What price the HRA now?
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amateur51
Originally posted by Simon View Posthttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukne...ghts-laws.html
I suppose there will be a few who still won't see it, but here's proof if ever it were needed that we need to see off this unnecessary and useless legislation asap.
A florid example of someone determined to undermine the law certainly. But is that the full story?
The Deputy Prime Minister writes:
Nick Clegg: While British governments have called for greater human rights abroad, they have too often belittled them at home
and an experienced lawyer offers his experience
Response: This important legislation embodies British values, not submission to Europe, says Geoffrey Bindman
Case not made, I'd say Simon.
More hard work needed to make your case, I'd say
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Originally posted by Simon View Posthttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukne...ghts-laws.html
I suppose there will be a few who still won't see it, but here's proof if ever it were needed that we need to see off this unnecessary and useless legislation asap.
Anyway, the idea that this case is proof that the entire Human Rights legislation should be scrapped is eccentric.
However, you make a very good point about the tiresome use of lefty Guardian stories by drawing attention to a tiresome, erm, Telegraph story. Who was it mentioned political agendas?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Simon
Well, makropulos, it's possible to make a convincing argument that the whole thing was unnecessary in Britain in the first place... British law had adequate safeguards already in place for all the necessary human rights and the vast increase in millionaire lawyers has been an unwanted, but well forseen (especially by the lawyers) consequence.
Closing loopholes that were the consequence of poor drafting would be another matter.
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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostA key factor seems to have been the Home Office's decision to grant the child British citizenship in the middle of the efforts to deport the father.
Anyway, the idea that this case is proof that the entire Human Rights legislation should be scrapped is eccentric.
However, you make a very good point about the tiresome use of lefty Guardian stories by drawing attention to a tiresome, erm, Telegraph story. Who was it mentioned political agendas?
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Simon
However, you make a very good point about the tiresome use of lefty Guardian stories by drawing attention to a tiresome, erm, Telegraph story. Who was it mentioned political agendas?
It's simply a legal story; a further illustration of an arguably unnecessary law being abused and exploited for the gain of undesirables and to the detriment of the population in general.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Simon View PostI did. I suppose this could be said to balance the usual naive liberal stuff we get from certain other posters, but it's hardly political. After all, nobody, of any political persuasion, possessing a brain, could possibly suggest that people like this should be allowed to stay in our country.
It's simply a legal story; a further illustration of an arguably unnecessary law being abused and exploited for the gain of undesirables and to the detriment of the population in general.
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I think there are plenty of people with brains who might not dispute that the man deserves to be deported yet not conclude from that that the human rights legislation should be scrapped.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Simon
I think there are plenty of people with brains who might not dispute that the man deserves to be deported yet not conclude from that that the human rights legislation should be scrapped.
You accept that people wouldn't dispute that this man should be kicked out and yet suggest that at the same time they would argue that the very legislation that has been used to allow him to stay should also remain in place.
I've always assumed heretofore that you had some grasp of logic...
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Simon, I'll ignore the last comment.
If you look at the facts you can see that there were several issues other than human rights legislation. The fact that the HO took a decision to deport him in 1996 - but no action was taken. He was an illegal immigrant but was allowed to stay. He was granted indefinite leave to remain. Thereafter, there was little difference between his criminal activity and that of a British criminal and the law ruled that he should be treated in the same way, since by this time his son was a British citizen. All these facts are in the story you quote but you dismiss them in order to make your usual point about human rights.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Simon
If you look at the facts you can see that there were several issues other than human rights legislation. The fact that the HO took a decision to deport him in 1996 - but no action was taken. He was an illegal immigrant but was allowed to stay. He was granted indefinite leave to remain. Thereafter, there was little difference between his criminal activity and that of a British criminal and the law ruled that he should be treated in the same way, since by this time his son was a British citizen. All these facts are in the story you quote but you dismiss them in order to make your usual point about human rights.
Perhaps a couple of direct quotes from the story, that you appear to have missed:
1.
"Omotunde's case highlights the way the "family life" rules under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights are being used to overturn the government's efforts to throw foreign crooks out of the country."
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"Dominic Raab, campaigning to reform Article 8, said: "The judges are using the Human Rights Act to bar deportation in a rapidly increasing number of cases where the government want to deport serious criminals, on the basis that it may disrupt their family relations. [...]"
And whilst I'm clarifying things by quoting, I could also reinforce my point, as opposed to negating yours, by another excerpt from the facts of the story:
"Since immigration judges made their decision in May this year, he has been sent to jail again for offences relating to his failure to pay a £45,000 confiscation order for his part in the benefits fraud."
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Both your quotes come from biased sources, the second from a campaigner against the HRA, the first Telegraph reporters who use slanted language which shows their prejudice. ("Extraordinarily he should not have been in the country in the first place."). This isn't objective reporting.
Furthermore, look at it again:
1. 'Extraordinarily he should not have been in the country in the first place.'
2. 'The last Labour government granted him indefinite leave to remain under a "regularisation scheme" in 2002.'
The second, from a legal point of view, nullifies the first. His son (who is key in the human rights argument) was born here after he had been given leave to remain.
The judges in the case have clearly taken these factors into consideration and their decision was that human rights issues were involved. These facts emerge even from as slanted a story as the Telegraph's. It's your view that human rights don't matter. I disagree. They apply even to such an undeserving specimen as this.
An additional thought: the reason why the law appears to go further than may seem justified is in order to ensure that more deserving cases will 'pass the test'.Last edited by french frank; 30-08-11, 23:36.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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