Coronavirus Bill in the House of Commons
Welcome the Amendment on the Burial,
not the Cremation of the Victims
Dr. Mozammel Haque
The
House of Commons was considering the draft emergency bill on Coronavirus on
23rs March 2020. And one element of the Bill caused particular alarm amongst
some of the faith based communities. Rt. Hon. Naz Shah Member of the Bradford
West tabled an amendment to that. The Government listened and put an amendment.
Followings
are in brief the debate took place on the issue of Burial in the House of
Commons of the British Parliament on 23 March, 2020.
Rt. Hon. Paul Bristow Conservative
MP for Peterborough
The
debate, Paul Bristow Conservative MP for Peterborough said, “My one concern
related to the proposal in Schedule 27 to disregard the wishes of the deceased,
which would have allowed all bodies to be cremated indiscriminately if the
system could not cope.”
“Understandably,
that caused alarm to anyone whose religion forbids cremation, including my
local Muslim community in Peterborough, who made their feelings clear to me
this weekend. However, difficult circumstances become in the weeks and months
ahead, it would be extremely undesirable for their religious beliefs to be
ignored. To get through this crisis, we need to bring every community in our
country with us. For that reason, I am enormously grateful to the Government
for their reassurances today on that issue,” said the Conservative MP Bristow and
added, “Today’s notice of the amendment from the Secretary of State, combined
with his comments, will give our Muslim and Jewish communities much of the
security they need. I sincerely hope that this will now mean that local
authorities will never enforce cremation of a dead body against the express
wishes of the family when they have ample burial plots available and the
ability to transport the body to the plots. This is welcome and needed.”
Paul
Bristow also mentioned, “I have been in close contact with the leaders of all
Peterborough’s mosques, who took a first lead last week in closing Friday
prayers, in their extra-curricular schooling and in all their other activities,
which was by no means easy for them. I thank Mr. Abdul Choudhuri of the
Faizan-e-Madinah, Nazim Khan of the Masjid Ghousia, Hamid Chaudhury of Masjid
Khadijah, Mohammad Yunas of the Alma Road Mosque, and Salim Rahmatullah of the
Hussaini Islamic Centre, Burton Street. We need them and they need us, now more
than ever. I know that they will be relieved and pleased by the news from the
Government. I also know that Peterborough can come together to refine
procedures that will allow for Muslim and Jewish burial.”
Rt. Hon, Ruth Jones, Labour Party
MP from Newport West
Rt.
Hon, Ruth Jones, Labour Party MP from Newport West joined in the debate and
said, “Talking on faith, I welcome the amendment on the Burial, not cremation,
of victims, which will do so much to reassure the strong and vibrant Muslim
community in Newport West that respect and decency, as well as saving lives and
getting through this crisis, is an important focus for all of us.”
Rt. Hon. Zarah Sultana Labour Party
MP from Coventry South
Rt.
Hon. Zarah Sultana Labour party MP from Coventry South said, “I welcome the
fact that an amendment has been accepted that gives protections to Muslim and
Jewish communities, who feared that the Bill would have resulted in forced
cremation. I hope that the provisions on those protections are heeded.”
Rt. Hon. Caroline Nokes Conservative Party MP
from Romsey and Southampton North
Rt.
Hon. Caroline Nokes Conservative party MP from Romsey and Southampton North
said, “I spoke for that black and minority ethnic backgrounds and of course, the
Paymaster General, my right hon. Friend, the Member from Portsmouth North
(Penny Mordaunt), has done some phenomenal work with faith communities, making
sure that funerals can be held appropriately for religions. But I would like to
point out that it is in the gig economy where we are most likely to find people
from a BAME background working; they are also most likely to be young people.”
Rt. Hon.Imran Hussain Labour Party
MP from Bradford East
Rt.
Hon. Imran Hussain Labour Party MP from Bradford East said, “I will make one
point that has been raised with me by a number of constituents about Schedule
27 which suspends protections that prevent the cremation of an individual
regardless of their wishes or faith. The right to faith and dignity in death is
one of our most inalienable rights and one on which we must never compromise.
How our physical bodies are handled and treated after our death is a core tenet
of all faiths. That is why I wrote to Public Health England some time ago to
express my concerns about how the deceased may be handled during this
emergency, and why I was alarmed to learn of the manners in the Bill that overrule
the right to faith and dignity in death by permitting a local authority to
cremate an individual against their wishes.”
Labour
MP Hussain said, “While I acknowledge that the Government have this afternoon taken a step in the right
direction and shown that they are listening to and engaging with the faith
communities by making it clear in law that faith must be taken into account
before a decision on cremation is made, there is still some confusion as the
provisions still appear to allow a local authority to cremate an individual
against their wishes where there is a lack of capacity, either locally or in
the immediate area, for handling the deceased. The Government must this
afternoon address that confusion and make it clear that the absolute right to
refuse the option of cremation is upheld in their amendment and in Government
policy.
