The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, an independent advisory body in Washington, has once again recommended that India be designated a “country of particular concern”, a label used under U.S. law for governments accused of carrying out or tolerating especially serious violations of religious freedom. In its 2026 annual report, the commission said conditions in India continued to deteriorate in 2025.
The recommendation is significant, but it does not automatically change U.S. policy. USCIRF can advise the president, Congress and the secretary of state, but the actual decision on whether to place a country on the CPC list belongs to the U.S. State Department. USCIRF’s own materials make clear that its report is a set of independent policy recommendations, not the final designation itself.
In the India section of the report, the commission says religious minorities faced mounting pressure through legislation, enforcement actions and attacks on places of worship. It points in particular to anti-conversion laws in several states and says these measures have increasingly been used against minority communities. The report frames these trends as part of what it calls “systematic, ongoing, and egregious” violations.
That, of course, is the commission’s view — and New Delhi has pushed back hard. Indian government officials have rejected the USCIRF assessment as “motivated and biased,” arguing that it does not reflect the country’s democratic framework or its record on religious freedom. Indian media reports on the government response say the recommendation was categorically dismissed.
So the real story is not just the recommendation itself. It is the familiar diplomatic friction around it. USCIRF has repeatedly pressed for India to receive the CPC designation, while the State Department has not acted on that advice in previous years. This latest report keeps that disagreement alive and puts the issue back into the U.S.-India rights conversation, even as broader strategic ties remain important to both governments.
