1. Introduction
1. Freedom of thought, conscience and religion is a
fundamental right, enshrined not only in Article 9 of the European
Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5) and Article 18 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, but also in many national, international
and European instruments. It is a basic right of the greatest importance.
The right to hold religious beliefs, to change them or abandon them
freely, to promote and express them openly, and to expect the State
to protect individuals as they exercise their rights is among the
most fundamental civil rights.
2. The Council of Europe’s legal basis includes the European
Convention on Human Rights and the case-law of the European Court
of Human Rights (“the Court”). Other relevant international instruments
include the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
and the 1981 United Nations Declaration on the Elimination of All
Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or
Belief. The following documents adopted by the Parliamentary Assembly
are also relevant in this context:
Resolution 1846 (2011) on combating all forms of discrimination based on religion,
Resolution 1763 (2010) on the right to conscientious objection in lawful medical
care and
Resolution 1928 (2013) on safeguarding human rights in relation to religion and
belief and protecting religious communities from violence. The inalienable
character of freedom of thought, conscience and religion was also
recalled by the Committee of Ministers in its 2011 Declaration on
religious freedom.
3. Cases of discrimination on the grounds of religion and belief
which affect minority religious groups in Europe are rightfully
condemned and given close attention by the international institutions,
including the Council of Europe, the European Union and the Organization
for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), as such discrimination
constitutes a threat to the foundations of a democratic and pluralist
society. Likewise, acts of intolerance, discrimination or even violence
are sometimes committed against persons belonging to a majority
religious group. Any call for or act of intolerance, discrimination
and violence should worry us, irrespective of the religious group
which is targeted. Therefore, it is clear that acts of intolerance
and discrimination directed against Christians, be they members
of a majority or a minority religious group, strike at the core
values of the Council of Europe.
4. In his 2012 address to the members of the diplomatic corps
accredited to the Holy See, Pope Benedict XVI said: “In many countries
Christians are deprived of fundamental rights and side-lined from
public life; in other countries they endure violent attacks against
their churches and their homes. At times they are forced to leave
the countries they have helped to build because of persistent tensions
and policies which frequently relegate them to being second-class
spectators of national life. In other parts of the world, we see
policies aimed at marginalising the role of religion in the life
of society, as if it were a cause of intolerance rather than a valued
contribution to education in respect for human dignity, justice
and peace.”
5. According to the 2012 inquiry “Clearing the Ground inquiry
– Preliminary report into the freedom of Christians”, carried out
by British members of parliament, some British local authorities
“place unnecessary barriers to wider Christian contribution”.
“Christians
are not asking for special treatment, but we are looking for a level
playing field and for sincerely held beliefs to be given equal space
in our law and in our society. I hope the Government will take this
report very seriously”, noted MP Gary Streeter.
6. In the “Clearing the Ground” report, British parliamentarians
suggested promoting a concept of “reasonable accommodation” for
religious beliefs in the public sphere in order to better ensure
that Christians, as well as members of other faiths, have the room
to articulate and live out their beliefs in all areas of their life, both
private and public.
7. In August 2011, the United Kingdom’s Equality and Human Rights
Commission publicly stated that Christians were more discriminated
against than other religious groups in the workplace and suggested
that, where possible, the concept of reasonable accommodation should
be considered. However, the Commission subsequently retracted this
statement.
8. It is against this background that, on 29 April 2012, I tabled,
with other members of the Assembly, a motion for a resolution on
“Tackling intolerance and discrimination in Europe with a special
focus on Christianity”. This motion for a resolution stated that
“in seeking to ensure respect and equality, it is also necessary
to shed light on the growing bias against practising Christians”.
A major challenge in the drafting of this report lies in the absence
of any Europe-wide surveys on intolerance and discrimination against
Christians. However, an illustrative cross-section of incidents
that have taken place over the past three years are referred to
in this report, based on national reports provided by governments,
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and civil society organisations.
With this report, I intend to shed light on a phenomenon which is
largely overlooked. I will examine best practices and preventive
measures, and in particular the concept of “reasonable accommodation”,
which allows all groups to live in harmony in the respect and acceptance
of their diversity.
