Friday, October 31, 2008
Tesco plays the race card
Tesco plays the race card
After a fairly heavy drinking session with Victor yesterday afternoon, I went out between 7-8pm to take Rocky for a walk and put some money on my gas card and electric key at the Paki shop, and with the idea of buying some Tesco own brand cheap sausages for tea. When I entered the Tesco Extra on Beverley Road I noticed that a large section of the shelving was empty and a notice proclaimed that this was because of a breakdown in the refrigerator. However, there was also large gaps on the shelves where the sausages normally are and this was not down to any breakdown. All the cheap brands were missing and the only ones on show were the expensive variety at over a £1 more.
It reminded me of the images I had seen in Russia where shop after shop displayed empty shelves. I complained to the Asian-looking shop assistant who was nearby, and he suggested I come back tomorrow! I couldn't believe the response. The shop manager turned up along with a security guard. In my view, the shop manager is responsible for stock taking and ensuring that the products are available for the customers. I said he was incompetent and failing to do his job. He said I could shop elsewhere. I said the store was convenient for me just being across the road, and I did not appreciate his suggestion that I visit the Tesco Extra on Spring Bank as this branch was 20-30 minutes walk away.
I said that Tesco had encouraged customers to come here, and even went to the extent of opening and closing an hour earlier and later than the Paki shop. The shop manager screamed that what I had said was racist and the security guard bundled me out of the store and the store manager said I was now banned.
Is the term Paki racist? Not according to this Talk:Paki from wiktionary. "Paki is just a shortened word for Pakistani, just as Brit is for British, Aussie for Australian etc".
In my view, Tesco should ensure that it's store managers are up to the job. Tesco should not encourage customers to come in and buy its own brand products, and then fail to ensure that it has re-stocked the products only leaving the more expensive brand names on show. Tesco should train its store managers not necessarily with the view that the customer is always right, but to listen to the complaint and respond appropriately. I don't think that libelling and assaulting customers is the correct approach. Nor do I believe that Tesco's customer complaints department should ignore my complaint after informing me that it will get back to me, only to ask me to fill out a questionnaire!
As it happened, I returned to the Paki shop and discovered a pack of sausages with the label £2.20 for 2, but there was only one pack available. I pointed this out to the shop assistant, and he said, "Right, you can have it for £1.10". We shook hands on the deal. Once before I saw and said the same thing at Tesco Extra, and their response was to shrug and say take it or leave it.
And the story that Newsnight should have led with: Congo fighting causing humanitarian catastrophe
And the story that Newsnight should have led with: Congo fighting causing humanitarian catastrophe
Fighting in the Democratic Republic of Congo is threatening to cause a humanitarian catastrophe as tens of thousands become refugees, aid agencies have warned.
It's Déjà vu on Newsnight
It's Déjà vu on Newsnight
He's gone...
She's gone...
Why hasn't he gone?
It's Déjà vu on Newsnight. Last night again the lead story was the stunt that went wrong. It dragged on and on and on for 25 minutes. The BBC suspending Jonathan Ross for 3 months without pay has cost him £1.5M, what a saving for the TV licence fee payers. That's one hell of a severe punishment, but I do question whether he is worth £125,000 per week in the first place. Then there is Lesley Douglas resigning. And what does the BBC do? It promotes the man directly beneath her in the line of management, and yet he also allowed the show to be aired!
If anyone should have gone, being editor in chief, surely it should have been the Director General of the BBC, Mark Thompson? Isn't this where the buck stops?
He's gone...
She's gone...
Why hasn't he gone?
It's Déjà vu on Newsnight. Last night again the lead story was the stunt that went wrong. It dragged on and on and on for 25 minutes. The BBC suspending Jonathan Ross for 3 months without pay has cost him £1.5M, what a saving for the TV licence fee payers. That's one hell of a severe punishment, but I do question whether he is worth £125,000 per week in the first place. Then there is Lesley Douglas resigning. And what does the BBC do? It promotes the man directly beneath her in the line of management, and yet he also allowed the show to be aired!
If anyone should have gone, being editor in chief, surely it should have been the Director General of the BBC, Mark Thompson? Isn't this where the buck stops?
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Topsy turvy world of BBC Newsnight
Topsy turvy world of BBC Newsnight
I couldn't believe it last night when Newsnight's lead story was Russell Brand had resigned from his Radio 2 show. Apparently, a stunt backfired. When it was aired, there was 2 complaints from listeners. Following the gutter press making a mountain out of a mole hill, 27,000 people who had not heard it then complained to the BBC. My only complaint is why the BBC thought Jonathan Ross is worth £6M per year. And, Russell Brand £200,000 per year just for presenting one show per week on Radio 2. It is being said that these stars reach the younger generation. Times must have changed because Radio 2 used to be for the Golden Oldies.
Whoever is responsible for letting the offensive material be broadcast needs to justify the decision given that Andrew Sachs requested it not be aired because he found it offensive. Although I have seen it in the blogosphere that nobody has the right not to be offended.
By the same token, whoever took the decision at the BBC to make this the lead story on Newsnight should be taken out and shot. Later in the programme it was reported that in the Congo another Rwanda was taking place, and that the UN was supporting the troops who had carried out the genocide in Rwanda and were now doing the same in the Congo.
UN joins battle with Congo rebels
Perhaps, I am too cynical but it does seem rather convenient with the world economy collapsing that 2 scapegoats have emerged...
I couldn't believe it last night when Newsnight's lead story was Russell Brand had resigned from his Radio 2 show. Apparently, a stunt backfired. When it was aired, there was 2 complaints from listeners. Following the gutter press making a mountain out of a mole hill, 27,000 people who had not heard it then complained to the BBC. My only complaint is why the BBC thought Jonathan Ross is worth £6M per year. And, Russell Brand £200,000 per year just for presenting one show per week on Radio 2. It is being said that these stars reach the younger generation. Times must have changed because Radio 2 used to be for the Golden Oldies.
Whoever is responsible for letting the offensive material be broadcast needs to justify the decision given that Andrew Sachs requested it not be aired because he found it offensive. Although I have seen it in the blogosphere that nobody has the right not to be offended.
By the same token, whoever took the decision at the BBC to make this the lead story on Newsnight should be taken out and shot. Later in the programme it was reported that in the Congo another Rwanda was taking place, and that the UN was supporting the troops who had carried out the genocide in Rwanda and were now doing the same in the Congo.
UN joins battle with Congo rebels
Perhaps, I am too cynical but it does seem rather convenient with the world economy collapsing that 2 scapegoats have emerged...
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Giving prisoners a purpose
Giving prisoners a purpose
Hansard
Prisoners
2. Angela Watkinson (Upminster) (Con): What recent discussions he has had with HM Prison Service on increasing the amount of purposeful activity undertaken by inmates in prisons. [230371]
28 Oct 2008 : Column 711
9. Mr. David Evennett (Bexleyheath and Crayford) (Con): What recent discussions he has had with HM Prison Service on increasing the amount of purposeful activity in prisons. [230378]
The Minister of State, Ministry of Justice (Mr. David Hanson): The Government and the National Offender Management Service are committed to increasing the amount and quality of purposeful activity in prisons including, for example, the expansion and further development of links with private sector employers to increase the range of constructive work and training available to prisoners; the delivery of a comprehensive range of interventions designed to address offending behaviour; and an improvement in the quality of prison education provision.
Angela Watkinson: The Minister will agree that a custodial sentence provides the opportunity for training and education to prepare people to lead productive lives, but that what often happens in practice is that people are moved from prison to prison, meaning that they have different tutors and their courses are left unfinished. What will he do to remedy that? Will he have discussions with his colleagues in the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform and in the Department for Work and Pensions to see what additional work opportunities can be given to prisoners when they leave, so that they are motivated to learn while they are in prison?
Mr. Hanson: The hon. Lady makes a valid point. It is important that we have employment opportunities and that we link them to what happens in the world outside for when prisoners leave. Last year alone, more than 40,000 prisoners went into training and employment at the end of their sentence. I take the point that occasionally movement between prisons can disrupt sentences. We have to focus on providing meaningful employment, raising skills and matching that with the business world outside. Indeed, later this year I shall host a further seminar with some key employers to try to make links with prisons in the community.
Mr. Evennett: In June, the Government introduced the core day, which means that in 159 of our state prisons prisoners are locked in their cells for the whole of Friday, with the cancellation of classes and workshops. Does the Minister think that that will help in the fight against recidivism?
Mr. Hanson: I know that the hon. Gentleman meant Friday afternoon, rather than the whole of Friday. Prisoners are not locked up for the whole of Friday. We are looking at a range of efficiency measures. The core day is at an early stage in its implementation. I need to look at that, and we have a group looking at the impact of the core day on a range of services. Overall, last year, some 25.3 hours per prisoner was, on average, spent on purposeful activity. I want to see that figure increase and, for the reasons I gave to the hon. Member for Upminster (Angela Watkinson), I am trying to ensure that that happens.
Mr. Dennis Skinner (Bolsover) (Lab): Will the system that my right hon. Friend is outlining be comprehensive enough to find something useful for Russell Brand and Jonathan Ross to do in the event that they finish up inside?
28 Oct 2008 : Column 712
Mr. Hanson: I am sure that we have some in-house entertainment that they can do. My hon. Friend makes a serious point. It is not for me to comment on the issues that were mentioned, but I feel that both Mr. Ross and Mr. Brand have to apologise for the broadcast. I do not think that it was appropriate or in keeping with broadcasting. I am not sure that it will result in prosecutions, but I feel that an apology is called for.
Kerry McCarthy (Bristol, East) (Lab): I am sure that the Minister will agree that given the reoffending rates among young offenders it is particularly important that they find purposeful activities during their periods inside. Is he aware of the scheme that has been operating between Ashfield young offenders institution and Avon fire and rescue, whereby the youngsters do the equivalent of a firefighter’s training course? Does he think that that model could be adapted elsewhere?
Mr. Hanson: I am grateful to my hon. Friend for that point. I am aware of the scheme. It is important that we give people pride in themselves, as well as some recognition of their achievement, and that we let them learn new skills. The fire service scheme, linked with the young offenders institution in this case, offers all those activities. It is key to us that we raise the level of skills and of employability and that we give people some pride and self-worth, which, sadly, they often have not had outside the estate.
John Bercow (Buckingham) (Con): Given that the right hon. Gentleman is a notable progressive, and pursuant to the publication of the youth crime action plan, will he accept that it should be a priority to do something to help the 60 per cent.-plus of the 11,000 people in the young offenders estate who suffer from speech, language and communication problems on a scale and of a severity that prevents them from accessing conventional education and training courses?
Mr. Hanson: Absolutely. I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for his recognition of my progressive nature, which I am sure the House will welcome. I recognise that he has done a considerable amount of work on the question of dyslexia and other learning disabilities. There is, sadly, a high correlation between the people who go into offending behaviour and their level of literacy and numeracy. We need to address the problem early. The youth crime action plan, with which I have been dealing along with my right hon. Friend the Home Secretary and my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families, is trying to look at early intervention and at how to make better use of people’s time in custody to deal with those very issues.
David Taylor (North-West Leicestershire) (Lab/Co-op): There is a rather Dickensian feel to the list of activities that prisoners undertake: scrubbing floors, cleaning toilets and stitching laundry are jobs that Magwitch would recognise, but does my right hon. Friend have great expectations that a wider variety of tasks will be available in the years ahead that will genuinely fit discharged prisoners better for the outside world that will receive them?
28 Oct 2008 : Column 713
Mr. Hanson: There is certainly some low-level employment in prisons, but I can give some different examples. I visited Wandsworth prison recently and saw the high investment that has been made in giving some prisoners computer skills so that they have the potential to work in the sector. Other prisons offer real and definite skills in housebuilding, decorating and painting, which require a high national vocational qualification. Indeed, funding for education in prisons has risen in the past six years alone from £57 million in 2001 to £170 million in 2008. That is real progress, and we are looking to match giving inmates skills for the outside world with what needs to be done in prison.
Dr. William McCrea (South Antrim) (DUP): I accept that purposeful activity for inmates is vital, but will the Minister assure the House that the justice system is there to punish those who have broken the law?
