20 November 2024

Britain must not be a spectator at this carnage

By

Religious freedom is a human right. Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights makes that clear. Despite every UN member having signed onto this principle, religious persecution is on the rise globally. Christians are the target of most of it. For this reason, the new Labour government must make sure that the UK continues to be a champion of religious freedom. The fact that the government has still not appointed a new Special Envoy for Freedom of Religion or Belief (FoRB) is a cause of great concern.

Christians around the world are suffering increasing levels of persecution. The number of countries where Christians experience high to extreme levels of persecution has nearly doubled since the early 1990s. Currently, more than 365 million Christians are estimated by Open Doors to be facing high levels of religious persecution and discrimination. According to the International Society for Human Rights, four out of five acts of religious discrimination around the world are directed at Christians.

This dire situation was first brought to my attention when I was Foreign Secretary. Even back then Open Doors were estimating that at least 200m Christians were facing high levels of religious persecution.

Behind this shocking statistic were countless stories of suffering. One such story was a family of Christians from Pakistan who told me about the persecution they faced. After their children were falsely accused of blasphemy by school bullies – who had tried to forcibly convert them to Islam and later physically attacked them – the situation quickly went from bad to worse. In response to threats of further violence, the father took the boys into hiding. Eventually the family decided to flee to the UK to claim asylum.

I knew that the UK had a strong history of fighting for religious freedom around the world. Indeed, Prime Minister Theresa May had just appointed the government’s first Special Envoy for FoRB. I was not convinced, however, that we were doing enough.

On Boxing Day 2018, I announced that I had commissioned a report into the global persecution of Christians and that I had asked the Rt Rev Philip Mounstephen, Bishop of Truro, to lead it. I wanted the report to investigate the extent and nature of the problem, review how the Foreign Office was responding and make recommendations for how we could improve. I asked him to report back to me by the following Easter.

The report’s findings were shocking. Not only did it find that Christians were the most targeted group for religious persecution, but it also suggested that current levels were arguably reaching the threshold for genocide. As I feared, it also found that the UK government had been inconsistent when speaking out against persecution and had been reluctant to call out the persecution of Christians if other interests were involved.

Bishop Mounstephen’s report helped make FoRB a policy priority of the Foreign Office. We have since used our position on the United Nations Human Rights Council, Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe, Council of Europe and in the G7 to advocate for the issue. We even played a key role in founding the International Religion and Belief Alliance. An important driver behind these achievements was our Special Envoy for FoRB.

Sadly, religious freedom does not seem to be particularly important to the new Labour government. Indeed, since the election, the Prime Minister has failed to appoint a new Special Envoy for Freedom of Religion or Belief. Bishop Mounstephen himself has warned that the UK is at risk of losing traction on the issue as well as relevant expertise in the Foreign Office. I would have expected Keir Starmer – as a human rights lawyer with experience in Northern Ireland – to have made FoRB a major foreign policy priority.

Prior to the election, there were efforts being led by the previous Special Envoy for FoRB, Fiona Bruce, to give the position a statutory footing. Unfortunately the bill didn’t pass through the House of Lords before the election. Recently, a new Private Members’ Bill sponsored by the DUP’s Jim Shannon has been tabled. This bill would make the appointment of a Special Envoy for FoRB a legal requirement. I sincerely hope the new government supports it.

Let us use this year’s Red Wednesday to remind Labour of the plight faced by Christians around the world and ask that religious freedom be made a priority again.

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The Rt Hon Jeremy Hunt is the MP for Godalming and Ash and a former Chancellor and Foreign Secretary.

Columns are the author's own opinion and do not necessarily reflect the views of CapX.