2. Freedom
of religion: a fundamental right in a democratic and pluralist society
9. Freedom of religion is regarded by the European Court
of Human Rights as one of the foundations of a democratic and pluralist
society. The Court underlined in the case of
Kokkinakis
v. Greece the fundamental nature of the
rights guaranteed in Article 9 of the Convention and has developed
an extensive case law through which it has clarified the scope of
the protection afforded by the Convention. The right to freedom
of religion encompasses freedom of conscience and freedom to manifest
one’s religion or beliefs in worship, teaching, practice and observance,
and is closely linked to other fundamental rights such as freedom
of assembly, freedom of expression and freedom of choice in education.
2.1. Freedom of conscience
10. The right to freedom of conscience is protected by
Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 18
of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Article 9
of the European Convention on Human Rights and Article 10 of the
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union.
11. In his 2013 address to the members of the diplomatic corps
accredited to the Holy See, Pope Benedict XVI emphasised that “in
order effectively to safeguard the exercise of religious liberty
it is essential to respect the right of conscientious objection.
This ‘frontier’ of liberty touches upon principles of great importance
of an ethical and religious character, rooted in the very dignity
of the human person. They are, as it were, the ‘bearing walls’ of
any society that wishes to be truly free and democratic. Thus, outlawing
individual and institutional conscientious objection in the name
of liberty and pluralism paradoxically opens by contrast the door
to intolerance and forced uniformity”.
12. Conscientious objection is a recurrent issue which relates
to the place of religions in our societies and the accommodation
of religious beliefs. In recent years, issues related to religion
and beliefs at workplaces have become increasingly topical in some
Council of Europe member States.
13. As regards the health sector, Assembly
Resolution 1763 (2010) on the right to conscientious objection in lawful medical
care noted that, in the vast majority of Council of Europe member
States, conscientious objection is adequately regulated. In particular,
it observed that there is a comprehensive and clear legal and policy
framework governing conscientious objection by health-care providers,
ensuring that the interests and rights of individuals seeking legal
medical services are respected, protected and fulfilled.
14. However, there is a need to balance different rights and this
should be handled with care in order not to fuel intolerance. The
former Secretary of State at the Health Ministry of Norway, Robin
Kåss, once stated that: “If you refuse to perform a blood transfusion,
you can’t be a surgeon. If you deny a patient contraception or a referral
for an abortion, you can’t be a general physician.”
Such
statements are not helpful because they disregard the need to reconcile
different rights.
15. Conscientious objection has also been invoked in several European
countries which have authorised same-sex marriage or civil unions.
In the United Kingdom, two employees, Ms Ladele and Mr McFarlane,
were dismissed from employment for expressing a conscientious objection
to performing a duty that they believed would condone, approve or
facilitate same-sex conduct. In neither case was a person ever refused
a service. Ms Ladele and Mr McFarlane appealed through the domestic
legal system and ultimately lodged an appeal before the European
Court of Human Rights. The Court reiterated the importance of protecting
the right to freedom of religion and accepted that, in the case
of Ms Ladele, the local authority’s requirement that all registrars
of births, marriages and deaths be designated also as civil-partnership
registrars had had a particularly detrimental impact on her because
of her religious beliefs. However, the Court held that the United Kingdom
acted within its margin of appreciation after the domestic courts
found against the applicants and dismissed the claim for reasonable
accommodation requested by the applicants.
16. Despite this judgment of the European Court of Human Rights,
in July 2014, in the United Kingdom, Margaret Jones, a senior registrar
at the Bedford register office who had been dismissed for gross
misconduct for refusing to perform same-sex marriages was reinstated
after a successful appeal. The appeal board (a panel of members
of Central Bedforshire Council) considered that ways of accommodating
her religious beliefs had not been sufficiently investigated and
noted that in other cases informal customs and practice arrangements
had been developed in order to accommodate individual staff situations.
17. This decision is a positive development and it is hoped that
it will pave the way for more accommodation of religious beliefs
in the workplace in the United Kingdom. This is notably due to the
fact that this decision had regard to guidance from the United Kingdom’s
Equality and Human Rights Commission. In March 2014, the Commission
issued a series of guidance documents relating to the implementation
of the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013. The Commission recalled
that, while the registrars are not granted by law an exemption from
any of their duties, those whose religious beliefs prevent them
from undertaking all the responsibilities of their public office
can explore the potential options with their employer.
18. Such a pragmatic approach was for a long time a characteristic
of the Dutch way of dealing with freedom of religion. During my
visit to Netherlands (25-26 August 2014), I was informed that until
the 1960s, there was a tradition of accommodation called “pillarisation”
(
verzuiling) according to
which each religious or political group organised itself into its
own schools, political parties, newspapers, trade unions, hospitals,
etc. Professor Vermeulen described this system as a peaceful “living
apart”, a form of voluntary segregation along religious, social
and political divides.
