Sunday, March 27, 2011

MyConstitution Finale Launch: Rock 4 Rights!



Since the first launch of the MyConstitution Campaign on 13 Nov 2009, the Bar Council Constitutional Law Committee (“BCCLC”) has launched seven more phases periodically. Each launch was accompanied by a specific theme inspired by the Federal Constitution, and was supplemented by its very own Rakyat Guide booklet and Rakyat Service Advertisement.

On 2 Apr 2011 (Saturday), BCCLC will launch its 9th and final phase at Fort Cornwallis, Penang, at 12 noon. The launch will be officiated by YB Prof Dr P Ramasamy, Deputy Chief Minister II of Penang.
In addition to the 9th Rakyat Guide booklet and Rakyat Service Advertisement on “Elections and Democracy”, BCCLC has also produced a music album entitled “Radio Demokratika”*. The album contains 12 original songs, written and performed by 12 local independent bands. Each song resonates a message on human rights, fundamental liberties or democracy.
Therefore, it should come as no surprise that BCCLC is organising a concert and carnival to celebrate the final phase of the MyConstitution Campaign. Some of the bands featured in the album will perform at the concert.

Many have asked, “Why a concert? What does it have to do with Bar Council?”
The reasons are:
• better outreach to youths between the ages of 18 and 35 on the concept of elections and democracy;
• improved awareness amongst local artists and youths on the concept of elections and democracy;
• increased participation of youths in the Malaysian political process through the conduct of voter registration drive during the concert; and
• greater media coverage and publicity for the MyConstitution Campaign.
Admission is free. Please come and join BCCLC for its final phase of the MyConstitution Campaign. It will be a fun, stimulating and uniquely refreshing experience. For more information, refer to the attached flyer.
Please contact Lim Ka Ea by telephone at 03-2231 7103 or 03-2031 3003 ext 127, or by email at kaea@malaysianbar.org.my, should you have any queries.
See you all there!
Thank you.
Edmund Bon Tai Soon
Chairperson
Bar Council Constitutional Law Committee
Sejak pelancaran sulung Kempen PerlembagaanKu pada 13 Nov 2009, Jawatankuasa Undang-Undang Perlembagaan Majlis Peguam (“BCCLC”) telah melancarkan tujuh lagi fasa secara berperingkat-peringkat. Setiap fasa mempunyai tema khas yang diilhamkan daripada Perlembagaan Persekutuan dan dilengkapi dengan Buku Panduan Rakyat dan Pesanan Khidmat Rakyat.

Pada 2 Apr 2011 (Sabtu), BCCLC akan melancarkan fasa ke-9 dan terakhir bertempat di Fort Cornwallis, Pulau Pinang, pada 12 tengah hari. Acara ini akan dirasmikan oleh Timbalan Ketua Menteri II Pulau Pinang, YB Prof Dr P Ramasamy.

Disamping Buku Panduan Rakyat dan Pesanan Khidmat Rakyat ke-9 yang bertemakan “Pilihan Raya dan Demokrasi”, BCCLC juga telah menghasilkan album muzik yang bertajuk “Radio Demokratika”. Album ini mengandungi 12 lagu-lagu hasil karya asal yang dipersembahkan oleh 12 kumpulan muzik bebas tempatan. Setiap lagu membawa mesej hak-hak asasi manusia, kebebasan asasi atau demokrasi.

Maka, tidak menghairankan yang BCCLC akan menganjurkan sebuah konsert dan karnival untuk meraikan fasa terakhir Kempen PerlembagaanKu. Beberapa kumpulan muzik yang telah menyumbangkan lagu untuk album ini akan membuat persembahan secara langsung.

Ramai yang bertanya, “Kenapa konsert? Apa kaitan konsert dan Majlis Peguam?”

Sebab-sebabnya ialah:
• lebih mudah mendekati belia dalam lingkungan umur 18 ke 35 tahun untuk mendedahkan mereka kepada konsep pilihan raya dan demokrasi;
• menambahkan kesedaran tentang konsep pilihan raya dan demokrasi di kalangan pemuzik tempatan dan belia;
• meningkatkan jumlah penyertaan belia dalam proses politik Malaysia dengan mendorong mereka untuk mendaftar sebagai pengundi ketika konsert berlansung; dan
• liputan media dan publisiti yang meluas untuk Kempen PerlembagaanKu.

