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Blunkett
speech causes fear of clampdown on Christian belief
Earlier this afternoon David Blunkett launched an astonishing attack
on Christians throughout the UK. Announcing a new policy to criminalise
‘incitement to hatred’, the Home Secretary has implied that
he wants to clamp down on the beliefs of evangelical Christians.
David Blunkett has resurrected the proposed law after it was thrown
out in 2001 by the House of Lords. At the time evangelical Christians
raised alarm that the incitement offence could be used to criminalise
ordinary Christians for expressing their beliefs.
In his speech this afternoon David Blunkett explicitly equated evangelicals
with Islamic terrorists. He talked about “those who would take
our lives because they reject our faith” and went on “…[the
new law] applies equally from far right evangelical Christians, to extremists
in the Islamic faith.” [See below for fuller transcript.]
The proposal appears to be a new censorship law which allows politicians
to decide what is an acceptable religious belief and what isn’t.
Colin Hart, Director of The Christian Institute, said today:
“David Blunkett today has showed the danger of giving politicians
the power to censor religious belief. The confidence of evangelicals
in this new law has been shattered by the Home Secretary’s intemperate
comments.”
“He appears to want to introduce this law to clamp down on evangelicals.
A new incitement offence could put church leaders in jail and affect
Christian schools, youth work or street preaching.”
“Many evangelicals have gone down in history as great Britons
– Wilberforce, Shaftsbury and Josephine Butler, to name a few.
To equate evangelicals with terrorists is an outrage. I call on the
Home Secretary to retract his implied assertion that evangelicals in
the UK are calling for the murder of non-Christians.”
Note for editors:
- Evangelicals
are Christians whose highest authority is the Bible and who hold to
the historic Christian creeds.
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Extract from speech given by David Blunkett on 7 July 2004:
“We need to be able to take on those extremists and say, I’m
afraid in our society, pluralism and openness, the ability to accept
differences without being subsumed, is crucial to our survival, it’s
what distinguishes all of us, from every faith, from those who would
take our lives because they reject our faith, and it applies equally
from far right evangelical Christians, to extremists in the Islamic
faith.”
For
more information contact: Simon Calvert on 0191 281 5664
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the Christian faith in the UK
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