xmasdale Angel - now passed away
Joined: 25 Jul 2005 Posts: 1959 Location: South London
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Posted: Sat Dec 19, 2009 1:09 pm Post subject: Secret inquests legalised |
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Secret Inquests!
Labour forces secret inquests Bill through the Commons
By Robert Verkaik, Home Affairs Editor
*Tuesday, 10 November 2009*
Secret inquests which will bar bereaved families and the public from
attending hearings into controversial deaths were forced through Parliament
last night.
The Government narrowly defeated opposition to the new powers by a majority of eight MPs in a highly charged vote in the House of Commons. Under the
measures ministers will be able to order that an inquest is replaced with a
secret inquiry whenever they deem it necessary
But last night MPs and civil rights groups accused the Government of eroding
the ancient right to a public inquest. Shami Chakrabarti, director of
Liberty, which had strongly opposed the powers, said: "The British public
has no taste for secret justice, particularly when the rights of grieving
families are at stake. We will continue to fight for open jury inquests
until the Government thinks again."
At last night's debate Labour's Bob Marshall-Andrews (Medway) described the
inquiries as a "disproportionate remedy" to tackle the problem of sensitive
information being made public in inquests. "In order to rectify what is an
evidential problem, the Government is proposing to hand a massive new power
to the executive," he said.
Ministers want to use the Inquiries Act to hold investigations into deaths
which require the use of sensitive information such as intercept
intelligence, which could not be placed before an inquest jury. The measure,
buried in the Coroners and Justice Bill, gives the Lord Chancellor, Jack
Straw, absolute discretion to order a secret inquiry in place of a public
inquest.
It could mean that inquests that might expose the negligence of Government
or a public body, or embarrass ministers or foreign allies, could be
censored. It comes only six months after Mr Straw dropped similar proposals
to hold sensitive inquests in private without juries.
Mr Straw said the move would only affect a "tiny number" of cases. "Every
effort is made by this Government ... to push the standard coronial system,
with a jury, in this kind of case to ensure that if humanly possible it is a
normal coroner's inquest with a jury which holds the investigation."
He added: "There is no intention whatsoever by the agencies, by the police,
by the Government, by the law officers, that any provisions in this Bill
should ever be used as an alternative to a normal inquest where such a
normal inquest, stretching the envelope as far as possible, can be used."
There was only one case currently where the central evidence was obtained
from an intercept and there was "grave anxiety" that it would have to be
made available to people who had not been security cleared. The case of
Azelle Rodney, who was shot dead by police as he sat in the back of a car in
north London in 2005, has not been the subject of an inquest.
Mr Straw said: "Unless we find a way through this problem there will be no
satisfactory investigation into the cause of death in an equivalent case."
But in the Lords, Baroness Miller of Chilthorne Domer, for the Liberal
Democrats, said that although the Government had "very sensibly" withdrawn
the secret inquests plan, using the Inquiries Act as an alternative was "an
even worse solution".
Civil rights campaigners and MPs have attacked the Government for trying to
sneak through an "abuse of power".
--
Ian Grigg-Spall
Academic Chair
NCLG
Kent Law School
University
Canterbury
CT2 7NZ
'the point is not to merely interpret the world but to change it'
'for injustice to prevail all it takes is for good persons to do nothing' |
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Frank Freedom Mind Gamer
Joined: 01 Feb 2009 Posts: 413 Location: South Essex
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Posted: Sat Dec 26, 2009 10:29 pm Post subject: |
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Quote: | Secret inquests which will bar bereaved families and the public from
attending hearings into controversial deaths were forced through Parliament
last night.
The Government narrowly defeated opposition to the new powers by a majority of eight MPs in a highly charged vote in the House of Commons. Under the
measures ministers will be able to order that an inquest is replaced with a
secret inquiry whenever they deem it necessary
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Use the analogy of the anti-terror legislation which can make criminals of everyone,this also makes everyone's suspect death,be it from "hospitalisation" to an innocent being shot a very dodgy piece of
"majority passed legislation". _________________ The poster previously known as "Newspeak International" |
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