Penyertaan adalah percuma. Marilah bersama-sama BCCLC menjayakan fasa terakhir Kempen PerlembagaanKu. Ia pasti menjadi satu acara yang menyeronokkan, disamping merangsang minda dan memberi pengalaman unik. Untuk maklumat lanjut, sila rujuk kepada risalah yang dilampirkan.

Sila hubungi Lim Ka Ea melalui telefon di 03-2231 7103 atau 03-2031 3003 sambungan 127, atau melalui e-mel di kaea@malaysianbar.org.my untuk sebarang pertanyaan.

Jumpa anda disana!

Terima kasih.

Edmund Bon Tai Soon
Pengerusi
Jawatankuasa Undang-Undang Perlembagaan Majlis Peguam

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Pray for Sarawak




The NECF Prayer Commission is mobilizing churches and intercessors to cover Sarawak in prayer in preparation for their coming State Elections. We would like to stand together with our Sarawakian brethrens in prayer as they face their State Elections. We believe through united prayer, we can alter the course of a people. There are 31 Parliamentary Seats and 71 State Seats in Sarawak. We hope to cover every seat in prayer.

To participate in this initiative, kindly fill and submit theonline registration form with the selected seats you wish to pray for. In the mean time, you can start praying. Further updates, info and prayer alerts will be sent once we have received your participation.

If you have any feedback please provide them here.

NECF Prayer Commission


Walk and Rawk for Change



Penganjur: EMPOWER, Women's Aid Organisation, Sisters in Islam, Jaringan Rakyat Tertindas (JERIT), Suara Rakyat (SUARAM), Tenaganita, Centre for Independant Journalism (CIJ), Malaysia Youth and Students' Democratic Movement (DEMA), Persatuan Sahabat Wanita Selangor and All Women’s Action Society.

Sambutan 100 tahun Hari Wanita Antarabangsa

Sabtu, 26 Mac 2011, 9.30pg – 12.00tghari,

Pasar Seni, Kuala Lumpur

Mengapa ‘Walk and Rawk for Change’

  • Setiap hari, 10 orang wanita melaporkan kes berkaitan penderaan fizikal, seksual dan emosi;
  • Sebanyak 9,575 kes perkosaan dilaporkan sepanjang 5 tahun;
  • 4 orang wanita diperkosa di Malaysia setiap hari;
  • Kes penderaan pekerja asing semakin meningkat;
  • Kadar gaji minimum masih belum dikuatkuasakan di Malaysia;
  • Gaji pekerja ladang wanita adalah jauh di bawah garis kemiskinan;
  • Akta Pekerjaan telah diubahsuai sehingga mengenepikan hak wanita di tempat kerja;
  • Perlembagaan Malaysia mengandungi klausa yang berterusan mendiskriminasikan wanita;
  • Pengubahsuaian Akta Undang-Undang Keluarga Islam telah menidakkan hak-hak wanita Muslim;
  • Penyertaan wanita dalam politik adalah kurang dari 10% sepanjang tempoh 20 tahun;
  • Tiada peningkatan terhadap penyertaaan wanita dalam tenaga kerja, hanya 47% sepanjang tempoh 20 tahun;
  • Isteri warga asing yang telah bermastautin di Malaysia selama 10 tahun masih dinafikan hak taraf penduduk tetap.

Mari sertai acara ini sekiranya ada ingin:-

- Dilihat, didengari dan diberi hak sama rata.

We want women’s voice and representation at all levels of decision making.

WILL YOU WALK WITH US?

Organisers: EMPOWER, Women's Aid Organisation, Sisters in Islam, Jaringan Rakyat Tertindas (JERIT), Suara Rakyat (SUARAM), Tenaganita, Centre for Independant Journalism (CIJ), Malaysia Youth and Students' Democratic Movement (DEMA), Persatuan Sahabat Wanita Selangor and All Women’s Action Society.

