Wednesday, July 15, 2026

At Least, They Apologised!

Amnesty International UK expresses 'regret' over report that branded Christian groups 'anti-rights.

Amnesty International UK

Amnesty International UK has expressed "regret" over the publication of a report that labelled dozens of Christian, pro-life and gender critical organisations as "anti-rights". 

The report was hastily removed from Amnesty's website last week after it triggered a huge backlash, with JK Rowling and John Cleese among the high profile figures denouncing it. 

At the time, Amnesty said the report had been temporarily withdrawn so that an internal review could be carried out. 

In a further statement addressing the furore on Monday, Amnesty International UK said the report had not gone through the proper internal checks before being published on its website. 

"We regret that this briefing was uploaded to our website without going through the established internal review processes that are in place to ensure consistency, accuracy and alignment with Amnesty International UK's positions," a spokesperson said. 

"Its use of language does not reflect the position of Amnesty International UK which is why it was promptly removed.

"We remain committed to defending human rights, including both the rights of women and the rights of trans people.

"Human rights protections are strongest when they apply equally to everyone, and no community should be singled out for unfair treatment or denied their dignity and rights."

The report had claimed that the UK faced a "growing threat" from an "anti-rights movement" which it alleged was "fostering moral panic" and working to "roll back human rights protections”, especially for women and LGBT+ people. 

The report called on the Charity Commission to review the charitable status of an extensive list of organisations that supposedly formed this "anti-rights movement". 

Numerous Christian and pro-life groups were listed, including The Christian Institute, the Evangelical Alliance UK, the Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales, Christian Concern, the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children (SPUC), and CARE - all of which are socially conservative. 

They rejected being labelled "anti-rights" and expressed regret over Amnesty's drift from its roots, having been founded by a devout Christian to be a voice for religious and political prisoners of conscience. 

Ciarán Kelly, Director of The Christian Institute, said: “Amnesty has fallen a long way from its origins defending prisoners of conscience. Now it has a pick ‘n’ mix approach to human rights.  

“Tragically, this doesn’t include the right to life for babies in the womb, the rights of women being exploited through prostitution, or the rights of freedom of conscience and speech.”

Many of the organisations on the report's blacklist were pro-life and crisis pregnancy centres. 

Pro-life advocate Fleur Elizabeth Meston said: “It is rather sad to see Amnesty International, founded by a devout Christian to defend prisoners of conscience, now branding people with the ‘wrong’ consciences as ‘anti-rights’.

“Its founder, Peter Benenson, built Amnesty around freedom of thought, conscience, religion and expression. Today, Amnesty treats disagreement on abortion and sex-based rights, and even belief in Christian teachings, as though they were a threat to humanity.

“Saying biological sex matters is not anti-rights. Campaigning to protect unborn children is not anti-rights. In fact, those of us who hold these beliefs just want human rights for women and babies too.

“Amnesty can waste its time creating these reports, rather than helping those in real danger around the world, but smearing lawful, mainstream organisations as ‘anti-rights’ is completely unworthy of its founding mission.”

Amnesty faced particularly strong criticism for including on the list Beira's Place, a service for female victims of sexual assault that was founded by JK Rowling. 

Also accused of being "anti-rights" was For Women Scotland, which secured the landmark Supreme Court ruling declaring that the legal definition of a woman is based on biological sex. It was among the groups demanding an apology. 

Sonnet: Our Saviour's Love.

Upon that tree of grace, the Saviour bled,

A boundless love for all mankind He bore.
He wore the crown of thorns upon His head,
And opened wide salvation’s sacred door.
No soul too lost, no heart too far away,
For in His unending mercy, all are found.
He turns the darkest midnight into day,
Where sin is deep, His streaming grace abounds.
He calls the weary, bids the heavy rest,
And gently wipes the weeping eye of grief.
A shepherd’s heart, embracing every guest,
Who comes to Him in faith and sweet belief.
O perfect love, poured out for all to see,
That whosoever will, may be set free.

The Unfathomable Darkness of the Church of England. Melanie Searches For Truth As An Outsider Looking In.

 

Acts 7:35.

Butterfly.

Colossians 3.

  4) When Christ, who is your life, appears - then you also will appear with him in glory.

Shameless!

