"The most significant human rights problems were police and security force abuses, including extra-judicial killings, torture, and rape; widespread corruption at all levels of government, leading to denial of justice; and separatist, insurgent, and societal violence," said the annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices released by Secretary of State John Kerry.
Other human rights problems included disappearances, poor prison conditions that were frequently life threatening, arbitrary arrest and detention, and lengthy pretrial detention, the report said.
Authorities continued to infringe on citizens' privacy rights, the report said adding that the law in some states restricts religious conversion, and there were reports of arrests but no reports of convictions under those laws and religion-based societal violence remained a problem, it said.
Forced labour and bonded labour were widespread while child labour, including forced child labour, was also a serious problem, it added.
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In its report the State Department said that the government made some progress in cases that seek to hold police and security officials accountable for killings during the Gujarat riots in 2002.
Noting that there were allegations of bias in cases stemming from the 2002 Gujarat violence, the report said a decade after the communal riots, the 2013 Study on Internally Displaced Persons of India (IDPs) by the Centre for Social Justice reported 3,964 internally displaced families in 86 settlements in Gujarat, all of them Muslim.
"The study reported that 30 percent of the IDPs had not received any aid and the rest had been inadequately compensated," it said.