However, since the 1960s, secularism,
individualism and multiculturalism have developed quickly in the
Netherlands. As secularism has become the dominant view in the Netherlands, religious
groups feel that they have less public space and that their views
are sometimes ridiculed and presented as outdated. All of this results
in tensions as regards the place of religions in society.
19. In the Netherlands, the law authorising same-sex marriage
was adopted in 2001. Like in the United Kingdom, a limited number
of civil servants (approximately 80 people) invoked their religious
beliefs for not participating in the performance of same-sex marriages.
The practice was that an exemption could be granted to them, at
local level, on a case-by-case basis. As from 1 November 2014, such
an exemption is no longer allowed. All my interlocutors confirmed
that the objection of civil servants to perform same-sex marriages
had never prevented a same-sex marriage from taking place. However,
despite the absence of any practical problem, the initiators of
the 2014 law made this objection a matter of principle. The prohibition
of any objection to perform a same-sex marriage was therefore analysed
as a symbolic attack against the more traditional Christian minority.
The entry into force of this new law implies that the conscience
of an individual civil servant is no longer accommodated in the
workplace regardless of whether or not their religious beliefs could
practically be accommodated.
This constitutes
a step backwards compared to the tradition of pragmatic tolerance
which previously prevailed in the Netherlands.
20. Employment is not the only area where freedom of conscience
is being challenged. Increasingly, freedom of conscience cases are
appearing in other areas of public life, including the provision
of goods and services. For example, in the United Kingdom, bed and
breakfast owners who refused, on the ground of their religious beliefs,
to provide double-bedded accommodation to unmarried couples, have
lost their case before the domestic courts.
2.2. Freedom of expression
21. Freedom of expression is protected under Article 19
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 11 of the
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union and Article 10
of the European Convention on Human Rights. However, Christians
in some member States are harassed while publicly promoting and
defending religious values, including traditional marriage. Furthermore,
some Christians have been investigated, suspended and dismissed
from work for wearing religious symbols in the workplace, in schools
or public space, in breach of their right to manifest religion in
public.
22. An important case relating to the wearing of religious signs
at the workplace was recently brought before the European Court
of Human Rights. This case,
Eweida and
others v. United Kingdom, involved two Christian women
who were told by their respective employers that they must either
cover up or remove their cross necklaces.
In
the case of Ms Eweida, the European Court of Human Rights ruled
that the British court accorded too much weight to the employer’s
corporate image at the expense of the wish of the applicant to manifest
her religion and, therefore, that the criterion of proportionality
was not met in this case. In addition, the Court noted that there
was no evidence that the wearing of other previously authorised
items of religious clothing, such as turbans and hijabs, by other
employees, had any negative impact on British Airways’ brand or
image. As a consequence, the Court found a violation of Article 9
of the Convention. However, in the case of Ms Chaplin, the Court
considered that the reason for asking her to remove the cross, namely
the protection of health and safety on a hospital ward, was inherently
more important than a corporate image. The Court observed that two
Sikh nurses had been told they could not wear a bangle or kirpan
and that flowing hijabs were prohibited. The Court therefore found
no breach of Article 9 of the Convention.
23. It is well established that freedom of expression encompasses
criticism of others’ beliefs and opinions. However, this is not
an absolute right and limitations can be imposed in order to protect
the enjoyment of other rights, including the right to hold religious
beliefs and to express them.
24. The European Court of Human Rights has developed an extensive
case law on freedom of religion and freedom of expression, and has
defined the States’ duties in this respect. The Court requires the
States Parties to be neutral and impartial towards religions and
beliefs, but also to ensure protection against gratuitous offence,
incitement to violence and hatred against a religious community.
In the case of
Otto-Preminger-Institut v.
Austria, the Court held that the State has “an obligation
to avoid as far as possible expressions that are gratuitously offensive
to others … and which therefore do not contribute to any form of
public debate capable of furthering progress in human affairs”.
25. In her report on the religious dimension of intercultural
dialogue, Ms Anne Brasseur noted that: “In some extreme cases …
the effect of particular methods of opposing or disparaging religious
beliefs may be such as to inhibit those who hold such beliefs from
exercising their freedom to hold and express them. The State has a
responsibility to prevent such unreasonable behaviour and to ensure
to believers the peaceful enjoyment of the right guaranteed by Article
9. It may therefore consider it necessary to take measures aimed
at repressing certain forms of conduct, including the imparting
of information and ideas judged incompatible with respect for the
freedom of thought, conscience and religion of others.”
