Rabu, 15 Mei 2024

Sycamore Gap tree: Man pleads not guilty to cutting down famous tree - live - The Independent

Sycamore Gap: Iconic tree at Hadrian’s Wall chopped down in apparent act of vandalism

Two men have appeared in court on Wednesday in connection with the felling of the Sycamore Gap tree - which has been valued at £620,000 in criminal damage.

Daniel Graham, 38, and Adam Carruthers, 31, have been charged with causing the damage, the Crown Prosecution Service said. They are on bail.

Graham entered pleas of not guilty, while Carruthers entered no plea.

There was a national outcry in September when the much-loved, centuries-old tree in rural Northumberland was found to have been cut down.

The tree, believed to have been one of the most photographed in the country, used to sit in a gap along Hadrian’s Wall – a Unesco world heritage site – and a popular hotspot for tourists and walkers.

Its origins are believed to have dated back to medieval times and it has been excavated on two previous occasions – between 1908 and 1911 and again between 1982 and 1987 – when Roman remains linked to Hadrian’s Wall were found.

Northumberland National Park (NNP) said it had received 2,000 “heartfelt” messages from people from all around the world expressing sadness and that it had been inundated with offers of help.

1715793895

Pictures show the two men accused leaving court

(Getty Images)
(Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)
(Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)
Maryam Zakir-Hussain15 May 2024 18:24
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Court sketch shows two men accused in connection with the felling of the Sycamore Gap tree

Daniel Graham, 38, (left)of Milbeck Stables, Carlisle, and Adam Carruthers, 31, of Church Street, Wigton, Cumbria, appeared in the dock at Newcastle Magistrates' Court.

They are accused of causing £622,191 worth of damage to the much-photographed Sycamore Gap tree

(Elizabeth Cook/PA Wire)
Maryam Zakir-Hussain15 May 2024 17:41
1715787069

Loss of Sycamore Gap tree caused ‘serious distress’, court hears

During the hearing, Rebecca Brown, prosecuting, said that the tree was “instantly recognisable”.

She said the cost of the damage to the tree was assessed using the Capital Asset Value for Amenity Trees (CAVAT) tool used by local authorities to work out the level of compensation needed to replace a tree.

Ms Brown said factors involved in the calculation involved the size of the tree, its type and the number of people who had access to it.

The lawyer said the loss of the tree had caused “serious distress”, as well as economic and social damage.

The case was “complex” and involved cell site analysis, number plate recognition technology, botany, evaluation of the tree and “image enhancement”, she said.

(Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)
Maryam Zakir-Hussain15 May 2024 16:31
1715783211

Case ‘too serious’ for magistrates’ court, judge says

A district judge said that the case of two men accused of felling the famous Sycamore Gap tree was so serious that it must be dealt with at the crown court.

Daniel Graham, 38, of Milbeck Stables, Carlisle, and Adam Carruthers, 31, of Church Street, Wigton, Cumbria, are accused of causing £622,191 worth of damage to the much-photographed tree.

They are also accused of causing £1,144 worth of damage to Hadrian’s Wall, a Unesco World Heritage Site, which was hit by the falling tree when it was felled overnight on September 28.

Both the tree and the wall were said to belong to the National Trust.

Graham entered pleas of not guilty, while Carruthers entered no plea.

District Judge Zoe Passfield declined jurisdiction, saying: “This case is too serious to be heard in the magistrates’ court.”

The pair will attend Newcastle Crown Court on June 12 for their next hearing and they were both granted unconditional bail in the meantime.

Daniel Graham, left, and Adam Carruthers, right, wore masks outside court (Owen Humphreys/PA)
Daniel Graham, left, and Adam Carruthers, right, wore masks outside court (Owen Humphreys/PA) (PA Wire)
Maryam Zakir-Hussain15 May 2024 15:26
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More pictures of the defendants at court

(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)
Sam Rkaina15 May 2024 15:10
1715780518

Accused men pictured outside court

Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers were pictured leaving Newcastle Upon Tyne Magistrates’ Court after appearing in connection with the felling of the Sycamore Gap tree.

The much-photographed tree, which stood next to Hadrian’s Wall in Northumberland for 200 years, was chopped down in September last year, causing a national outrage.

Graham and Carruthers face charges of criminal damage to the tree and to the wall, which is a World Heritage Site.