100 years of women's struggles - in commemoration of International Women's Day

Saturday, March 26 · 9:30am - 12:30pm
Central Market, Kuala Lumpur

Why we MUST walk

  • Everyday, 10 women report physical, emotional and sexual abuse;
  • 9,575 statutory rape cases were reported over the past 5 years;
  • Every day, four women are raped in Malaysia;
  • Migrant workers are increasingly abused, tortured and enslaved;
  • Basic, decent minimum wages do not yet exist for all Malaysians;
  • Women in the plantation and informal sectors earn well below the poverty line;
  • Amendments to the Employment Act remove work security and erode the rights women gained at work;
  • The Federal Constitution, the Supreme Law of the Land, have clauses that continue to discriminate against women;
  • Amendments to the Islamic Family Law Act have diminished the rights of Muslim women;
  • Representation of women in politics has been less than 10% for the past 20 years;
  • Women labour force participation has stagnated at 47% for the past 20 years;
  • Foreign wives with more than 10 years of residency still denied permanent residence.

We walk because it is our right - to be seen, heard and respected as equals.

We walk for all women who remain hidden, silenced and discriminated.

We call upon ALL parliamentarians, state assembly persons, government representatives

AND the PEOPLE of Malaysia -- Make the Change.

We want women’s voice and representation

at all levels of decision making.

WILL YOU WALK WITH US?

Monday, March 21, 2011

Talk on "Sri Lanka in May 2009: Then, Now and the Future"



Dr Dagmar Hellman Rajanayagam, who was in UKM from 1996 to 2001 and is now Acting Professor in the Chair of Southeast Studies (Insular) at the University of Passau, will be giving a talk on “Sri Lanka in May 2009: Then, Now and the Future”


When: Saturday, 26th March 2011 at 7.30 pm

Where: President’s Room, Royal Selangor Club, Dataran Merdeka, Kuala Lumpur


Dr. Dagmar Hellman Rajanayagam is an expert in the contemporary developments in Sri Lanka.

Dr Dagmar studied Indology, History of Asia and Comparative Religion at the Universities of Hamburg and Heidelberg; Ph.D. in 1982; D.Litt. 1998; she has been among others a Junior Research Fellow in Singapore, 1982-83, Research Fellow at St. Antonys College, Oxford, 1985-86 and at the German Historical Institute London, 1986-1991, Acting Chair, University of Kiel, Dept. of Asian History, 1990-91, Senior Lecturer and Associate Professor, National University Malaysia, Bangi, 1996-2001.


Major Publications: Peace Initiatives Towards Reconciliation and Nation Building in Sri Lanka. An International Perspective. Proceedings of the Workshop 13-15th July 2001 Bangi, Malaysia (Ed.), Kuala Lumpur 2002; The Tigers - Armed Struggle for Identity, Beiträge zur Südasienforschung 157, Stuttgart 1994, repr. 1997; Nationalstaat und Sprachenkonflikte in Süd- und Südostasien (ed. together with Dietmar Rothermund), Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden, Stuttgart 1992; Tamil - Sprache als politisches Symbol, Wiesbaden 1984; also a number of articles, among others: Religious Ideology Among the Tamils, in: Barrie Morrison et al. (Eds.); Struggling to Create a New Society: Sri Lanka in the Era of Globalization, Sage India, in press; From Differences to Ethnic Solidarity Among the Tamils, in: ibid., in press.


She has organised several conferences on nationalist and ethnic questions, including the one in 2001 in Bangi, Malaysia, on Reconciliation in Sri Lanka together with Dato Dr. D. M. Thuraiappah the then President of the Malaysian Ceylonese Congress. Leading scholars on the situation in Sri Lanka and well known persons and journalists from both sides of the divide from various parts of the world attended including prominent lawyer Mr Visvanathan Rudrakumar who came all the way from New York.


Please donate generously to the Tamil Forum (Malaysia).

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Dangerous liaisons - no thanks to hidden cameras



Published by MSN on 17 March 2011. By The Star.

A local syndicate is believed to be involved in the activity by hiring attractive men and women to lure the victims to bed before threatening to upload the material on the Internet, said Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) Public Services and Complaints Department chief Michael Chong.

"Five victims of the syndicate have come forward since last year," he said, adding that many other victims contacted him but refused to reveal their identities, fearing exposure.

He said most victims were involved in brief affairs instead of one-night stands.

Chong said one of the victims, a 68-year-old retired businessman who wanted to be known only as Vincent, met 35-year-old "Winnie" in December last year.