26. In a report on the relationship between freedom of expression
and freedom of religion prepared at the request of the Assembly,
the European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission) expressed
the view that “in a true democracy imposing limitations on freedom
of expression should not be used as a means of preserving society
from dissenting views, even if they are extreme. Ensuring and protecting
open public debate should be the primary means of protecting inalienable
fundamental values such freedom of expression and religion at the
same time as protecting society and individuals against discrimination.
It is only the publication or utterance of those ideas which are
fundamentally incompatible with a democratic regime because they
incite to hatred that should be prohibited”.
27. In recent years, there have been a number of cases reported
in the media and courts, where Christians have been arrested and
even imprisoned because of the expression of their religious view
on a number of subjects. For example, several Catholic Bishops have
been charged or been the subject of a criminal investigation for
alleged hate speech violations for homilies or other expression
of doctrinal Christian values.
Many more
Christian preachers have also been arrested for publicly preaching
on the streets.
It seems
the basis for many of these legal proceedings is vague or ill-defined
so-called “hate speech” laws that allow over-zealous law-enforcement
officers to stifle public debate.
28. Lastly, I would like to refer to the approach adopted by the
United Kingdom, which is of particular relevance in this respect.
The Public Order Act protects the rights of individuals to express
their views on sexual conduct by stating that “for the avoidance
of doubt, the discussion or criticism of sexual conduct or practices or
the urging of persons to refrain from or modify such conduct or
practices shall not be taken of itself to be threatening or intended
to stir up hatred”.
This provision
is in my view well-balanced and should be carefully considered by
the member States of the Council of Europe when seeking a balance
between potential conflicting rights such as freedom of religious
expression and the right not to be discriminated against.
2.3. Freedom of assembly
29. Freedom of assembly is guaranteed under Article 20
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 21 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and Article 11
of the European Convention on Human Rights. Nevertheless, some Christian
events, prayer meetings or services are disrupted by attacking groups
which disagree with various standpoints these groups hold. The methods
include verbal insult, incitement to violence, material damage and
even physical attacks. Such incidents have taken place in Austria,
Belgium,
Germany,
Italy,
the Netherlands and Spain.
30. I have also been informed that some Oxford Colleges have banned
a Christian training conference for young leaders, known as “The
Wilberforce Academy”, for apparently breaching “equality and diversity”
codes by stating that marriage is between a man and a woman.
Similarly,
a major conference was banned in London in 2012 by the Law Society
and the United Kingdom Government Conference Centre (Queen Elizabeth II
Conference Centre) because it promoted the view that marriage should
be between a man and a woman.
31. The Guidelines on freedom of peaceful assembly prepared by
the Venice Commission and the Panel on Freedom of Assembly of the
OSCE’s Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights recalled
that the protection of the freedom of assembly is crucial to creating
a tolerant and pluralist society in which groups with different
beliefs, practices or policies can exist peacefully together. As
regards counter-demonstrations, the Guidelines provide that: “the
right to counter-demonstrate does not extend to inhibiting the right
of others to demonstrate. Indeed demonstrators should respect the
right of others to demonstrate as well. Emphasis should be placed
on the State’s duty to protect and facilitate each event where counter-demonstrations
are organised or occur, and the State should make available adequate
policing resources to facilitate such related simultaneous assemblies,
to the extent possible, within ‘sight and sound’ of one another.”
2.4. Acts of vandalism
and desecration
32. While this is far from concerning Christians only,
hostility in European countries toward religious buildings and property
comes across in numerous instances of vandalism, destruction of
property, and defamatory displays, including the destruction or
defamation of Christian symbols, demolition of places of worship
and the desecration of cemeteries or tombs of historical and cultural
heritage value. Such incidents directed against Christians are all
too often overlooked by the public authorities.
33. The OSCE/ODIHR and the Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination
against Christians, based in Vienna (Austria), reported incidents
of cemetery desecration, vandalism of churches, damage to property, arson
and physical assault in many Council of Europe member States.
34. In France, 84% of the vandalism in 2010 was directed against
Christian sites, according to the former French Minister of the
Interior, Brice Hortefeux.