Mr. Hanson: Absolutely. Yesterday, my right hon. Friend the Justice Secretary repeated what all Ministers have always made very clear—that the justice system is about punishment and reform. There has to be an element of punishment, as that is what the public and victims quite rightly demand, but equally we need to make sure that those who come into contact with our system do not return to us after the end of their sentence. The key to that is employability, as well as raised skill levels and the maintenance of family links. We must also build support for accommodation outside prison and try to deal with some of the real and meaningful problems to do with drugs, alcohol and mental health. Our pathways programme tries to do all that in a positive way.
Fiona Mactaggart (Slough) (Lab): The Minister said that the important thing about purposeful educational activity in prison is that it prepares people for the world outside, and I welcome that. For example, great progress has been made in helping prisoners to learn to read, but the problem of giving prisoners—those doing National Extension College courses, and others—access to the internet is a real barrier to preparing them for the world outside. Has there been any progress in making it easier for prisoners to use the internet safely?
Mr. Hanson: First, may I pay tribute to the work that my hon. Friend did in this field when she held ministerial office? She rightly recognises that we need to raise prisoners’ internet and computing skills in preparation for the outside world, and we are looking at how we can make that practicable in a secure way. However, she will accept that that there are real difficulties with internet usage and contact between prisoners and the outside world, so security concerns remain paramount in our approach to the issue.
Mr. Edward Garnier (Harborough) (Con): In July, the Government severely cut the amount of time that prisoners can spend working or learning to read and write, but even before that prisoners spent only three and a half hours a day, Monday to Friday, on purposeful activity. Does the Minister share my disappointment that, while the reoffending rate for ex-prisoners rockets and thus more victims of crime are created, the Secretary of State resorts to cheap soundbites about sentencing to disguise the Government’s incompetence in failing to provide real opportunities for offenders to turn away from crime through purposeful activity in prison?
28 Oct 2008 : Column 714
Mr. Hanson: First, let me tell the hon. and learned Gentleman that crime overall is down some 39 per cent. since 1997. Reoffending figures have also fallen over the past six years, as he will see if he looks at the announcement that I made to the House in September. He mentioned the figures on purposeful activity by prisoners, which I set out earlier to the hon. Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford (Mr. Evennett). Currently, in 2007-08, each prisoner spends some 25.3 hours per week on purposeful activity. That is a steady figure, but I am working to increase it and I know that I will have his support in doing so—although unfortunately a future Conservative Government, if there were to be one, would be unlikely to provide the necessary resources.
ConservativeHome has more here.
Hansard
Prisoners
2. Angela Watkinson (Upminster) (Con): What recent discussions he has had with HM Prison Service on increasing the amount of purposeful activity undertaken by inmates in prisons. [230371]
28 Oct 2008 : Column 711
9. Mr. David Evennett (Bexleyheath and Crayford) (Con): What recent discussions he has had with HM Prison Service on increasing the amount of purposeful activity in prisons. [230378]
The Minister of State, Ministry of Justice (Mr. David Hanson): The Government and the National Offender Management Service are committed to increasing the amount and quality of purposeful activity in prisons including, for example, the expansion and further development of links with private sector employers to increase the range of constructive work and training available to prisoners; the delivery of a comprehensive range of interventions designed to address offending behaviour; and an improvement in the quality of prison education provision.
Angela Watkinson: The Minister will agree that a custodial sentence provides the opportunity for training and education to prepare people to lead productive lives, but that what often happens in practice is that people are moved from prison to prison, meaning that they have different tutors and their courses are left unfinished. What will he do to remedy that? Will he have discussions with his colleagues in the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform and in the Department for Work and Pensions to see what additional work opportunities can be given to prisoners when they leave, so that they are motivated to learn while they are in prison?
Mr. Hanson: The hon. Lady makes a valid point. It is important that we have employment opportunities and that we link them to what happens in the world outside for when prisoners leave. Last year alone, more than 40,000 prisoners went into training and employment at the end of their sentence. I take the point that occasionally movement between prisons can disrupt sentences. We have to focus on providing meaningful employment, raising skills and matching that with the business world outside. Indeed, later this year I shall host a further seminar with some key employers to try to make links with prisons in the community.
Mr. Evennett: In June, the Government introduced the core day, which means that in 159 of our state prisons prisoners are locked in their cells for the whole of Friday, with the cancellation of classes and workshops. Does the Minister think that that will help in the fight against recidivism?
Mr. Hanson: I know that the hon. Gentleman meant Friday afternoon, rather than the whole of Friday. Prisoners are not locked up for the whole of Friday. We are looking at a range of efficiency measures. The core day is at an early stage in its implementation. I need to look at that, and we have a group looking at the impact of the core day on a range of services. Overall, last year, some 25.3 hours per prisoner was, on average, spent on purposeful activity. I want to see that figure increase and, for the reasons I gave to the hon. Member for Upminster (Angela Watkinson), I am trying to ensure that that happens.
Mr. Dennis Skinner (Bolsover) (Lab): Will the system that my right hon. Friend is outlining be comprehensive enough to find something useful for Russell Brand and Jonathan Ross to do in the event that they finish up inside?
28 Oct 2008 : Column 712
Mr. Hanson: I am sure that we have some in-house entertainment that they can do. My hon. Friend makes a serious point. It is not for me to comment on the issues that were mentioned, but I feel that both Mr. Ross and Mr. Brand have to apologise for the broadcast. I do not think that it was appropriate or in keeping with broadcasting. I am not sure that it will result in prosecutions, but I feel that an apology is called for.
Kerry McCarthy (Bristol, East) (Lab): I am sure that the Minister will agree that given the reoffending rates among young offenders it is particularly important that they find purposeful activities during their periods inside. Is he aware of the scheme that has been operating between Ashfield young offenders institution and Avon fire and rescue, whereby the youngsters do the equivalent of a firefighter’s training course? Does he think that that model could be adapted elsewhere?
Mr. Hanson: I am grateful to my hon. Friend for that point. I am aware of the scheme. It is important that we give people pride in themselves, as well as some recognition of their achievement, and that we let them learn new skills. The fire service scheme, linked with the young offenders institution in this case, offers all those activities. It is key to us that we raise the level of skills and of employability and that we give people some pride and self-worth, which, sadly, they often have not had outside the estate.
John Bercow (Buckingham) (Con): Given that the right hon. Gentleman is a notable progressive, and pursuant to the publication of the youth crime action plan, will he accept that it should be a priority to do something to help the 60 per cent.-plus of the 11,000 people in the young offenders estate who suffer from speech, language and communication problems on a scale and of a severity that prevents them from accessing conventional education and training courses?
Mr. Hanson: Absolutely. I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for his recognition of my progressive nature, which I am sure the House will welcome. I recognise that he has done a considerable amount of work on the question of dyslexia and other learning disabilities. There is, sadly, a high correlation between the people who go into offending behaviour and their level of literacy and numeracy. We need to address the problem early. The youth crime action plan, with which I have been dealing along with my right hon. Friend the Home Secretary and my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families, is trying to look at early intervention and at how to make better use of people’s time in custody to deal with those very issues.
David Taylor (North-West Leicestershire) (Lab/Co-op): There is a rather Dickensian feel to the list of activities that prisoners undertake: scrubbing floors, cleaning toilets and stitching laundry are jobs that Magwitch would recognise, but does my right hon. Friend have great expectations that a wider variety of tasks will be available in the years ahead that will genuinely fit discharged prisoners better for the outside world that will receive them?
28 Oct 2008 : Column 713
Mr. Hanson: There is certainly some low-level employment in prisons, but I can give some different examples. I visited Wandsworth prison recently and saw the high investment that has been made in giving some prisoners computer skills so that they have the potential to work in the sector. Other prisons offer real and definite skills in housebuilding, decorating and painting, which require a high national vocational qualification. Indeed, funding for education in prisons has risen in the past six years alone from £57 million in 2001 to £170 million in 2008. That is real progress, and we are looking to match giving inmates skills for the outside world with what needs to be done in prison.
Dr. William McCrea (South Antrim) (DUP): I accept that purposeful activity for inmates is vital, but will the Minister assure the House that the justice system is there to punish those who have broken the law?
Mr. Hanson: Absolutely. Yesterday, my right hon. Friend the Justice Secretary repeated what all Ministers have always made very clear—that the justice system is about punishment and reform. There has to be an element of punishment, as that is what the public and victims quite rightly demand, but equally we need to make sure that those who come into contact with our system do not return to us after the end of their sentence. The key to that is employability, as well as raised skill levels and the maintenance of family links. We must also build support for accommodation outside prison and try to deal with some of the real and meaningful problems to do with drugs, alcohol and mental health. Our pathways programme tries to do all that in a positive way.
Fiona Mactaggart (Slough) (Lab): The Minister said that the important thing about purposeful educational activity in prison is that it prepares people for the world outside, and I welcome that. For example, great progress has been made in helping prisoners to learn to read, but the problem of giving prisoners—those doing National Extension College courses, and others—access to the internet is a real barrier to preparing them for the world outside. Has there been any progress in making it easier for prisoners to use the internet safely?
Mr. Hanson: First, may I pay tribute to the work that my hon. Friend did in this field when she held ministerial office? She rightly recognises that we need to raise prisoners’ internet and computing skills in preparation for the outside world, and we are looking at how we can make that practicable in a secure way. However, she will accept that that there are real difficulties with internet usage and contact between prisoners and the outside world, so security concerns remain paramount in our approach to the issue.
Mr. Edward Garnier (Harborough) (Con): In July, the Government severely cut the amount of time that prisoners can spend working or learning to read and write, but even before that prisoners spent only three and a half hours a day, Monday to Friday, on purposeful activity. Does the Minister share my disappointment that, while the reoffending rate for ex-prisoners rockets and thus more victims of crime are created, the Secretary of State resorts to cheap soundbites about sentencing to disguise the Government’s incompetence in failing to provide real opportunities for offenders to turn away from crime through purposeful activity in prison?
28 Oct 2008 : Column 714
Mr. Hanson: First, let me tell the hon. and learned Gentleman that crime overall is down some 39 per cent. since 1997. Reoffending figures have also fallen over the past six years, as he will see if he looks at the announcement that I made to the House in September. He mentioned the figures on purposeful activity by prisoners, which I set out earlier to the hon. Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford (Mr. Evennett). Currently, in 2007-08, each prisoner spends some 25.3 hours per week on purposeful activity. That is a steady figure, but I am working to increase it and I know that I will have his support in doing so—although unfortunately a future Conservative Government, if there were to be one, would be unlikely to provide the necessary resources.
ConservativeHome has more here.
No help for war veterans
No help for war veterans
The government has refused to fund a trip to France for surviving Normandy war veterans to celebrate the 65th Anniversary of D-Day.
Video link.
"If I should die, think only this of me:
That there's some corner of a foreign field
That is forever England. There shall be
In that rich earth a richer dust concealed;
A dust whom England bore, shaped, made aware,
Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam,
A body of England's, breathing English air,
Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home".
(Rupert Brooke, The Soldier)
The government has refused to fund a trip to France for surviving Normandy war veterans to celebrate the 65th Anniversary of D-Day.
Video link.
"If I should die, think only this of me:
That there's some corner of a foreign field
That is forever England. There shall be
In that rich earth a richer dust concealed;
A dust whom England bore, shaped, made aware,
Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam,
A body of England's, breathing English air,
Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home".
(Rupert Brooke, The Soldier)
Prison reformer misses the point
Prison reformer misses the point
Juliet Lyon the director of Prison Reform Trust and secretary general of Penal Reform International, in an article for Comment is free concludes:
"The conditions in prison may no longer be Dickensian but young mothers are still going to jail for the same reasons they were in Victorian times: poverty, debt, addiction and mental illness".
I challenge her view that women are being sent to prison for "poverty, debt, addiction and mental illness". Like men, they are sent to prison for committing crimes.
Juliet Lyon the director of Prison Reform Trust and secretary general of Penal Reform International, in an article for Comment is free concludes:
"The conditions in prison may no longer be Dickensian but young mothers are still going to jail for the same reasons they were in Victorian times: poverty, debt, addiction and mental illness".