During their brief relationship, Winnie insisted that their sexual trysts be held in hotel rooms.

Three months later, Winnie claimed she was pregnant and demanded 300,000 ringgit from Vincent.

When he refused, she produced video recordings of them having sex and threatened to put it on the Internet.

"The video clearly showed Vincent engaged in the act while it hardly had any footage of the woman," said Chong, adding that the syndicate was careful to protect the identities of their "workers".

Vincent claimed Winnie was backed by a syndicate because she knew information about him and his family although he had never revealed anything personal about himself.

Chong said the syndicate targeted successful professionals and business tycoons who could afford to pay the amount extorted.

Most victims were married and would rather pay the crooks instead of coming clean to their spouses.

He said the right thing to do would be for the victims to own up to their mistakes with their spouses.

He said the crooks could easily duplicate the videos and photos, which meant that victims could face multiple blackmails over a single incident.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

The Roles & Challenges of an MP



























Get to know your MPs!

Date: 27 March 2011 (Sunday)
Time: 3 to 5.30 pm
Venue: Leonardo’s Restaurant, Jalan Bangkung, KL

Register by 23 March 2011.

Read more:

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Parable of the man who chose hell – Shanker



Published by The Malaysian Insider.

MARCH 16 – Once upon a time, a man died and was met at the Pearly Gates by an angel. The angel then explained that the man had arrived on a day of special offers: today, he gets to choose whether he wishes to spend eternity in heaven or hell.

“We’re going to let you have a day in hell and a day in heaven and then you can choose whichever one you want to spend eternity in.” The man then replied, “Why not? Ok, I’ll take the offer.”

And with that the angel put the man in an elevator and it went down straight to hell. The doors opened and the man found himself stepping out onto the putting green of a beautiful golf course.

In the distance was a country club and standing in front of him were all his friends – they were all dressed in splendid evening attire and cheering for him.

They ran up to him and they talked about old times. They played an excellent round of golf and at night went to the country club where they enjoyed an excellent steak and lobster dinner.

He also met the devil who was, surprisingly, a really nice guy and he had a great time telling jokes and dancing.

The man was extremely excited! He was having such a good time that before he knew it, it was time to leave. Everybody shook his hand and waved goodbye as he got on the elevator. It went up and opened back up at the Pearly Gates and he found the first angel waiting for him.

“Now it’s time to spend a day in heaven.” So the man spent the next 24 hours lounging around on clouds and playing the harp and singing. He had a great time and before he knew it, his 24 hours were up. The first angel came up to him.

“So, you’ve spent a day in hell and you’ve spent a day in heaven. Now you must choose your eternity.” The man paused for a second and then replied, “Well, I never thought I’d say this, I mean, heaven has been really great and all, but I think I had a better time in hell.”

So the angel escorted him to the elevator and the man went down back to hell. When the doors of the elevator opened, he found himself standing in a desolate and dark wasteland covered in garbage and filth. He saw his friends were dressed in rags and screaming in pain. There were hot flames all around and it felt slimy and the smell was awful.

The devil then came up to him and put his arm around him. “Wait a minute! I don’t understand,” stammered the man. “Yesterday I was here and there was a golf course and a country club and we ate lobster and we danced and had a great time. Now what I see instead is a dark wasteland and all my friends are in misery.”

The Devil looked at him and smiled, and then he explained: “That’s because yesterday, you met our marketing team.”

Read more:

http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/breakingviews/article/parable-of-the-man-who-chose-hell-shanker/

Home Ministry vs #Alkitab



Published by various online media on 17 March 2011.

Please click on the title to get to the full report.

Press statement by Christian Federation of Malaysia: Holy Scriptures Desecrated

We call on all Malaysians, from Semenanjung and in Sabah and Sarawak, and from all walks of life, to come together in unity to reject any attempt to restrict the freedom of religion in our beloved country.

We invite all Christians in Malaysia to remain calm and to continue to pray for a dignified and respectful resolution of this issue. As Sunday 20 March 2011 marks the 2nd anniversary of the impounding of the Bibles at Port Klang, we call on all those in Malaysia and elsewhere to dedicate themselves to a day of prayer and quiet reflection.


