
The ‘human rights’ regime has flipped democracy on its head
FRASER MYERS
Britain’s migration policy has fallen into the hands of an arrogant, anti-democratic judiciary.
If someone is in Britain illegally, should a history of persistently sexually harassing women make it easier or harder for him to stay in the country? Should joining a terror group, or being a paedophile, bolster or hinder an asylum claim? Incredibly, Britain’s immigration judges have found themselves on the wrong side of all of these questions. The result is a migration policy that is not only dysfunctional and at odds with public opinion, but bordering on the deranged, too.
An Afghan who had been convicted of indecent exposure was granted refugee status back in 2020, not in spite of being a sex offender, but because he is a sex offender. His ‘sexually disinhibited behaviour’, and the fact he ‘continues to act inappropriately towards females’, the court agreed, might expose him to ‘ill-treatment’ back in Afghanistan.
A Nigerian woman, who tried and failed to claim asylum eight times, succeeded on her ninth attempt – all thanks to her decision to join a terror group. In December last year, the presiding judge even acknowledged that the claimant was not a sincere supporter of the Indigenous People of Biafra, a proscribed terrorist organisation in Nigeria, but had joined up solely ‘in order to create an asylum claim’ to help her stay in the UK.
A Zimbabwean paedophile was due to be deported in 2021, but a judge blocked the proceedings, fearing that his ‘criminal record for child sex offences’, among other things, would leave him likely to face ‘substantial hostility’ from the authorities in Zimbabwe.
Such absurdities invariably arise from judges’ interpretations of the Human Rights Act 1998 and the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), which the UK signed up to in the wake of the Second World War.
The so-called convention rights have attained the status of holy writ among the political class and the judiciary. According to defenders of the human-rights regime, to be sceptical of the ECHR is to want to turn Britain into Vladimir Putin’s Russia (which was expelled from the convention after its invasion of Ukraine). Worse still, to query any application of human-rights law is supposedly to reject the lessons of Nazi Germany, given the ECHR’s framers set out to ensure that Hitler’s crimes could never be repeated. Winston Churchill played a major role in its inception, having opened the Hague Congress in 1948, which later gave rise to a range of European supranational institutions, the ECHR among them.
The ECHR’s articles often sound reasonable and unobjectionable on paper. In practice, they have led to some truly perverse decisions in British courts. What right-thinking person could object to the ‘prohibition of torture’, or the prohibition of ‘inhuman or degrading treatment’, as enshrined in Article 3? Yet it is this provision that established, in effect, a ‘human right’ to avoid deportation for that Zimbabwean paedophile and Afghan sex offender. Is it really reasonable to say that this is precisely what Churchill had in mind? Does anyone seriously believe that depriving a pervert of a passport would put us on a slippery slope towards setting up concentration camps?
The Article 8 ‘right to a family life’ was established primarily to prevent the state’s intrusion into the family. Sensible enough, you might think. But this provision has also wreaked havoc when it comes to immigration and asylum. It is the main culprit behind a string of baffling cases that have come to light in recent weeks. Take the Albanian criminal who couldn’t be deported in part because his son doesn’t like foreign-made chicken nuggets. Or the Jamaican drug dealer who must stay in the UK because his daughter is questioning her gender.
More politically explosive was last month’s ruling that six Gazans should have the right to resettle in the UK under the same terms of a scheme the government had set up for refugees from Ukraine. The ‘right to a family life’ came into play here because the Gazan family had a brother living in Britain. The fact they had had no face-to-face contact with him for 17 years was apparently of no import to the judge.
The Gaza resettlement case shows the alarming extent to which activist judges and lawyers, armed with human-rights law, have taken control of the UK’s migration policy. The ruling handed down by Hugo Norton-Taylor, an upper-tribunal judge, makes no efforts to disguise its political bent. Norton-Taylor assumes it is in his gift to effectively create his own refugee resettlement scheme, claiming there was ‘no evidence’ of a ‘deliberate decision’ by the UK government or parliament not to include Gazans when it created a scheme for Ukrainians in the wake of Russia’s 2022 invasion. He even haughtily dismissed any considerations of the ‘public interest’ when deciding who should be allowed to come to Britain. Under his interpretation of the ‘right to a family life’, it seems the British government now has an active duty to relocate a family living 2,500 miles away to a country they have never stepped foot in.