I challenge her view that women are being sent to prison for "poverty, debt, addiction and mental illness". Like men, they are sent to prison for committing crimes.
Former prisoner Mohamed Nasheed wins Maldives election
Former prisoner Mohamed Nasheed wins Maldives election
A former Amnesty International "prisoner of conscience" has spectacularly beaten his former jailer and Asia's longest serving ruler, Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, in the Maldives' first democratic election.
Walking in the footsteps of Nelson Mandela?
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Tagging 'allows curfew breaches'
Tagging 'allows curfew breaches'
Criminals given electronic tags could break their curfews for more than 11 hours and still not be arrested, a report has revealed.
Probation inspectors found that being at home for just a few minutes qualified offenders for a warning. Only a second breach would prompt an arrest.
The report said the system was "meeting the contract but missing the point".
Straw man
Straw man
There must be more than one Jack Straw at large in the cabinet. The thoughtful Mr Straw wrote the forward to a recent collection of essays on penal reform, a book which not only called for a massive cut in the prison population, but included that call in its title. The other one delivered a hardline speech on punishment yesterday. One of these men panders to liberal reformers - indeed, would like to be thought of as something of a liberal himself. The other goes down well with the Daily Mail. Only an old lag at the political game, serving his second stretch in charge of the justice system, could be both of these people at the same time.
It is nice to know that it is not just me who can see through Jack Straw and his half-baked policies.
There must be more than one Jack Straw at large in the cabinet. The thoughtful Mr Straw wrote the forward to a recent collection of essays on penal reform, a book which not only called for a massive cut in the prison population, but included that call in its title. The other one delivered a hardline speech on punishment yesterday. One of these men panders to liberal reformers - indeed, would like to be thought of as something of a liberal himself. The other goes down well with the Daily Mail. Only an old lag at the political game, serving his second stretch in charge of the justice system, could be both of these people at the same time.
It is nice to know that it is not just me who can see through Jack Straw and his half-baked policies.
Monday, October 27, 2008
The 'posh' Prescott
The 'posh' Prescott
I found the first part of the BBC 2 programme on John Prescott and class very entertaining. He reminds me of Les Dawson.
I couldn't help thinking that his missus behaved like that Bucket woman, Hyacinth.
The three London girls were natural born comedians, unfortunately they were as thick as pig shit. I think the girls up North would have taught them a thing or two.
I am looking forward to part two next week.
Prescott: The Class System and Me (BBC2) is a jolly plum pudding of a programme. There is far too much of it (another helping next week) but, if you rummage around, there are treasurable thrupenny bits to be found. I came across this entertaining exchange between John Prescott and Josie, a teenage tearaway. Prescott: "I would say you're working class." Josie: "But I don't work!"
This is the bit that got me thinking about that Bucket woman and Keeping Up Appearances...
"Pauline, who wore gloves to make smoked salmon sandwiches, is very aware of appearances. "John," she said "could you get my Royal Albert teapot from the top shelf?" John was taken aback. "Do what?" "We always have it out, John, don't we?" she said making a winding up gesture behind his back".
I found the first part of the BBC 2 programme on John Prescott and class very entertaining. He reminds me of Les Dawson.
I couldn't help thinking that his missus behaved like that Bucket woman, Hyacinth.
The three London girls were natural born comedians, unfortunately they were as thick as pig shit. I think the girls up North would have taught them a thing or two.
I am looking forward to part two next week.
Prescott: The Class System and Me (BBC2) is a jolly plum pudding of a programme. There is far too much of it (another helping next week) but, if you rummage around, there are treasurable thrupenny bits to be found. I came across this entertaining exchange between John Prescott and Josie, a teenage tearaway. Prescott: "I would say you're working class." Josie: "But I don't work!"
This is the bit that got me thinking about that Bucket woman and Keeping Up Appearances...
"Pauline, who wore gloves to make smoked salmon sandwiches, is very aware of appearances. "John," she said "could you get my Royal Albert teapot from the top shelf?" John was taken aback. "Do what?" "We always have it out, John, don't we?" she said making a winding up gesture behind his back".
A prickly subject and it's not Jack Straw for a change...
A prickly subject and it's not Jack Straw for a change...
A rare blond hedgehog enjoys some autumn sunshine at a rescue centre after being found at a West Midlands care home. His light colouring makes him too vulnerable to predators to live in the wild.
click to enlarge for full viewing pleasure
A rare blond hedgehog enjoys some autumn sunshine at a rescue centre after being found at a West Midlands care home. His light colouring makes him too vulnerable to predators to live in the wild.
click to enlarge for full viewing pleasure
Why has Jack Straw shoved his head up his arse?
Why has Jack Straw shoved his head up his arse?
I am somewhat puzzled why Jack Straw has decided to give this particular speech to the Royal Society of Arts? Google informs me that: "The RSA is a charity which encourages the development of a principled, prosperous society and the release of human potential". According to the BBC: Jail reformers 'forget victims' "Prison reformers must do more to help the victims of crime, Justice Secretary Jack Straw is due to say". My understanding is that prison reform groups are set up with the twin aims of reforming prisons and reforming prisoners. They have enough on their plate without having the additional burden thrust upon them of aiding victims of crime.
As I understand it, victims of crime are taken care of when an offender is caught and the offender goes through the Criminal Justice System. This is Jack Straw's responsibility. It is no good seeking to abdicate responsibility by trying to shoulder it upon prison reform groups. In prison, prison officers refer to this tactic as 'sloping shoulders'.
I do wish that the BBC would refrain from referring to NACRO (which was originally called the National Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders, then restyled itself as the "crime reduction charity") as a charity. NACRO is now a prison business having joined forces with Global Soloutions Ltd (formally Group 4). That is, NACRO has an interest in building more prisons and keeping prisoners in longer because it is where the profits are.
I find it odd that Jack Straw is claiming that he is not returning to Victorian values, given that a large part of the penal estate is still made up of Victorian prisons.
I would say that Jack Straw has gone around in circles and lost his head up his own arse!
I am somewhat puzzled why Jack Straw has decided to give this particular speech to the Royal Society of Arts? Google informs me that: "The RSA is a charity which encourages the development of a principled, prosperous society and the release of human potential". According to the BBC: Jail reformers 'forget victims' "Prison reformers must do more to help the victims of crime, Justice Secretary Jack Straw is due to say". My understanding is that prison reform groups are set up with the twin aims of reforming prisons and reforming prisoners. They have enough on their plate without having the additional burden thrust upon them of aiding victims of crime.
As I understand it, victims of crime are taken care of when an offender is caught and the offender goes through the Criminal Justice System. This is Jack Straw's responsibility. It is no good seeking to abdicate responsibility by trying to shoulder it upon prison reform groups. In prison, prison officers refer to this tactic as 'sloping shoulders'.
I do wish that the BBC would refrain from referring to NACRO (which was originally called the National Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders, then restyled itself as the "crime reduction charity") as a charity. NACRO is now a prison business having joined forces with Global Soloutions Ltd (formally Group 4). That is, NACRO has an interest in building more prisons and keeping prisoners in longer because it is where the profits are.
I find it odd that Jack Straw is claiming that he is not returning to Victorian values, given that a large part of the penal estate is still made up of Victorian prisons.
I would say that Jack Straw has gone around in circles and lost his head up his own arse!
Jack Straw: 'Punishing criminals must come before offenders' needs'
Jack Straw: 'Punishing criminals must come before offenders' needs'
Punishing criminals must be the main factor in guiding sentencing policy, Jack Straw will say in a speech as he admits that the Government has too often concentrated on the needs of offenders.
I might be too cynical, but all this sounds rather too much like political posturing. That is, "we can be tougher than the Tories". It appears that Jack Straw is merely gearing up for the next election.
The Daily Telegraph informs us that Jack Straw will say two words. It is not clear from the gibberish what those two words are. They may be punishment and reform. In any event, I have two words for Jack Straw...
Fuck Off.
UPDATE: The Guardian clarifies what Jack Straw is trying to say. I still say it is political waffle.
The BBC reports that the gutter press is getting stuck in as well...
Papers urge action over 'cushy jails'
Most of Monday's papers are covering a speech yet to be made in which Jack Straw will, according to the Daily Mirror, signal the end of cushy jails.
The Daily Mail says the justice secretary will launch "a withering attack on liberal justice groups who 'drive him nuts'."
But its editorial suggests his words are out of step with his actions in office.
The Sun too believes actions speak louder than words, saying "if you mean business, give us those new prisons".
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Saturday, October 25, 2008
Jailed son freed in father mix-up
Jailed son freed in father mix-up
Prison officers released the wrong man after an "administrative error" led to him being mixed up with his father, the Ministry of Justice said.
Father and son, both called Terence Clegg, were in HMP Durham, with the elder Clegg due for release.
But prison officers mixed up the two men's papers and freed the son, who was on remand awaiting trial, on Thursday.
Northumbria Police are now trying to trace the 23-year-old. The father, 53, of Newcastle, has since been released.
I am amazed that whoever released the young Clegg was unable to tell the difference between a 23 and 53 year old. It used to be that whoever is responsible for releasing prisoners would check the photo on the prison record against the prisoner to ensure that no error occurred.
Prison officers released the wrong man after an "administrative error" led to him being mixed up with his father, the Ministry of Justice said.
Father and son, both called Terence Clegg, were in HMP Durham, with the elder Clegg due for release.
But prison officers mixed up the two men's papers and freed the son, who was on remand awaiting trial, on Thursday.
Northumbria Police are now trying to trace the 23-year-old. The father, 53, of Newcastle, has since been released.
I am amazed that whoever released the young Clegg was unable to tell the difference between a 23 and 53 year old. It used to be that whoever is responsible for releasing prisoners would check the photo on the prison record against the prisoner to ensure that no error occurred.
Italian police to use 200mph Lamborghini
Italian police to use 200mph Lamborghini
Italian police unveiled the latest weapon in their war on speeding motorists yesterday – a muscular, blue and white Lamborghini capable of travelling at 200 miles per hour.
Z Cars eat your heart out...
Italian police unveiled the latest weapon in their war on speeding motorists yesterday – a muscular, blue and white Lamborghini capable of travelling at 200 miles per hour.
Z Cars eat your heart out...
Frogwogs are sore losers
Frogwogs are sore losers
I see that the Frogwogs intend to rewrite history to try to minimise the British victory at Agincourt, and accuse us of war crimes during the battle. Perhaps, they are only being Sarkozyiastic?
I see that the Frogwogs intend to rewrite history to try to minimise the British victory at Agincourt, and accuse us of war crimes during the battle. Perhaps, they are only being Sarkozyiastic?
Friday, October 24, 2008
NARK LEECH
NARK LEECH
The one thing that is consistent about Mark Leech is his overblown ego and
posturing as some kind of self-appointed spokesman for prisoners as though noone else's opinion counts and such a sensitive guy is this parody of a man called Mark
Leech that like a big girl's blouse he launches into the world of the conspiracy
theorists that everyone is out to get him and to him that is unforgivable as he lets
loose with vitriolic abuse even against the more diplomatic and civilised criticism
of him. Gentleman (or gentlewoman) he is not, but a hate filled individual who is
consumed with rage and rant.
I cannot help but notice how he has clashed with the widely read prisoner's
newspaper Inside Time which relies entirely on prisoner's contributions be it
articles, letters, queries even poetry and so forth but what does Leech produce? The
paper Converse which [is] so full of solicitor's adverts that there exists little room for anything else except the word according to Mark Leech and aimed at believers in him.
Naye, a platform for abuse, for how else does he explain the play on the title of
Inside Time in his 2008 Converse issue - 'Inside Slime', so tragic, so petty oh so
childlike and so inane?
Grow up Leech.
That he can get personal about people and in this case I mean prisoners shows why
people hold him in contempt. He abuses Ben Gunn a regular writer for Inside Time
and labels him a columnist with a small c and waves him goodbye as he plans a
holiday in Thailand where he has a house (a house?). Well, as someone suggested
recently, people especially men go to Thailand for one of two reasons. One, for
cheap drugs,' and the other for cheap under age sex and Leech has no history of
drug misuse.
Of course, we cannot leave out his main supporter and quite disgracefully so a
prisoner, Dee Wilde-Walker of HMP Low Newton.