In
Sweden, official law-enforcement figures recorded in 2012 a total
of 785 anti-religious crimes (651 in 2011), of those 200 (162 in
2011) were classified as motivated by bias against Christians.
The
Italian Observatory “No Cristianofobia” has highlighted Radio Vatican’s
report that 2012 has been the worst year for religious freedom in
Spain, with numerous incidents of attacks against religious symbols
or clergy. More recently, in its report of July 2014 on the human
rights situation in Ukraine, the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights reported an increasing number of attacks
on Protestant and Roman Catholic churches in the areas controlled
by the armed groups.
35. In its report published in April 2014, the Observatory on
Intolerance and Discrimination against Christians provided information
about 158 incidents which took place in 2013 in member States of
the European Union, as well as in San Marino and Switzerland.
During
a hearing organised by the Committee on Equality and Non-Discrimination
on 5 March 2014 in Vienna, Dr Gudrun Kugler, Director of the Observatory, underlined
that vandalism of religious sites was widespread in Europe and that
numerous cases concerned Christian sites. Dr Kugler indicated that,
while there was no persecution of Christians in Europe, forms of intolerance
were emerging and that negative stereotyping of Christians was an
issue.
36. In reaction to an increase in acts of vandalism and desecration
in many Council of Europe member States, in 2010 the former Council
of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, Thomas Hammarberg, qualified these
acts as hate crimes and pointed out that they were “urgent human
rights issues”.
The European Commission
against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) has also reported attacks
against religious sites and property, in particular in Bosnia and
Herzegovina,
Poland,
“the
former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”
and
Turkey.
ECRI
expressed concern at reports that in some cases such incidents tended
to be minimised by the authorities and stressed the need to address
such issues squarely by condemning racist attacks whenever they
occur and carrying out adequate investigations into every such case.
I fully agree that hate crimes against religious groups should be
publicly condemned and the authorities should ensure that the perpetrators
are identified and prosecuted.
2.5. Freedom of choice
in education
37. In some European countries, there exist limitations
to the right of parents to opt their child out of individual classes
or an entire course that the parents deem contrary to their religious,
moral and ethical beliefs, for example certain forms of sex education
classes.
38. This was the case in Spain, until 2012, when the government
finally decided to discontinue the compulsory class “Education in
citizenship”, to which nearly 55 000 parents had conscientiously
objected because it included approaches to sexuality and abortion
which were unacceptable to them.
They had appealed to the European Court
of Human Rights to “require the Spanish State to respect ideological
neutrality in the educational system to prevent future violations
of rights”. “Schools need to recover the tranquillity, consensus
and respect for the freedom of all in order to carry out their mission.”
39. In Germany, some parents seeking to educate their children
according to a Christian worldview have been prosecuted for trying
to remove their children from State education programmes. These
parents requested an exemption because they considered that the
content of this teaching was contrary to Christian sexual ethics.
The school refused their request for exemption arguing that school
attendance was mandatory. The parents prevented their children from
attending the State education classes and were fined by the school. The
German jurisdictions upheld the fines and subsequently sentenced
the parents to imprisonment for non-payment. In 2008, these parents
lodged a complaint before the European Court of Human Rights for
violation of their right to freedom of religion and to educate their
children in accordance with their religious beliefs. However, in
its judgment of 2011 (
Dojan v. Germany),
the Court ruled that Germany had not overstepped its margin of appreciation
in setting up and interpreting rules for its education system. The
Court considered that “there was no indication that the education
provided had put into question the parents’ sexual education of
their children based on their religious convictions or that the
children had been influenced to approve of or reject specific sexual
behaviour contrary to their parents’ religious and philosophical
convictions”.
40. The mandatory nature of school attendance also implies that
homeschooling remains illegal in Germany, regardless of parents’
religious or cultural reasons for wishing to do so. Following a
mission to Germany in 2006, the United Nations Special Rapporteur
on the right to education noted in this respect “that distance learning
methods and homeschooling represent valid options which could be
developed in certain circumstances, bearing in mind that parents
have the right to choose the appropriate type of education for their children,
as stipulated in Article 13 of the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights”. The Special Rapporteur added that “the
promotion and development of a system of public, government-funded education
should not entail the suppression of forms of education that do
not require attendance at a school” and indicated having received
complaints about threats to withdraw the parental rights of parents
who chose homeschooling methods for their children.
41. However, in the case of
Konrad
v. Germany (2006), the European Court of Human Rights
did not question the German practice of mandatory schooling and
noted that there was no consensus among the Council of Europe member
States with regard to compulsory attendance of primary schools.