Daniel Graham (left) and Adam Carruthers leaving Newcastle Upon Tyne Magistrates’ Court after appearing
Daniel Graham (left) and Adam Carruthers leaving Newcastle Upon Tyne Magistrates’ Court after appearing (Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)
(AFP via Getty Images)
Sam Rkaina15 May 2024 14:41
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A man accused of felling the famous Sycamore Gap tree has denied charges of criminal damage.

Daniel Graham, 38, and Adam Carruthers, 31, appeared at Newcastle Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday.

Graham, of Milbeck Stables, Carlisle, entered pleas of not guilty, while Carruthers, of Church Street, Wigton, Cumbria, entered no pleas.

The pair are charged with criminal damage to property of a value over £5,000, namely “without lawful excuse, damaged a sycamore tree to the value of £622,191 belonging to the National Trust”.

They face a second charge of criminal damage to property valued under £5,000, namely Hadrian’s Wall, with the damage assessed to the Unesco World Heritage Site as being £1,144.

Both offences were alleged to have been committed on September 28 last year.

Sam Rkaina15 May 2024 14:32
1715776205

Pictured: Felled Sycamore Gap tree

An aerial view shows the felled Sycamore Gap tree, along Hadrian’s Wall, near Hexham, northern England on September 28, 2023
An aerial view shows the felled Sycamore Gap tree, along Hadrian’s Wall, near Hexham, northern England on September 28, 2023 (Getty Images)
An aerial view shows the felled Sycamore Gap tree, along Hadrian's Wall, near Hexham, northern England on September 28, 2023
An aerial view shows the felled Sycamore Gap tree, along Hadrian's Wall, near Hexham, northern England on September 28, 2023 (AFP via Getty Images)
Alexander Butler15 May 2024 13:30
1715772605

Sycamore Gap tree to go on public display after row

The fate of the felled Sycamore Gap tree has been decided as it is set to be displayed at a tourist attraction near its original site.

There was an outcry when the tree was illegally chainsawed in September, with Northumberland National Park saying it had received 2,000 “heartfelt” messages from people from all around the world expressing sorrow.

Historic England said Hadrian’s Wall had suffered damage when it was felled in an act of vandalism, and the future of the famed tree has been uncertain until now.

Alexander Butler15 May 2024 12:30
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When was it cut down?

Reports first emerged that the tree had been felled overnight on 27 September, with Northumberland police vowing to bring those responsible to justice.

The National Trust, which manages the land where the tree stood, said it was “shocked and saddened” to learn of the news.

It subsequently closed the site where the tree was located.

Reports first emerged that the tree had been felled overnight on 27 September
Reports first emerged that the tree had been felled overnight on 27 September (EPA)
Alexander Butler15 May 2024 11:30

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2024-05-15 16:43:54Z
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Emergency measure triggered to deal with prison overcrowding in England - Sky News

An emergency measure has been triggered by the Ministry of Justice to deal with prison overcrowding in England.

Operation Early Dawn will see defendants in police custody remain there - and not be transferred to magistrates' courts for bail hearings - in case there is no space in jail cells for that prisoner if they are remanded into custody.

Sky News understands the measure is just being used in London and the North East, at the moment.

The Law Society, which represents solicitors in England and Wales, says many magistrates' court cases will be delayed as a result, with the most serious cases given priority.

Defendants who are not prioritised will be released on police bail, the Law Society added.

Read more: Early prison release scheme causing 'high-risk' offenders to be let out

At Prime Minister's Questions, Sir Keir said the "prison system is in chaos" and asked the prime minister if his decision to "let prisoners out 70 days early makes our country more secure".

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A Ministry of Justice spokesman said: "This government is categorical that the most dangerous offenders should stay behind bars for longer, which is why new laws will keep rapists locked up for every day of their prison sentence and ensure life means life for the most horrific murderers.

"We continue to see pressure on our prisons following the impact of the pandemic and barristers' strike which is why we have initiated a previously used measure to securely transfer prisoners between courts and custody and ensure there is always a custody cell available should they be remanded."

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The Law Society said it was "crystal clear" the prison space crisis "is a consequence of the government's approach to justice including over a decade of underfunding of our criminal justice system".

A spokesman added: "Victims, witnesses, defendants and lawyers will today turn up at magistrates' courts across England only to find out that their cases have been delayed due to a crisis in prison and police cell capacity outside of their control.