Hisham: Stamps on bible standard practice

“Even during Dr Mahathir Mohamad and Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s time, these bibles were released with a chop on them.”

Asked why it was stamped without the importer’s permission, Hishammuddin said that the bibles were stamped as “they (importers) wanted it to be immediately released”.

No intention to deface Bibles: Hishammuddin

The 5,100 Malay-language Bibles in Port Klang were stamped according to the Home Ministry's standard operating procedure and there was no intention to deface them, Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein said.

He said the stamping was done as the Bible Society of Malaysia (BSM) had wanted the Bibles to be released quickly.

"We stamped the Bible based on practices since Tun Dr Mahathir's (Mohamed) time.

Apologise to Christians, MCA tells Home Ministry

The MCA wants the Home Ministry to apologise for setting “degrading” conditions for the release of the Malay-language Bibles, saying that those who imposed them were suffering from the four “diseases” that Datuk Seri Najib Razak had recently warned Barisan Nasional (BN) about.

The prime minister had recently warned BN parties of the diseases of delusion, amnesia, inertia and arrogance, which he said often hit those who stayed too long in power and failed to reflect on their own weaknesses.

Questions over released Bible

The Home Ministry has written to the Bible Society of Malaysia (BSM) and the Sarawak branch of the global Christian group, The Gideons, to collect the 35,000 impounded copies of the Bible from Port Klang and Kuching port.

The BSM said the ministry had instead stamped the words “AlKitab Berita Baik ini untuk kegunaan penganut agama Kristian sahaja” (The Good News Bible is for the use of Christians only).

It also said the ministry wanted serial numbers printed and an official ministry stamp on the holy books.

No victory in bible release

The release of the 30,000 Malay bibles has come with two attached conditions: that the books bear a stamp demarcating “For Christians Only” and marked with serial numbers.

The chairman of the fellowship, Daron Tan, has called these conditions “insensitive” and a “gross violation of the Christian’s holy book”.

Christian Federation rejects seized bibles

Malaysian Christians today rejected the return of some of the 35,000 bibles seized in a dispute over the use of the word “Allah” by non-Muslims, saying they had been “desecrated.”

The government had said the using “Allah” as a translation for “God” in the Malay-language Bibles could cause confusion and encourage conversion, which is illegal for the country’s majority Muslim Malays.


The Star reprimanded over BM Bible story

The Home Ministry has issued a letter of reprimand to The Star over an article on the impounding of 5,000 Bahasa Malaysia Bibles.


Saturday, March 5, 2011

"MyConstitution is Mine" by Barcode



Do you look around and think that nothing’s changed?
Do you ever feel like you’re restrained? They say
there’re thoughts you cannot convey,
ideas you can’t portray
you know there must be a better way

A nation just and free, a dream of liberty
Bound in a document of destiny, but today
we’ve let doubt lead us astray,
we’ve let fear stand in our way,
now we must realise we have a role to play

For no one can silence what you have to say
And no one can ever take your freedom away
No one can tell you the way to define
What you think, what you believe, MyConstitution is mine

We’ll be the change that our nation needs to see
We’ll turn the dream into reality to be

A land that’s peaceful and strong
Which fights for right against wrong
And all of its people united and free!

For no one can silence what we have to say
And no one can ever take our freedom away
No one can tell us the way to define
What we think, what we believe, MyConstitution is mine

No matter who you are, no matter what defines you
There’s one thing you can always hold true

For no one can silence what we have to say
And no one can ever take our freedom away
No one can tell us the way to define
What we think, what we believe, MyConstitution is mine

For no one can silence what we have to say
And no one can ever take our freedom away
No one can tell us the way to define
What we think, what we believe, MyConstitution is mine

Lyrics & Music by Low Wen Zhen

Barcode are See Xien on vox, Paul Linus Andrews on both acoustic & electric guitars, Cilia Chong & Soo Jin Yun on keys, Farez Jinnah on bass, Khor Bin Yun on drums; with the fun sizes - Maha Balakrishnan, Cilia Chong, Khor Bin Yun, Joanne Leong, Melissa Sasidaran, Soo Jin Yun, Yvonne Young Ai Peng - on backing vox, and claps by the fun sizes and Syahredzan Johan.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Students Have Right to Wear ‘Be Happy, Not Gay’ T-Shirt, 7th Circuit Appeals Court Rules



By Martha Neil. Posted by ABA Journal on 2 March 2011.