Bradford
East MP Hussain said, “The Government must also make clear this commitment and
ensuring that all local authorities have sufficient capacity to handle an increased
number of deaths. On that point, I pay tribute to the work of Bradford Council
over recent days and weeks to build additional capacity to handle deaths in a
faith compliant manner, to ensure that in Bradford we never have to compromise
on the right to faith and dignity in death. As the leader of the Bradford
Council has firmly set out: “Those of faith where burial is a prerequisite will
always have that wish respected, and that will always be Bradford Council’s
position in all circumstances.”
“I
think that point should be put clearly on the record,” Member of Parliament for
Bradford East said.
He
also added, “In short, our Muslim and Jewish faith communities are rightly
concerned about the manners in the Bill and want firm assurances from the
Government - assurances I urge the
Government to provide today – that they will never compromise the right to
faith and dignity in death. These are fundamental and absolute rights, and they
are non-negotiable.”
Rt. Hon. Yasmin Qureshi, Labour Party MP
from Bolton South West
Rt.
Hon. Yasmin Qureshi, Labour Party MP from Bolton South West said, “It is clear from the words set out in
sub-paragraphs 13(1)(a) and (b) in part 3 of Schedule 27 that it is desirable
for local authorities to consult with religious communities and groups in the
event of a deceased person. However, that provision does not say that if a
family or person objects to the cremation taking place, the local authority can
still go ahead and cremate. I would like the Minister’s assurance that that is
correct; or will the Bill be amended during its passage to say very clearly
that if a person does not wish to be cremated, then a cremation will not take
place?”
Rt. Hon. Naz Shah, Labour
Party MP from Bradford West
Rt.
Hon. Naz Shah, Labour Party MP from Bradford West said, “Members have said that
a 100% guarantee that nobody will be cremated against their wishes would be
very welcome. Does my hon. Friend agree?
Rt.
Hon. Nick-Thomas-Symonds replied, “Yes, and I congratulate my hon. Friend on
the work that she has been doing on this matter.
The Minister Penny Penhaunt
The
Minister Penny Penhaunt said, “Let me turn to other Government amendments,
particularly on cremation which many hon. Members have raised. For their
engagement, I want to thank in particular the hon. Members for Bradford West
(Naz Shah), for Birmingham Ladywood (Shabana Mehmood), and for Bradford East
(Imran Hussain), and my hon. Friends the Member for Peterborough (Paul
Bristow), for Dudley North (Marco Longhi), for Stoke-on-Trent South (Jack
Brereton), for Wycombe (Mr. Baker), for Wealden (Ms. Ghani) and for Meriden
(Saqib Bhatti).
The
Minister also said, “The policy has been developed on dealing with excess
deaths has involved all faith groups from the start. The purpose of the provisions
is to ensure that people’s choices can be adhered to, that the dignity of the
deceased is respected and that support services for families are in place, even
in times of great stress. There should be no public health reason or capacity
reason to be buried would be cremated. I can give the House that reassurance.
We have included further measures in the Bill. Local authority leaders will
also want to reassure their communities in the coming days – clearly, it is
local authority chief executives who will use these powers, if they are ever
used. I also want to put on the record my thanks to the councillor Sharon
Thompson of Birmingham City Council.”
Labour
MP Yasmin Qureshi
from
Bolton South East
Labour
MP Yasmin Qureshi from Bolton South East said, “The provision states that it is
desirable for a Local authority or public authority to seek the wishes of the
deceased person’s family or a place of worship if there is no next of kin.
Saying that it is desirable to take their views into consideration does not
mean that those views will apply if a local authority or public authority
decides that a cremation is going to take place, under the legislation as it
stands. The Government could make an amendment to clearly specify that if
somebody does not wish to be cremated, they will not be cremated. That is
missing from the Bill at the moment.”
The Minister Penny Mordaunt
The
Minister Penny Mordaunt replied, “We have brought forward an amendment that
gives those guarantees with regard to someone’s beliefs, religion or wishes. In
addition, I stress that it has never been the case – there has never been any
doubt about this – that somebody who wished to be buried would have to be
cremated. There is no public health reason or capacity reason why that should be
the case. We have worked from the off with all faiths to produce the
guidelines, and the amendment was produced through consultations. I see no
circumstance – and it certainly would not relate to those powers - in which
somebody would be cremated against their wishes. I do not think I can give any
more guarantees than that. That is absolutely not the intent of the policy and
it is certainly not anything to do with the practice.”
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