BY PHILIP MATHEW

BANGALORE: Extremists from majority community attacked a group of Christians on Friday in the southern Indian state of Karnataka.

Sajan George, president of the Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC), told UCAN that 10 activists from the militant Hindu group Bajrang Dal beat eight Christians who were praying in a house in Coorg in the state’s southwest.

The intruders abused the Christians, who were daily wage earners at a coffee estate, and

Catholic youths block a national highway
earlier this year in protest against attacks
 on Christians

dragged them to the nearest police station, George said.

The police admitted two heavily bleeding Christians to hospital, he added. The victims are reportedly members of a local Pentecostal church.

The GCIC leader blamed the attack on some local coffee estate owners, who allegedly support Hindu radical groups. These estate owners refuse to pay their workers the minimum wage and often do not pay them on time.

The police have not taken any action against the attackers so far, George said. Police often say they cannot act against Hindu extremists and instead ask Christians not to pray in their homes.

In a similar incident on Dec. 5, Bajrang Dal activists attacked four Christians in Shimoga district.

According to Evangelical Fellowship of India, 25 extremists barged into a room and dragged the Christians to a police station accusing them of forcing people to convert to Christianity.

Three days earlier on Dec. 2, some 20 alleged Hindu extremist threatened to rape a Christian woman near Bangalore, the state capital, if she did not return to her original Hindu religion.UCAN