Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta court rejects challenge from law student to Oath of Allegiance to monarchy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Oct, 2023 01:36 PM
  • Alberta court rejects challenge from law student to Oath of Allegiance to monarchy

An Alberta judge has dismissed an Edmonton law student's challenge to the legal profession's mandatory Oath of Allegiance to the monarch.

Prabjot Singh Wirring had argued the portion of the oath mandated by the Legal Profession Act that includes pledging allegiance to the sovereign violates his Charter rights to religious freedom and equality.

Wirring, who is an Amritkhari Sikh, said he is only allowed to pledge allegiance to a divine being in the Sikh tradition and not Queen Elizabeth, who was the reigning monarch at the time his suit was filed. 

He said the Oath of Allegiance to the queen was incompatible with his beliefs and filed a statement of claim last year against the Law Society of Alberta and the Alberta government.

Wirring obtained a law degree from Dalhousie University and completed his articles. In order to be admitted to the Law Society and practise law in Alberta, the Legal Profession Act requires an applicant to swear various oaths in open court before a judge. 

No concerns were raised with respect to the other oaths. 

"Given Mr. Wirring’s stated willingness to swear the other oaths, which reference abstract concepts like the sovereign’s interest, the public interest, and the rule of law, it is evident that he is not religiously prohibited from swearing oaths to 'literally anything,'" Court of King's Bench Justice Barbara Johnston wrote in her ruling posted Monday.

Wirring argued the Oath of Allegiance shouldn't be interpreted as anything but an oath to the queen in a literal sense. 

Johnston disagreed.

"I have found that the Oath of Allegiance is properly characterized as an oath to uphold and maintain the rule of law and the Canadian constitutional system," she said. 

"Any reference to the queen in the Oath of Allegiance is as a symbol of these values, and not to the queen as a political or religious entity."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Review finds at least 120 CRA employees claimed COVID benefits while employed

Review finds at least 120 CRA employees claimed COVID benefits while employed
The Canada Revenue Agency says 120 people have been fired for claiming a federal COVID-19 benefit while employed there. The CRA is reviewing approximately 600 cases in which current employees received the Canada Emergency Response Benefit — or CERB — during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Review finds at least 120 CRA employees claimed COVID benefits while employed

Online News Act could see Google, Meta pay combined $230 million to Canadian media

Online News Act could see Google, Meta pay combined $230 million to Canadian media
The federal government has put a price tag on how much it would like to see Google and Facebook spend under an act requiring the tech giants to compensate media for news articles. 

Online News Act could see Google, Meta pay combined $230 million to Canadian media

Busy long weekend ahead: BC Ferries

Busy long weekend ahead: BC Ferries
B-C Ferries wants customers to prepare for a busy Labour Day weekend. The company says advanced bookings for the holiday weekend show high passenger and vehicle volumes heading from the mainland to Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands today through Saturday, with high eastbound traffic expected from Sunday to Monday.

Busy long weekend ahead: BC Ferries

Ongoing cost-of-living crisis should trigger another housing benefit payment: Singh

Ongoing cost-of-living crisis should trigger another housing benefit payment: Singh
The federal government needs to issue another $500 benefit payment for low-income families struggling to keep a roof over their heads, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Thursday. Singh was in Sooke, B.C., on a cross-country summer tour where the national housing crisis and ongoing anxiety about the cost of living is taking centre stage.   

Ongoing cost-of-living crisis should trigger another housing benefit payment: Singh

'Persistent' bears force 160 firefighters to pull out of B.C. Interior camp

'Persistent' bears force 160 firefighters to pull out of B.C. Interior camp
The wildfire service says the bears threatened the safety of staff "within and around" the camp near Gold Bridge, about 100 kilometres west of Lillooet, prompting the decision to quit the camp Wednesday evening.  

'Persistent' bears force 160 firefighters to pull out of B.C. Interior camp

Hiker falls to death

Hiker falls to death
A man has died while hiking in B-C's southern Interior. RCMP say they received a report of a missing person on Monday after a man went paddling the night before on Vaseux Lake, north of Oliver.  

Hiker falls to death