Now, we cannot ever imagine the basis of such a relationship. A gay HIV (Heavy
Into Vitriol) wannabe a 'prisoner expert and spokesperson' (person?)' and a female
who perhaps might be a fag hag or child abuser (yes! the NSPCC reported back in
the 1990s that most child abusers are mothers which makes sense for they are the
ones children spend most time with especially single mothers and abuse can be
anything can it not including emotional and mental abuse) who shares Leech's
contempt for male prisoners.
Naye, men in general perhaps, for why should she assume that Benn Gunn is a
domestic violence perpetrator. In any event, so what? He is doing his time and it
might be good advice that she should focus on hers and doesn't allow herself to
become as bitter and twisted as her mentor Leech.
Now to Converse.
What does it represent to prisoners apart from being a platform for personal attacks
and mouthy Leech at play.
Take for instance the current issue of Converse where Leech claims not to take a
penny in salary or otherwise from the paper. What the fuck does he want?
An accolade? He takes plenty from other sources relating to prisoners which
enables him to swan around the country in a helicopter like the time he visited
Grendon and landed nearby. Was he there to talk to cons? No he was there to arse
lick and found cons walking out of a meeting at which he was giving a talk or
rather rubbing shoulders with the prisoner's captors - the screws. I would have
puked.
Leech goes on to attack the Directors of Inside Time and somehow shows his
ignorance of the law and here is someone who claims he is a fucking Perry Mason
and a marvel to modern jurisprudence. For Leech's information, a person can draw
a salary from a voluntary organisation including registered charities. You see there
is a difference between a statutory body like the Job Centre and a voluntary body
like MIND which I am certain Leech is only too familiar with. Those at MIND
including their charity fund raisers do draw a salary as do charity shop managers.
The body is a voluntary body in that it exists on public donations and fund raising
and not Government funding. Would you believe that the boss of OXFAM earns a salary which would disgrace Leech's?
On second thoughts perhaps not.
I would suggest that anyone wanting to know what Leech might derive in income
to look at the websites associated with him. Books, DVDs, courses etc. etc. and of
course consultancy fees for putting himself as a self-appointed expert on prisons to
such likes as the media.
Some time ago, a friend of mine sent an email to Leech asking if there was a
discount for prisoners on his Prison's Handbook. No reply. My friend followed it through with an undertaking to buy 30 copies for prison libraries if there was a discount. Yes! you have guessed it, Leech answered almost immediately with an offer to reduce the cost. Now we have it an entrepreneur first and foremost, fuck the cons.
A bit like when he recently sacked the distribution firm which distributed Converse
for him so that he could cut costs and do it himself and why not?
After all, the supposedly 44,000 copies he claims to circulate is entirely suspect and bogus and that is from the horses mouth. More like 5,000 we are reliably informed.
He makes great play on the silly OK logo as representing those solicitors who have
completed the Prison Law Course of his as if it's the pinnacle of legal practice.
No it's not anymore than a practitioner in Mental Health Law needs to undertake a
two bob course in psychiatry or psychology. Good practice and knowledge comes from experience and there are many many good prison law lawyers whose reputation and skills derive from exactly that. They have trod the path of both prison law litigation and the representation of prisoners and an OK logo is no substitute for that. In fact, the logo is all the evidence one should need to steer clear
of those whose names and firms appear alongside the symbolic tick and OK for his
very name and attitude towards certain prisoners creates a definite conflict of
interests between solicitors who he is favourably disposed towards because he has
given them a tick and an OK and the client.
Moreover, the Prisoner's Advice Service in London a long and well established
prisoner's legal rights body which offers FREE legal advice and in some cases
legal representation for prisoners runs its own prison law programmes and seminars
for solicitors and barristers. Indeed, the PAS is made up of barristers, solicitors,
academics and representatives of government departments and non government
bodies.
Professionals indeed, not a tick and logo brigade.
In addition, the Prisoner's Legal Rights Group Bulletin a highly informative
publication and published periodically for prison lawyers by the PAS is entirely
FREE to prisoners and there we have it, a proper legal body that truly represents
prisoners.
The full time solicitors who work for the PAS which is a registered charity are paid
employees so there you are Mr Leech, a confirmation that those who work in the
voluntary sector are able to draw a salary but then they are lawyers and should
know shouldn't they?
Mark Leech displays all the features and would no doubt meet the criteria of a
diagnosis of personality disorder which might explain why he served a period in
Grendon Psychiatric prison at one time. Either he was sent there or volunteered but
either way it is clear there was something psychologically wrong with him he
should join the therapy freaks where he was no doubt encouraged to grass people
up as is common in Grendon and cry in his coffee as he confessed his past
misdemeanours, again another common feature of Grendon. So fucking sad really.
I would recommend those looking for something to brighten their day to read, 'A
Product of the System' a self-pitying narrative of Leech's life and oh yes! when he
was nicked in Scotland for robbery and jailed he joined the thousands of innocent
prisoners in UK jails for he didn't do it. He didn't do it because he said so. He was
innocent and just another fucking victim says he.
Well, he came out good didn't he? for he arse licked Martin Narey the one time
Director General of the Prison Service who according to Leech brought about many
beneficial changes in the lives of prisoners. God pray, can you give us a clue Leech? What fucking changes?
What planet are you on Leech and where was you when all these changes came
about? Or did you hear about those changes from Narey himself who you quite
boldly and in print call your friend (friend?). Is Leech so sad and so short of friends that he needs the one time head of the Prison service as one?
Perhaps he really is deluded and needs a shot of therapy again. There are names and
descriptions given to people who appear to be favourably disposed to one side
whilst serving the interests of the other and when I hear that Leech is a called a 'wrong un' by some people, I have to make them right.
Now that Narey has left the Prison Service, Leech no longer has any remit for
downplaying all that which is very Wrong with the Prison Service. He has no
Martin Narey to answer to now but if he thinks he can claw back any reputation he
thinks he might have he is sadly mistaken. It really is too late.
Sign up for that therapy now Leech which clearly you so desperately need and do
us all a favour.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note the above is from an anonymous author and was sent to me, and I felt it deserved a wider audience. It is not a personal attack from me upon Mark Leech. Therefore, Mr Leech might prefer not to read it and I suggest he does not do so. You have been warned you might be offended by the content. This notice comes better late than never.
Technical note the copy and paste does not appear to have worked out very well, and attempts to rectify it have so far defeated me.
The one thing that is consistent about Mark Leech is his overblown ego and
posturing as some kind of self-appointed spokesman for prisoners as though noone else's opinion counts and such a sensitive guy is this parody of a man called Mark
Leech that like a big girl's blouse he launches into the world of the conspiracy
theorists that everyone is out to get him and to him that is unforgivable as he lets
loose with vitriolic abuse even against the more diplomatic and civilised criticism
of him. Gentleman (or gentlewoman) he is not, but a hate filled individual who is
consumed with rage and rant.
I cannot help but notice how he has clashed with the widely read prisoner's
newspaper Inside Time which relies entirely on prisoner's contributions be it
articles, letters, queries even poetry and so forth but what does Leech produce? The
paper Converse which [is] so full of solicitor's adverts that there exists little room for anything else except the word according to Mark Leech and aimed at believers in him.
Naye, a platform for abuse, for how else does he explain the play on the title of
Inside Time in his 2008 Converse issue - 'Inside Slime', so tragic, so petty oh so
childlike and so inane?
Grow up Leech.
That he can get personal about people and in this case I mean prisoners shows why
people hold him in contempt. He abuses Ben Gunn a regular writer for Inside Time
and labels him a columnist with a small c and waves him goodbye as he plans a
holiday in Thailand where he has a house (a house?). Well, as someone suggested
recently, people especially men go to Thailand for one of two reasons. One, for
cheap drugs,' and the other for cheap under age sex and Leech has no history of
drug misuse.
Of course, we cannot leave out his main supporter and quite disgracefully so a
prisoner, Dee Wilde-Walker of HMP Low Newton.
Now, we cannot ever imagine the basis of such a relationship. A gay HIV (Heavy
Into Vitriol) wannabe a 'prisoner expert and spokesperson' (person?)' and a female
who perhaps might be a fag hag or child abuser (yes! the NSPCC reported back in
the 1990s that most child abusers are mothers which makes sense for they are the
ones children spend most time with especially single mothers and abuse can be
anything can it not including emotional and mental abuse) who shares Leech's
contempt for male prisoners.
Naye, men in general perhaps, for why should she assume that Benn Gunn is a
domestic violence perpetrator. In any event, so what? He is doing his time and it
might be good advice that she should focus on hers and doesn't allow herself to
become as bitter and twisted as her mentor Leech.
Now to Converse.
What does it represent to prisoners apart from being a platform for personal attacks
and mouthy Leech at play.
Take for instance the current issue of Converse where Leech claims not to take a
penny in salary or otherwise from the paper. What the fuck does he want?
An accolade? He takes plenty from other sources relating to prisoners which
enables him to swan around the country in a helicopter like the time he visited
Grendon and landed nearby. Was he there to talk to cons? No he was there to arse
lick and found cons walking out of a meeting at which he was giving a talk or
rather rubbing shoulders with the prisoner's captors - the screws. I would have
puked.
Leech goes on to attack the Directors of Inside Time and somehow shows his
ignorance of the law and here is someone who claims he is a fucking Perry Mason
and a marvel to modern jurisprudence. For Leech's information, a person can draw
a salary from a voluntary organisation including registered charities. You see there
is a difference between a statutory body like the Job Centre and a voluntary body
like MIND which I am certain Leech is only too familiar with. Those at MIND
including their charity fund raisers do draw a salary as do charity shop managers.
The body is a voluntary body in that it exists on public donations and fund raising
and not Government funding. Would you believe that the boss of OXFAM earns a salary which would disgrace Leech's?
On second thoughts perhaps not.
I would suggest that anyone wanting to know what Leech might derive in income
to look at the websites associated with him. Books, DVDs, courses etc. etc. and of
course consultancy fees for putting himself as a self-appointed expert on prisons to
such likes as the media.
Some time ago, a friend of mine sent an email to Leech asking if there was a
discount for prisoners on his Prison's Handbook. No reply. My friend followed it through with an undertaking to buy 30 copies for prison libraries if there was a discount. Yes! you have guessed it, Leech answered almost immediately with an offer to reduce the cost. Now we have it an entrepreneur first and foremost, fuck the cons.
A bit like when he recently sacked the distribution firm which distributed Converse
for him so that he could cut costs and do it himself and why not?
After all, the supposedly 44,000 copies he claims to circulate is entirely suspect and bogus and that is from the horses mouth. More like 5,000 we are reliably informed.
He makes great play on the silly OK logo as representing those solicitors who have
completed the Prison Law Course of his as if it's the pinnacle of legal practice.
No it's not anymore than a practitioner in Mental Health Law needs to undertake a
two bob course in psychiatry or psychology. Good practice and knowledge comes from experience and there are many many good prison law lawyers whose reputation and skills derive from exactly that. They have trod the path of both prison law litigation and the representation of prisoners and an OK logo is no substitute for that. In fact, the logo is all the evidence one should need to steer clear
of those whose names and firms appear alongside the symbolic tick and OK for his
very name and attitude towards certain prisoners creates a definite conflict of
interests between solicitors who he is favourably disposed towards because he has
given them a tick and an OK and the client.
Moreover, the Prisoner's Advice Service in London a long and well established
prisoner's legal rights body which offers FREE legal advice and in some cases
legal representation for prisoners runs its own prison law programmes and seminars
for solicitors and barristers. Indeed, the PAS is made up of barristers, solicitors,
academics and representatives of government departments and non government
bodies.
Professionals indeed, not a tick and logo brigade.
In addition, the Prisoner's Legal Rights Group Bulletin a highly informative
publication and published periodically for prison lawyers by the PAS is entirely
FREE to prisoners and there we have it, a proper legal body that truly represents
prisoners.
The full time solicitors who work for the PAS which is a registered charity are paid
employees so there you are Mr Leech, a confirmation that those who work in the
voluntary sector are able to draw a salary but then they are lawyers and should
know shouldn't they?
