OnlineNewsPortal.In is a leading online news portal providing the latest news, articles, expert insights, updated knowledge, business, technology, health, sports, entertainment, and lifestyle information

News And Articles To Read

Conversion To Religion Other Than Hinduism, Buddhism Or Sikhism Results In Loss Of Scheduled Caste Status : Supreme Court

Conversion To Religion Other Than Hinduism, Buddhism Or Sikhism Results In Loss Of Scheduled Caste Status : Supreme Court

The Supreme Court has recently held that a person who converts to a religion other than Hinduism, Sikhism or Buddhism loses Scheduled Caste (SC) status and cannot be treated as a SC for constitutional or statutory purposes.

Core holding of the Court

  • The Court ruled that only individuals professing Hinduism, Sikhism or Buddhism can be recognised as members of a Scheduled Caste.

  • Conversion to any other religion (such as Christianity, Islam, Jainism, etc.) results in immediate and complete loss of SC status, irrespective of birth‑linked caste.

  • The bench (Justices P. K. Mishra and N. V. Anjaria) upheld an Andhra Pradesh High Court order that a Dalit who converts to Christianity and actively practises that faith cannot claim SC status or protection under the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.

  • The Court relied on the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950, especially Clause 3, which restricts SC status to followers of Hinduism, Sikhism or Buddhism.

  • The Court described the bar as “absolute”: once a person professes a religion outside these three, he or she ceases to be a SC, even if the social reality of caste‑based discrimination persists.

Practical implications for advocates

  • Such a convert cannot claim SC category benefits in reservations (jobs, education, promotions) or in quotas under other SC‑specific schemes.

  • For criminal‑law practice, a person converting from SC to another faith may not be able to invoke the SC/ST (POA) Act against alleged atrocities, unless the Court or legislature carves out a specific exception.