All quotations

Parliamentary Debate on Free Speech in the UK

March 11, 2011

The Government must reform the Public Order Act to protect freedom of speech, MPs have warned during a debate in Parliament. Edward Leigh MP insisted that the Bill should be used to remove the word “insulting” from Section 5 of the Public Order Act, and listed numerous examples of people whose free speech had been restricted by the existing law.

Animosity Against Catholics Aggravating in Spain

March 11, 2011

The website Libertad Digital reported on March 11, 2011 that animosity against Christians and in particular Catholics is aggravating in Spain. Journalist Javier Lozano lists incidents Christians recently witnessed from the temporary close of the chapel at University of Barcelona due to violence and intolerance to the cancellation of a lecture by Cardenal Rouco Varela because of demonstrations and the lack of security to deter anti-Christians activists.

Protest Against "Christianophobia" in Croatia

March 7, 2011

An uproar in Croatian society on the silencing of a primary school teacher has led to a peaceful manifestation in Zagreb. The protestors were wearing stickers over their mouths to symbolize that Christians are being silenced by court proceedings.

Vatican Diplomat at UN: 75% of Those Killed for Religious Hatred Are Christians

March 2, 2011

Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, permanent representative of the Holy See to the U.N. offices in Geneva, delivered on March 2 at the XVI ordinary session of the Human Rights Council on religious freedom an address in which he urged the UN to protect the right to seek truth.

UK Courts Blaimed for Anti-Christian Bias

February 26, 2011

Premier Christian Media claims that there is an inconsistency in the way the Courts apply and interpret equality laws in relation to Christians. When it comes to competing rights between different groups, the rights of Christians seem to be consistently ‘sacrificed on the altar of political correctness.’

OSCE Representative Calls for the Establishment of a Day of Christian Martyrs of Our Time

February 18, 2011

Dr. Massimo Introvigne, OSCE Representative on Combating Racism, Xenophobia, and Intolerance against Christians and Members of Other Religions: "On the level of raising awareness about discrimination against Christians we can do more. ... I have ... suggested to the States that wish to participate the celebration of a Day of Christian Martyrs of our time, to be celebrated not – or not only – in churches, where there are already similar initiatives in place, but in schools, cities, and public institutions because the persecution of Christians does not affect just Christians, but everyone."

UK Lord Mackay of Clashfern Has Warned That Christians Shouldn't be Forced to Act Against Their Beliefs by Equality Laws

February 1, 2011

Lord Mackay warned that we are “in danger of putting religion in a box only to be brought out on ceremonial occasions. Religion, certainly the Christian faith, is much more than that.” Lord Mackay also argued forcibly for “the right to liberty of conscience, freedom of expression and religious liberty” in the public sphere. He added: “One does not lose them when one steps into the public sphere. Indeed, for the sake of everyone’s liberty it is paramount that such rights are upheld in the public realm.

German Archbishop: Religious Neutrality Must Not Become Policy to Block Religion

January 30, 2011

Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, Chairman of the German Conference of Catholic Bishops, warned that the principle of religious neutrality of states must not evolve into a “policy to prevent religion”. The right to practice one’s religion has to be assured to the full extent by national governments as well as the European Union, the archbishop demanded.

Top BBC anchorman: "BBC has a systemic bias to bashing Christianity"

January 27, 2011

One of Britain’s most senior news broadcasters has accused the BBC of a systemic bias to the left and of bashing Christianity and traditional British values. Peter Sissons, a top anchorman of the BBC’s leading evening news slots, has said that the BBC’s leftist bias is so deeply engrained it is not so much a bias as a “mindset.” “At the core of the BBC, in its very DNA, is a way of thinking that is firmly of the Left,” Sissons said. “The one thing guaranteed to damage your career prospects at the BBC is letting it be known that you are at odds with the prevailing and deep-rooted BBC attitude towards Life, the Universe and Everything.”

Turkish President Calls Treament of Christians in Turkey a „Disgrace“

January 27, 2011

Turkish President Gül was asked by reporters about the status of Christians in Turkey. The reasons for asking were the expropriation of the Syriac-Orthodox monastery Mor Gabriel, the reproach that Christians are denied government jobs, and the unclear legal status of Christian communities in Turkey. Gül answered, that the treament of Christians in Turkey was a „disgrace“.