Mark Leech displays all the features and would no doubt meet the criteria of a
diagnosis of personality disorder which might explain why he served a period in
Grendon Psychiatric prison at one time. Either he was sent there or volunteered but
either way it is clear there was something psychologically wrong with him he
should join the therapy freaks where he was no doubt encouraged to grass people
up as is common in Grendon and cry in his coffee as he confessed his past
misdemeanours, again another common feature of Grendon. So fucking sad really.
I would recommend those looking for something to brighten their day to read, 'A
Product of the System' a self-pitying narrative of Leech's life and oh yes! when he
was nicked in Scotland for robbery and jailed he joined the thousands of innocent
prisoners in UK jails for he didn't do it. He didn't do it because he said so. He was
innocent and just another fucking victim says he.
Well, he came out good didn't he? for he arse licked Martin Narey the one time
Director General of the Prison Service who according to Leech brought about many
beneficial changes in the lives of prisoners. God pray, can you give us a clue Leech? What fucking changes?
What planet are you on Leech and where was you when all these changes came
about? Or did you hear about those changes from Narey himself who you quite
boldly and in print call your friend (friend?). Is Leech so sad and so short of friends that he needs the one time head of the Prison service as one?
Perhaps he really is deluded and needs a shot of therapy again. There are names and
descriptions given to people who appear to be favourably disposed to one side
whilst serving the interests of the other and when I hear that Leech is a called a 'wrong un' by some people, I have to make them right.
Now that Narey has left the Prison Service, Leech no longer has any remit for
downplaying all that which is very Wrong with the Prison Service. He has no
Martin Narey to answer to now but if he thinks he can claw back any reputation he
thinks he might have he is sadly mistaken. It really is too late.
Sign up for that therapy now Leech which clearly you so desperately need and do
us all a favour.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note the above is from an anonymous author and was sent to me, and I felt it deserved a wider audience. It is not a personal attack from me upon Mark Leech. Therefore, Mr Leech might prefer not to read it and I suggest he does not do so. You have been warned you might be offended by the content. This notice comes better late than never.
Technical note the copy and paste does not appear to have worked out very well, and attempts to rectify it have so far defeated me.
Bowsy Wowsy: Tories on the ropes claims Iain Dale
Bowsy Wowsy: Tories on the ropes claims Iain Dale
The Independent, in a good article, asks the question: Are attack dogs man's best friend?
Then there is the question why did Iain Dale bother to write and the Daily Telegraph bother to publish: The Conservatives should let their attack dogs off the leash?
Iain Dale informs us that "Denis MacShane is a Labour MP". Nice to see he has his finger on the political pulse. But, where is his tongue? Apparently, arse licking a consensual Norman Tebbit. And there I was thinking the old skeleton was homophobic! Unlike Mr Dale, he actually praises Denis MacShane. However, it is tempered with criticism which is so like Mr Dale.
Interestingly, he calls for more tribal politics. That sounds so primitive. Reminds me of Lord of the Flies.
I am surprised to see that the seat seeking Tory missile, Dildo Dale, admits that the Tories are on the ropes. Chuckle, chuckle.
So, who does Mr Dale see as a Tory party attack dog? Pause for laughter...
"David Davies (no, not that one), the Tory MP for Monmouth, has established himself as the Tory the Labour Party loves to hate. He has the ability to be quite outrageous but sound eminently reasonable. He's a regular fixture on Jeremy Vine's Radio 2 programme and Radio Five Live, and is able to articulate the voice of the man on the Clapham Omnibus in a way few other Tory MPs are capable of".
You only have to see this idiot's comments about the open prison in his constituency to find out why he is such a laughable choice. So, the judging stick is Jeremy Whine and Radio 5 Live appearances? Dumb and dumber. The thing with the Clapham Omnibus, in legal parlance, is that it refers to the reasonable man. Neither Mr Dale nor David Davies fit into that category.
The Independent, in a good article, asks the question: Are attack dogs man's best friend?
Then there is the question why did Iain Dale bother to write and the Daily Telegraph bother to publish: The Conservatives should let their attack dogs off the leash?
Iain Dale informs us that "Denis MacShane is a Labour MP". Nice to see he has his finger on the political pulse. But, where is his tongue? Apparently, arse licking a consensual Norman Tebbit. And there I was thinking the old skeleton was homophobic! Unlike Mr Dale, he actually praises Denis MacShane. However, it is tempered with criticism which is so like Mr Dale.
Interestingly, he calls for more tribal politics. That sounds so primitive. Reminds me of Lord of the Flies.
I am surprised to see that the seat seeking Tory missile, Dildo Dale, admits that the Tories are on the ropes. Chuckle, chuckle.
So, who does Mr Dale see as a Tory party attack dog? Pause for laughter...
"David Davies (no, not that one), the Tory MP for Monmouth, has established himself as the Tory the Labour Party loves to hate. He has the ability to be quite outrageous but sound eminently reasonable. He's a regular fixture on Jeremy Vine's Radio 2 programme and Radio Five Live, and is able to articulate the voice of the man on the Clapham Omnibus in a way few other Tory MPs are capable of".
You only have to see this idiot's comments about the open prison in his constituency to find out why he is such a laughable choice. So, the judging stick is Jeremy Whine and Radio 5 Live appearances? Dumb and dumber. The thing with the Clapham Omnibus, in legal parlance, is that it refers to the reasonable man. Neither Mr Dale nor David Davies fit into that category.
Sharia Law breaches English Law on human rights decides the House of Lords
Sharia Law breaches English Law on human rights decides the House of Lords
"The House of Lords [yesterday] drew stark attention to the conflict between sharia and UK law, calling the Islamic legal code "wholly incompatible" with human rights legislation.
The remarks came as the Lords considered the case of a woman who, if she was sent back to Lebanon, would be obliged under sharia law to hand over custody of her 12-year-old son to a man who beat her, threw her off a balcony and, on one occasion, attempted to strangle her.
The woman was seeking asylum in the UK to avoid the provisions of sharia law that give fathers or other male family members the exclusive custody of children over seven".
I am glad that sense is beginning to shine through given that I have already expressed the same opinion here.
"The House of Lords [yesterday] drew stark attention to the conflict between sharia and UK law, calling the Islamic legal code "wholly incompatible" with human rights legislation.
The remarks came as the Lords considered the case of a woman who, if she was sent back to Lebanon, would be obliged under sharia law to hand over custody of her 12-year-old son to a man who beat her, threw her off a balcony and, on one occasion, attempted to strangle her.
The woman was seeking asylum in the UK to avoid the provisions of sharia law that give fathers or other male family members the exclusive custody of children over seven".
I am glad that sense is beginning to shine through given that I have already expressed the same opinion here.
If this is art I'm a Dutchman
If this is art I'm a Dutchman
One oil canvas, entitled Tesco Value Tomato Soup, fetched £140,000, more than the estimated £80,000, according to Bonhams, the auction house.
Some of Banksy's work I would call art. With this I feel he is taking the piss, and making the point that some people have more money than sense.
One oil canvas, entitled Tesco Value Tomato Soup, fetched £140,000, more than the estimated £80,000, according to Bonhams, the auction house.
Some of Banksy's work I would call art. With this I feel he is taking the piss, and making the point that some people have more money than sense.
Fishermen catch dog a mile out to sea
Fishermen catch dog a mile out to sea
Two North Sea fishermen made an unusual catch when they caught a dog.
Freddie, a 14-year-old cairn terrier, became disorientated in the fog while on a walk with his owner Jean Brigstock.
It slipped into the water as Mrs Brigstock, 73, searched for it but had no success and assumed he was hiding in a nearby holiday park.
However, Freddie was swimming against the tide, almost a mile out to sea.
He was only saved when the two fishermen spotted what they thought was an otter, went to investigate and saw the dog.
It's always heartwarming to read a story like this.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Drug can reverse the effects of MS
Drug can reverse the effects of MS
Discovery is hailed as breakthrough in treatment of debilitating condition
"Scientists have made a dramatic leap forward in the treatment of multiple sclerosis with the discovery of a drug that not only halts the disease but can also reverse it".
Discovery is hailed as breakthrough in treatment of debilitating condition
"Scientists have made a dramatic leap forward in the treatment of multiple sclerosis with the discovery of a drug that not only halts the disease but can also reverse it".
Internet related
Internet related
Did the piano teacher, who has really been arrested, 'murder' her husband by strangling him with a piano wire? No, she deleted his not real life on-line digital persona.
And, Del Boy's been at it again...
A man is being threatened with a libel action after posting critical comments on the internet about an eBay user who sold him a mobile phone
In my view, it was fair comment. And the fact that the money was refunded does not alter the state of the goods sold. If people cannot give feedback what is the point of the facility, and how else are people to be warned off from dodgy salespeople?
Did the piano teacher, who has really been arrested, 'murder' her husband by strangling him with a piano wire? No, she deleted his not real life on-line digital persona.
And, Del Boy's been at it again...
A man is being threatened with a libel action after posting critical comments on the internet about an eBay user who sold him a mobile phone
In my view, it was fair comment. And the fact that the money was refunded does not alter the state of the goods sold. If people cannot give feedback what is the point of the facility, and how else are people to be warned off from dodgy salespeople?
Going going gone - Chairman no chair no man
Going going gone - Chairman no chair no man
Chairman no chair no man
"South African MP Nhlanhla Nene was being interviewed live on a parliamentary review programme when a loud-crack was heard, seconds later his chair collapsed.
The South African Broadcasting Commission has apologised to Mr Nene, and said that "all necessary precautions are being put in place to avoid a similar incident".
How did that interviewer keep a straight face?
Chairman no chair no man
"South African MP Nhlanhla Nene was being interviewed live on a parliamentary review programme when a loud-crack was heard, seconds later his chair collapsed.
The South African Broadcasting Commission has apologised to Mr Nene, and said that "all necessary precautions are being put in place to avoid a similar incident".
How did that interviewer keep a straight face?
Sitemeter and spam
Sitemeter and spam
For technical reasons I am unable to publish the screengrab. However, as you can clearly see from the list of visits to my blog all bar the last has my blog URL as the address. Therefore what is the last one doing there and who has allowed it to encroach upon my blog?
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For technical reasons I am unable to publish the screengrab. However, as you can clearly see from the list of visits to my blog all bar the last has my blog URL as the address. Therefore what is the last one doing there and who has allowed it to encroach upon my blog?
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Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Jailhouselawyer beats the Daily Telegraph to number one on Google
Jailhouselawyer beats the Daily Telegraph to number one on Google
Link.
The difference between has and could have?
Update: I couldn't help but notice that the so-called number one political blogger Iain Dale only managed to reach number 8 in the list (according to Total Politics only the first 7 count for anything).
Link.
The difference between has and could have?
Update: I couldn't help but notice that the so-called number one political blogger Iain Dale only managed to reach number 8 in the list (according to Total Politics only the first 7 count for anything).
Is there a link between the rise of Islamists in the penal system and the proposed Titan Prisons?
Is there a link between the rise of Islamists in the penal system and the proposed Titan Prisons?
UK prison officers are ill-equipped to deal with the growing threat of Muslim terrorists and those converting to Islam whilst in prison. Briefly, it has reopened the Concentration versus Dispersal debate. However, the Director General of the National Offender Management Service, Phil Wheatley, favours the Dispersal concept.
A problem as I see it is this, if the threat was Aids rather than radical Islamists then if unprotected contact occurred there is a danger of the contagion spreading to the general population. Instead of reducing the problem by dispersal, it would spread like a oil slick discharged from a tanker.
Update: This is interesting Christianity in prisons as a bulwark against radical Islam?
UK prison officers are ill-equipped to deal with the growing threat of Muslim terrorists and those converting to Islam whilst in prison. Briefly, it has reopened the Concentration versus Dispersal debate. However, the Director General of the National Offender Management Service, Phil Wheatley, favours the Dispersal concept.
A problem as I see it is this, if the threat was Aids rather than radical Islamists then if unprotected contact occurred there is a danger of the contagion spreading to the general population. Instead of reducing the problem by dispersal, it would spread like a oil slick discharged from a tanker.
Update: This is interesting Christianity in prisons as a bulwark against radical Islam?