"As of now, we understand that this pattern will be repeated every day that this emergency measure is in place."

Prison
Image: File pic: iStock

High-risk offenders being released early

In February, a separate scheme - the End of Custody Supervised Licence (ECSL) - to allow prisoners to be released early due to a lack of space was extended indefinitely. Those convicted of serious offences are not eligible for early release.

A row broke out over the scheme during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday after Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer accused Rishi Sunak of allowing sex offenders to be released early.

Sir Keir quoted a report published on Tuesday by HM Chief Inspector of Prisons about Lewes prison in East Sussex, after he found a "high-risk prisoner had his release date brought forward under the ECSL scheme, despite having a history of stalking, domestic abuse and being subject to a restraining order".

"He was a risk to children and subject to an exclusion zone that included the local authority responsible for trying to house him," the report said.

But the prime minister said: "As I've said, no one should be put on this scheme if they are a threat to the country.

"And let me be crystal clear... it does not apply to anyone serving a life sentence.

"Anyone convicted of a serious violent offence, anyone convicted of terrorism, anyone convicted of a sex offence, and crucially, in contrast to the system that Labour had put in place, governors and the prison service have an absolute lock so that no one is put on this scheme who shouldn't be."

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2024-05-15 13:41:15Z
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PMQs: Rishi Sunak challenged over early release of dangerous criminals - BBC

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Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has been challenged over the early release of dangerous criminals under a scheme aimed at easing overcrowding in jails.

During PMQs, Sir Keir Starmer asked for a guarantee that no criminals considered high risk were freed early.

The PM insisted no-one deemed a threat to public safety would be eligible.

But the Labour leader pointed to an example of one inmate who posed a danger to children, who had his release date brought forward.

The case was revealed in a report on HMP Lewes by the prisons watchdog, which was published on Tuesday.

The individual had a history of stalking and domestic abuse but was released without a full risk assessment.

The original scheme, introduced last October, allowed "low-level offenders" to be freed from prisons in England and Wales up to 18 days early under strict supervision.

This was increased to up to 60 days in March and will be further extended to up to 70 days from 23 May.

The government has said no-one convicted of a sexual, terrorist or serious violent offence would be eligible for early release.

The prison population has ballooned in recent decades as a result of tougher sentences and court backlogs.

Sir Keir said the government had not provided "basic details" about the scheme, including how many prisoners were being released early, where they were and what crimes they had committed.

He called for domestic abusers to be exempt from the scheme.

In response, Mr Sunak said: "There are strict eligibility criteria in place, with exclusions based on public safety and no-one will be put on the scheme if they were deemed a threat to public safety."

The PM said prison governors also had "an absolute lock" over who was put on the scheme.

He added that those released were subject to strict conditions and supervision, which he said was in contrast to under the last Labour government.

Later, Downing Street denied that the government is attempting to pass the buck onto prison governors in managing the move, after emphasising they have powers to veto offenders moving onto licence.

"Prison governors and the probation service have a veto which we fully expect them to use to block any offender moving onto licence before their release date if they could pose an increased risk to the public," the prime minister's official spokesman said.

A Labour spokesman said the party would want to end the early release policy "as soon as possible" if it wins power, but added "we are under no illusion about the scale of the challenge we will face when it comes to the prison capacity crisis that we will inherit".

Mr Sunak will be especially eager to maintain the Conservative Party's reputation for being tough on crime in an election year.

Under repeated questioning from Sir Keir on the issue he hit back by arguing that the Conservatives believe more than Labour that prison prevents crime.

That attack line shows precisely why Mr Sunak is also now vulnerable if Labour can establish the argument in voters' minds that prisoners are being released early who should not be on the streets.

In a piece of potentially awkward timing, one of the main pieces of legislation the government still hopes to complete before the general election is a Sentencing Bill.

The proposed law is partly intended to address the capacity problems by suspending almost all prison sentences of less than a year and expanding home detention.

But some prisons campaigners say this is insufficient to deal with the problems in the system, and in other ways the bill is designed to put people in prison longer - with those who commit the most violent murders imprisoned for life, and those sentenced for rape and some other sexual offences required to serve their whole sentence in prison, whereas currently they can in some circumstances be released on licence after two-thirds of the sentence.

