The Government has said that its first tranche of funding for the
protection of places of worship will predominantly go to Christian
churches.
The Home Secretary Amber Rudd announced yesterday that 45 of the 59
religious buildings being awarded a share of the £405,000 grant for
security measures including CCTV and protective fencing, are churches.
Only 12 mosques and one Hindu temple are receiving support from the initiative which is part of the Government’s hate crime action plan: a three-year programme of funding that churches can apply for if they can prove they have been subject to a hate-based attack.
The statement came after Ms Rudd and Communities Secretary Sajid Javid met with faith leaders on Wednesday.
It is believed that many more churches than mosques applied for the support after increasing levels of crime.
The Home Secretary said the fund to secure places of worship would “help protect a cross-section of faiths from attack”.
Mr Javid added: “If we are truly to build a country that works for
everyone, people of different faiths should be free to worship without
fear of prejudice or attack.”
The funding is the first part of a £2.4m allocation announced by
Prime Minister Theresa May in July shortly after Fr Jacques Hamel was
murdered by Islamic terrorists in his church in Rouen, France.
The next wave of funding will be open to applications from April
2017.
Churches must provide supporting evidence of attacks, such as
police reports, records of incidents and insurance claims. They must
also be willing to contribute 20 per cent of the total costs.
In addition to the security funding, May is also this year allocating
a separate £300,000 for projects that will tackle specific types of
hate crime.
Both amounts of funding were launched by the Home Secretary
alongside the Government’s hate crime action plan in July.
Christianity Reaching Inner City Birmingham is among the nine
projects that will receive awards of between £24,000 and £50,000.
Others
include Stop Hate UK in Cardiff, a project to support young transgender
people, and the Eastern European Resource Centre – to support Polish
and Romanian nationals dealing with hate crime incidents in London.