Happy 10th birthday to the Human Rights Act (1998)
Happy 10th birthday to the Human Rights Act (1998)
Jack Straw has given a speech to mark the 10th anniversary of the Human Rights Act at the Annual Human Rights Law Conference.
[Check against delivery: this is the prepared text of the speech, and may differ from the delivered version.]
The Right Honourable Jack Straw MP, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice:
Introduction
2008 marks three very significant anniversaries: the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the 60th birthday of the NHS and the 10th anniversary of the passage of the Human Rights Act through Parliament.
It would seem opportune, therefore, to reflect on how we got here and where the next chapter in this rather epic story of rights will take us. Such an illustrious gathering of experts as this will need few lessons in the history and etymology of the rights we enjoy today. But permit me briefly to set the context.
Human Rights Act 10 years on
The Human Rights Act was an important and defining piece of legislation, a landmark which set the liberties we have long enjoyed in the United Kingdom onto a constitutional footing.
I believe - although I am completely biased as I introduced the Bill in Parliament - that the introduction of the 1998 Act will be seen as one of the great legal, constitutional and social reforms of this government.
I could, and I do, claim that this is part of a long tradition in my party which goes back to Attlee and the Welfare State, the fundamentals of which were about giving people much more tangible economic and social, as well as legal, rights.
But I cannot claim a monopoly here. It happened to be a distinguished Conservative MP and lawyer - and also by chance, my old Head of Chambers - the late Sir Edward Gardner, who first called for the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) into UK law in a Private Members Bill back in 1987. A Bill which, I may say, did not meet approbation from either of the front benches at the time.
This is one of many reasons why I was anxious during the passage of the Bill to secure, what was in the event secured, namely bipartisan consensus on its terms. The Conservatives opposed the Bill at Second Reading, but not at the Third Reading as a result of changes. The passage of the Bill culminated in the then Conservative spokesperson and former Attorney General, Nick (now Lord) Lyell wishing the Bill well on its Third Reading in the Commons.
And in the 10 years since its inception, the Act has done what it set out to do. As I said at the Second Reading:
'The Bill will guarantee to everyone the means to enforce a set of basic civil and political rights … by giving further effect in our domestic law to the fundamental rights and freedoms contained in the European Convention on Human Rights.'
It has done. And this, in and of itself, is remarkable.
Which makes it all the more disappointing that the widespread support and approval that was a feature of the passage of the Act a decade ago, seems to have dissipated and been replaced by opinions as confused as in my judgement they are retrograde.
Now, the Opposition Justice Minister, Nick Herbert, says that the 'Human Rights Act should be scrapped, and replaced by a British bill of rights and responsibilities that would enable us to take action against, for instance, those who commit acts of terrorism'.
Whilst the Opposition leader, David Cameron, told the Observer that a British Bill of Rights would result in the judges in Strasbourg giving the United Kingdom a greater 'margin of appreciation', but promises at the same time quite explicitly that the Opposition will not resile from the ECHR itself.
Both have cited the German Basic Law as their example of the 'margin of appreciation' in operation, claiming that the Strasbourg court rarely challenges the decisions of the German courts.
It is well worth setting out once again why this is the case. It is because the Basic Law rights go further than the ECHR, and because German courts impose a more stringent interpretation of rights than does the ECHR. In this sense, the German Basic Law is less flexible than the ECHR, with less room for competing interests to be balanced.
I do not believe that the Opposition intends to offer either further rights, or a more strictly interpreted set of rights like the Basic Law - so I suggest perhaps they simply misunderstand the implication of their policy.
Far from failing to benefit from any margin of appreciation, the UK enjoys considerable flexibility on account of the Human Rights Act because our courts apply the same criteria, in the same way, and on the same issues as the Strasbourg court. Indeed, in the debates which preceded the introduction of the Bill, one of the many arguments in favour of it was that we would benefit from the margin of appreciation.
Put simply, repealing the Human Rights Act and replacing it with a stand-alone Bill of Rights will not create such a 'margin of appreciation' that would allow a another government to circumvent, for instance, Article 3; nor would it allow them to overturn the Chahal judgment - a judgment of the Strasbourg court which was issued in 1996, two years before the passage of the 1998 Act and four years before its implementation. Quite the reverse, in fact. Any Bill of Rights that they propose could not have a reduced or more heavily qualified set of rights than currently laid out in the ECHR, without placing the UK in breach of its international obligations - which the Opposition has said it will not do this.
Repealing the Human Rights Act would be ill-advised and unwise, and to the great detriment of people across the UK.
The 1998 Act embodies fundamental principle of fairness - by ensuring that everyone has access to the same rights and benefits, not just the few who are litigious or wealthy enough to assert their rights independently.
Contrary to soothsayers' predictions that it would cripple the justice system, encourage vexatious litigants and 'throw common sense out of the window', the 1998 Act has neither caused a gridlock in our courts nor fundamentally changed the character of our law.
Far from it. The system has worked well, largely due to the skill and professionalism of our judiciary. Judges have been robust and fair in their application of the Act. Our case law is contributing to European human rights jurisprudence; and - as the 2006 review by the then Department of Constitutional Affairs highlighted - the Act has had a pronounced and powerful influence on policy formulation and decision-making throughout the state.
But one of the Act's most significant achievements has been the way in which it has made a qualitative improvement to people's lives.
First, it has helped to change the way in which public authorities and central government formulate policy, take decisions and determine procedures. I do not claim credit for the basic architecture of the Act - credit for that must go to Christopher Jenkins, former First Parliamentary Counsel. But I do claim credit for the inclusion of section 19, which requires ministers to sign a certificate to say whether or not the Bill complies with Convention rights. From the moment the legislation begins to be worked on, drafters and ministers must have regard to the need for this certificate.
The courts, local government, the police, health-care services and other public authorities are legally obliged to act compatibly with the rights enshrined in the European Convention - not just when they make decisions about the vulnerable or the marginalised, but about everybody. For all that we hear of the 'egregious' individuals who benefit from the Act, there are many law-abiding citizens who have also benefited. The Act really has affected behaviour across Whitehall and beyond.
Secondly, the Act has meant that when the standards of public authorities regrettably do fall below that of the Convention rights, it is easier and quicker for individuals to seek legal redress, to have their rights respected, and to be given meaningful protection. They no longer have to join the back of a seven-year, 95,000-case queue to get to Strasbourg - their case can be heard in front of a UK judge and their remedy lies, in the first instance, with UK courts - and normally they are satisfied with it.
I have to accept that what the Act has not done is find a place in the public's affection; this is despite its manifest benefits.
Let me suggest why this has not happened.
I have often thought about this. I think that the main reason is that the atrocities of 9/11 occurred less than a year into the operation of the Act. Having mechanisms through which to enforce rights inevitably leads to tensions, to conflicts of rights. People qualify for these basic rights not because they are good citizens but because they are human beings. But that does not always mean that they seem deserving of them. That is a fact which pre-dated 9/11. But what those events did was bring to the forefront of people's minds and onto their TV screens, an issue which had previously been there but on the periphery. For most people, this was an arcane, academic, marginal debate, with little influence on their daily life. 9/11 changed that, and the debate then became about whether terrorists themselves should be given the very rights they deny to others.
Now, I know that this may not sit easily with many people in the human rights world but the reality of the matter is that the events of 9/11 have made the concept of inalienable rights much more difficult for many people to accept. To admit so is not to deny the fundamental nature of human rights or their philosophical basis; it is to acknowledge that these events have hardened many people's attitudes towards them and towards the Act.
The reality is that the Act has not impeded our efforts to counter terrorism; indeed it has helped to provide the moral framework for our response and the legitimacy of it. But this has not always been the perception. That was something brought out eloquently in Sir Ken Macdonald's valedictory speech last night.
The Human Rights Act has not had an easy childhood. Without 9/11, I firmly believe that it would have passed into the fabric of our lives without incident. Instead, it has attracted the attention of elements of the media which seek to blame it for much they do not like. Myths abound about the Act, compounded by inaccurate headlines about prisoners being given KFC, or hardcore pornography 'because of their human rights'. Anyone with the most basic understanding of the operation of the Act would realise quite how these things have nothing whatever to do with human rights or the 1998 Act.
Prisoners do not have access to hardcore pornography, and whether being fed KFC could be perceived as a fulfilment of a person's human rights or a denial of them is open to question!
It is a measure of this society's progress - not a mark of its degeneration - that rights now are part and parcel of our everyday lives. Rights which in very many countries are embedded into constitutions.
The need for a Bill of Rights and Responsibilities
Whilst the Human Rights Act represents a significant milestone, it was never intended to be the final destination. Ten years ago, I described it as 'a living development of rights to assist our citizens' – 'a floor and not a ceiling'. We have learnt, since then, both the strengths of the Human Rights Act and its limits.
One of the great strengths of the UK constitutional arrangements is that they have constantly been able to adapt, to stay relevant, to evolve with the times. It is the organic quality that Walter Bagehot described which gives it the flexibility to grow and to develop. It has always been our belief that the incorporation of the ECHR into UK law could provide the basis for our own Bill of Rights. But not merely a Bill of Rights which builds on the Human Rights Act and does not detract from it - we also want to emphasise the responsibilities that go with them.
A Bill of Rights and Responsibilities therefore represents the next stage of an evolutionary process begun long ago.
The need for a Bill is important because the context in which the ECHR and Human Rights Act operate has changed so significantly.
Not only when Bagehot wrote his great work towards the end of the 19th century, but 80 years later when the jurist and Conservative MP, later Lord Chancellor Lord Kilmuir - David Maxwell Fyfe - played a key role in the drafting of the Convention, the UK was a much more homogeneous society. But today advances in communications, greater ease of transport and the growth of international trade have contributed to the diversity and increasing heterogeneity of our population. And as David Pannick has expressed, 'the less homogeneous British society becomes, the greater the need for a fundamental constitutional charter to identify the values that bind us together.'
Meanwhile, the structure of our society which developed over a century or more of industrialisation has been transformed as a result of economic globalisation. And such profound socio-economic change has encouraged or coincided with the rise of an individualistic, consumerist public, more inclined to think of themselves as customers rather than citizens.
In fact, some see rights themselves as commodities to be claimed and consumed at our pleasure rather than mutually balancing entitlements and obligations, fought for over the course of centuries. This is demonstrated in the way some seek to assert their rights selfishly, with little regard to others.
In the aftermath of the Second World War, the drafters of the European Convention had in the forefront of their minds issues such as how, for future generations, to prevent the development of fascist, totalitarian states. They did not have in mind such issues as we consider important today - the need to protect the environment, the need for good administration, for instance. From the vantage point of a more peaceful and prosperous 2008, we should consider whether to give status to these rights in the context of a new constitutional instrument.
Indeed, now is also the time to discuss whether a Bill of Rights and Responsibilities should bring together those rights which have developed in parallel with the ECHR, but are not incorporated into it - for instance, the social and economic entitlements I mentioned earlier which were established as part of the Welfare State. A new Bill presents the opportunity to bring the rights currently scattered across a host of different places together into one document.
I should explain that this would not in any sense be a move towards giving judges the power to allocate resources. These decisions must always remain a matter for our democratically elected Parliament.
So, I suggest a Bill of Rights and Responsibilities is needed because the context in which the Human Rights Act operates - that is to say, society - has changed significantly.
And it is also required because the development of a rights culture seen since the 1998 Act has not always been matched by a culture of duty.
Responsibilities are something of a poor cousin to rights in our national discourse. They are deeply woven into our social and moral fabric, and we have a latent understanding and acceptance of our duties to one another and to the state, but they have never been given the same prominence in our constitutional architecture.
This is despite the fact that many duties and responsibilities already exist in statute, common law and our ethical framework, and despite the fact that the text and case law of the European Convention require a balance to be struck between the two.
'Liberty means responsibility', wrote George Bernard Shaw, 'that is why most men dread it'. It is perhaps not surprising that we have so far been less willing to accept what we owe than what we are owed. But just as there was a powerful legal and moral case for the incorporation of Convention rights in 1998, I believe there is now a compelling societal case for emphasising the importance of exercising rights responsibly.