It is a judgement so egregious, so obviously contrary to the will of the elected government and parliament, that even UK prime minister Keir Starmer, usually a fanatical enthusiast for all things ‘human rights’, felt the need to distance himself from it. When pressed on the case by opposition leader Kemi Badenoch during Prime Minister’s Questions last week, Starmer said the judge had made the ‘wrong decision’.
Tellingly, this fairly mild rebuke was enough to draw the ire of the judicial establishment. England’s top judge, Baroness Sue Carr, made an extraordinary intervention this week, condemning both Badenoch’s question and Starmer’s answer as ‘unacceptable’. According to the lady chief justice, the government must ‘respect and protect the independence of the judiciary’. Elected MPs, she said, also ‘have a duty to respect the rule of law’. What Baroness Carr seems to mean by this is that judges’ decisions should not be publicly questioned. That their activism in the courtroom, no matter how blatant or perplexing, should never be subjected to outside political challenge.
The anti-democratic arrogance of the lady chief justice, in slapping down our elected representatives, shouldn’t really surprise us. It is a feature, not a bug, of the human-rights framework, stretching right back to the immediate postwar period. For while we are often told that human rights were born of a need to prevent the return of fascist or Communist horrors, the framers of the ECHR had another fear at the forefront of their minds – namely, the rise of mass democracy. As Luke Gittos outlines in his book, Human Rights – Illusory Freedom: ‘The existence of a human-rights framework owes everything to postwar elites’ attempt to exert economic and political control over the heads of European peoples.’ It stems from a reactionary, elitist belief that democracy, if not reined in by an unelected elite, is little better than tyranny.
If the likes of Churchill were alive today, they would undoubtedly look askance at some of the individual decisions being made on the basis of the ECHR. But what the framers would certainly recognise is the chasm between what the general public expect from a government policy and what judges are delivering. That much, at least, was always what was intended.
When it comes to migration, the human-rights regime has succeeded in making policy almost laughably impervious to public opinion and democratic pressure. This is celebrated by today’s elites, who view the voting masses as reactionary, racist and irrational. But has the judicial takeover of our borders really resulted in a more rational, humane policy? I seriously doubt that anyone accountable to voters would defend granting asylum on the basis of ‘sexually disinhibited behaviour’.
Spiked: continue reading
See Related Article Below
Jailing Syrian sex offender asylum seeker could breach human rights, judge says
Hassan Abou Hayleh, 39, who assaulted 19-year-old woman, suffers from PTSD after being tortured, his lawyer says
WILL BOLTON
Jailing a “very dangerous” asylum seeker who sexually assaulted a teenager could breach his human rights, a court heard.
Hassan Abou Hayleh, 39, attacked the 19 year-old after driving around at 3am looking for vulnerable drunk women.
He was due to be sentenced on Monday at Bournemouth Crown Court, but the hearing was adjourned after his defence barrister argued that sending him to prison might breach his human rights.
Graham Gilbert claimed that Hayleh was suffering from PTSD, having been tortured in a Syrian jail under the regime of Bashar al-Assad, the former Syrian president.
The lawyer said that jail would make the defendant’s condition worse.
He told Judge Robert Pawson: “The doctor’s report only came in on Saturday and it expressed concerns about Hayleh’s PTSD.
“He has several symptoms of PTSD which would be made worse by a custodial sentence. It would also be made worse without the support of his wife and friends.
“The court must work out whether a custodial sentence would breach Article 3 and be inhumane and degrading for him…”
Hayleh targeted his victim while she was sitting alone on the kerb waiting for her father to give her a lift home.
He molested her in the street and then tried to get her into his car before members of the public intervened.
Convicted in November
The Syrian immigrant was found guilty of sexual assault in a trial last November.
Following his conviction, Judge Pawson, told him: “On the evidence before me you are potentially a very dangerous man. I shudder to think what might have happened.”
After hearing Mr Gilbert’s argument, Judge Pawson erred on the side of caution and adjourned sentencing for further assessment of Hayleh.
He said: “A lot of prisoners’ mental health gets worse during a custodial sentence.
“However we are going to take the upmost care and caution due to Mr Hayleh’s PTSD due to his time suffering torture in a Syrian prison under the Assad regime.