Interview With OSCE Representative on Discrimination Against Christians

January 21, 2011

Interview with Dr. Massimo Introvigne, Italian sociologist of religion, representative of the chair-in-office of the Organisation of Security and Cooperation in Europe on combating racism, xenophobia and discrimination, with a special focus on discrimination against Christians and members of other religions, Rome/Vienna.

UK Daily Telegraph: The Law is Out of Kilter

January 18, 2011

"The right to hold religious beliefs, and to act in keeping with one's faith, is being set against the right not to be offended – and is losing. This is a dispiriting trend in a free society. The views of the Bulls will seem to many to be old-fashioned, even distasteful – but they have every right to hold them. A pervasive climate of political correctness, however, is driving such beliefs to the margins; the law is out of kilter. It no longer protects the freedom of the believer in the way that it defends the interests of those who consider themselves discriminated against. As we have argued before, this is an unhealthy imbalance that needs to be redressed – if not by the courts, then by Parliament."

Pope Benedict XVI Concretely Names Areas of Discrimination Against Christians in the West

January 10, 2011

“Turning our gaze from East to West we find ourselves faced with other kinds of threats to the full exercise of religious freedom. I think in the first place of countries which accord great importance to pluralism and tolerance, but where religion is increasingly being marginalized. There is a tendency to consider religion, all religion, as something insignificant, alien or even destabilizing to modern society, and to attempt by different means to prevent it from having any influence on the life of society. ...

Pope Benedict XVI Urging a Positive Secularity

January 10, 2011

"Sadly, in certain countries, mainly in the West, one increasingly encounters in political and cultural circles, as well in the media, scarce respect and at times hostility, if not scorn, directed towards religion and towards Christianity in particular. It is clear that if relativism is considered an essential element of democracy, one risks viewing secularity solely in the sense of excluding or, more precisely, denying the social importance of religion. But such an approach creates confrontation and division, disturbs peace, harms human ecology and, by rejecting in principle approaches other than its own, finishes in a dead end. There is thus an urgent need to delineate a positive and open secularity which, grounded in the just autonomy of the temporal order and the spiritual order, can foster healthy cooperation and a spirit of shared responsibility."

Former UK Chief Justice, Lord Woolf, Warns against Penalising Christian Beliefs

January 4, 2011

“We may have gone too far. If the law has gone too far in one direction, then the experience of the law is that it tends to move back. The law must be above any sectional interest even if it is an interest of a faith but at the same time it must be aware of the proper concerns of that faith... The law should be developed in ways that, wherever practicable, it allows that faith to be preserved and protected."

Vatican Official on Persecution of and Discrimination against Christians Worldwide

December 16, 2010

Anthony Frontiero of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace: 
“Between 200 and 300 million Christians face daily threats of murder, beating, imprisonment and torture. And a further 350 to 400 million encounter discrimination in areas such as jobs and housing.”

Director Janez Lenarcic said that the OSCE has become well aware of “emerging issues” regarding equality and non-discrimination legislation.

December 10, 2010

The religious freedom of Christians in Europe is under threat from “equalities” and anti-discrimination laws around the EU, said a director of The Organisation for Security and Co-Operation in Europe (OSCE) at a conference.

Christians are the Largest Single Group Persecuted in the World

November 30, 2010

Virtually every human rights group and Western government agency that monitors the plight of Christians worldwide arrives at more or less the same conclusion: Between 200 million and 230 million of them face daily threats of murder, beating, imprisonment and torture, and a further 350 to 400 million encounter discrimination in areas such as jobs and housing. A conservative estimate of the number of Christians killed for their faith each year is somewhere around 150,000.

Desecration Insults Entire Nation

November 24, 2010

Brice Hortefeux, former French Minister of Internal Affairs: "Since the beginning of the year (2010), 323 assaults against Christian sites have been identified on French territory: 140 cemeteries and 183 places of worship were desecrated. When a church, a synagogue, a mosque, a temple or any other place of worship is attacked, when a grave is desecrated, it is the entire national community which is offended... A desecration is not only an insult to the dead but also to France and to civilization. The guilty will not go unpunished."