A suburban Chicago school district that promotes tolerance must also allow students to express opposing views, so long as they are not unduly disruptive, a federal appeals court ruled as it upheld the right of high schoolers to wear a "Be Happy, Not Gay" t-shirt.

"[A] school that permits advocacy of the rights of homosexual students cannot be allowed to stifle criticism of homosexuality," writes Judge Richard Posner in yesterday's opinion (PDF) in Zamecnik v. Indian Prairie School District.

"The school argued (and still argues) that banning “Be Happy, Not Gay” was just a matter of protecting the 'rights' of the students against whom derogatory comments are directed. But people in our society do not have a legal right to prevent criticism of their beliefs or even their way of life."No

Adding that same-sex marriage is still "highly controversial," he notes that high school students, who will soon be old enough to vote, should be educated to discuss the issues of the day. Further, he goes on to say, "there is no generalized 'hurt feelings' defense to a high school’s violation of the First Amendment rights of its students."

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Abortion: The choice is between life and death

Published by LifeSiteNews.com

By Kathleen Gilbert.

SANTA MARIA, California, March 1, 2011 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Several decades after an abortion left Jane Russell unable to bear children and spurred her to become an outspoken pro-lifer and adoption advocate, the silver screen beauty died yesterday at the age of 89. In lieu of flowers, the family of the born-again Christian actress is asking for donations in her honor to Care Net, a pro-life pregnancy resource center network.

Jane Russell, the brunette bombshell of the films The Tall Men and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, whose image became a popular pinup for World War II servicemen, passed away of respiratory failure at her Santa Monica home Monday.

Leading a wild lifestyle early on, Russell later became, in her words, “a teetotal, mean-spirited, right-wing, narrow-minded, conservative Christian bigot” - but not before an illegal abortion caused her to lose her fertility.

The experience, which she says nearly killed her, led her to become outspoken about abortion, denying that any circumstance - rape or incest included - justified taking the life of an unborn child.

“People should never, ever have an abortion. Don’t talk to me about it being a woman’s right to choose what she does with her own body. The choice is between life and death,” Russell declared in one quotation widely attributed to her.

In another quotation cited by IMDB.com, Russell said that when she found herself pregnant at 18, “The only solution was to find a quack and get an abortion. I had a botched abortion and it was terrible. Afterwards my own doctor said, ‘What butcher did this to you?’ I had to be taken to hospital. I was so ill I nearly died. I’ve never known pain like it.”

Even decades after the procedure was made legal in America, loss of fertility remains a common side effect of abortions: post-abortive women telling their stories through Silent No More Awareness frequently testify to losing the ability to bear children as a consequence of their abortions.

Her struggle conceiving led Russell to adopt three children and to found the World Adoption International Fund in 1955. She also started the ‘Hollywood Christian Group,’ a weekly Bible study she hosted at her house for Christians in the film industry. Russell, who divorced once and was married two more times, is survived by her three children, six grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.

After confirming her death on Monday, her family suggested that donations be made in her name to Care Net Pregnancy & Resource Center at 121 W. Battles, Santa Maria, CA, as well as CASA of Santa Barbara County, a group that helps abused children find a court advocate.

Care Net, which oversees a nationwide network of 1,100 pregnancy centers, specializes in helping women facing unplanned pregnancies by providing practical help as well as emotional support.

'Our Christianity is our lifestyle – we can’t take it on and off’


8:32PM GMT 01 Mar 2011. Published by The Telegraph UK.

Eunice Johns greets me, a total stranger, with an embrace. “I like to hug,” she says. A minute later, when I am looking for a tissue to blow my nose, she hands me half her packet. These are the actions of a true Christian. And that’s the problem. Eunice lives according to the instruction she finds in the Bible – and one of those instructions is that sex should be confined to marriage. For that reason, she and her equally beaming, gentle husband, Owen, have not been allowed to foster children.

Yesterday, two High Court judges upheld the decision of Derby City Council not to approve the Johns family as carers. There were no objections to them saying grace before meals or taking foster children to church on Sunday. The sticking point was their answer to the question: “Would you tell a child it was OK to be homosexual?” The Johns replied that they would not. They would love a child regardless, but not endorse that lifestyle.

