The Home Office says you don’t need to know about its ‘spying’ on lawyers

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Image of GCHQ donught building. Doesn't look like a doughnut. Look. Oh c'mon, can't you see - open your eye.

Original article republished from Open Democracy under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International licence.

Exclusive: Government refuses to answer questions about its surveillance of immigration lawyers

Jenna Corderoy 24 April 2023, 10.00pm

The government has refused to answer questions about its “monitoring” of human rights lawyers – saying revealing the extent of its surveillance is not in the public interest.

In February, immigration minister Robert Jenrick admitted during a parliamentary debate that the Home Office is “monitoring the activities” of “a small number of legal practitioners”, after claiming that “human rights lawyers abuse and exploit our laws”.

Using Freedom of Information (FOI) laws, openDemocracy asked the Home Office how many legal practitioners it is monitoring, the nature of the monitoring and when it began. We also asked which unit within the department is carrying out the surveillance or if it has been outsourced to private firms.

The Home Office has now rejected the request, saying it is not in the public interest to disclose any of the information. openDemocracy has appealed against this decision.

Paul Heron, senior solicitor at the Public Interest Law Centre, told openDemocracy: “Government ministers spying on lawyers sounds like something from an authoritarian state. It is a direct threat to the rule of law and undermines the principles of justice and fairness.

“State surveillance of lawyers, and indeed any worker, is a clear violation of human rights and civil liberties and undermines the very foundation of a free and democratic society.”

Heron added: “The Home Office’s refusal to respond openly, adequately and indeed at all to the FOI request from openDemocracy regarding the monitoring strategy of lawyers by the Home Office should be a real concern, indicating not only a fundamental lack of transparency but a fundamental lack of accountability.”

State surveillance of lawyers, and indeed any worker, is a clear violation of human rights and civil liberties

Jon Baines, a senior data protection specialist at law firm Mishcon de Reya, shared Heron’s concerns.

Speaking to openDemocracy, Baines said: “The secrecy shown by the Home Office is regrettable, particularly as there is a distinct lack of any meaningful analysis of the public interest factors weighing in favour of disclosure.

“Secret monitoring of lawyers by the state has very serious connotations, and if the information really is exempt from disclosure, it is incumbent on the Home Office to give more detail and more justification for what is an inherently oppressive activity.”

The Home Office’s silence comes ahead of the return of the Illegal Migration Bill to the Commons this week, for its third and final reading before moving to the Lords. On Monday, the Equality and Human Rights Commission warned that the bill “risks breaching international obligations to protect human rights and exposing individuals to serious harm”.

The government claims the legislation will deter people from crossing the English Channel in small boats.

In February, Tory MP Bill Wiggin used a parliamentary session about a violent incident outside a hotel used to temporarily house asylum seekers in Knowsley, Liverpool to ask about legislating to stop such crossings.

Jenrick replied: “This is one of the most litigious areas of public life. It is an area where, I am afraid, human rights lawyers abuse and exploit our laws.”

The Home Office must give more detail and more justification for what is an inherently oppressive activity

Later in the debate, Liberal Democrat MP Alistair Carmichael asked: “The minister told us a few minutes ago that part of the problem here is human rights lawyers who abuse and exploit our laws… could the minister tell the House how many solicitors, advocates and barristers have been reported by the Home Office in the last 12 months to the regulatory authorities?”

Jenrick did not answer the question or provide figures. Instead, he said: “We are monitoring the activities, as it so happens, of a small number of legal practitioners, but it is not appropriate for me to discuss that here.”

At the time, Jenrick’s comments prompted dismay and concern among lawyers.

In its FOI refusal, the Home Office stated that a disclosure would “inhibit free and frank analysis in the future, and the loss of frankness and candour would damage the quality of risk assessments and deliberation and lead to poorer decision-making”.

Explaining its decision to withhold the information, the department said: “The Home Office has a process that allows caseworkers to check companies and individuals are qualified to provide immigration advice and reporting mechanisms that allows us to escalate any issues to regulatory bodies.”

Original article republished from Open Democracy under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International licence.