'Serious concerns'

Chief inspector of prisons Charlie Taylor has raised "serious concerns" about the early release scheme.

His report highlighted one individual who had been freed early was recalled to custody before the watchdog's inspection of the prison had ended.

According to the findings, the inmate had a "significant" drug problem and a record of self-harm as well as experiencing suicidal thoughts, but was freed despite "appeals for the decision to be reversed and staff having serious concerns for his and the public's safety".

Meanwhile, some court appearances in England will be delayed in another emergency measure to deal with prison overcrowding.

Under Operation Early Dawn, the Ministry of Justice says that it now needs to control the flow of cases reaching this first day in court because of the pressure on cells.

In practice, this means some defendants who would expect to be sent from court to a remand prison cell will be told the start of their case is being delayed. That will mean police will have to release some of them on bail with a date to later attend court.

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2024-05-15 14:32:26Z
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Selasa, 14 Mei 2024

Twin who fought off crocodile attacking her sister given King's medal - The Independent

A woman who saved her twin sister’s life by punching a crocodile in the face will be honoured for her bravery in the King’s first Civilian Gallantry List.

Georgia Laurie, a 31-year-old from Sandhurst, was bitten in the arm while fighting the reptile off as it dragged Melissa underwater and attacked her three times, while they were swimming at a lagoon in the Mexican state of Oaxaca in June 2021.

Both women were seriously hurt, with Melissa developing sepsis as a result of her wounds, but survived after treatment – with Georgia now set to receive the King’s Gallantry Medal.

“It’s an honour. I was so shocked as well when I received the letter because I didn’t see it coming, I didn’t expect it,” said Ms Laurie, adding: “I feel really privileged, it’s a silver lining to have come out of the terrible ordeal ... it kind of softens the whole traumatic experience.

Georgia will receive the King’s Gallantry Medal, which acknowledges exemplary acts of bravery (Aaron Chown/PA Wire)

“It’s been a good thing for not just me but for the whole family. I feel like I have to share it with my sister because, let’s face it, I don’t think I would have been nominated for it if she didn’t survive.

“What’s made this story so incredible is Melissa’s unwavering bravery throughout it all because she was so strong during it and I don’t think I would be here without her, she really gave me the strength to keep fighting.”

Melissa suffered an open fracture to her wrist, severe puncture wounds to the abdomen and multiple injuries to her leg and foot, while Georgia was bitten on her hand.

Twin sisters Melissa and Georgia Laurie both survived the attack (Facebook)

Georgia added: “The further away it gets, the less it feels real. But then something like this happens and it puts it all back into perspective again, like wow, that actually did happen, it’s a crazy story. Because when you think about it, it does sound like a horror movie, but it is a part of our life, it’s part of the tapestry of our life.”

This year’s Civilian Gallantry List, which includes nine people, is the first to be approved by the King, who was crowned last year on 6 May.

Also set to receive the medal is police constable Zach Printer, who confronted gunman Jake Davison while himself unarmed on 12 August 2021 in Plymouth, after Davison killed his mother before shooting dead three-year-old Sophie Martyn, her father Lee, 43, Stephen Washington, 59, and Kate Shepherd, 66.

Mr Printer was attending to Ms Shepherd when he saw Davison carrying the firearm, immediately sprinting towards the 22-year-old, telling him to stand still, and hoping that he could talk him down. But Davison – who had his pump-action shotgun positioned under his own chin – pulled the trigger.

Georgia (right saved twin sister Melissa from a crocodile attack in Mexico in June 2021 (Aaron Chown/PA Wire)

The officer was acknowledged for his “selfless and brave actions” while confronting Davison, which prevented further harm to others.

Among the other recipients of the medal is police constable Steven Denniss, who was stabbed in the leg while apprehending a double-murder suspect while off duty in Louth, Lincolnshire.

Mr Denniss was walking his dog at Hubbard’s Hills on 1 June 2021 when he spotted Daniel Boulton, who was wanted for the murder of his 26-year-old former girlfriend Bethany Vincent and her nine-year-old son Darren Henson the previous evening.

Both sisters suffered injuries with Melissa developing sepsis (Screengrab from itv News )

Without any protective equipment, Mr Denniss attempted to detain Boulton until colleagues arrived, and was stabbed by him while on the phone to colleagues.

