Police visit mum after shop smack warning



A mother who warned her naughty children they may be smacked was followed home by an off-duty police officer and later questioned.

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Mother's suicide turns lens on skewed police priorities



How can the police zealously pursue Christians for criticising Islam yet say the thugs who drove a mother to kill herself and her daughter were a 'low priority'?


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Lords back free speech shield in 'gay hate' law



The Government has been defeated in the House of Lords over its attempt to repeal a free speech protection from a sexual orientation 'hatred' law.

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'Do not say God bless' council sacks Christian



A London council that bans staff from saying "God bless" at work has sacked a Christian employee for discussing his faith.

Video: Elderley couple quizzed by police for criticising 'gay rights




The 2005 story of Joe and Helen Roberts - an elderly Christian couple from Lancashire who were interrogated by police because they criticised a 'gay rights' project being run by their local council.

In this new video, Helen speaks about how intimidating it was to be questioned by police officers for over an hour. The officers told them they were near to committing a hate crime which carries a seven year prison sentence.

Joe says Wyre Borough Council kept talking about 'diversity' but the council's brand of diversity didn't seem to allow him and his wife to express their religious beliefs on sexual ethics.

He says he never thought he would see the day when British police officers would be interrogating citizens because they had expressed a point of view in a telephone call.

A year after the events, following a legal action supported by The Christian Institute, the police and the council admitted they had acted wrongly towards the Roberts and changed their policies to avoid it happening again.

Last year Parliament passed a free speech protection making it clear that criticising homosexual conduct is not, in itself, a crime. But the Government is trying to repeal it. We expect a vote in Parliament sometime in July.

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Government to force gay youth workers on church



The Government says its new Equality Bill will force churches to accept practising homosexuals or transsexuals in youth worker posts and other similar roles.

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Sacked for suggesting a patient 'go to church'



Nurse with 40 years experience sacked for suggesting a patient 'go to church' to relieve stress in a training course.

A NHS Nurse with over 40-years experience has been sacked after he suggested two "patients" might go to Church to relieve stress during a role play session on a training course.

Committed Christian, Anand Rao, aged 71, was taking part in simulated situations as part of an exercise in palliative care. He had elected to go on the training session and found his own grant funding to do so. The Christian, a bank staff nurse in hospitals run by the Leicester NHS Trust, advised two persons playing the roles of husband and wife patients they might like to try going to church to relieve stress. He has recently instructed the Christian Legal Centre to advise him and is considering taking legal action for religious discrimination against his former employer.

Anand Rao says that he, and thousands of his former patients, will be staggered that someone who has given four decades to caring for people can be treated in the way he has.  He feels the action by his employers is “heavy handed and disproportionate”.

In the simulated exercise Mr Rao was involved in he was asked to advise the wife with a serious heart condition.  In the exercise the trainers were looking to elicit how a nurse would deal with advising a patient about reducing stress through the patient’s sexual intimacy with her husband. Mr Rao said: “Mrs. Jones [a made-up name] told me that her doctor had informed her that she would not live long and this had created stress. I advised her going to church might ease her anxiety and stress.” It is understood the woman "patient" in the role play situation felt she did not receive sympathetic, suitable advice.

The course directors raised this concern with Rao and told him that they do not want him to talk about God. Subsequently, the course organiser, Leicestershire and Rutland Organisation for the Relief of Suffering (LOROS), sent a report to his employer raising concerns over his performance.

Mr Rao, who worked for the Leicester NHS Trust since May 2005, was initially suspended by his employer on the grounds that "concerns have been raised about your professional conduct by the course directors at LOROS."  The care worker did not attend a disciplinary hearing on 23 January 2009 when the allegations against him were being examined as he had not been given, despite several requests, a copy of the questions and answers from his training meeting.  Mr Rao had his contract terminated in a letter from his employers which addressed concerns about his behavior at the training course.

Andrea Minichiello Williams, Director of CLC commented: “How is it possible that a nurse who has served the public for 40 years should find himself dismissed because in a training exercise he advised someone to go to Church?  To seek to censor and suppress this kind of language and belief is the first fruits of a closed society”.

Andrea Minichiello Williams

Christian Legal Centre

 

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