In this decision, the Court
supported the German Constitutional Court’s ruling according to
which “the general interest of society in avoiding the emergence
of parallel societies based on separate philosophical convictions
and the importance of integrating minorities in society”. This argument
of “parallel societies” has been criticised as fallacious, in particular
in the light of the fact that fundamental rights and liberties precisely
safeguard the option to live in different ways, even separately
from society.
42. In
Resolution 1904 (2012) on the right to freedom of choice in education in Europe,
the Assembly recalled that the right to freedom of choice in education
is intimately linked to freedom of conscience. This right is enshrined
in Article 2 of the Protocol to the European Convention of Human
Rights (ETS No. 9), which provides that: “No person shall be denied
the right to education. In the exercise of any functions which it assumes
in relation to education and to teaching, the State shall respect
the right of parents to ensure such education and teaching in conformity
with their own religious and philosophical convictions.”
43. In the case of
Folgerø and others
v. Norway, the Court recalled that the second sentence
of Article 2 of the Protocol “does not prevent States from imparting
through teaching or education information or knowledge of a directly
or indirectly religious or philosophical kind” and that “it does
not even permit parents to object to the integration of such teaching
or education in the school curriculum, for otherwise all institutionalised
teaching would run the risk of proving impracticable”.
However, the Court also held
in a case against Turkey that the State must refrain from pursuing
an aim of indoctrination that might be considered as not respecting
parents’ religious and philosophical convictions.
In
this case, a follower of the Alevi faith complained that the compulsory
class in “religious culture and ethics” in State schools only included
the teaching of Islam Sunni.
44. In
Resolution 1904 (2012), the Assembly recommended that member States recognise
clearly in law, where this has not already been done, the right
to establish and run private schools, as well as the possibility for
these schools to be part of the national education system. A good
model is offered by the Netherlands where freedom and neutrality
of education are guaranteed by the Constitution (Article 23). Two
types of schools exist in the Netherlands: State schools and “special”
schools which comprise denominational schools and neutral or general
schools (for example Montessori schools). Special schools represent
two thirds of schools in the Netherlands. They are all State-funded
and enjoy a high level of autonomy, in particular as regards the pedagogical
content and the choice of teachers. Religious schools are allowed,
under the General Equal Treatment Act, to recruit teachers in accordance
with their religious beliefs, provided that the requirements imposed
on the latter do not lead to discrimination on the “sole” ground
of sexual orientation, marital status, political opinion, etc.
45. However, I was informed during my visit to the Netherlands
(25-26 August 2014) that a contentious issue was whether Christian
schools could dismiss teachers on the basis of their private conduct,
specifically, sexual conduct, based on the exemption allowed by
the General Equal Treatment Act. A draft law aimed at removing from
this Act the “sole fact” principle is under discussion.
3. Best practices
and preventive measures
3.1. The OSCE Resolution
on combating intolerance and discrimination against Christians in
the OSCE area
46. The Organization for Security and Co-operation in
Europe, including its Office for Democratic Institutions and Human
Rights (ODIHR), has drawn attention to the problem of intolerance
and discrimination against Christians. The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly
recommended in its Resolution on combating Intolerance and discrimination
against Christians in the OSCE area, adopted in Belgrade in July
2011, that a “public debate on intolerance and discrimination against
Christians be initiated and that the right of Christians to participate
fully in public life be ensured” (paragraph 12); that “legislation
in the participating States, including labour law, equality law,
laws on freedom of expression and assembly, and laws related to
religious communities and right of conscientious objection be assessed”
in view of discrimination and intolerance against Christians (paragraph 13);
and “encourage(d) the media not to spread prejudices against Christians
and to combat negative stereotyping” (paragraph 15).
47. “That hate crimes against individuals based on their real
or perceived adherence to Christianity occur in the OSCE region
is indisputable”, said Ambassador Janez Lenarčič, the Director of
ODIHR. “Such attacks instil fear, not just in the individuals they
target directly, but also in the wider community.”
3.2. The Global Charter
of Conscience
48. Observing that “the growing tensions involving religion,
worldview and ideology have become a massive global problem”, an
international group of leading academics and activists launched
the Global Charter of Conscience in June 2012.
The Global Charter of Conscience
is a declaration reaffirming and supporting Article 18 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (on freedom of thought, conscience and
religion). It was crafted over the course of three years by people
of many faiths and non-believers, including more than 50 academics,
politicians of many persuasions and NGOs, all committed to a partnership
on behalf of “freedom of thought, conscience and religion” for all.
