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No Apology from Pastor in Muslim Vilification Case
A pastor found guilty of vilifying Muslims in Australia says that his
conscience would not allow him to apologize for his 2002 comments.
Penalties by the court are still pending.
Pastor
Daniel Scot said that Muslims were aiming to take over the country
and encouraging domestic violence. He also called Islam an inherently
violent religion, according to the Herald Sun. The pastor said his
conscience would not allow him to give an apology or acknowledgment,
and added that he was prepared for jail. Photo Credits: Spirituality.org _________________________________________
At a Christian seminar in March 2002, Pastor Daniel Scot said that
Muslims were aiming to take over the country and encouraging domestic
violence. He also called Islam an inherently violent religion,
according to the Herald Sun.
The judge in the case has yet to assign a date to hand out a penalty,
which could include a mandatory speech of apology or a fine. The
judge stated that the pastors' comments demeaned Muslims.
"It was presented in a way which is essentially hostile, demeaning
and derogatory of all Muslim people, their God, Allah, the prophet
Mohammed and in general Muslim religious beliefs and practices," said
Judge Michael Higgins.
The Islamic Council of Victoria had sought a court order that the
pastors' ministry and both pastors acknowledge religious
discrimination in statements in their newsletters and website. The
requested posting would also include the judge's findings that both
were not credible witnesses and that they had not distinguished
between mainstream and extremist Muslims in their 2002 comments, said
the Herald Sun.
The Sun reported that on May 2, the pastor said his conscience would
not allow him to give an apology or acknowledgment, and added that he
was prepared for jail.
The defendants in the case were Daniel Scot and Danny Nallilah of
Catch the Fire, an evangelical ministry. They were both found guilty
of violating the Victorian Racial and Religious ACT. The ministry and
two defendants were criticized over a March 2002 seminar in
Melbourne, where several articles in a newsletter attacked Islam,
said the Age.
In a statement a few days after the initial decision in December,
Waleed Aly, the spokesperson for the Islamic Council, which had
brought the case to court, said that the pastors' comments were not
conducive to dialogue.
"When your places of worship are described as `Satan's strongholds,'
you sit up and take notice. That kind of thing helps no-one and
certainly doesn't enhance debate."
In the same statement, the President of the ICV, Yasser Soliman, said
he had hoped the case could have been resolved outside the Victorian
Civil and Administrative Tribunal.
"We were saddened that despite our attempts to resolve the issue
informally, we were left with no alternative than to pursue it
through VCAT. We couldn't ignore the continuing vilification that was
taking place in public."
The case drew attention from the Becket Fund, a law-firm dedicated to
freedom of religion cases. It issued a statement on May 4 warning the
Australian government that it would be violating "international
obligations" to protect human rights if its laws were used to punish
religiously motivated speech. The case was tried in the state of
Victoria.
The judge had ruled that "unreasonable" critiques of Islamic theology
were made, according to Becket Fund. The law-firm also said that
Australia was violating the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights.
"By allowing its court system to become a sermon review board that
censors religious expression, Australia not only violates
international law but also undermines the true basis for tolerance,
that is, the freedom to openly discuss and debate views that differ
from one's own," said Roger Severino, counsel for the Becket Fund for
Religious Liberty.
The pastors' ministry, Catch the Fire, is currently appealing the
decision in the Australian Supreme Court. The ministry claimed that
the Judge in the case was biased against them.
Story Credits: Christian Post
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