What We've Lost
A report by UCL Student Human Rights Programme
Compiled for the Convention on Modern Liberty
19 February 2009
One of the problems with the erosion of liberty in Britain over the
last decade was that the public failed to pay attention to what was
happening in Parliament. Laws that fundamentally challenged our
traditions of rights and liberty and flew in the face of the Human
Rights Act ("HRA") were passed with relatively little debate. Few
grasped the impact they would have on our society and Ministers were
able to brush aside protests with assurances that their desire to
protect us was equal to their respect for civil liberties.
The difficulty campaigners faced was to press home the argument
about the scale of the loss. An account was needed to show that the
legislative programme, which swept away centuries old rights and
transferred so much power from the individual to the state, actually
existed. Now we have that evidence and the Convention on Modern Liberty
can demonstrate with confidence what Britain has lost and discuss how
this crisis of liberty took root in one of the world’s oldest
democracies and what to do about it.
This report by the UCL Student Human Rights Programme ("UCLSHRP") is
a concise and approachable inventory of the loss. It is a profoundly
disturbing document, even for those who thought they knew about the
subject, for it not only describes the wholesale removal of rights that
were apparently protected by the HRA and set down nearly 800 years ago
in Magna Carta, it also shows how the unarticulated liberties that we
assumed were somehow guaranteed by British culture have been
compromised. The same is true of constitutional safeguards that were
once considered beyond the reach of a democratically elected
legislature.
The attack is as broad as it is deep. Over 25 Acts of Parliament
and some 50 individual measures are involved. This document is
organised around the articles of the Human Rights Act and also draws on
the guarantees of Magna Carta, but it is important to remember that
many of the freedoms that are disappearing have never been codified,
which makes it all the more difficult to keep track of the attack on
liberty. Part of the future work of those associated with the
Convention must be to continue to monitor and report on these dangerous
trends. Opposition can only begin when we are in full possession of the
facts. These are what the UCLSHRP provides in this first exhaustive
account of what we have lost.
Section1: European Convention on Human Rights
The Human Rights Act 1998 incorporates the European Convention on
Human Rights (”ECHR”) into UK law. As a result these rights can be
enforced by individuals in UK courts. Individuals need no longer take
their claims to Strasbourg, the home of the European Court of Human
Rights. Despite boldly claiming to be “bringing rights home” through
the Human Rights Act (HRA), the UK has since then introduced a
contradictory legislative scheme that in fact erodes our rights.
Life, Article 2, ECHR
“Everyone’s right to life shall be protected by law. No one shall be deprived of his life intentionally”
The obligation to investigate violations of the right to life
1. Coroners Inquests
The right to life can only be secured if the executive investigate
suspicious deaths to determine whether a violation of the right has
taken place. New proposals will end the independence of coroners who
until now have been able to investigate the cause of suspicious or
uncertain deaths and criticise government departments and agencies,
(for example in the death of Iraqi civilians under the control of the
British Army). Jack Straw’s Coroners and Justice Bill trespasses on
this independence, granting the Executive power to suspend the inquest
even when it may involve a homicide. The inquest may be forced into
secret session by the minister for reasons of national interest, to
protect relations with a foreign country or if the hearing threatens to
harm the public interest.
2.There is a further erosion of accountability in the measure that
will allow the Executive, acting through the Lord Chancellor, to
suspend an inquest when the death is being investigated under the
Inquiries Act 2005. Coroners and Justice Bill 2009
No Torture, Article 3, ECHR
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
Prohibition of degrading treatment and enforced destitution
3.Asylum seekers were denied state support in 2002 unless they
make their claims as soon as resonably practical after their arrival in
the United Kingdom. The Home Secretary may withhold support from the
applicants, who cannot explain how they came into the country, how they
have been living since their arrival, or to anyone who does not
cooperate with the authorities. Lord Bingham found that application of
the Nationality Immigration and asylum Act 2002 was “deliberate action of the state” which “denied shelter, food [and] the most basic necessities of life.” Nationality Immigration and asylum Act 2002
[contents]
Liberty, Article 5, ECHR
Article 5(1), Right to Liberty and Security of the Person
“Everyone has the right to liberty and security of
person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save in the following
cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law: the lawful
detention of a person after conviction by a competent court;…the lawful
arrest or detention of a person effected for the purpose of bringing
him before the competent legal authority on reasonable suspicion of
having committed an offence.”
