From Here
The Times wrote:
A teenager lost her High Court challenge yesterday to be allowed to wear a “purity ring” to school as an expression of her Christian faith.
Lydia Playfoot, 16, had claimed that the ban at the Millais School in Horsham, West Sussex, was an “unlawful interference” with her right to express a belief in sexual abstinence before marriage.
Michael Supperstone, QC, sitting as a deputy High Court judge, dismissed her challenge and said that the school was “fully justified” in its ban. “The decision of the defendant [the school] not to permit the claimant to wear a ‘purity’ ring as a symbol of her commitment to celibacy before marriage was not unlawful,” he said. The decision, he said, did not breach her human rights. “In my judgment, the school was fully justified in acting as it did.”
Ms Playfoot said that she would consider an appeal and that she was “very disappointed”. It was a matter of deep regret that she could not “persuade the court to consider upholding the religious liberty of Christian people in the United Kingdom”, she said.
She said the ruling would mean that “people such as school governors, employers, political organisations and others will be allowed to stop Christians from publicly expressing and practising their faith”.
No surprises there then...