From CNN Report
Holocaust-denying bishop returns to UK
LONDON, England * Feb. 25, 2009
A British Roman Catholic bishop
who was ordered to leave Argentina because of his inflammatory comments about the
Holocaust has returned home.
Bishop Richard Williamson flew
into London's Heathrow airport from Buenos Aires where he was met by a police
guard.
Williamson was ordered to leave
Argentina on February 19 within 10 days after he denied the Nazis had
systematically murdered millions of Jews during World War II simply for being
Jewish.
In an interview with Swedish
television, Williamson said, "I believe that the historical evidence is
strongly against -- is hugely against -- 6 million Jews having been
deliberately gassed in gas chambers as a deliberate policy of Adolf Hitler.
"I believe there were no gas
chambers," he said.
The United Kingdom's Home Office,
which is responsible for policing among other duties, said Williamson had a
right to return home and implied he did not face arrest on his return.
"We understand and respect
the fact that some countries ban Holocaust denial, but there is a consensus within
the UK that this is not an approach that we should adopt domestically,"
the Home Office said in a statement.
"Instead, we believe that
such behavior should only be criminal if it incites violence or hatred by reference
to color, race, national or ethnic origin and is carried out in a threatening,
abusive or insulting manner."
Williamson is under investigation
for Holocaust denial in Germany, where it is a crime.
Williamson made headlines in
January when he and three other ultra-conservative bishops were welcomed back
into the Roman Catholic Church more than 20 years after Pope John Paul II
excommunicated them on a theological question unrelated to the Holocaust.
Williamson's rehabilitation
sparked condemnation from Israel, American Jewish leaders and German Chancellor
Angela Merkel, among others.
The Vatican has pointed to
several statements by Pope Benedict XVI condemning the destruction of European
Jewry. The pope also has said he did not know of Williamson's views on the
Holocaust when he lifted the excommunication.
The mainstream Catholic bishops
of England and Wales have condemned Williamson's views on the Holocaust as
"totally unacceptable" and say the lifting of his excommunication was
for unrelated matters.
A spokesman for the Catholic
bishops conference of England and Wales told the Press Association on Wednesday
he had "absolutely no idea" where Bishop Williamson was going
following his arrival in Britain.
The Vatican has said Williamson
will not be allowed to perform priestly functions until he recants his
Holocaust denial.
Williamson has apologized for the
"distress" his remarks caused the pope, but he has not retracted
them.
Posted
February 25, 2009 by
Catholic Family News
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