Individual liberty is an ancient right recognised by English law as early as 1215 AD in the Magna Carta at Article 39, “No
free man shall be captured, and or imprisoned, or robbed of his
freehold, and or of his liberties…but by the lawful judgment of his
peers, and or by the law of the land.”
4.Control orders were introduced to confine terrors suspects who
have not been found guilty of any crime by a conventional court of law.
The orders include measures such as house arrest and electronic
tagging. They also restrict movement, association and the use of phones
and the Internet. The act allows control order proceedings to be held
in closed sessions with security cleared “special advocates”
representing the accused, who do not even have the right to see or
rebut the evidence against them. The evidence may consist of secret
intelligence, or even information obtained from torture outside the
United Kingdom. Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005
5.Immigration officers were given police-like powers, which include increased detention, entry, search and seizure. UK Borders Act 2007
No arrest or detention unless it is for the purpose of
bringing them to court because there is reasonable suspicion they have
committed a criminal offence
ECHR Article 5(1)(c)
6.Immigration officers were given the power of arrest without a warrant. Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants) Act 2004
7.Police were given powers in two different acts to stop and search
people and cars without suspicion at airports and within designated
areas. Currently 180,000 people are being stopped and searched every
year. Terrorism Act 2000 and Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001
No Detention without Charge, Article 5(2)
8.Police have the power to hold a terrorist suspect for 28 days
without charge. This power was to last one year but the Secretary of
State was given the authority to continue 28 days detention by
statutory instrument. Terrorism Act 2006
Right of detained individuals to legally challenge their detention within a reasonable period of time, Article 5(4)
9.Automatic bail hearings for those detained under immigration
legislation was ended. The same piece of legislation also made it
possible for an asylum seeker to be detained at any time during their
application, in accommodation centres for up to six months. Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002
Fair Trial, Article 6ECHR
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations or of any criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled
to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent
and impartial tribunal established by law.”
Criminal Standard of proof, Article 6(1)
10. To restrict an individual’s liberty it must be proven in a court
of law that the individual is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. This is
the criminal standard of proof. The lower standard of proof for a civil
trial is that of balance of probabilities. The
important distinction between criminal and civil law was eroded with
the introduction of Anti-Social Behaviour Orders (ASBOs). The orders
are granted on civil burden of proof, which requires only the “balance
of probabilities”. But a person breaching an ASBO is likely to incur
criminal penalties. Even though the actions or behaviour for which the
ASBO is granted may not be against the law, breaching an ASBO can lead
to a sentence of up to five years in prison. Crime and Disorder Act 1998
11.Parenting Orders were introduced. Prosecution results if the parent does not meet the conditions of the order. Crime and Disorder Act 1998
12.Civil orders that allow courts to impose post-sentence restrictions on those convicted of violent offences were introduced. Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008
13.The Serious Crime Prevention Order (SCPO) can be used to restrict
where an individual can live and limit their work and travel
arrangements. SCPOs can last for up to five years and breaching them
can result in up to five years imprisonment. The House of Lords
Constituional Committee expressed doubts about using SCPOS to target
organised crime. “Whether or not the trend towards greater use of
preventative civil orders is constitutionally legitimate (a matter on
which we express doubt), we take the view that SCPOs represent an
incursion into the liberty of the subject and constitute a form of
punishment that cannot be justified in the absence of a criminal
conviction.” Serious Crime Act 2007
The presumption of innocence until guilt is proven, ECHR, Article 6(2),
14.The presumption of innocence was weakened with a new law that
allows a jury to make inferences about the guilt of a defendant if he
or she fails to give evidence when charged with the new offence of
causing or allowing the death of a child, and either or both murder or
manslaughter. Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004
15.The right to silence was further eroded by terror legislation
that allows post-charge questioning of terror suspects and the courts
to draw an adverse inference from a defendant’s silence. Counter-Terrorism Act 2008
Right to a lawyer of ones own choosing, ECHR, Article 6(3)(c)
16.Under the Terrorism Act an individual and his lawyers may be
barred from court proceedings. The Act also states that material
contrary to the public interest may not be disclosed, that state
appointed special advocates, with limited ability to communicate with
the individual, are to represent his interests in the closed
proceedings, and that the written determination of the court may be
withheld from the defendant, if in the public interest. Counter-Terrorism Act 2008
17.Free speech and freedom of association were both reduced by
terror laws. Any support for a proscribed organisation became illegal.
