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Unmarried couples who have purchased a house together could face a huge tax bill if one of them passes away compared with a surviving spouse who would pay nothing. According to a report in The Irish Examiner, four out of five first-time buyers over the last few years have been unmarried couples. However, there are no official statistics to back this up. Read more...

Ireland and Latvia have the highest percentage of children living with a lone parent in the EU, new figures published today show. The figures, produced by Eurostat, the EU's official statistics bureau, showed that, in 2008, 23 percent of children in both Ireland and Latvia were raised by single parents. The average figure for the EU as a whole was 14 percent. Read more...

Peter Tatchell, one of Britian's leading and most radical gay rights advocates has said that the actions of local housing authority, Trafford Housing Trust in demoting and slashing the pay of a Christian employee who posted comments about civil partnerships on Facebook were “excessive and disproportionate”. Adrian Smith, who worked for the Trust for 18 years, used his own private Facebook page to point to a news article about proposals to register samesex civil partnerships in churches, and added the remark: “an equality too far”. Read more...

Archbishop Diarmuid Martin addressed The Iona Institute last night on the topic of ‘Marriage and the Common Good’. He told an audience of almost 200 people that the State must continue to support marriage and the “love and fidelity” that are its essence. He warned that today the individual is replacing the family as the fundamental unit of society. Read more...

Those who rioted in London and other English cities in August were predominantly young, male, and from poorer backgrounds, according to a new report. However, the report provides no details concerning how many came from fatherless families, a factor identified by many commentators and politicians as one cause of the riots. David Lammy, Labour MP for the Tottenham area, where the riots started said that the lack of male role models in young men’s lives was one of the long term reasons behind the trouble. Read more...

Those who rioted in London and other English cities in August were predominantly young, male, and from poorer backgrounds, according to a new report. However, the report provides no details concerning how many came from fatherless families, a factor identified by many commentators and politicians as one cause of the riots. David Lammy, Labour MP for the Tottenham area, where the riots started said that the lack of male role models in young men’s lives was one of the long term reasons behind the trouble. Read more...

The European Humanist Federation (EHF) has lodged an official complaint against the European Commission, accusing it of treating them as second class citizens. In an open letter, they say the Commission, by refusing their proposal of a dialogue seminar on “Competing Rights Issues in Europe” has failed to implement Article 17:3 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU). Read more...

Local UK health authorities are giving IVF treatment to single women, paid for by the National Health Service, while elsewhere married couples are being turned down. Nearly a fifth of Primary Care Trusts (PCTs), bodies which are in charge of commissioning local health services in the UK, offer fertility treatment to women even if they are not married or in a long-term relationship, according to a report in the Daily Mail. Read more...
The Maltese courts granted their first divorce judgement last Friday to a couple who had been living apart for 21 years from the day of their legal separation. Malta voted in a referendum to legalise divorce in May. The referendum was passed by a narrow margin of 52pc to 48pc. It was the last country in Europe, apart from the Vatican, to do so. Outside Europe, the only other country which does not permit divorce is the Philippines. Read more...

A theatre in Dublin is set to stage Jerry Springer the Opera later this month, a blasphemous play which mocks Jesus, God the Father and Mary. The play, which sparked a storm of protest when it was screened by the BBC in 2005, will be shown at the Grand Canal Theatre, Dublin, from October 31st to November 5th.. Read more...

A key pledge by the Health Service Executive (HSE) to bolster child protection by hiring extra social workers has been broken. On foot of recommendations made in the Ryan Report into institutional abuse, the HSE said it would appoint 60 additional social workers this year to strengthen child protection services. However, none of these additional posts have been filled, the Irish Times has reported today. Read more...

The British Government is more likely to protect the rights of hedgehogs than Christians, according to prominent former Tory minister, Ann Widdecombe. In a speech tomorrow to the annual conference of international charity, Aid to the Church in Need, Ms Widdecombe, who was Minister for Prisons in the last Conservative government, is set to accuse current Tory ministers of double standards for threatening to withdraw foreign aid from nations which persecute homosexuals but ignoring the plight of persecuted Christians. Read more...

French school textbooks which promote the idea that a person’s ‘gender’ is the result of upbringing and society rather than biology have been slammed by French politicians. The controversy is similar to one that took place here some years ago when a programme called ‘Exploring Masculinities’ was introduced into Irish schools which said ‘gender is a social construct’. Read more...

Thirty five children and teenagers known to the Health Service Executive (HSE) have died since March of last year, it was revealed yesterday. It was also revealed that were 16 serious incidents involving children or adolescents known to the HSE over the same time period. Read more...

An Australian Catholic bishop has said that his diocese will cease performing legal marriages if it is ever forced to conduct same-sex unions. Archbishop Barry Hickey (pictured), of the archdiocese of Perth was speaking to parishioners as politicians in the state of Western Australia debate introducing same-sex marriage. Read more...

Two boys should be allowed to remain with their mother because this is their wish, despite the fact that they were wrongfully removed from their father, a Supreme Court ruling has said. The boys, now aged nine years and seven, were taken from New York to Ireland by their mother in 2010, the Irish Times reports. Read more...

Two same-sex couples who are contesting custody over two young girls have put their own wishes ahead of the welfare the children involved, according to a leading UK family judge. Mr Justice Hedley was speaking in the High Court in a case in which a gay man and his lover took the lesbian mother of his children and her partner to court for access rights. Read more...

