The United Nations has officially published KAILASA's 31st report, titled "The Continuity of Colonial Violence: Systemic Persecution of Indigenous Hindus in Modern India," submitted by the sovereign entity KAILASA. The report presents comprehensive documentation of ongoing human rights violations, institutional discrimination, and coordinated transnational persecution targeting Hindus and the KAILASA community, both in India and worldwide.
According to the report, the indigenous identity of Hindus is systematically denied. It establishes that the Vedic (Hindu) civilization is a sophisticated, indigenous, and continuous tradition within Bharat (modern-day India), with roots predating colonial interruptions. Recent genetic studies cited affirm that Hindus alone embody the indigenous lineage of the region, while Christianity arrived primarily through European colonial powers and Islam through invasions. However, the report alleges that the deep-state stance prevents formal identification, documentation, demarcation, registration, and titling of indigenous Hindu lands.
The report highlights institutionalized temple control and wealth confiscation, noting that post-independence India continued the British colonial legacy of controlling Hindu temples through laws like the Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments (HRCE) Act. Key findings include systematic diversion of Hindu temple funds to non-Hindu projects, while mosques and churches remain free from state control. Government officials control temple administration, appointments, and finances, leading to massive wealth confiscation that warrants a UN audit under CERD General Recommendation 23.
Statistical evidence of persecution is presented, including violations under the Forest Rights Act (FRA). Out of 45.5 million land claims filed, 40% (18 million claims) have been rejected, leading to mass evictions of indigenous communities from ancestral lands, violating UNDRIP Article 10 on forced removal without free, prior, and informed consent.
The report establishes KAILASA's sovereign status as derived from SPH Bhagavan Nithyananda Paramashivam's inheritance of unbroken succession and revival of 21 ancient Hindu sovereign states, including Surya Vamsa Surangi Samrajya Sarvajnapeetha, Suvarnapeetha Swargapura Samrajya Sarvajnapeetha, and Shyamala Peetha Sarvajnapeetha. Legal foundations include the Doctrine of Continuity, Doctrine of Acquired Rights, De Jure Statehood under the Montevideo Convention, and Divine Sovereignty in Hindu Law.
Several international law violations are documented, citing conventions such as the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), ICERD, UNDRIP, ICCPR, Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, UN Charter, Rome Statute of ICC, CERD General Recommendation 23, Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, and Vienna Convention on Succession of States. The report calls on the UN to conduct an immediate audit of confiscated temple wealth, deploy a Special Rapporteur to investigate forced conversions, pass a General Assembly resolution condemning the weaponization of secularism, restore indigenous rights to land and self-governance, and establish accountability mechanisms for diplomatic missions engaging in harassment.
Historical context traces modern persecution to colonial instruments such as the Criminal Tribes Act of 1871, SC/ST Act, HRCE Acts, and sedition laws. The report uses Kashmir as a case study demonstrating patterns of indigenous Hindu displacement and forced migration. The full report is available at the UN call for input page and the submitted report.


