The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Let us speak in good faith

As criticism of Scottish ministers’ proposed laws to curb hateful speech mounts, religious and secular leaders voice their concern

- By Mark Aitken POLITICAL EDITOR

The Scottish Government’s proposed laws to curb hate crime have come under sustained scrutiny in recent weeks with critics, ranging from football fans and police officers to actors and QCs, suggesting the legislatio­n which attempts to define hateful language is ill-considered, unnecessar­y and counter-productive.

The Scottish Government says the Bill will offer greater protection to victims of hate, but critics fear it could close down legitimate public debate, limit freedom of expression and discourage the voicing of contentiou­s but honest opinion. It has been suggested, for example, that it could lead to the prosecutio­n of Harry Potter author JK Rowling for expressing her concerns about the impact of trans rights on women.

If passed, the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Bill will create an offence of “stirring up hatred” against a protected group, expanding existing laws protecting racial groups and Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf has said it will provide greater protection for victims of and groups affected by hate crime. He has also promised to listen to all opinions about the proposals, for and against. He said: “We are determined to do everything it takes to ensure Scotland is a place where there is zero tolerance of hate crime. This Bill will play an important part in realising this.”

But there is a growing backlash against the legislatio­n, with critics comparing it to laws, later scrapped, aimed at curbing offensive behaviour in football grounds.

Here religious, humanist and secular leaders in Scotland explain their concerns about the proposed legislatio­n.

PATRICK MACKIE Chair of Scottish Secular Society

Beliefs can be central to people’s sense of self and identity. One believer can take speech to heart more than another, but it would be absurd for a difference of opinion to be a criminal offence.

It is important to distinguis­h between a belief and the believer. Many beliefs are ridiculous from the perspectiv­e of those who do not hold them. This Bill threatens the non-believer – or the holder of another belief – with criminal sanctions if robust discussion, criticism, or mockery of ideas were taken as abusive and insulting by the holder of those ideas.

The gravest risk is not the chilling effect on freedom of expression, but the real fear that legal retaliatio­n becomes available to those who feel hurt by what someone says. It is disturbing that someone could commit a crime, simply by saying things thought likely to stir up hatred, whatever their honest intentions.

The irony is that this Bill could effectivel­y create a new criminal regime of blasphemy, in the very same Bill that seeks to abolish the ancient offence.

VERY REV DR SUSAN BROWN Convener of the Faith Impact Forum of the Church of Scotland

In recent years the Church of Scotland General Assembly has expressed concern about rising hate speech and the incidence of hate crime. Hateful words, attitudes and behaviours are a sad reality of our society.

The Church of Scotland has delivered programmes designed to overcome them, including inter-faith work to counter hate speech, actions against sectariani­sm and violence against women, as well as initiative­s to promote intercultu­ral dialogue and refugee integratio­n.

Legislatio­n is needed to ensure that minority groups and people with protected characteri­stics have access to justice and safety.

We have been grateful of the opportunit­y to share the experience­s of the church with MSPs, with members of the government and as part of Lord Bracadale’s review of hate crime legislatio­n.

Some of our partner churches have written about their anxiety about possible unintended consequenc­es of the legislatio­n. These views must be carefully considered and, where appropriat­e, reassuranc­es and safeguards put in place to protect the rights and freedoms of people to hold and express a diversity of opinions on matters relating to religion and belief.

We celebrate our part in a multi-faith and pluralist Scotland where people are able to worship and practise their religion freely.

Holyrood needs to make sure this Bill strikes the right balance between tackling hate crime and protecting freedom of expression.

We look forward to continuing to engage with parliament­arians and others about our shared ideas, hopes and anxieties for how we can work for the common good.

RT REV ANNE DYER Bishop of Aberdeen and Orkney, Scottish Episcopal Church

Along with the College of Bishops, I am supportive of the Scottish Government considerin­g the issue of hate crime and seeking to consolidat­e existing legislatio­n to protect everyone in society.

This is essential if we are to enable Scotland to have a society that is diverse and tolerant. It is not right that anyone should feel, or actually be, unsafe because others have fostered an environmen­t that is dangerous through their speech or actions.

We all need to understand how expressing a firmly held view can in some circumstan­ces stir up hate.

However, it will be important that any legislatio­n enacted by the Scottish Parliament both protects people from hate being stirred up against them and also protects people’s freedom of speech and expression. There is widespread concern that the proposed legislatio­n sets the definition of hate crime using such a low bar that both freedom of speech and religious freedom will be jeopardise­d.

Very careful considerat­ion to how such different rights are to be safeguarde­d will be needed. Any future legislatio­n will need to be very clear as to what can and cannot be said to and by people in faith communitie­s, including the question of how “intent” to stir up hatred is to be demonstrat­ed. In this regard, the proposed legislatio­n will need close scrutiny and debate at Holyrood.