“We need to provide a solution to do away with the polarisations and
the aggravating bitterness surrounding religion in public life –
as in the so-called culture wars”, said Dr Thomas Schirrmacher,
a German sociologist of religion, who oversaw the drafting of the
text of the Charter. The Global Charter of Conscience encourages
a new culture of civility where robust and noisy public debate is
seen as being good for society.
49. The articles, values and principles of the Charter, and the
promotion of these, have already been instrumental in opening spaces
for the understanding, discussion and prevention of attacks on freedom
of thought, conscience and religion or belief in Europe for all,
including Christians. This has happened in Germany, Sweden and the
United Kingdom, since the launch of the Charter in June 2012. It
is paving the way to establishing guidelines to solve issues surrounding
religion in the public sphere. It aims to build a civil and cosmopolitan
public square which would be hospitable to people’s worldviews and
the way they manifest themselves in public. In this civil public
square, people and communities would be mindful of social peace, public
order and the rights of others as they manifest their convictions
alone or in community with others. Freedom of conscience would be
recognised by all as a fundamental right, the enjoyment of which
should only be limited as a matter of exception, under restrictive
conditions prescribed in international instruments such as the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
50. The Charter is also helping the emergence of discussions about
promoting education and understanding about various worldviews,
including through civic education about religions and beliefs, and
related civil liberties. Finally, it has helped to provide training
for employees in the public sector in order to understand, rigorously
assess and deal with achievements and challenges to freedom of thought,
conscience and religion.
51. In a special recommendation for this text, Professor Dr Heiner
Bielefeldt, United Nations Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion
or belief, said: “The Global Charter of Conscience is a powerful
document. I appreciate its enormous potential to inspire practical
commitment on behalf of freedom of thought, conscience, and religion
or belief and to contribute to a better understanding of human rights
in general. In the spirit of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, the Charter underlines the universal validity of freedom
of religion or belief as an inextricable part of a holistic human
rights agenda in which civil, political, economic, social and cultural
rights can mutually reinforce each other.”
3.3. The concept of
reasonable accommodation for religious reasons
52. The concept of “reasonable accommodation” provides
a “common sense” approach to many of the challenges Christians,
and indeed other religious groups, face in the workplace. Reasonable
accommodation places the onus on the employer to accommodate the
religious practice of an employee, providing it does not cause the
employer an undue burden. In Europe, this concept has been used
in disability discrimination for many years and in North America
it has been successfully applied to religion or belief.
53. This concept first emerged in the United States and Canada
in equality law as a means of handling religious diversity.
It was then
applied to other grounds of discrimination, and primarily to disability.
This concept means that measures need to be taken in order to ensure
effective equality and full enjoyment of rights. Professor Stefan
Hammer (Department of Legal Philosophy, Law of Religion and Culture
of the University of Vienna) explained during the hearing organised
by the Committee on Equality and Non-Discrimination, in Vienna on
5 March 2014, that this concept is not applied to groups or categories
of individuals, but on a case-by-case basis to persons, taken individually,
who are specifically and personally affected by a regulation or
measure which prevents the full enjoyment of their rights. The objective
pursued by the concept of reasonable accommodation is therefore
not to exclude the general application of the law but to remove
the barriers faced by persons in situations of discrimination for
reasons relating to their religion, age, health or other grounds.
54. In Europe, the duty of reasonable accommodation is generally
accepted by the Council of Europe member States when it applies
to disability, as a corollary of the prohibition of indirect discrimination.
In the case of
Glor v. Switzerland,
the European Court of Human Rights developed its understanding of
the duty of reasonable accommodation, based on Article 14 of the
Convention (prohibition of discrimination), but without expressly
naming it as such.
In this case, the applicant
claimed that he was the victim of discriminatory treatment because,
although willing, he was prevented from doing his military service
and, instead, he was obliged to pay the exemption tax because his
disability (diabetes) was considered a minor one by the competent
authorities. The Court recalled that “Article 14 does not prohibit
distinctions in treatment which are founded on an objective assessment
of essentially different factual circumstances and which, being
based on the public interest, strike a fair balance between the
protection of the interests of the community and respect for the
rights and freedoms safeguarded by the Convention”. The Court then
noted that “special forms of civilian service tailored to the needs
of people in the applicant’s situation are perfectly envisageable”
and found a violation of Article 14 because of the failure of the
Swiss authorities “to strike a fair balance between the protection
of the interests of the community and respect for the Convention
rights and freedoms of the applicant”.