The officer chased Boulton until he was joined by armed officers, before the suspect was arrested and later jailed for life with a minimum term of 40 years.

Also on the King’s list are Lawrie Elsdon-Dew, for protecting others during fierce fighting outside the British embassy in Sudan in April 2023, and Stacey Farrington and Jake Walker, who stopped a speeding car travelling the wrong way on a motorway using an ambulance.

King Charles has released his first Civilian Gallantry List (Jordan Pettitt/PA)

The King’s Commendation for Bravery was awarded to Stephen Ellison, who rescued a stranger from a river in Chongqing, China, in November 2020.

Chhaganlal Jagaita – who helped people out of a burning hotel in Mati, Greece, in July 2018 – and Paul Martin, who intervened during a knife attack in April 2021, also receive recognition.

Those honoured in the late Queen’s final Civilian Gallantry List included five individuals – Steven Gallant, John Crilly, Darryn Frost and Lukasz Koczocik – who fought with Fishmonger’s Hall terrorist Usman Khan in November 2019, and Adam Roberts, who risked his life to protect one of the wounded victims.

Additional reporting by PA

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2024-05-14 07:47:50Z
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Gavin Robinson: DUP vote on MP sex offences ban would have been 'misconstrued' - Belfast Telegraph

Speaking to the BBC on Tuesday, Mr Robinson said he and his fellow DUP MPs were in parliament for the vote.

But he said: "We determined that given the last number of months, it would have been inappropriate for us because anything we said could have been misconstrued in an unhelpful way or an erroneous way".

He added: "We didn't participate in it. Anything we said in light of recent events could have been misconstrued so we weren't going to participate in last night's debate, it was a matter for parliament as a whole and parliament has determined the outcome."

MPs later voted in favour of a proposal from Liberal Democrat Wendy Chamberlain (North East Fife) to revert to the threshold being an arrest, by a majority of 170 to 169, majority one.

The House of Commons Commission initially proposed that a risk assessment would take place on whether an MP should be prevented from attending the parliamentary estate if they were arrested on suspicion of committing a violent or sexual offence.

MPs have previously only been prevented from attending the parliamentary estate by voluntary arrangements with their own party whips under such circumstances.

In April, former DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson made his first appearance in court in Newry after he and his wife Eleanor were charged in connection with historical sex offences.

The Lagan Valley MP (61) faces 11 charges: one count of rape, one count of gross indecency and nine counts of indecent assault.

The charges relate to two complainants and are alleged to have occurred between January 1, 1985, and December 31, 2006.

His wife, co-accused Lady Eleanor Donaldson (58), also appeared in court charged with aiding and abetting rape and indecent assault, as well as two counts of cruelty to a person under the age of 16.

The aiding and abetting charges relate to alleged incidents between January 1, 1985, and December 31, 1991, as well as a specific count of the charge on January 1, 1985.

One cruelty charge is alleged to have occurred between January 1, 1985, and December 31, 1991, while the other alleged offence occurred between January 1, 1998, and December 31, 2004.

Donaldson wrote to the DUP saying he would be strenuously contesting the charges. He remains as Lagan Valley MP, a seat he has held since 1997.

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Nottingham attacks: Judges reject appeal over triple killer's sentence - BBC

Valdo CalocaneNottinghamshire Police

The sentence of a man who stabbed three people to death in Nottingham was not unduly lenient, judges have ruled.

Valdo Calocane killed Barnaby Webber and Grace O'Malley-Kumar, both 19, and 65-year-old Ian Coates on 13 June 2023.

He was given an indefinite hospital order after prosecutors accepted a plea of manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility.

Mr Webber's mother, Emma Webber, said the Court of Appeal ruling came as "no surprise" to the victims' families.

Speaking at the hearing on Tuesday, Lady Chief Justice Baroness Carr concluded there was "no error" in the approach taken by Mr Justice Turner at Nottingham Crown Court in January.

She said Calocane was in the "grips of a severe psychotic episode" at the time.

Mr Justice Turner came to the "reasonable conclusion" that the aim of protecting the public would be best served by a hospital order, she added.

In a statement following the hearing, Mrs Webber said the ruling illustrated the need for "urgent reforms" in UK homicide law.

"Despite the fact that the attorney general herself feels that Valdo Calocane did not receive the appropriate sentence, today's outcome proves how utterly flawed and under-resourced the criminal justice system in the UK is," she said.