Terrorism Act 2000
Article 8, ECHR, Privacy
“Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.”
“The Database State”- intercepting, collecting, storing, sharing private information
The right to privacy has been eroded, perhaps permanently, by broad
powers to intercept, collect, store, share and our private
information.
Surveillance and Interception
18.In 2004 it became possible for the Secretary of State to authorise electronic monitoring of individuals. Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants) Act 2004
19. RIPA laws came into force in 2000 and specified the
circumstances in which the various authorities and agencies could mount
surveillance operations. RIPA defines five broad categories of covert
surveillance: directed surveillance (includes photographing people);
intrusive surveillance (includes bugging); the use of covert human
intelligence sources (informants and undercover officers, including
watching and following people); accessing communications data (record
of emails sent, telephone calls made) and intercepting communications
(i.e. reading content of emails, listening to calls). The Act also
allows the Home Secretary to issue an interception warrant to examine
the contents of letters or communications on the grounds of national
security, and for the purposes of preventing or detecting crime,
preventing disorder, public safety, protecting public health, or in the
interests of the economic well-being of the United Kingdom. Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000
20.An end to rules banning government departments from sharing
personal information is proposed in the Coroners and Justice Bill. An
amendment to the Data Protection Act of 1998 contained in the new bill
will allow personal data to be shared by ministers through executive
order to achieve what are vaguely termed the government’s “policy
purposes.” Coroners and Justice Bill 2009
Collection and Acquistion
21.Over 50 pieces of personal information will be transferred from
the private control of the individual to the authority’s National
Identity Register ( NIR) under the Identity Cards Act. Information
placed on the NIR will include date and place of birth, principal place
of residence, every other place of UK or overseas residence, head and
shoulder photograph, signature, fingerprints, and other biometric
information (which may include iris scans, and a facial measurement
template). Individuals may be forced to register their details in order
to receive certain public services and may be fined for not keeping
their NIR information up-to-date. A record of all the important
transactions in a person’s life will be created by the electronic
verification of their card Identity Cards Act 2006
22.Freedom to communicate in private has been effectively
extinguished by RIPA laws. The state may demand that telephone, and
internet providers hand over detailed communications records of
individual users, including: name and addresses; phone calls made and
received; source and destination of emails; internet browsing
information and mobile phone positioning data that records the user’s
location may be demanded. This power may be exercised by many public
bodies, ranging from the Revenue and Customs to the Royal Mail Group. Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 and Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Communications Data) (Additional Functions and Amendment) Order 2006/1878
23.The loss of the right to communicate privately by post also ended
with RIPA. Postal service providers may now be forced to intercept and
retain postal items; maintaining a system of opening, copying and
resealing of any postal item carried for less than £1. Secrecy is
written into the law. Postal services are under strict obligations to
intercept with as little impact as possible to ensure the individual
remains unaware of the intrusion. Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Maintenance of Interception Capability) Order 2002/1931
24.A further serious loss of privacy will occur when a person
crosses UK borders. Anyone entering or leaving, or even expecting to
leave, the UK must under the Eborders Scheme supply the government with
their name, gender, nationality, type of travel document held, and
vehicle registration number if travelling in a vehicle. In all, 53
pieces of information may be taken from British citizens before they
are permitted to leave the country, even though the new Draft (Partial)
Immigration and Citizenship Bill asserts the freedom of a person to
leave the UK unimpeded. Those coming into the UK will be expected to
provide information and biometrics. Yachtsmen leaving British waters
for the day and returning to shore will be expected to provide
information about all those on board. Immigration, Asylum and
