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The Round-up: Controversy over the Courts Charge and Serdar Mohammed

Photo credit: The Guardian

In the news

The Howard League for Penal Reform has called for a review of the “unfair and unrealistic” Criminal Courts Charge, which “ penalises the poor and encourages the innocent to plead guilty”. The mandatory charge of up to £1,200 is imposed on those who admit committing minor misdemeanours, regardless of their circumstances.

The charity has compiled a list of cases where heavy financial charges have been demanded of people convicted of low-level offences. These include the case of a 38-year-old homeless man who admitted persistently begging in Oxford, and breaching an Asbo prohibiting him from sitting within 10 metres of a cash machine. He was jailed for 30 days and ordered to pay a £150 criminal courts charge.

Frances Crook, Chief Executive of the organisation, has said of the newly introduced procedure:

“It was the French writer Anatole France, more than 100 years ago, who wrote that ‘In its majestic equality, the law forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, beg in the streets and steal loaves of bread’. Now the law seems hell-bent on exacting charges from rich and poor alike for the privilege – but it is the poor who will find themselves entrenched in their poverty by these criminal charges.”

In other news

In the courts

The Court of Appeal in Serdar Mohammed v Secretary of State for Defence has ruled that the detention of an Afghan suspect by British armed forces for almost four months was unlawful. Afghan law required any person detained by British forces to be handed over to Afghan authorities after 96 hours. The public law claim of SM was successful on the basis that his detention was arbitrary and therefore contrary to Article 5 ECHR [the right to liberty]. Further, a private law claim in tort under the law of Afghanistan could in this instance be made in the English courts, since no compelling grounds of public policy had been raised to defeat it.

The Court’s response to the Secretary of State’s proposition that authority to detain in a non-international armed conflict could be derived from the treaty law of International Humanitarian Law is considered by Dr Alex Conte. The analysis concludes that the Court most certainly got it right in determining that it was “not possible to base any implication of a power to detain in an internationalised non-international armed conflict purely on a treaty” [para. 219 of the judgment]. See also 1COR’s Dominic Ruck Keene here.

The Guardian reports on the judgment here.

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