"So far, there have been no less than eight individual reports, reviews and investigations.

"We do not believe that there is any chance these can be cohesive enough to ensure a full and detailed outcome, and therefore call for a public inquiry."

Ian Coates, Barnaby Webber and Grace O'Malley-Kumar

Dr Sanjoy Kumar, father of Ms O'Malley-Kumar, said the attacks were "entirely preventable".

"It is the missed multiple opportunities to prevent the Nottingham attacks and the murder of our children and Ian Coates, is what has led us here today," he said.

"We will continue to pursue agencies that failed us and hold them responsible for the Nottingham attacks so that no other family is made to suffer like ours."

Calocane, 32, had been diagnosed with treatment-resistant paranoid schizophrenia before the attacks.

In addition to killing Mr Webber, Ms O'Malley-Kumar and Mr Coates, Calocane stole Mr Coates's van and used it to drive at three pedestrians, who were all left seriously injured.

The review into the sentence, launched by the attorney general, was held by the Lady Chief Justice of England and Wales, Lord Justice Edis and Mr Justice Garnham.

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In summing up their conclusion, Baroness Carr said: "Had the offender not suffered the mental condition that he did, the sentencing judge would doubtless have been considering a whole life term.

"But neither the judge nor this court can ignore the medical evidence as to the offender's condition which led to these dreadful events or the threat to public safety which the offender continues to pose."

During the hearing, Calocane watched on from a unit in Ashworth High Secure Hospital.

He did not respond when asked to confirm he could hear the ruling - but a member of hospital staff indicated that the judgement could be heard via the video link.

Deanna Heer KC, representing the attorney general's office, had previously argued Calocane should have received a hospital and limitation direction, through which he would be treated in hospital before being transferred to prison.

While not criticising the approach of the original sentencing judge, she said psychiatrists who gave evidence to the court had not commented on the need for custodial action.

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2024-05-14 09:24:16Z
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Senin, 13 Mei 2024

Illegal Migration Act: Parts should not apply in NI, judge rules - BBC

UK Border Force staff assisting a female evacueePA Media

A judge has ruled that large parts of the government's Illegal Migration Act should not apply in Northern Ireland because they breach human rights laws.

He ruled some elements of the act are in breach of the Windsor Framework.

This is the revised post-Brexit deal agreed between the UK and European Union last year.

Mr Justice Humphreys also declared parts of the act to be incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights.

The Illegal Migration Act provides new powers for the UK government to detain and remove asylum seekers it deems to have arrived illegally in the UK.

Teenage asylum seeker

The Windsor Framework deals mostly with trade issues but also includes a human rights element.It commits the UK not to water down the human rights provisions that flow from the Good Friday Agreement, the 1998 deal which brought an end to 30 years of conflict in Northern Ireland, known as the Troubles.

The judge found that several elements of the act do cause a "significant" diminution of the rights enjoyed by asylum seekers residing in Northern Ireland under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.

"I have found that there is a relevant diminution of right in each of the areas relied upon by the applicants," he said.

Dr Tony McGleenan KC, representing the government, indicated that an appeal may be considered.

"We'll be taking our instructions on the judgment and the position in terms of any further litigation will become clear," he said.

The legal challenge was brought by the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission and a 16-year-old asylum seeker from Iran who is residing in Northern Ireland.

The commission has welcomed the judgement.

It said it issued the legal challenge in "its own name due to the significant concerns it has with the Illegal Migration Act and the effect on asylum seekers in Northern Ireland".

It said it would now be "considering the judgment in full and its implications".

'Beacon of protections'

The teenage asylum seeker was represented by Phoenix Law.Its head of immigration and asylum, Sinead Marmion, welcomed the ruling."The Good Friday Agreement has always been a beacon of human rights protections and hope.

"Today, the court through the Northern Ireland Protocol, has ensured those rights apply to the whole community - including asylum seekers."

The government has been contacted for a response to the ruling.

A government spokesperson previously told the BBC: "Tackling illegal migration is a top priority for the government, and there are an unacceptable number of people risking their lives, making dangerous crossings on small boats.

"The Illegal Migration Act will play an important part in our collective effort to break the cycle, end exploitation by gangs and prevent further loss of life."

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2024-05-13 13:56:37Z
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