The right of Churches in the US to hire and fire their own ministers, is being challenged the US Supreme Court by President Obama's Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). A number of judges on the Court, including noted judicial liberal Justice Stephen Breyer, suggested during the hearing, that the stance taken by the Commission could ultimately endanger the right of the Catholic Church to ordain only men as priests. Read more...

Mexico city, which introduced same-sex marriage in 2009, is now considering offering its citizens short-term marriages lasting as little as two years. Under the plans, couples in Mexico City could end their short term marriages if they no longer felt happy, or if the marriage was not “stable”. Couples would sign marriage contracts, including provisions on childcare and property to come into force in the event of a separation. Read more...

The Irish Government has prepared a 200 page draft report ahead of its appearance before the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The Committee monitors the implementation of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). No date has been fixed for the meeting as yet. Read more...

Couples who rank money and material goods as very important might be worse off in their relationships than those who aren't as materialistic, according to a new US study. Researchers surveyed 1,734 married couples across the U.S. about their attitudes toward relationship values and issues such as materialism, compassion, communication and the importance of marriage. Read more...

Three candidates for the Presidency have said that the reference to God in the Presidential Oath of Office in the Constitution should be reviewed. Labour's Michael D Higgins (pictured), Senator David Norris and Sinn Féin's candidate Martin McGuinness, speaking on RTE's Prime Time Presidential debate said that the wording of the oath should be reviewed. Read more...

Parents in the UK will be given greater power to protect children from sexually explicit images on the internet, in plans unveiled yesterday. In addition, children will protected from sexually explicit TV and on-street advertising. Four of Britain’s biggest internet service providers, BT, TalkTalk, Sky and Virgin Media, have agreed to make new customers choose between a connection with or without access to adult content as part of the set-up process, in a major move to help parents protect children from internet pornography. Read more...

The growing trend across the Western world of devaluing the importance of biological mothers and fathers has been sharply criticised in an important new report. Entitled ‘One Parent or Five? A Global Look at Today's New Intentional Families’, the report challenges assumptions that “intentional parenthood”, resulting from surrogacy and sperm or egg donations, is good for children “simply because it is planned in advance of the child's conception.” Read more...

Patronage is not a major issue for parents, and most are not even familiar with the term, according to the head of the Church's umbrella body for Catholic schools. Speaking yesterday at the launch of a major new report commissioned by the Catholic Schools Partnership (CSP), Fr Michael Drumm (pictured) said that the issue of patronage should not be overstated, according to an Irish Times report. Read more...
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The Government has accepted a recommendation made at a UN meeting last week to make contraceptive information “available and accessible” to “boys, girls and adolescents”. It has also said it will consider changing the constitutional definition of the family and amending Section 37 of the Employment Equality Act which protects the rights of religious employers. Read more...

Children raised in intact, married families are more likely to acquire the human and social capital they need to become well-adjusted, productive workers, according to a new report from a leading US think tank. The report, Sustainable Demographic Dividend: What Do Marriage & Fertility Have To Do With The Economy also says that men who get and stay married work harder, work smarter, and earn more money than their unmarried peers. Read more...

Catholic education officials are preparing a major “fact-based” study in response to Government plans to significantly reduce the number of Catholic primary schools. It is believed to be the first such research project of its kind on the subject, and will take into account the wishes of parents, according to a report in the Irish Catholic. Read more...

Ireland was put under pressure yesterday to legalise abortion, change our laws on the family and weaken the protection given to religious employers at a meeting of the UN Human Rights Council I Geneva. The meeting was part of the UN's Universal Periodic Review, which is designed to monitor the progress of member states in implementing human rights treaties. Ireland was represented by the Minister for Justice, Alan Shatter. Read more...

One of the UK's top Catholic bishops has warned Prime Minister David Cameron (pictured) not to redefine marriage. The Most Rev Peter Smith, the Archbishop of Southwark was responding to Mr Cameron's speech to his party conference earlier this week in which he said he supported plans to legalise gay marriage. The Prime Minister said “commitment” in relationships should be valued regardless of whether it involved “a man and a woman, a woman and a woman, or a man and another man”. Read more...

Ireland has appeared before the UN's Human Rights Council in Geneva this morning to have its human rights record reviewed. This is part of the so-called Universal Periodic Review (UPR). The process is designed to monitor the progress of member states in implementing UN human rights treaties. Read more...
Claims by the Government that child protection is a top priority are “a load of rubbish”, a leading expert in the area has said. Dr Helen Buckley of The Children's Research Centre in Trinity College Dublin, one of the authors of a report into clerical child abuse in the Ferns diocese made the remarks in an interview with the Irish Catholic as it emerged that the HSE intends to slash funding for family and child support services by up to 20 per cent. Read more...

A new ad hoc Committee for Religious Liberty has been set up by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) amidst growing concerns over the erosion of freedom of religion in America. The news comes in the wake of moves by the Obama Administration to require insurance companies to fund contraceptive services, including sterilisation procedures and abortifacient drugs regardless of religious affiliation. Read more...

The Constitution has proved “capable of guaranteeing rights and curbing power – including the power of the State”, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin (pictured) has said. In his homily for the annual Red Mass, which is held at the commencement of the year for the Irish courts, Archbishop Martin noted that the Constitution was “sometimes presented just as a fossilised child of its time”. Read more...

An appeal against German laws which forbids parents from taking their children out of sex education classes has been dismissed by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) as “manifestly ill-founded”. Five German couples had appealed to the ECHR after they had been jailed for refusing to pay fines for removing their children from sex education classes. However, last month, the Court ruled that the parents' appeal was inadmissible. Read more...
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