There are those who say that to emphasise the importance of responsibilities is to dilute the importance of rights. This is not the case. There is no question of fundamental human rights like the right to life and a fair trial being made contingent on the fulfilment of responsibilities. But equally, it is a basic tenet of human rights theory that one's rights cannot be claimed or exercised without regard to the rights of others, that most human rights are subject to inherent balance and qualification.
So for the first time, our aim is that responsibilities should be elevated to a new status in a constitutional document, reflecting their importance to the healthy functioning of our democracy, but also bringing out that no one is suggesting that rights and responsibilities are symmetrical.
A lasting impact
But if a new Bill of Rights and Responsibilities is to have any real and lasting impact, it must win the public's support - and indeed a degree of affection - in a way that the Human Rights Act has yet to do.
The experiences of countries like Canada and South Africa - and earlier in its history, the United States - have shown that Bills of Rights can have great symbolic and totemic importance where they are borne out of existential threats, moral hazards or massive upheaval to a country's system of values or governance. The South African and Canadian Bills of Rights, and the first ten amendments to the US Constitution, are all iconic statements of liberty, with a character and value which have captivated the public consciousness. They have made a reality of Philip Alston's assertion that Bills of Rights should be 'a combination of law, symbolism and aspiration'.
The UK, itself, has been lucky in many ways, not having had to struggle in many centuries for self-determination or nationhood, nor has it been torn apart by social strife or had to fight bitterly for equality. We do not wear our freedom on our sleeves in the same way as those do in the United States, or Canada, or South Africa. But what the experiences of those countries have shown is that Bills of Rights can be more than just dry legal documents - they can be mechanisms for unifying nations around common sets of values, and provide an ethical framework to give practical effect to those values.
If a Bill that clarifies our rights and responsibilities is to be more than just a legal treatise and to become a document around which we unite, then it is vital that it is owned by people across the United Kingdom and not just lawyers and politicians.
I should make clear at this point that in seeking to bring greater clarity and status to the relationship between citizen, state and community, we are mindful of the important questions raised by devolution and of the need to work in partnership with the devolved administrations and legislatures in resolving them. And I have already begun that process.
We will of course greatly depend on the contribution of experts like those present today in articulating our rights in a new constitutional document and emphasising - for the first time - the responsibilities that go with them. I am grateful to Justice for the valuable contribution it has already made to the debate.
But the public will also have to be involved in developing the Bill if they are to have 'ownership' of it and an emotional stake in it. Sparking their interest and engaging them in this process will be no easy task. The Green Paper that we will soon be publishing is just the starting point.
Conclusion
In conclusion, I hope I have shown some of what the Human Rights Act has achieved over the past decade - without preaching too much to the converted - and also been honest about what it has not. I have always seen the Human Rights Act as a platform on which to build and not, as some would have it, an inconvenience to be dismantled.
A Bill of Rights and Responsibilities forms the next natural and necessary step in a process which began 60 years ago with the Universal Declaration. It is an opportunity to bring together existing rights and responsibilities in one place and to provide a clearer articulation of the duties which we all owe. It can help better to define the relationship between citizen and state, in a new and unifying constitutional document fit for this century. And it is an opportunity which I firmly hope the people of the United Kingdom will seize.
Thank you.
Comment: It's also the 3rd birthday of prisoners winning the human right to vote at the ECtHR. So, Jack, why have you not fulfilled the UK's obligation to the Convention by implementing the measure?
Jack Straw has given a speech to mark the 10th anniversary of the Human Rights Act at the Annual Human Rights Law Conference.
[Check against delivery: this is the prepared text of the speech, and may differ from the delivered version.]
The Right Honourable Jack Straw MP, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice:
Introduction
2008 marks three very significant anniversaries: the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the 60th birthday of the NHS and the 10th anniversary of the passage of the Human Rights Act through Parliament.
It would seem opportune, therefore, to reflect on how we got here and where the next chapter in this rather epic story of rights will take us. Such an illustrious gathering of experts as this will need few lessons in the history and etymology of the rights we enjoy today. But permit me briefly to set the context.
Human Rights Act 10 years on
The Human Rights Act was an important and defining piece of legislation, a landmark which set the liberties we have long enjoyed in the United Kingdom onto a constitutional footing.
I believe - although I am completely biased as I introduced the Bill in Parliament - that the introduction of the 1998 Act will be seen as one of the great legal, constitutional and social reforms of this government.
I could, and I do, claim that this is part of a long tradition in my party which goes back to Attlee and the Welfare State, the fundamentals of which were about giving people much more tangible economic and social, as well as legal, rights.
But I cannot claim a monopoly here. It happened to be a distinguished Conservative MP and lawyer - and also by chance, my old Head of Chambers - the late Sir Edward Gardner, who first called for the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) into UK law in a Private Members Bill back in 1987. A Bill which, I may say, did not meet approbation from either of the front benches at the time.
This is one of many reasons why I was anxious during the passage of the Bill to secure, what was in the event secured, namely bipartisan consensus on its terms. The Conservatives opposed the Bill at Second Reading, but not at the Third Reading as a result of changes. The passage of the Bill culminated in the then Conservative spokesperson and former Attorney General, Nick (now Lord) Lyell wishing the Bill well on its Third Reading in the Commons.
And in the 10 years since its inception, the Act has done what it set out to do. As I said at the Second Reading:
'The Bill will guarantee to everyone the means to enforce a set of basic civil and political rights … by giving further effect in our domestic law to the fundamental rights and freedoms contained in the European Convention on Human Rights.'
It has done. And this, in and of itself, is remarkable.
Which makes it all the more disappointing that the widespread support and approval that was a feature of the passage of the Act a decade ago, seems to have dissipated and been replaced by opinions as confused as in my judgement they are retrograde.
Now, the Opposition Justice Minister, Nick Herbert, says that the 'Human Rights Act should be scrapped, and replaced by a British bill of rights and responsibilities that would enable us to take action against, for instance, those who commit acts of terrorism'.
Whilst the Opposition leader, David Cameron, told the Observer that a British Bill of Rights would result in the judges in Strasbourg giving the United Kingdom a greater 'margin of appreciation', but promises at the same time quite explicitly that the Opposition will not resile from the ECHR itself.
Both have cited the German Basic Law as their example of the 'margin of appreciation' in operation, claiming that the Strasbourg court rarely challenges the decisions of the German courts.
It is well worth setting out once again why this is the case. It is because the Basic Law rights go further than the ECHR, and because German courts impose a more stringent interpretation of rights than does the ECHR. In this sense, the German Basic Law is less flexible than the ECHR, with less room for competing interests to be balanced.
I do not believe that the Opposition intends to offer either further rights, or a more strictly interpreted set of rights like the Basic Law - so I suggest perhaps they simply misunderstand the implication of their policy.
Far from failing to benefit from any margin of appreciation, the UK enjoys considerable flexibility on account of the Human Rights Act because our courts apply the same criteria, in the same way, and on the same issues as the Strasbourg court. Indeed, in the debates which preceded the introduction of the Bill, one of the many arguments in favour of it was that we would benefit from the margin of appreciation.
Put simply, repealing the Human Rights Act and replacing it with a stand-alone Bill of Rights will not create such a 'margin of appreciation' that would allow a another government to circumvent, for instance, Article 3; nor would it allow them to overturn the Chahal judgment - a judgment of the Strasbourg court which was issued in 1996, two years before the passage of the 1998 Act and four years before its implementation. Quite the reverse, in fact. Any Bill of Rights that they propose could not have a reduced or more heavily qualified set of rights than currently laid out in the ECHR, without placing the UK in breach of its international obligations - which the Opposition has said it will not do this.
Repealing the Human Rights Act would be ill-advised and unwise, and to the great detriment of people across the UK.
The 1998 Act embodies fundamental principle of fairness - by ensuring that everyone has access to the same rights and benefits, not just the few who are litigious or wealthy enough to assert their rights independently.
Contrary to soothsayers' predictions that it would cripple the justice system, encourage vexatious litigants and 'throw common sense out of the window', the 1998 Act has neither caused a gridlock in our courts nor fundamentally changed the character of our law.
Far from it. The system has worked well, largely due to the skill and professionalism of our judiciary. Judges have been robust and fair in their application of the Act. Our case law is contributing to European human rights jurisprudence; and - as the 2006 review by the then Department of Constitutional Affairs highlighted - the Act has had a pronounced and powerful influence on policy formulation and decision-making throughout the state.
But one of the Act's most significant achievements has been the way in which it has made a qualitative improvement to people's lives.
First, it has helped to change the way in which public authorities and central government formulate policy, take decisions and determine procedures. I do not claim credit for the basic architecture of the Act - credit for that must go to Christopher Jenkins, former First Parliamentary Counsel. But I do claim credit for the inclusion of section 19, which requires ministers to sign a certificate to say whether or not the Bill complies with Convention rights. From the moment the legislation begins to be worked on, drafters and ministers must have regard to the need for this certificate.
The courts, local government, the police, health-care services and other public authorities are legally obliged to act compatibly with the rights enshrined in the European Convention - not just when they make decisions about the vulnerable or the marginalised, but about everybody. For all that we hear of the 'egregious' individuals who benefit from the Act, there are many law-abiding citizens who have also benefited. The Act really has affected behaviour across Whitehall and beyond.
Secondly, the Act has meant that when the standards of public authorities regrettably do fall below that of the Convention rights, it is easier and quicker for individuals to seek legal redress, to have their rights respected, and to be given meaningful protection. They no longer have to join the back of a seven-year, 95,000-case queue to get to Strasbourg - their case can be heard in front of a UK judge and their remedy lies, in the first instance, with UK courts - and normally they are satisfied with it.
I have to accept that what the Act has not done is find a place in the public's affection; this is despite its manifest benefits.
Let me suggest why this has not happened.
I have often thought about this. I think that the main reason is that the atrocities of 9/11 occurred less than a year into the operation of the Act. Having mechanisms through which to enforce rights inevitably leads to tensions, to conflicts of rights. People qualify for these basic rights not because they are good citizens but because they are human beings. But that does not always mean that they seem deserving of them. That is a fact which pre-dated 9/11. But what those events did was bring to the forefront of people's minds and onto their TV screens, an issue which had previously been there but on the periphery. For most people, this was an arcane, academic, marginal debate, with little influence on their daily life. 9/11 changed that, and the debate then became about whether terrorists themselves should be given the very rights they deny to others.
Now, I know that this may not sit easily with many people in the human rights world but the reality of the matter is that the events of 9/11 have made the concept of inalienable rights much more difficult for many people to accept. To admit so is not to deny the fundamental nature of human rights or their philosophical basis; it is to acknowledge that these events have hardened many people's attitudes towards them and towards the Act.
The reality is that the Act has not impeded our efforts to counter terrorism; indeed it has helped to provide the moral framework for our response and the legitimacy of it. But this has not always been the perception. That was something brought out eloquently in Sir Ken Macdonald's valedictory speech last night.
The Human Rights Act has not had an easy childhood. Without 9/11, I firmly believe that it would have passed into the fabric of our lives without incident. Instead, it has attracted the attention of elements of the media which seek to blame it for much they do not like. Myths abound about the Act, compounded by inaccurate headlines about prisoners being given KFC, or hardcore pornography 'because of their human rights'. Anyone with the most basic understanding of the operation of the Act would realise quite how these things have nothing whatever to do with human rights or the 1998 Act.
Prisoners do not have access to hardcore pornography, and whether being fed KFC could be perceived as a fulfilment of a person's human rights or a denial of them is open to question!
It is a measure of this society's progress - not a mark of its degeneration - that rights now are part and parcel of our everyday lives. Rights which in very many countries are embedded into constitutions.
The need for a Bill of Rights and Responsibilities
Whilst the Human Rights Act represents a significant milestone, it was never intended to be the final destination. Ten years ago, I described it as 'a living development of rights to assist our citizens' – 'a floor and not a ceiling'. We have learnt, since then, both the strengths of the Human Rights Act and its limits.
One of the great strengths of the UK constitutional arrangements is that they have constantly been able to adapt, to stay relevant, to evolve with the times. It is the organic quality that Walter Bagehot described which gives it the flexibility to grow and to develop. It has always been our belief that the incorporation of the ECHR into UK law could provide the basis for our own Bill of Rights. But not merely a Bill of Rights which builds on the Human Rights Act and does not detract from it - we also want to emphasise the responsibilities that go with them.