Nationality Act (2006) and the Immigration and Police (Passenger, Crew
and Service Information) Order 2008 /5
[contents]
25.The right to check into a hotel in the United Kingdom anonymously
and without the state being informed may end with compulsory
registration measures proposed in clause 30 of the draft of the new
Draft (Partial) Immigration and Citizenship Bill. This will allow the
Home Secretary to keep records of people, “whether or not they are a
British Citizens”, and require them - on pain of a £5,000 fine or year
in prison - to provide the information to an unspecified list of people
whom the Secretary of State considers “expedient”. Draft (Partial) Immigration and Citizenship Bill 2008
26.The privacy of non-UK nationals has also been compromised. Asylum
seekers must supply a personal record containing physical
characteristics, photos and fingerprints; an inventory of a detainee’s
possessions must be made. Photographs and fingerprints may be retained
until they become British citizens, even if they have a right of
residency in the UK Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002, Immigration and Asylum Act 1999, Immigration (Provision of Physical Data) Regulations 2006/1743, Detention Centre Rules 2001/ 238
27.The line between guilt and innocence has been blurred with
preventative orders, under anti-terrorism and social disorder
legislation (see below). One result is that personal information of
those merely suspected of involvement in terrorist related activities
which are held by public bodies, may be demanded by police and security
services carrying out criminal and terrorist investigations.
Individuals placed under control orders may now be forced to provide
police with fingerprints and DNA samples. Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 and Counter-Terrorism Act 2008
Storage and Retention of personal information
28.Children are being groomed for a life in the database state.
Alongside the gradual introduction of biometrics and CCTV in schools,
is the children’s database -or ContactPoint - which went live in
January 2008. It contains 20 pieces of information on all children
resident in England. Over 400,000 people will have access to the
database but parents will have no right to check the data held on their
children. Children Act 2004
29.The concept of innocence unless proven guilty by a normal court
of law was eroded when it became possible for police in England, Wales
and Northern Ireland to retain indefinitely DNA samples and
fingerprints from anyone arrested for a recordable offence, even if
they were released without charge, or found not guilty. This also
included the DNA of people who were witnesses to a crime. The European
Court of Human Rights ruled in December 2008 that the retention of DNA
from two innocent men in Yorkshire breached their human rights, which
has implications for the samples of one million innocent people on the
Police National DNA Database. Criminal, Justice and Police Act 2001
30.The imposition of compulsory biometric identity documents for
non-EU immigrants came in 2007 in a law which grants the secretary of
state wide-ranging powers to retain and share biometric information
This law requires people subject to immigration control to apply for a
biometric immigration document which can contain over 15 pieces of
information, including details held on a radio frequency electronic
microchip (RFID) embedded in the document. The information can be
retained by the Secretary of State as long as is deemed necessary. UK Borders Act 2007 & Immigration (Biometric Registration) Regulations 2008/3048
Data Sharing
31.The sharing of information on the National Identity Register
(NIR) is the first step in a government wide project to make all
information on private citizens available to government and its
agencies. The Security Service, Secret Intelligence Service, GCHQ,
Serious Organised Crime Agency and HM Revenue and Customs will all have
access to the NIR. Information on the NIR may be passed on to any
public authority where it is deemed necessary for security, law
enforcement, prevention of crime or government efficiency. No member of
the public will be allowed access to his or her file. Identity Cards Act 2006
32.Information about parents and children is required to be shared
between public authorities before an application for a parenting order
is made. Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003 & Education (Parenting Contracts and Parenting Orders) (England) Regulations 2007/1869
33.The enhanced CRB check system infringes the right to privacy and
the presumption of innocence. Charges for which one has been acquitted
and even conduct unrelated to crime may be disclosed. The Chief of
Police is empowered to disclose to potential employers anything that in