55. The possible extension of the duty of reasonable accommodation
to religion, age or other grounds is not largely accepted by the
Council of Europe member States at the moment. Only very few of
them formally apply the duty of reasonable accommodation to grounds
other than disability (for example Bulgaria and Sweden). In the
case before the European Court of Human Rights involving four British
Christians (Eweida and others v. United
Kingdom), this legal concept was promoted before the
Court by the applicants and several third party interveners. On
that occasion, the Court decided not to consider the legal concept
in its decision; however, there is no reason why reasonable accommodation
cannot be adopted more broadly in the European setting.
56. However, it should be noted that, in practice, accommodation
is applied in many member States of the Council of Europe in the
field of employment – flexible working hours and leave for religious
holidays – or regarding dietary requirements. As regards this last
aspect, the European Court of Human Rights recently found a violation
of Article 9 because the prison authorities had refused to provide
the applicant with a vegetarian diet as required by his Buddhist
convictions, referring in particular to “a positive duty on the
State to take reasonable and appropriate measures to secure the
applicant’s rights under paragraph 1 of Article 9” of the Convention.
57. Another interesting example of accommodation of religious
beliefs was reported to me during my visit to the Netherlands (25-26
August 2014). An orthodox Christian group opposed the payment of
compulsory medical insurance on the grounds of its religious beliefs.
The arrangement found was that the members of this group would pay
an extra income tax or payroll tax (instead of the monthly premiums
deducted from the wage) which would be allocated to a special fund.
These people would pay their medical care and would be reimbursed
depending on the amount they had contributed. This arrangement was
made possible by the State in co-operation with the group concerned.
It provides a good example of a successful accommodation of the interests
of the public health system, on the one hand, and of the religious
beliefs of a minority group, on the other. In addition, it is interesting
to note that the Dutch people have the possibility to exclude from
their medical insurance a number of pre-defined medical acts, such
as euthanasia or sex reassignment.
58. Lastly, it should be recalled that in its
Resolution 1928 (2013) on safeguarding human rights in relation to religion
and belief and protecting religious communities from violence, the
Assembly, almost unanimously, called on member States to accommodate
religious beliefs in the public sphere, ensure the right to well-defined conscientious
objection in relation to morally sensitive matters, respect the
right of parents to ensure education and teaching in conformity
with their own religious and philosophical convictions, change their
legal regulations whenever these go against the freedom of association
for groups (including religious communities defined by their religion
or beliefs), and, where the restitution of church property is not
yet concluded, to speed up this process and finish it in the short
or medium term.
4. Conclusions
59. Freedom of religion is a fundamental right protected
by international treaties and instruments. However, in recent years,
hostility towards religion in Europe is to be seen in numerous acts
of violence and vandalism as well as in limitations to the expression
of faith. This phenomenon concerns minority religious groups and also
majority religious groups. It denies the contribution of religion
to our societies and undermines the democratic and pluralist nature
of our States.
60. While a legal response remains important, legislation is only
part of a larger toolbox to respond to the challenge of intolerance
and discrimination against Christians. Any related legislation should
be complemented by initiatives coming from various sectors of society
geared towards a plurality of policies, practices and measures nurturing
social consciousness, tolerance and understanding, change and public
discussion. This is with a view to creating and strengthening a
culture of peace, tolerance and mutual respect among individuals, public
officials and members of the judiciary, as well as rendering media
organisations and religious/community leaders more ethically aware
and socially responsible.
61. States, media and society have a collective responsibility
to ensure that acts of incitement to intolerance and discrimination,
also when targeted at Christians, are denounced and acted upon with
the appropriate measures in accordance with law.
62. The use of reasonable accommodation in the context of religious
beliefs would ensure that the protection afforded to freedom of
religion by international human rights law is effectively implemented
in the Council of Europe member States and that the right to practice
one’s religion is not an empty word. Pragmatism should prevail in
this respect. The accommodation of religious beliefs should be considered
by the member States of the Council of Europe in a spirit of tolerance,
within the borders defined by law and according to a case-by-case approach.
I am convinced that the application of the concept of reasonable
accommodation to religious beliefs in the Council of Europe member
States would allow all religious groups to live in harmony in the
respect and acceptance of their diversity.