Both Eunice, 62 and Owen, 65, are born-again Christians. They came to Britain from Jamaica in their teens and found their “vibrant” form of worship – clapping and gospel singing – out of kilter with the Church of England. They joined The Church of the God of Prophesy, based in Tennessee; Eunice teaches at Sunday school.

In the Eighties, when the last of their own four children was soon to leave home, the couple took up fostering in their four-bedroom house. “We love children and we wanted to give something back to society,” says Eunice, a retired nurse. Over the course of a decade or so, while Owen worked at Rolls-Royce, they had dozens of children to stay with them for three- or four-week spells, providing respite for their regular carers.

After a gap of a decade, during which they ran a catering business, they decided to return to fostering in 2007, offering respite care for five- to eight-year-olds. Their motive was not financial – “We didn’t even find out how much the money was,” says Eunice, even though foster carers can earn £250 per child per week. But this time, after several interviews, they were not put on a training course. Instead, to their surprise, they received a letter thanking them for withdrawing their application.

The problem? Their views, they learnt, had disbarred them from caring for other people’s children under the 2007 Equalities and Sexual Orientation regulations. As interpreted by Derbyshire social workers, and now the law courts, this means that they have to endorse homosexuality. “I worked with homosexuals as a nurse and it was never a problem,” says Eunice. “The issue never arose with any of the children who came to stay with us. If it were to, I would ask social services for a professional to deal with it.”

She might have done better to fudge the issue when asked a direct question. “But,” she protests, “our Christianity isn’t something we can just take on and off. It is our lifestyle.” Her husband adds that this ruling represents “the first stage of persecution”.

In the courtroom battle, Christianity has lost to equality rights. But the real losers here, say Eunice and Owen, are the children who won’t have loving homes, because people like themselves will be put off from coming forward. Many Christians with strong Biblical objections to homosexuality are of Afro-Caribbean origin – the very social group most in demand for fostering and adoption.

Several other members of their Pentecostal congregation are foster carers. The difference between them and the Johns is that they weren’t scrutinised during the last three years. In other local authorities, Christians with similar views have been approved because the ruling has not been uniformly applied. This week’s judgment comes at a time when demand has never been greater: since the death of Baby P in 2007, ever more children have been taken into care.

Social services like to match parents’ and children’s ethnic backgrounds. But, says Eunice, “can’t they match us with children from similar religious backgrounds? Only this week Derbyshire social services were advertising for more black foster carers. Many people were waiting for this ruling to decide whether to apply.” Now they may not offer to share their homes.

A good thing, too, says Cathy Ashley, chief executive of the Family Rights Group. “It is unfortunate that this case is being portrayed as religion pitched against liberal human rights,” she insists. “But the state has to provide children with homes that are not just loving but supportive. Even if the children the Johns want to foster are too young to be concerned about their own sexuality, they might have a homosexual brother and this could be a problem.

“There is a danger of saying that anything is good enough because there is a shortage of carers, but these children have often been through hell. Instead, we need to encourage more people to come forward as potential carers, to look more carefully at aunts and uncles who could be carers, and to question whether so many children need to be taken into care at all.”

The new ruling has also met with approval from many Christians who don’t share the Johns’s views. “Christ himself said nothing about gay people,” says Michael Arditti, a gay Christian and author of Lourdes, a novel that debates Christian versus secular values. “The only aspect of personal relationships that Christ consistently condemned was divorce. People who propagate hatred are directly responsible for the huge number of homophobic attacks which continue to blight the lives of ordinary people. We cannot stop such people injecting their poison in their own children, but we can stop them from doing so to other people’s.”

Eunice and Owen, however, don’t appear militant except when they quote the Bible. Indeed, they would never have taken their case through two lower courts to the High Court had Eunice not been watching the Revelation Channel three weeks after Derby turned them down. There, she heard about the case of Vince and Pauline Matherick, whose 11-year-old foster child was removed from their care by Somerset social services after they, too, refused to endorse homosexuality.

The Mathericks’ case was fought by the Christian Legal Centre, which succeeded in getting them reinstated. Andrea Williams, director of the CLC, says she has 50 cases on her books, all concerned with the rights of Christians to live according to their consciences. “We aren’t focused on the homosexual issue,” she says, “but it’s the issue of our times.”