his or her opinion “might be relevant” to an individual’s job
application. This is despite the disproportionate effect disclosure
might have on the individual’s employability. This promotes a “no smoke
without fire” approach. Police Act 1997
The privatisation of the database
34. The government’s drive to use private companies to hold
information on private citizens began in 2001 with anti-terrrorism
legislation. It requires airlines to provide information about
passengers and enables communication service providers to retain data,
so that it can be accessed by law agencies investigating terrorism or
criminal activities. The law also obliges financial institutions such
as banks to contact law agencies when they believe there are
“reasonable grounds” to a suspect terrorist financing. The Act allows
for the retention of communications data by service providers, who must
retain information on who called who for extended periods of time. Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001
35.In 2000 the government took powers to force Internet service
providers (ISPs) to fit equipment to facilitate surveillance and allows
the government to demand that the ISP give secret access to a
customer’s communication. Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000
[contents]
Freedom of Expression, ECHR, Article 10
“Everyone has the right to
freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold
opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without
interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers.”
36.New laws affecting the freedom of expression will be introduced
by Jack Straw’s Coroners’ and Justice Bill: the discussion, criticism
or discouragement of sexual conduct or practices will become an offence
of stirring up hatred on grounds of sexual orientation. Coroners and Justice Bill 2009
37. Terror laws make it a criminal offence to encourage terrorism by
directly or indirectly inciting or encouraging others to commit acts of
terrorism. This includes an offence of “glorification” of terror -
people who “praise or celebrate” terrorism in a way that may encourage
others to commit a terrorist act. Terrorism Act 2006
38.The freedom to take photographs of police who are engaged in
anti-terrorist operations was removed by laws that make it a criminal
offence to elicit or attempt to elicit information about a member of
the armed forces, the intelligence services or a constable which is
likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of
terrorism. Counter-Terrorism Act 2008
39.To glorify terrorism in away that may encourage others to commit a terrorist act was made a criminal offence in the Terrorism Act 2006
Freedom of Assembly, ECHR, Article 11,
“Everyone has the right to
freedom of peaceful assembly and to freedom of association with others,
including the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection
of his interests.”
Right to Peaceful Protest
40.The right to freedom of assembly was eroded by the Anti-Social
Behaviour Act 2003, which allows police and community officers to issue
dispersal orders to groups of people in a designated area. A group was
defined as over two people. Refusal to leave or returning to an area
once dispersed is a criminal offence. Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003
41.Demonstrations within 1km of Parliament Square without police
permission are forbidden. The police can decide the time and place of
the demonstration and limit numbers of people as well as the size and
number of banners. Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005
42.A new definition of a “rave” means that a gathering of 20 people, not 100, maybe dispersed by police. Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003 amending the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994
43.The freedom to attend gatherings such as football matches and pop
concerts was affected by the issue of section 27 forms. These allows
police to tell an individual or a group to leave a locality for up to
48 hours to minimise the risk of alcohol related disorder or crime.
There is evidence that this law is already being abused to deprive
innocent members of their right to attend events. Violent Crime Reduction Act 2006.
[contents]
Freedom of Association, ECHR, Article 11,
“Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly
and to freedom of association with others, including the right to form
and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.”
Right to join and form organisations
44.The right to strike was removed from prison officers. Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008
45.Free speech and freedom of association were both reduced by
terror laws. Any support for a proscribed organisation became illegal.