 Andy Burnham is already trying to stitch up Nigel Farage - he's got no shame at all.

Labour are changing the rules in one massive election, to try and lock out Reform from taking the crown, argues Aaron Newbury.

OPINION
By Aaron Newbury, Political Correspondent
13:59, Tue, Jul 14, 2026

BRITAIN-POLITICS-LABOUR-BURNHAM

Burnham has got himself new digs down South (Image: Getty)

Andy Burnham might think he is already walking the corridors of Downing Street, but until asked to take post by His Majesty, he is but a mere backbencher. But that, it would seem, has not stopped him rigging the game before he has even picked up the keys to Number 10. For in just a few weeks the £5million Greater Manchester mayoral by-election - triggered because Andy wanted a nicer digs in London - will take place.

Make no mistake, that costly ballot exists for one reason: because more than 400 Labour MPs agreed none of them were good enough to be the new Labour leader and Prime Minister. So they parachuted in Andy Burnham, the municipal messiah whose main goal it seems is to make as many references to Oasis whilst avoiding talking about what he might do to us all as PM. One of his first big political tests will be ensuring Labour wins the election to choose a new Greater Manchester mayor. But he'll face it safe in the knowledge that the rules for choosing his successor have just been changed. How very convenient!

For Labour this entire sordid process has been about their political survival, and this does little more than prove it.

Mr Burnham was of course, first blocked from returning to Parliament, in Gorton and Denton - for fears they could lose the Mayoralty!

But now, with Andy no longer at the helm, out goes first past the post, the simple system where the candidate with the most votes wins.

In comes the Supplementary Vote, where electors mark a second choice and the also-rans' votes are shovelled around until the right result pops out.

Why does it matter? Because under the old system, with the Left split three ways between Labour, the Greens and the rest, a strong Reform candidate could have romped home.

Now under the new system, losing lefties can gang up, pooling second preferences to lock Reform out.

Funny, is it not, that Mr Burnham, a man who has spent years itching to fiddle with how we vote, should see his side benefit so neatly?See More Comments
This is Labour to its rotten core. When they cannot win under the rules, they simply change the rules. It's the same logic as to why, when their polling plummeted, these cantankerous socialists wanted to let children have the vote.

Why bother beating your opponents when you can just rewrite the rules?

It is Reform that shall feel this dirty deal the most. Stretched and outmanoeuvred, the party has been forced to pull its troops out of Manchester and rush them to Clacton, where Nigel Farage fights a by-election of his own.

Sadly this is the measure of the man about to lead our country. Before a single day in office, his instinct is not to win the argument, but to rig the pitch.

Democracy means letting the people decide, and Mr Burnham's very first act tells you he would rather decide for them. DE.

Wet Toryism?

A broad church no longer.

Kemi Badenoch is redefining Britain's Conservative party as...conservative. Pass the smelling salts.

Kemi Badenoch, leader of Britain’s Conservative party.

This is an expanded version of my column in today’s Times (£).

Kemi Badenoch, who has earned a fearsome reputation for taking no prisoners, has now flourished her knuckledusters at members of her own party.

She is refusing to allow some former Conservative MPs to stand again at the next election because they don’t support her rejection of the 2050 net zero target and her pledge take the UK out of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).

Saying that she was building a “party for the future”, not a “retirement home for failed politicians,” she said that some of her former colleagues “should never have been candidates before” and would soon be informed they wouldn’t be again.

Her move is certainly gutsy. It’s not just that she’s provoking some big beasts in her party by targeting the kind of Tories memorably scoffed at by Margaret Thatcher as “wets”. She’s also challenging one of the cardinal orthodoxies of politics — that to succeed, a party has to be a broad church. She has decided instead that, to meet the demands of these most polarised of times, a political leader has to pick a side.

With Nigel Farage having got himself into serious difficulties over financial questions, causing a significant drop in opinion poll support for Reform, Badenoch’s gamble might just start to haul her party up from the pit from which it has been widely assumed it cannot possibly climb out.

Blogger: how many decades has it taken for the Tories 'to get it?' - I'll still not support them until i see the evidence though!

At Least, They Apologised!

Amnesty International UK expresses 'regret' over report that branded Christian groups 'anti-rights. Amnesty International UK has...