By Barney Zwartz, Religion editor, The Age, June 23, 2005, Page 3.
This is a more detailed report than the one in
yesterday's Age..
Christian pastors Danny Nalliah and Daniel Scot yesterday vowed to go to jail
rather than paying $68,690 for public apologies for vilifying Muslims. Mr Nalliah called Victoria's religious vilification law "sharia (Islamic) law by stealth", "a foul
law" and invalid, while Mr Scot said: "You don't compromise truth for
fear of jail."
Judge Michael Higgins, of the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal,
yesterday ordered Christian group Catch the Fire Ministries, Mr Scot and Mr Nalliah to publish apologies for comments made at a
Judge Higgins said the pastors were otherwise of good character, but their
passionate religious beliefs caused them to transgress the law. He ordered them
to publish apologies on their website, in their newsletter and in four
advertisements in
In December, in the first case under
Judge Higgins said
financial compensation would not be appropriate in yesterday's case, but a
public apology would. He ordered Catch the Fire and the pastors to insert the
same advertisement - using words set by the tribunal and of specified size - in
The Age and Herald Sun on two Saturdays and Mondays before
August 31. (This would cost $25,200 in The Age and $43,490 in the Herald
Sun.)
Mr Scot, who did not appear yesterday, said his teaching was taken from the
Koran and much of his
Mr Nalliah, who is about to campaign in England
against a proposed vilification law there, said it was surprising that the
Islamic Council had not complained about two Sydney Muslim leaders who
supported rape and jihad. "Didn't they vilify Muslims, if Muslims don't
believe that?"
The pastors' lawyers have already appealed against the verdict to the Supreme
Court, claiming that the act is unconstitutional and that Judge Higgins made
errors and showed "irredeemable bias". The case will be heard next
month.
Islamic Council of Victoria spokesman Waleed Aly said the remedies were light, but the council was
satisfied.
"This is not about punishing anyone or retribution or financial gain. The
statement is clearly not an apology, and they are asked to give an undertaking
not to do something that is illegal anyway," he said."
At http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/pastors-vow-to-go-to-jail-on-hate-case/2005/06/22/1119321792033.html