Terrorism Act 2000
46.Certain clothing and the display of articles such as banners were
outlawed if they aroused reasonable suspicion that they indicated
support for a prescribed organisation. A person commits an offence if
he belongs, professes to belong to, or supports a proscribed
organsation Terrorism Act 2000
Marriage, ECHR, Article 12,
“Men and women of marriageable age have the right to
marry and to found a family, according to the national laws governing
the exercise of this right.”
Right to Marry
47.The right to marry and found a family is affected by a new law
that requires immigrants to obtain permission to marry from the
Secretary of State. Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants) Act 2004
Property, ECHR, Protocol 1, Article 1
“Every natural or legal person is entitled to the
peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his
possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions
provided for by law and by the general principles of international law.”
Protection of Property
48.The Englishman’s home is no longer his castle. For the first time
since 1604 bailiffs may enter a home to seize goods in the recovery of
a fine owed as result of magistrates court conviction and use
reasonable force to restrain or pin down those present. Bailiffs may
also enter on a High Court or County Court warrant for unpaid taxes and
social security contributions. Tribunals Courts and Enforcement Act 2007
49.New laws allow police or local authorities to apply to
magistrates to close privately owned or rented property or local
authority premises believed to be the centre of serious and persistent
disorder, or nuisance. The order for three to six months may be granted
at short notice on extremely low standards of proof - hearsay and
evidence from anoymous witnesses is accepted. Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008 /Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003
50.Terror laws can be used to freeze assets as in the case of the stricken National Bank of Iceland
Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 & the Landsbanki Freezing Order 2008/2668
51.Asylum seekers have no property rights while in detention. A
detainee is not entitled to hold cash; the manager or Secretary of
State can object to the holding of possessions if they are likely to be
objectionable to others, are contrary to health and safety or are
incompatible with storage in the facility. Any individual may on
entering, or at sporadic times throughout his detention, be searched. Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 & the Detention Centre Rules 2001/238
Emergency Powers- Derogating from ECHR Rights
ECHR, Article 15
“In time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation any High Contracting Party may take measures derogating from its obligations under this Convention to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of the situation”
52.The Civil Contingencies Act 2004 allows that in an emergency a
senior minister will issue emergency regulations by means of an Order
in Council to protect human life, communications, property, supplies of
money food water or fuel. The powers include the confiscation of
property without compensation, the destruction of property, animal life
or plant life without compensation, enforced movement from a specified
place, the prohibition of travel, the deployment of the armed forces,
the creation of new offences, conferring jurisdiction on new courts and
tribunals and forced labour. ”The Civil Contingencies Act is the most
powerful and extensive peacetime legislation ever enacted,” wrote Clive
walker and James Broderick in their study of this little noticed Act.
“Indeed, it contains within it the tools for dismantling civil society.”
The safeguards against misuse of the act are thought to be weak
because there is no requirement of objectivity in the tests for
invoking emergency powers. The minister must merely satisfy him or
herself that an emergency has taken place, or is about to. The Act
specifies that emergency regulations may be issued by the Prime
Minister, the principle Secretaries of State, or the Commissioners of
Her Majesty’s Treasury, one of which is the Government’s chief Whip.
During its passage through Parliament, the bill was attacked by Lord
Lucas who said, “The Government have so many powers and sources of
information that they are capable of creating the illusion of a serious
threat to the country. Indeed one does not have to look back man months
to see them do exactly that. We have just been to war (in Iraq) as a
result of an illusion created by this government.” The Civil Contingencies Act 2004.
Section 2: Uncodified Rights and Constitutional Safeguards
Our human rights are not limited to those listed in the ECHR and the
Human Rights Act.. There are in fact a wider category of civil
liberties and fundamental freedoms which are protected by the UK
constitution, including rights to citizenship, freedom of movement and
jury trial. Further, constitutional safeguards, such as public
inquiries, provide essential accountability channels and therefore act
as a check and balance on abusive executives. Equally, however, the
attack on liberty has not been limited to ECHR, but has encroached upon
the UK’s cherished constitutional foundations.