“Placing him in prison would provide echoes of that experience.”
Article 3 of the European Convention of Human Rights prohibits torture, inhumane treatment and degrading punishment to a person.
It will be up to the judge to interpret and apply UK criminal law in a way that is compatible with the Human Rights Act 1998.
Hayleh, who required an Arabic interpreter in court, was released on conditional bail until his next appearance in April.
The Syrian arrived in the UK in 2020 and had been living in Weymouth, Dorset.
Vulnerable women
During the early hours of Dec 18 2022, he drove into the town centre looking for vulnerable women to target.
At 3.25am, he spotted his victim, who had left a nightclub and called her dad to pick her up. As she waited for him, she sat on the pavement alone.
CCTV captured Hayleh as he stopped his car and approached the young woman, before helping her up from the ground.
He then placed his hands down her trousers and inside her underwear before asking her to get inside his car.
The victim refused and instead shouted for help at three people who were walking nearby, telling them that Hayleh had touched her.
Her father, who arrived on the scene as Hayleh drove off, told the court he found his daughter with the three strangers, distraught and crying.
Hayleh told police that it was all a misunderstanding. He said that he saw the victim lying by the side of the road and stopped to help her.
He claimed that she hugged him and he noticed that her trousers were down, exposing part of her bottom, so he reached down and pulled them up.
Judge Pawson told him at a previous hearing: “You were driving around in the early hours on a Sunday morning hoping that you would find exactly what you did find – a young and vulnerable drunk woman who you wanted to get into your car so that you could sexually abuse her.”
‘Case for fundamental reform’
Chris Philp, shadow home secretary, said: “It is outrageous that ECHR considerations are potentially preventing a dangerous sexual predator from being jailed.
“No consideration seems to have been given to the danger he poses to women and girls and the need to protect them. The legal system should protect innocent people from dangerous attackers and not prioritise the supposed rights of illegal immigrants who, in this case, is also a dangerous sexual predator.
“With each one of these cases, which The Telegraph uncovers, the case for fundamental reform of these increasingly absurd human rights laws become stronger.”
Marco Longhi, a former Conservative MP, who has now joined Reform, said: “Judges must be held accountable for their decisions, especially when they prioritise offenders’ rights over the safety of the public.
“In cases like this, where a dangerous individual has been convicted of sexual assault, the rights of victims and potential future victims should take precedence.
“The idea that a convicted offender’s PTSD could exempt them from prison is deeply troubling and undermines justice.
“As long as the UK remains bound by the European Convention on Human Rights, judges will continue to apply subjective and left-leaning interpretations of this contested notion international law. Parliament is Sovereign and our laws should apply.
“Leaving the ECHR would ensure that British laws serve British people, rather than protecting criminals at the expense of victims.”
Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary said: “This disgusting man is a danger to women and girls. He should be behind bars and deported, never to return. The right of the British public to live in safety obviously trumps this man’s mental health claims…
The Telegraph: continue reading
Featured images: x.com
••••
The Liberty Beacon Project is now expanding at a near exponential rate, and for this we are grateful and excited! But we must also be practical. For 7 years we have not asked for any donations, and have built this project with our own funds as we grew. We are now experiencing ever increasing growing pains due to the large number of websites and projects we represent. So we have just installed donation buttons on our websites and ask that you consider this when you visit them. Nothing is too small. We thank you for all your support and your considerations … (TLB)
••••
Comment Policy: As a privately owned web site, we reserve the right to remove comments that contain spam, advertising, vulgarity, threats of violence, racism, or personal/abusive attacks on other users. This also applies to trolling, the use of more than one alias, or just intentional mischief. Enforcement of this policy is at the discretion of this websites administrators. Repeat offenders may be blocked or permanently banned without prior warning.
••••
Disclaimer: TLB websites contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available to our readers under the provisions of “fair use” in an effort to advance a better understanding of political, health, economic and social issues. The material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material for purposes other than “fair use” you must request permission from the copyright owner.
••••
Disclaimer: The information and opinions shared are for informational purposes only including, but not limited to, text, graphics, images and other material are not intended as medical advice or instruction. Nothing mentioned is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of The Liberty Beacon Project.
Leave a Reply