A report authored by Robert Berkeley of
Runnymede Trust states that the Hindu community groups and organisations in the United Kingdom face systematic disadvantage and discrimination. Scholars state that the Hindu community in the United Kingdom, and Europe in general, has faced discrimination in immigration policies adopted by the local governments. In local councils, construction or expansion permits for Hindu temples and community centres have been turned down for years, while Muslim mosques and Christian churches have been approved by the same councils and built. The discrimination suffered by Hindu communities from the local council officials in Britain has been described by Paul Weller as follows, Nearly 50% of Hindu children, both boys and girls, in British schools have reported to being victims of bullying for being Hindu and their religious heritage. However, Claire Monks et al. note that children of various races and religions report being victims of bullying in British schools as well. The Hindu community in the United Kingdom is not unique in suffering discrimination and stereotyping. and parts of EU-wide law to limit this practice were adopted in the United Kingdom in 1998. In some instances of Islamist terrorism, such as after the
7 July 2005 London bombings, Hindus along with Sikhs of the United Kingdom became more targeted and vulnerable for backlash than Muslims. In October 2018, it was reported that
Conservative Party (UK) London mayoral candidate
Shaun Bailey had written a pamphlet, entitled
No Man’s Land, for the
Centre for Policy Studies. In it, Bailey argued that accommodating Hindus "[robs] Britain of its community" and is turning the country into a "crime riddled cess pool". He also claimed that
South Asians "bring their culture, their country and any problems they might have, with them" and that this was not a problem within the black community "because we’ve shared a religion and in many cases a language". In the pamphlet, Bailey had confused the
Hindu religion and the
Hindi language: "You don’t know what to do. You bring your children to school and they learn far more about
Diwali than
Christmas. I speak to the people who are from
Brent and they’ve been having Hindi (sic) days off." The Conservative Party Deputy Chairman,
James Cleverly, defended Bailey and insisted he was misunderstood, and that he was implying black boys were drifting into crime as a result of learning more about Hinduism rather than "their own Christian culture". However, the anti-racism
Hope Not Hate campaign group called Bailey's comments "grotesque". The comments were condemned by the
Hindu Council of the United Kingdom who expressed "disappointment at the misrepresentation of our faith" by Bailey. In April 2023, the
Henry Jackson Society conducted an investigation on Anti-Hindu hate in schools. According to the report, 51% of parents of Hindu pupils stated that their child had experienced anti-Hindu hate in schools, while less than 1% of schools surveyed had reported any anti-Hindu related incidents in the last five years. They also found that many Muslim students had bullied their Hindu classmates on religious grounds,
The Telegraph reported, quoting the study, claimed that Muslim pupils called for Hindus to convert or face "threats of hell for disbelievers" using terms such as "
kaffir". In one example, a child "was harassed and told that if they converted to Islam, their life will become so much easier" and another was told, "You aren't going to survive very long... If you want to go to paradise, you'll have to come to Islam... Hindus are the herbivores at the bottom of the food chain, we will eat you up." Another parent said children were told to watch videos of an Islamic preacher and to "convert because Hinduism makes no sense," The Telegraph reported. According to the think tank, religious education was "fostering discrimination" against Hindus with inappropriate references to the Indian caste system and misconceptions about the worship of deities, which students felt made a mockery of them. ==British Overseas Territories==