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Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Nigerian Christian Woman Sues UK Employer Who Sacked Her Because She Refused To Work On Sunday

celestina mba
  Celestina Mba lost her job after she was told her employers could not guarantee she would never have to work Sundays.

A British Christian woman [of Nigerian origin] who was told she could not be guaranteed off on Sundays will take her case to the Court of Appeal this week.

Celestina Mba, a 58-year-old children’s care worker with Merton Council, lost her job after she was told her employers could not guarantee she would never have to work Sundays.

“I chose not to work Sunday and my employers accommodated it for almost three years, and then decided that I now must work Sunday, violating my rights as a believer to practice Christianity in the way that blesses me and blesses other people,” she said in a Christian Concern video posted on YouTube in February 2012.

Mba, a Baptist with three children, first bought a claim against her employer in February 2012 when they threatened her with disciplinary measures—even though her co-workers were willing to pick up the Sunday shifts.

She lost her claim for constructive dismissal when a judge ruled her employer could make her work on a Sabbath. The tribunal ruled that keeping Sunday as a day of rest was not a “core component” of Christianity, Daily Mail reported.

“Even though I have lost the case, I am not ashamed of the gospel of Jesus Christ because it is the gospel that sets us all free,” Mba stated in the video.

She will say in her appeal that an employer has a duty to “reasonably accommodate” the beliefs of a Christian worker. Mba will argue that her employer breached her Article 9 guaranteeing freedom of thought, conscience and religion, the U.K.’s Mirror says.

“We have so many different faiths in this society,” Mba told The Sunday Times. “I am standing up for my beliefs, not for anyone else’s.”

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