A Bill of Rights and Responsibilities therefore represents the next stage of an evolutionary process begun long ago.
The need for a Bill is important because the context in which the ECHR and Human Rights Act operate has changed so significantly.
Not only when Bagehot wrote his great work towards the end of the 19th century, but 80 years later when the jurist and Conservative MP, later Lord Chancellor Lord Kilmuir - David Maxwell Fyfe - played a key role in the drafting of the Convention, the UK was a much more homogeneous society. But today advances in communications, greater ease of transport and the growth of international trade have contributed to the diversity and increasing heterogeneity of our population. And as David Pannick has expressed, 'the less homogeneous British society becomes, the greater the need for a fundamental constitutional charter to identify the values that bind us together.'
Meanwhile, the structure of our society which developed over a century or more of industrialisation has been transformed as a result of economic globalisation. And such profound socio-economic change has encouraged or coincided with the rise of an individualistic, consumerist public, more inclined to think of themselves as customers rather than citizens.
In fact, some see rights themselves as commodities to be claimed and consumed at our pleasure rather than mutually balancing entitlements and obligations, fought for over the course of centuries. This is demonstrated in the way some seek to assert their rights selfishly, with little regard to others.
In the aftermath of the Second World War, the drafters of the European Convention had in the forefront of their minds issues such as how, for future generations, to prevent the development of fascist, totalitarian states. They did not have in mind such issues as we consider important today - the need to protect the environment, the need for good administration, for instance. From the vantage point of a more peaceful and prosperous 2008, we should consider whether to give status to these rights in the context of a new constitutional instrument.
Indeed, now is also the time to discuss whether a Bill of Rights and Responsibilities should bring together those rights which have developed in parallel with the ECHR, but are not incorporated into it - for instance, the social and economic entitlements I mentioned earlier which were established as part of the Welfare State. A new Bill presents the opportunity to bring the rights currently scattered across a host of different places together into one document.
I should explain that this would not in any sense be a move towards giving judges the power to allocate resources. These decisions must always remain a matter for our democratically elected Parliament.
So, I suggest a Bill of Rights and Responsibilities is needed because the context in which the Human Rights Act operates - that is to say, society - has changed significantly.
And it is also required because the development of a rights culture seen since the 1998 Act has not always been matched by a culture of duty.
Responsibilities are something of a poor cousin to rights in our national discourse. They are deeply woven into our social and moral fabric, and we have a latent understanding and acceptance of our duties to one another and to the state, but they have never been given the same prominence in our constitutional architecture.
This is despite the fact that many duties and responsibilities already exist in statute, common law and our ethical framework, and despite the fact that the text and case law of the European Convention require a balance to be struck between the two.
'Liberty means responsibility', wrote George Bernard Shaw, 'that is why most men dread it'. It is perhaps not surprising that we have so far been less willing to accept what we owe than what we are owed. But just as there was a powerful legal and moral case for the incorporation of Convention rights in 1998, I believe there is now a compelling societal case for emphasising the importance of exercising rights responsibly.
There are those who say that to emphasise the importance of responsibilities is to dilute the importance of rights. This is not the case. There is no question of fundamental human rights like the right to life and a fair trial being made contingent on the fulfilment of responsibilities. But equally, it is a basic tenet of human rights theory that one's rights cannot be claimed or exercised without regard to the rights of others, that most human rights are subject to inherent balance and qualification.
So for the first time, our aim is that responsibilities should be elevated to a new status in a constitutional document, reflecting their importance to the healthy functioning of our democracy, but also bringing out that no one is suggesting that rights and responsibilities are symmetrical.
A lasting impact
But if a new Bill of Rights and Responsibilities is to have any real and lasting impact, it must win the public's support - and indeed a degree of affection - in a way that the Human Rights Act has yet to do.
The experiences of countries like Canada and South Africa - and earlier in its history, the United States - have shown that Bills of Rights can have great symbolic and totemic importance where they are borne out of existential threats, moral hazards or massive upheaval to a country's system of values or governance. The South African and Canadian Bills of Rights, and the first ten amendments to the US Constitution, are all iconic statements of liberty, with a character and value which have captivated the public consciousness. They have made a reality of Philip Alston's assertion that Bills of Rights should be 'a combination of law, symbolism and aspiration'.
The UK, itself, has been lucky in many ways, not having had to struggle in many centuries for self-determination or nationhood, nor has it been torn apart by social strife or had to fight bitterly for equality. We do not wear our freedom on our sleeves in the same way as those do in the United States, or Canada, or South Africa. But what the experiences of those countries have shown is that Bills of Rights can be more than just dry legal documents - they can be mechanisms for unifying nations around common sets of values, and provide an ethical framework to give practical effect to those values.
If a Bill that clarifies our rights and responsibilities is to be more than just a legal treatise and to become a document around which we unite, then it is vital that it is owned by people across the United Kingdom and not just lawyers and politicians.
I should make clear at this point that in seeking to bring greater clarity and status to the relationship between citizen, state and community, we are mindful of the important questions raised by devolution and of the need to work in partnership with the devolved administrations and legislatures in resolving them. And I have already begun that process.
We will of course greatly depend on the contribution of experts like those present today in articulating our rights in a new constitutional document and emphasising - for the first time - the responsibilities that go with them. I am grateful to Justice for the valuable contribution it has already made to the debate.
But the public will also have to be involved in developing the Bill if they are to have 'ownership' of it and an emotional stake in it. Sparking their interest and engaging them in this process will be no easy task. The Green Paper that we will soon be publishing is just the starting point.
Conclusion
In conclusion, I hope I have shown some of what the Human Rights Act has achieved over the past decade - without preaching too much to the converted - and also been honest about what it has not. I have always seen the Human Rights Act as a platform on which to build and not, as some would have it, an inconvenience to be dismantled.
A Bill of Rights and Responsibilities forms the next natural and necessary step in a process which began 60 years ago with the Universal Declaration. It is an opportunity to bring together existing rights and responsibilities in one place and to provide a clearer articulation of the duties which we all owe. It can help better to define the relationship between citizen and state, in a new and unifying constitutional document fit for this century. And it is an opportunity which I firmly hope the people of the United Kingdom will seize.
Thank you.
Comment: It's also the 3rd birthday of prisoners winning the human right to vote at the ECtHR. So, Jack, why have you not fulfilled the UK's obligation to the Convention by implementing the measure?
Pervez death sentence quashed by Afghan court
Pervez death sentence quashed by Afghan court
A Kabul appeals court has quashed a death sentence imposed on the Afghan student Sayed Pervez Kambaksh for downloading information from the internet on women's rights.
The judges ruled however, that the 24-year-old trainee journalist should serve 20 years in jail – a decision Mr Kambaksh's lawyers insisted was unconstitutional and should be overturned by the country's supreme court.
There are some crimes that warrant 20 years in prison. However, this should not even be a crime let alone one that carries a 20 year sentence.
Blogging plant posts daily news on its mood
Blogging plant posts daily news on its mood
Revealed. The author of Iain Dale's Diary is actually a Japanese plant in a plant pot.
A potted plant that posts daily news on its mood and health is believed to be the world's first botanical blogger.
Revealed. The author of Iain Dale's Diary is actually a Japanese plant in a plant pot.
A potted plant that posts daily news on its mood and health is believed to be the world's first botanical blogger.
Thousands more ex-frontline soldiers in the criminal justice system than previously believed
Thousands more ex-frontline soldiers in the criminal justice system than previously believed
The number of former soldiers who have been convicted of a crime after returning from the frontline is 4,000 higher than previously thought, it was claimed yesterday.
Elfyn Llwyd told fellow MPs that an estimated 4,000 ex-servicemen were serving community punishments for drug dealing, robbery and sexual offences.
This is in addition to the estimated 8,500 prisoners - one in 10 of the jail population in England and Wales - who probation officers say are in jail after serving the country in Iraq or Afghanistan.
It also emerged that the Ministry of Defence had for the first time commissioned an internal study to try to understand the scale of the problem.
Mr Llwyd said it was a "massive problem": "At a time when serving soldiers have to make do with inferior kit, failure to act on this problem - and to do so positively and urgently - will be seen as further evidence that this Government has breached the covenant with the armed services in the most obvious and serious way.
"With proper support and counselling I believe that several thousands currently in custody would not be there."
Related link...
Data laws hamper MoD prison study
Data protection rules are preventing the number of military veterans in prison from being discovered, BBC News has learned.
The number of former soldiers who have been convicted of a crime after returning from the frontline is 4,000 higher than previously thought, it was claimed yesterday.
Elfyn Llwyd told fellow MPs that an estimated 4,000 ex-servicemen were serving community punishments for drug dealing, robbery and sexual offences.
This is in addition to the estimated 8,500 prisoners - one in 10 of the jail population in England and Wales - who probation officers say are in jail after serving the country in Iraq or Afghanistan.
It also emerged that the Ministry of Defence had for the first time commissioned an internal study to try to understand the scale of the problem.
Mr Llwyd said it was a "massive problem": "At a time when serving soldiers have to make do with inferior kit, failure to act on this problem - and to do so positively and urgently - will be seen as further evidence that this Government has breached the covenant with the armed services in the most obvious and serious way.
"With proper support and counselling I believe that several thousands currently in custody would not be there."
Related link...
Data laws hamper MoD prison study
Data protection rules are preventing the number of military veterans in prison from being discovered, BBC News has learned.
Should we want to cure autism?
Should we want to cure autism?
Two American grandparents are raising the global profile of the condition starting with a controversial debate in London tonight. Cassandra Jardine reports.
"Autism might have kept a low profile in the United States, if it hadn't affected Bob Wright's grandson, Christian. The chief executive of NBC Universal - the American television and film company - is not the kind of alpha male to take a problem in the family lying down. He's used to shaking trees, kicking ass, making things happen - and that is exactly what he has done in the five years following his grandson's regression into autism".
I saw this report on Breakfast News when the grandparents were being interviewed. I was particularly struck by the claim that it affects 1 child in 150 (increased to 1 in a 100 in this article). Also that part of the problem is believed to be environmental issues. It is a shame that it is only when it happens to a rich and powerful family and they begin to make noises that politicians and the media take notice. And it is a shame that those professionals allow their egos to get in the way of trying to understand and try and find a cure for autism.
Two American grandparents are raising the global profile of the condition starting with a controversial debate in London tonight. Cassandra Jardine reports.
"Autism might have kept a low profile in the United States, if it hadn't affected Bob Wright's grandson, Christian. The chief executive of NBC Universal - the American television and film company - is not the kind of alpha male to take a problem in the family lying down. He's used to shaking trees, kicking ass, making things happen - and that is exactly what he has done in the five years following his grandson's regression into autism".
I saw this report on Breakfast News when the grandparents were being interviewed. I was particularly struck by the claim that it affects 1 child in 150 (increased to 1 in a 100 in this article). Also that part of the problem is believed to be environmental issues. It is a shame that it is only when it happens to a rich and powerful family and they begin to make noises that politicians and the media take notice. And it is a shame that those professionals allow their egos to get in the way of trying to understand and try and find a cure for autism.
More Effing Madness from local councils
More Effing Madness from local councils
Woman, 80, warned she faces prosecution for feeding birds in her garden
Don't you just wish sometimes that nosy neighbours would just mind their own business, and that councils would busy themselves with important issues rather than try to make peoples lives a misery?
Woman, 80, warned she faces prosecution for feeding birds in her garden
Don't you just wish sometimes that nosy neighbours would just mind their own business, and that councils would busy themselves with important issues rather than try to make peoples lives a misery?
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Glasshouse gases
Glasshouse gases
Osborne denies seeking donation from oligarch
Wind. He could have at least said "What yacht?"
Cow burps are making a growing contribution to global warming
Greenhouse gases produced by cow burps are growing at a faster rate than the man-made emissions responsible for global warming, according to the latest research.
Osborne denies seeking donation from oligarch
Wind. He could have at least said "What yacht?"
Cow burps are making a growing contribution to global warming
Greenhouse gases produced by cow burps are growing at a faster rate than the man-made emissions responsible for global warming, according to the latest research.