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Housing Association can discriminate on religious grounds. Plus fracking and indefinite detention: The Round Up

Conor Monighan brings us the latest updates in human rights law

Credit: the Guardian

In the News:

The Joint Committee on Human Rights (JCHR) has concluded that indefinite detention in immigrations centres must cease. The Committee published a critical report into the issue, which found indefinite detention has a highly detrimental impact upon detainees’ mental health.

The Committee argued that individuals should be held for no more than 28 days. It said this would provide an incentive to the Home Office to speed up case management, thereby reducing costs. Harriet Harman MP, the JCHR’s Chairwoman, noted in an article that the Home Office has paid £20 million over five years to compensate for wrongful detentions.

The Committee also called for an independent body to decide whether or not an individual should be detained. Ms. Harman pointed out that police must involve a court if they wish to detain someone for more than 36 hours, whereas the Home Office is able to detain people at will. The UK is the only country in Europe which does not put a time limit on detentions.

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