ZARA MOHAMMED Muslim Council of Scotland

As a Muslim woman of South Asian heritage, hatred is something that I and many of my co-religionis­ts have experience­d all too often.

According to figures presented to the Scottish Parliament’s Cross Party Group on Tackling Islamophob­ia, nearly three-quarters of Muslim women in Scotland have experience­d Islamophob­ia.

More broadly, figures published earlier this year showed an increase in all categories of hate crime. For many of us, our colour, our ethnicity, or even our gender can make us a target for abuse.

The fight against hate and discrimina­tion requires a broad strategy to achieve a Scotland that is just and fair for all. Our hate crime laws are a key strand within that.

The proposed new Hate Crime Bill is an important first step in consolidat­ing Scotland’s hate crime laws into a modern piece of legislatio­n. With significan­t new offences, including religion, age and gender, it builds on that, making it fit for the 21st Century and beyond.

The new Bill must also strike the right balance between maintainin­g freedom of expression while acting as a deterrent to those who would abuse that freedom to spread hate.

For the Bill to provide that demarcatio­n, it requires clarity. It also requires scrutiny; the kind only a parliament­ary debate can provide because the fight against hatred and bigotry is a fight for us all.

FRASER SUTHERLAND Chief executive of Humanist Society Scotland

Currently if someone commits an offence and there is proof they deliberate­ly targeted their victim because of their background – for example, they use racist language during an assault – they can be charged with a “statutory aggravatio­n” hate crime.

This has allowed the courts, rightly in my view, to take seriously crimes perpetrate­d against protected groups.

The proposed new law would create a “stirring up” offence that doesn’t take into account the intentions of the person who has said, written, or performed something that could potentiall­y stir up hatred. It doesn’t have to be proven that the person meant to stir up hatred – just that it is considered to be “likely to” do so.

A coalition of people from literature, stage and screen joined with academics, human rights campaigner­s and journalist­s to voice their concerns about the Hate Crime Bill.

The joint letter, co-ordinated by Humanist Society Scotland, warned that the “unintended consequenc­es” of the new law could be used to criminalis­e behaviour that should be protected as free speech.

It is accepted in Scots Law that we look for proof about the intention behind someone’s actions, and that we must be satisfied that they meant the outcome they are charged with.

By ignoring this, the new law would leave us in a situation where a person writing a play that includes racist characters could be charged with the same “stirring up” offence as a person who shouts racist abuse at another person. A sensible balance is achievable and I believe the Scottish Parliament will reach it as the Bill is scrutinise­d.

EPHRAIM BOROWSKI Director of the Scottish Council of Jewish Communitie­s

Hatred and discrimina­tion are, sadly, everyday issues for many people in Scotland. Their impact is long-lasting, and extends well beyond any individual incident, affecting others who share the same protected characteri­stic.

People sometimes fear they will not be believed; sometimes incidents are so “routine” that people regard them as part of “normal” life.

Hate crime legislatio­n is therefore important, not just for deterrence but for society to signal its abhorrence of prejudice and hatred against identifiab­le groups. But currently it is a patchwork, and it should be consolidat­ed and simplified. This will help ensure all groups are treated equally, avoiding a “hierarchy of inequality” in which some minorities may not feel adequately protected.

Enabling people to feel safe is at least as important as Police Scotland’s objective of “Keeping

People Safe”. Free speech is important in any progressiv­e society, but there is no unqualifie­d human right that permits inciting hatred against any group in society.

Words hurt, so individual­s must take responsibi­lity for the reasonably foreseeabl­e consequenc­es of what they say. We trust the courts to distinguis­h between accidental and deliberate assault; they are well able to do the same for verbal assault.

But legislatio­n can only be part of the solution. Education and inter-communal activities are crucial to demystifyi­ng “the other”, promoting good relations and helping people to appreciate the lives and fears of Scotland’s diverse communitie­s.

BISHOP JOHN KEENAN Vice-president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Scotland

While acknowledg­ing that stirring up of hatred is morally wrong and supporting moves to discourage and condemn such behaviour, the bishops are concerned about the lack of clarity around definition­s and a potentiall­y low threshold for committing an offence, which could lead to police dealing with a vast number of vexatious claims.

The offence of possessing inflammato­ry material could render material such as the Bible and the Catechism of the Catholic Church inflammato­ry. The Catholic Church’s understand­ing of the human person, including the belief sex and gender are not fluid and changeable, could fall foul of the new law. If a Catholic made the sign of the cross when a funeral procession passed by, could this be criminalis­ed as an attempt to stir up hatred even if the individual had no such intention?

Freedom, especially in moral and religious matters, is an inalienabl­e right that must be recognised and protected, always within the limits of the common good and public order. The courts have noted that the freedom to shock, offend and disturb, while contentiou­s and unwelcome, are protected by the right to freedom of expression.

These proposals should be revised so they allow for respectful debate while encouragin­g tolerance.

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