In some instances, the line between private belief and human rights is clearer. If a child were being cared for by Jehovah’s Witnesses who did not believe in blood transfusions, the state would intervene. “The rights of the child have to come first,” agrees Eunice, who is using the CLC’s central London offices as a base.

But many of the test cases taken up by the CLC deal with the fuzzy area between personal conscience and public office: registrars sacked for not wishing to conduct same-sex civil ceremonies, B&B owners who don’t want to take unmarried couples, a nurse suspended for offering to pray for a patient. She feels that Christians are given less respect for their views than other religions. The peculiar thing, she claims, is that such battles are not seen elsewhere in Europe, except for Sweden. “In Italy and Germany, the Johns would not have this trouble. When the Italians were told that they couldn’t have crosses on classroom walls, they simply ignored it. In America, Christians would invoke the first amendment on the freedom to worship. This country is in the vanguard of legislation – for better or worse, depending on your point of view.”

The case may now go to appeal. Ideally, Williams would like a commission of inquiry to investigate whether the new equality and sexual orientation legislation infringes other rights. In the meantime, the Johns have an empty spare bedroom.

Christian government minister slain in Pakistan



By Agence France-Presse, Updated: 3/2/2011. Published by MSN News.

In broad daylight, unknown assailants sprayed bullets on the car of minorities minister Shahbaz Bhatti after he came out of a home in a residential area of Islamabad, police said.

"Three or four armed men riding in a white Suzuki car intercepted his official vehicle," city police chief Wajid Durrani told reporters.

"The attackers were clad in shawls and fired bursts on him, and he died," Durrani said. The minister's driver was wounded.

The police chief insisted that Bhatti had been provided with proper security, but said the minister was not accompanied by his security detail when the attack happened.

"The squad officer told me that the minister had directed him to wait for him at his office. We are investigating the matter from different angles," Durrani said.

Bhatti was dead on arrival at Islamabad's Shifa hospital, doctor Azmatullah Qureshi confirmed.

Bhatti, a member of Pakistan's tiny Christian community, had been a vocal opponent of the controversial blasphemy law along with the liberal late governor of Punjab province, Salman Taseer.

Taseer, a member of the main ruling Pakistan People's Party (PPP), was shot dead on January 4 by one of his own police bodyguards outside an Islamabad coffee shop.

The murder -- the most high-profile political assassination in Pakistan since former prime minister Benazir Bhutto was killed in December 2007 -- drew condemnation from the United States and Europe.

But Taseer's confessed killer has been feted as a hero by Islamist hardliners, who like the bodyguard rejoiced at the death of an "apostate".

After Taseer's assassination, Bhatti said he was also receiving death threats, telling AFP that he was "the highest target right now".

Pakistan's law against blaspheming Islam carries the death penalty. While no one has ever been sent to the gallows for the crime, activists say the law is used to exploit others from personal enmity or because of business disputes.

Religious groups held protests in several Pakistani cities after Taseer had vowed to amend the law.

Controversy over the legislation flared both within Pakistan and internationally after a Christian mother of five, Aasia Bibi, was sentenced to hang last year for making derogatory remarks about the Prophet Mohammed.

Bibi was arrested in June 2009 after Muslim female labourers refused to drink from a bowl of water she was asked to fetch while out working in the fields.

Days later, the local women complained that she made derogatory remarks about Mohammed. Bibi was set upon by a mob, arrested by police and sentenced on November 8.

Politicians and conservative clerics have been at loggerheads over whether Bibi should be pardoned. But following Taseer's death, the government has made it clear it does not support reform of the blasphemy law.

Only around three percent of Pakistan's population of 167 million are estimated to be non-Muslim.

"During this Bibi case I constantly received death threats. Since the assassination of Salman Taseer... these messages are coming to me even publicly," Bhatti said after the governor was shot dead.

But he had insisted that he would work as usual.

"I'm not talking about special security arrangements. We need to stand against these forces of terrorism because they're terrorising the country," Bhatti told AFP at the time.

"I cannot trust on security.... I believe that protection can come only from heaven, so these bodyguards can't save you."