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Legal Aid Outcry, Political Disasters and a Mau Mau Settlement – The Human Rights Roundup

Human rights roundup UNWelcome back to the UK Human Rights Roundup, your regular Royal Variety Show of human rights news. The full list of links can be found here. You can also find our table of human rights cases here and previous roundups here.

This week, there was a flurry of comment and critique on the Ministry of Justice’s paper, ‘Transforming Legal Aid’, human rights abuses both past and present are in the spotlight and there have been some notable  decisions from the courts.

by Sarina Kidd

Legal Aid 

There were many responses this week to the Ministry of Justice’s controversial consultation paper, ‘Transforming Legal Aid’ from all walks of legal life. Look out for our summary post of more of the responses, and in the meantime check out Obiter J’s ever-expanding list of responses (currently at 55).

This week, amongst other things, 145 Government Counsel and the Daily Mail came out against the changes. If you agree, you can sign this petition, which needs around 15,000 more signatures to be debated in Parliament.

The Bar Council has published its full response . Among its contentions are the removal of client choice from the criminal legal aid system and the ‘fundamentally flawed’ introduction of price competitive tendering. Furthermore, the report challenges the evidence and legitimacy behind such proposals.

The Bingham Centre for the Rule of Law has also submitted its response. The report concludes that such changes are wanting in the rule of law as they would ‘impact the access to justice of holding public authorities to account and securing legal protection of basic rights and interests’.

One Crown Office Row’s public law team has also responded to the consultation and their response can be found here.

Carl Gardner, at Head of Legal, who has in fact supported many of the proposals has also voiced his concern over some of them. Focusing also on the competitive tendering system and the removal of client choice, he explains that whilst he is less concerned about limiting the ability to change solicitor, ‘it’s wrong to deny clients any choice of lawyer at all’ and that such proposals should be slowed down and tested first.

Finally, Free Movement blog argues that the cuts are counterintuitive. Whilst the aim is to save money, such changes would increase the number of litigants in person and therefore increase costs.

The UK’s Human Rights Record

The president of the European Court of Human rights has told BBC’s Law in Action that it would be a “political disaster”if the UK pulled out of the European human rights convention, and would undermine their credibility in promoting human rights around the world. Judge Dean Spielman suggests that such a move would mean leaving the Council of Europe and even, possibly, the EU. When discussing Theresa May’s suggestion that the courts have moved the goalposts to prevent the deportation of men such as Abu Qatada, he replied, “A decision of a court must be executed. If a decision is not executed this is a violation of the rule of law which is a basic principle of any democracy.”

Spielmann also addresses the suggestion by some parts of the media that the Strasbourg court is full of unelected judges, stating such a suggestion was ‘nonsense’ and that ‘Strasbourg judges are elected by the parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe.’

Meanwhile, the UN’s (pictured) torture watchdog has hit out at the British government for human rights abuses, focusing on the ‘war on terror’ and the mistreatment of prisoners in British custody in Iraq. The report focuses on allegations of torture and ill-treatment, the ‘escape clause’ in the Criminal Justice Act 1988, the failure to prosecute anyone for the torture of Iraqi prisoners and the plan to introduce secret court procedures. The British government has been given a year to explain how it can improve its human rights record.

This week, human rights barrister Dinah Rose QC challenged Ken Clarke over the Government’s extension of the use of secret courts. Rose was among a number of high profile figures who recently resigned from the Lib Democrats over the issue. Ken Clarke argues that the alternative ‘would be to allow Al-Qaeda to learn all of Britain’s security secrets’. The radio interview can be found here.

Meanwhile, Scotland’s leading prosecutor has ordered police to investigate new claims that Scottish airports are being used as stop-off points for CIA rendition flights from around the world.

The status of migrants

Iyiola Solanke looks at the proposed plans to introduce a duty upon landlords to check the immigration status of their tenants in boroughs that are popular with migrants. Such a focus is likely to breach the EU Race Directive 2000/43(2), as well as the public sector equality duty (PSED) in section 149 of the Equality Act 2010. If the government presses ahead, it may find itself subject to a complaint to the European Commission.

Meanwhile, the United Nationals Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants has criticised the EU’s approach to migrants, and its focus on security concerns, and has called for a more human rights-based approach.

In otherNews

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One more thing (from Adam )

Apropos of nothing much, here is an animated GIF I made of wonderful moment from today’s Sunday Politics. Readers of this blog will hopefully appreciate the conspiracy theorising nuttiness of Alex Jones, as well as Andrew Neil and David Aaronovich’s relatively cool treatment of him. I will try to use this for future Freemen on the Land posts. Enjoy.

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