Friday, 3 March 2017

European Court of Human rights ..a guide for Dummies

I heard someone on the bus this morning moaning about the European Court of Human Rights and how now that we have voted to leave blah blarh ..I am tempted to explain that the court is not an EU institution ...But I couldnt be bothered and glared instead ......so hear is the guide for those leavers who thought the European Court was tied up with the EU...

tt seems that a lot of people don't realise this... the ECHR is not a court of the EU. It is the highest court of the Council of Europe, formed with the UK as a founding member in the Treaty of London 1949. To cut a long story short, it was what our forefathers fought for.

Our lawmakers saw the horror of what happens when any group of people is considered to be subhuman, and decided that basic human rights should apply to all humans, regardless of their misdeeds and/or crimes. Clearly they knew full well that we wouldn't always like it, but that's kind of the point of Human Rights.

... and so we have those who complain that the ECHR and their lefty human rights prevented us from deporting people Abu Hamza - but actually, they didn't. What the ECHR DID do was to hold us to our legal obligations under law that WE created - they placed a TEMPORARY injunction upon his deportation until they were satisfied that he was not going to be tortured or imprisoned without ANY possibility for release no matter how reformed he could ever possibly become in the future. Once they were satisfied, the injunction was lifted and he was indeed deported.

We have the issue of life imprisonment, for example, with the killer of April Jones. The ECHR wouldn't let us give the killer a full life tariff without the possibility of release - so we explained that under extraordinary circumstances the Home Secretary could release such a prisoner, and the ECHR was OK with that.

Again - that's the thing with having a basic standard for human rights applicable to every human regardless of crime or misdeed - it applies simply by virtue of their being human, and can prove to be a little awkward at times... but it's a hell of a lot better than allowing ANYbody to be treated as sub-human no matter how distasteful we find them - because that's the same kind of thinking that allows societies to end up moving from finding a scapegoat to gassing jewish people or the disabled. Our forefathers, who fought the second world war and who were so disturbed by what they saw and learned, knew this.


So,when you voted to leave the EU on the basis of "those pesky do-gooding human rights", you did not consider where those human rights come from, why they exist, why they were created... by us... and the fact that they have absolutely nothing all to do with leaving the EU. We are still subject to the ECHR -,,,and if that disturbs you I am very sorry for you.

2 comments:

  1. Mustn't forget that hulabaloo about a prisoner's right to vote. Foaming at themouth politicians were inging to the gallery by declaring that"over their dead boddies" would prisoners be allowed the vote. It's hard enough to get the population at large to vote, how much of a problem was it a few inmates excerising their democratic rights?

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  2. Yes it's very sad that this misconception and failure to understand the raison d'etre of the court is one of the drivers for Brexit. Quite separately from Brexit Mrs May wants to do away with it, precisely because sometimes its purpose can be inconvenient and contrary to political will and expedience, which is exactly why it is so important.

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