Saturday, February 09, 2008

The Archbishop Has Stepped Into a Political and Intellectual Minefield

THE INDEPENDENT: The Archbishop of Canterbury's speech this week on the relationship between civil and religious law is a hopeless intellectual muddle. Dr Rowan Williams argues that the UK must "face up to the fact" that some citizens do not relate to the British legal system and that "the law needs to takes some account of that". One of his suggestions is "a constructive accommodation with some aspects of Muslim law".

The glaring problem with such an "accommodation" is that only Muslims would be bound by sharia. In a liberal and open society all citizens must be equal before the laws of the nation. There can be no laws which apply only to certain religious or cultural groups. Dr Williams says the idea that there is "one law for everybody and that's all there is" is dangerous. On the contrary, that unified legal system is what underpins our freedoms. If Dr Williams thinks "one law" is dangerous, he should consider the social consequences of different groups being governed by different legal jurisdictions. Leading article: The Archbishop has stepped into a political and intellectual minefield >>>

THE INDEPENDENT:
Church moves to the defence of Archbishop By Colin Brown and Jerome Taylor

THE TELEGRAPH:
Archbishop, with sharia it's all or nothing By Charles Moore

LE FIGARO:
Le primat anglican par qui le scandale arrive De Cyrille Vanlerberghe

Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)