Britain Convicts Christian For Praying Near Abortion Clinic (Worthy News Focus)
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
LONDON (Worthy News) – A Christian man is considering appealing his conviction in Britain for silently praying near an abortion clinic.
In comments obtained by Worthy News on Wednesday, Adam Smith-Connor, 51, said, âThe court has decided that certain thoughts â silent thoughts â can be illegal in the United Kingdom. That can not be right.”
In what his supporters called âa shock ruling,â the Bournemouth Magistratesâ Court gave Smith-Connor âa conditional dischargeâ and ordered him to pay prosecution costs of 9,000 British pounds ($11,631).
Experts said the âconditional dischargeâ meant that Smith-Connor would only be sentenced if convicted of any future offenses within the next two years.
Smith-Cornor was prosecuted as he had been praying inside a âbuffer zoneâ at an abortion clinic in Englandâs coastal resort town of Bournemouth in November 2022, Worthy News learned.
The areaâs Bournemouth, Christchurch, and Poole Council charged Smith-Connor, a military veteran and father of two who fought in Afghanistan, after âan interrogation on the nature of his prayers,â his lawyers said.
THOUGHT POLICE
The Alliance Defending Freedom UK (ADF UK), the legal group representing Smith-Connor, said the interrogation began when he stopped praying for a few minutes.
He was âconfronted by officers who asked âwhat is the nature of your prayer?â, on a public green within a large âbuffer zoneâ-an area covering several streets in the town,â recalled AFD UK in a statement.
In the so-called âbuffer zone,â authorities âhave banned various expressions of pro-life or Christian belief, including through offering help to women in crisis pregnancies or praying,â the AFD UK added.
Five councils across Britain already have active âbuffer zonesâ or âcensorship zonesâ banning prayer and offers of charitable help to women on the public streets near abortion facilities, the group explained.
Britainâs Parliament voted to roll out âbuffer zonesâ around every abortion facility in England and Wales as part of the Public Order Act 2023.
âThe Labour Government announced plans to implement the zones on October 31. Under the national law, âinfluencingâ someoneâs decision to âaccessâ abortion services will become a crime,â the AFD UK said.
However, âAll I did was pray to God, in the privacy of my own mind â and yet I stand convicted as a criminal?â countered Smith Connor. âI served for 20 years in the army reserves, including a tour in Afghanistan, to protect the fundamental freedoms that this country is built upon,â he stressed.
CHURCH VOLUNTEER
âI continue that spirit of service as a health care professional and church volunteer. It troubles me greatly to see our freedoms eroded to the extent that thought crimes are now being prosecuted in the UK.â
The AFD UK wondered why âdespite battling bankruptcy warnings and being forced to cut âall non-essential spending,â Bournemouth, Christchurch & Poole Council spent more than 90,000 pounds ($116,284) on legal fees to prosecute the offense, which carries a maximum penalty of 1,000 pounds ($1,292).â
The defense contended that the defendantâs âprayerful thoughts and the fact that he held certain beliefs and opinions could not in themselves amount to a crime, particularly when he stood peacefully and silently on a public street.â
The AFD UK stressed that Smith-Connor âdid not outwardly manifest his prayer by kneeling, speaking, or holding any signs. He made every effort to be out of the line of sight of the abortion facility, positioned behind a tree with his back to the facility, and did not engage with any other person.â
Jeremiah Igunnubole, the legal counsel for ADF UK, called the conviction that Christian man for praying âa legal turning point of immenseâ proportions.
âA man has been convicted today because of the content of his thoughts â his prayers to God â on the public streets of England,â he complained.
âWe can hardly sink any lower in our neglect of basic fundamental freedoms of free speech and thought,â Igunnubole said. âWe will look closely at the judgment and consider options to appeal. Human rights are for all people â no matter their view on abortion.â
NO 1984?
British Conservative politician Miriam Cates compared the case to the dystopian novel and cautionary tale â1984â by English writer Eric Arthur Blair, better known as George Orwell.
âThis isnât 1984, but 2024 â nobody should be on trial for the mere thoughts they hold in their mind. Itâs outrageous that the local council is pouring taxpayer funding into prosecuting a thoughtcrime at a time where resources are stretched thin,â she said.
âBuffer zone regulations are disproportionately wide, leaving innocent people vulnerable to prosecution merely for offering help or simply holding their own beliefs.â
It comes amid a broader debate in Britain and other European countries about âpro-lifeâ Christians opposing abortions.
Scotland, for instance, has enacted new abortion legislation that could criminalize praying at home within designated zones.
The Abortion Services Act (Scotland) 2024 may result in prosecution for activities
in own homes if these actions cause âharassment, alarm, or distressâ to staff and patients at abortion clinics, local media reported this week.
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