BBC News, 14
November 2012
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| Jamaican commuters say the authorities should now tackle other forms of disturbance, such as loud music on buses |
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Stories
Jamaica's
public transport authorities have banned lay preachers from addressing
commuters in public buses.
Jamaica is
a predominantly Christian country, but many passengers have complained about
the noise and disturbance.
Drivers
have been instructed to politely warn religious ministers that they are no
longer allowed to evangelise fellow passengers.
Preachers
say the decision infringes freedom of speech and religion.
"I am
all for evangelising, but they cannot use the bus as their platform,"
Hardley Lewin, managing director of the Jamaica Transit Company Limited said.
He told The
Gleaner newspaper that commuters resent being a captive audience.
"I
think this is what makes the bus an attractive mobile church. I suppose you
cannot just get off because you have spent your money," said Mr Lewin.
Correspondents
say lay ministers - many of them Christian evangelicals - have accepted the
decision for now, but may decide to challenge it by citing Jamaica's
constitution, which inludes the right "to manifest and propagate his
religion".
Prominent
evangelical pastor Herro Blair said preachers should have approached the public
transport company before embarking on attempts to evangelise commuters.

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