Freedom of Movement
53.Freedom of movement without surveillance came to an end in the
United Kingdom in 2007 when the Automatic Number Recognition Camera
Network went live to track and record all journeys on major roads and
through town centres. The system stores data for five years and allows
real time surveillance of target vehicles.
See “Eborders” data collection above. Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act (2006)
[contents]
Citizenship
54.The Home Secretary may remove British citizenship from dual nationals if “conducive to the public good”. Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006
55.The Home Secretary may deny a person of British citizenship if
satisfied that the person has done something seriously prejudicial to
the vital interests of the UK. Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002
Jury Trial
56. The Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act extends the slow
erosion of the principle that every defendant has the right to be tried
by a jury of his peers. The prosecution can now apply for a trial on
indictment when some, but not all, of the counts included on the
indictment may be conducted without a jury. Trial without jury is
permissible if the number of indictable accounts makes it
impracticable; and it is in the interests of justice to disallow jury
trial. Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004
57.Jury Trial is set to be further undermined by a new bill which
gives the secretary of state the power to demand that an inquest be
held (including one where a person has died in state custody or at the
hands of the state) without a jury. Coroners and Justice Bill 2009
[contents]
Public Inquiries
58.A grave reduction in scrutiny and public accountability was
brought about by the Inquiries Act 2005, which also allowed a transfer
of power from Parliament to the Executive with little public debate.
Public inquiries are essential for maintaining transparent and
accountable government. They provide necessary information for voters
and the opportunity to exercise civil liberties such as expression and
protest. However, the Executive now has the power to choose and appoint
the chairman and panel members of any public inquiry, set the inquiry’s
terms of reference and alter them at any point without Parliamentary
consent. The inquiry can be suspended at any point subject to the
Ministers discretion. The Minister may also restrict public access to
the inquiry and any inquiry documents on reasons of cost, delay or
inefficiency and has the power to censor the content of the report,
removing any information they consider would harm the economic and
security interests of state. The Act was barely noticed at the time of
its passage through the House of Commons. Inquiries Act 2005
February 19, 2009
Authors:
Umar Azmeh
Jonathan Butterworth
Tony Daly
Michael Mohallem
Naureen Shameen
Emily Rayner
Richard Walker
Kai Zhang
Editor: Henry Porter
[contents]
Annex 1: Legislation Tables
Statutes (22)
Crime and Disorder Act 1998
Immigration and Asylum Act 1999
Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000
Terrorism Act. 2000
Anti-Terrorist, Crime and Security Act 2001
Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002
Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003
Asylum and Immigration Act 2004
Children Act 2004
Domestic Violence ,Crime and Victims Act 2004
Inquiries Act 2005
Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005
Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005
Identity Cards Act 2006
Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006
Terrorism Act 2006
Violent Crime Reduction Act 2006.
Serious Crime Act 2007
Tribunals Courts and Enforcement Act 2007
UK Borders Act 2007
Counter Terrorism Act 2008
Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008
Statutory Instruments (8)
Amended Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994
Detention centre Rules 2001/ 238
Regulation of Investigative Powers (Communications data) Order 2003/3172
Immigration (Provision of Physical Data) Regulations 2006/1743
Regulations of Investigatory Powers (Communications data) (Additional Functions and
Amendment Order 2006/1878)
Immigration and Police (Passenger, crew and Service information) Order 2008 /5
Landsbanki Freezing Order 2008/2668
Immigration (Biometric) regulations 2008/3048
Draft Legislation (2)
Draft (Partial) Immigration and Citizens Bill 2008
Coroners and Justice Bill 2009
Contents
click to view
No torture
Liberty
Fair Trial
Surveillance and Interception
Freedom of Expression
Freedom of Association
Freedom of movement
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