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12.33am EST
00:33
Ahead of this week’s parliamentary debate on the religious discrimination bill (read the latest from Paul Karp here), the Hindu Council of Australia has released a statement warning about the bill’s potential impact on “newly arrived and minority” religions.
Surinder Jain from the Hindu Council is urging members to lobby MPs against supporting the legislation, raising concern about the ability of employers to discriminate on the basis of religion to maintain the faith based ethos of an institution:
Any business that claims to be inspired by religious ethos can fire people who don’t belong to their religion. This bill adversely affects minority religions. It especially affects Hindus and other newly arrived religions who have not had time and resources to establish their own schools, hospitals etc.
Jain said this could mean that Hindus who worked in schools, hospitals, aged care and other charities run by Christian faiths could be “actively discriminated against”:
Australia made commendable progress when it replaced its racist Whites only immigration policy. But like a reformed drinker hitting the bottle again, it is now introducing a Bill which will give undue advantage to majority and well established religions at the cost of newly arrived and minority religions.
The Buddhist Council has also raised similar concerns, with Gawaine Powell Davies from the NSW Buddhist Council telling a Senate inquiry last month that the proposed bill did not get the balance right between preventing religious discrimination while also ensuring individuals were protected:
Our concern of all that there is the potential to negatively impact minority religions are minority groups through reducing access to services, particularly where these are government funded, particularly where these are in the bush, where there are not many other opportunities for employment.
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