Carey Challenged to Reject Job Discrimination Campaign
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr George Carey, has been challenged to distance himself from the campaign being waged by evangelical Christians to scupper job protection for gay people. The Gay and Lesbian Humanist Association (GALHA) has written to Dr Carey calling on him to make clear his opposition to the campaign being waged by the Christian Institute and the Evangelical Alliance which aims to have a European Union employment directive amended to exclude “sexual orientation” from its protection.
GALHA Chairperson Derek Lennard commented: “We feel that if Dr Carey is going to be true to his religious principles he will not want to see gay people disadvantaged in employment. We have asked him to make a public statement condemning the Christian Institute’s high pressure campaign to have sexual orientation removed from the terms of the new European Union directive. Dr Carey has repeatedly stated that he is not homophobic and that his opposition to the repeal of Section 28 and the lowering of the age of consent for gay men was on the grounds of ‘protecting children’, but no such consideration can be involved in employment protection. The Archbishop should therefore give a lead to Christians and encourage them to support the directive’s aim of making discrimination against gay people at work illegal.”
For the past week, the Christian Institute’s representatives have been busily visiting MPs in Westminster in an effort to persuade them to oppose the directive. At the same time, the Evangelical Alliance is organising a training day for personnel officers and human resources directors in Christian organisations telling them how they should deal with the new human rights legislation.
A report in the Church of England Newspaper quotes Martyn Eden, Public Affairs Director of the Evangelical Alliance, as saying: “If a member of staff says he is a Christian but then has an adulterous affair or cohabits outside of marriage, there is nothing that an employer can do about that.” He said that the Evangelical Alliance has started personnel and recruitment training for Christian organisations in order to help them be much more certain that they are not likely to take on people who are likely to follow such a course.
The newspaper report also quotes Ann Allen, Convenor of the Church of Scotland Board of Social Responsibility, the largest provider of social care in Scotland, which already has a policy of employing only committed Christians. “All our work is done in the name of Jesus Christ”, said Allen, “so those who work in his name have to know him.”
In this section
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- Speaking out about homophobia in other cultures
- Oh dear me, what could the matter be? The Catholic Herald fumes at diversity.
- Gay Campaigner Strudwick Calls For End To Abusive "Conversion" Therapy
- Why Secularism is Vital for Gay Rights
- End of GALHA Pride Stall season
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- Christians Plan to Ambush Age-of-Consent Bill
- Gay Concessions on Euro Job Directive “Make it Worse”
- New Religious Attack on Gay Rights
- Carey Challenged to Reject Job Discrimination Campaign
- GALHA Write-In Steps up Fight for Gay Employment Rights
- Poll shows Gays have Lost Faith in Religion
- Religious Groups Preparing to Screen Gays out of Jobs
- Government Promises Employment Protection for Everyone – Except Gays
- First Shot Fired in War between Gays and the Churches
- Gay Humanists Slam Prince Charles’s Views as Naive and Divisive
- Livingstone’s Election Good News for Gays and Humanists
- GALHA Slams Hague’s Support for Homophobic Christians
- Gay Humanist Website Leads the Way
- Liberal Democrat MP Supports GALHA
- Religion is the Main Source of Anti-Gay Prejudice
- GALHA Condemns Churches’ Sex Education Guidelines
- Humanists Welcome Call for Sex Debate
- Cardinal’s Hatemongering ‘Dishonest, Destructive and Dangerous’
- Christian Hostility to Repeal of Section 28 is No Surprise
- 1999 archive
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