Proposals in a non-public member's invoice to ban so-called “conversion remedy” would “very probably” be a breach of the Human Rights Act, a prime lawyer has mentioned.
Labor MP Lloyd Russell-Moyle's Conversion Practices (Prohibition) Invoice is debated on Friday. It proposes a ban on providing or selling conversion practices whereas promising to guard mother and father and non secular practices.
Senior human rights lawyer Jason Coppel KC is unconvinced, warning that the phrases of the invoice are so “broad” that they’d criminalize expressions of non-public perception “even when made with out expressions of hatred or intolerance”.
He additionally mentioned it might result in a “severe intrusion” into the church buildings' regular follow.
“Whereas some makes an attempt have been made to create exemptions or exceptions to make sure that the follow of faith will not be prohibited, the principle prohibition within the invoice … stays broad and applies to church buildings and different spiritual organizations and to these, expressing sure views, together with gender-critical views, outdoors of those settings,” he mentioned.
Coppel mentioned the invoice would intervene with spiritual freedoms protected by the Human Rights Act.
“I imagine that the Invoice… if handed, would represent a severe interference with the official actions and practices of Christian church buildings and non secular societies, which might be opposite to their rights protected by the ECHR and subsequently the Human Rights Act of 1998. ,” he mentioned.
“They’d additionally intervene with the official expression of gender-critical views, once more in a method that will probably violate ECHR rights.”
That's his conclusion in a authorized opinion offered by The Christian Institute, which is preventing the introduction of a ban on conversion remedy.
Simon Calvert, deputy director of The Christian Institute, mentioned the wording of the invoice was “sloppy” and the definitions had been “too broad”.
“If handed, it might criminalize Christians and gender-critical mother and father for having conversations that most individuals would discover completely affordable,” he mentioned.
“It's not about defending individuals from abuse. That's already unlawful. There's no 'hurt' check within the invoice. It's about punishing individuals for talking out.”
“Each iteration of the conversion remedy ban we've seen, whether or not at Westminster or Holyrood, has raised the identical points.
“It’s not potential to legislate on this controversial space with out trampling on primary human rights.”