Continue ReadingThe Home Office says you don’t need to know about its ‘spying’ on lawyers

Climate Coalition to UK Government: ‘You Had Your Chance—Now We’re Stepping It Up’

Read more about the article Climate Coalition to UK Government: ‘You Had Your Chance—Now We’re Stepping It Up’
The Big One protest April 2023 Central London
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Original article republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) licence. By BRETT WILKINS Apr 24, 2023

“Everything we do will be aimed at building and mobilizing the huge climate movement that turned out over the last four days,” said one Extinction Rebellion activist, referring to the Big One protests that ended Monday.

They gave British leaders until Monday to engage with their demands or face a renewed wave of civil disobedience, and as their deadline passed without a response, climate campaigners had a new message for the right-wing U.K. government: “You had your chance—now we’re stepping it up.”

Last week, a coalition led by Extinction Rebellion (XR) demanded that the U.K. government, led by Conservative Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, produce a plan for ending the fossil fuel era in the face of a worsening planetary emergency and include the climate movement in the process.

The green groups said that failure to meet their ultimatum would result in massive civil disobedience like last year’s demonstrations—in which activists blocked roads, bridges, and fossil fuel infrastructureinterrupted a speech by then-Prime Minister Liz Truss, a Tory; glued themselves to buildings; and splashed tomato soup on a protected Van Gogh painting.

“Collectively, we can unite, and demand better. We have the power in all of us.”

At the start of the year, XR vowed to no longer use “public disruption as a primary tactic” and to leave the “locks, glue, and paint behind” in favor of prioritizing large demonstrations like the “The Big One,” which ended Monday and featured nationwide protests including a massive Earth Day die-in outside Parliament attended by tens of thousands of people.

“The government had a week to respond to our demands and they have failed to do so,” XR co-founder Clare Farrell said in a statement. “Next we will reach out to supporter organizations to start creating a plan for stepping up our campaigns across an ecosystem of tactics that includes everyone from first-time protesters to those willing to go to prison.”

“Over the next three months, we will be translating the appetite for action amongst people at The Big One into a whole new range of campaigns and action across the country,” XR action coordinator Rob Callender said in a statement.

“Everything we do will be aimed at building and mobilizing the huge climate movement that turned out over the last four days so that we can return to Parliament this year from every corner and community in the country in even greater numbers,” he added. “And this time we won’t leave until our demands to the government are met. We are all ready to do the important work of taking back our power and creating a better future for everyone.”

Dominique Palmer of coalition member Fridays For Future said: “Collectively, we can unite, and demand better. We have the power in all of us.”

“As we have seen, we cannot wait for politicians to take action that prioritizes people and planet over profit, and so we must demand it,” Palmer added. “By applying pressure, we can win. And create an equitable future.”

Original article republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) licence.

Continue ReadingClimate Coalition to UK Government: ‘You Had Your Chance—Now We’re Stepping It Up’

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Proud to be an eco-zealot, we need to call the apocalypse-zealot cnuts names too

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I can only speak for myself only. I am proud to be concerned for the environment, nature and the future of the planet – to be an eco-zealot.

Tory assole apocalypse-zealot Esther McVey goes in for name-calling with a total absence of rational argument. eco-zealots, pampered overprivileged nitwits, publicity-hungry anarchists, more ego-warriors than eco-warriors, need bringing down a peg or two by both the police and the courts, probably living off their family trust fund, eco-loons, eco-extremists, terrorists [with] nutty ideas. Terrorists? Nutty ideas like preventing apocalypse? The science is clear, it’s Esther McVey who is the unhinged zealot. She’s some kind of psychopath campaigning for climate destruction.

[22/4/23: Having paid some attention to McVey, I suspect that she may be insane.]

The Sun attacks activists for driving, eating fruit and veg and being a mother. Shopping at Waitrose while being a member of Extinction Rebellion, What disgusting, shameful activities will they do next?

A gammony man-child and Farage anger? They’re the mad fekkers …

[Full disclosure: I’m not at the Big One because I’m hopefully only temporarily ill but def there in spirit.]

Continue ReadingProud to be an eco-zealot, we need to call the apocalypse-zealot cnuts names too

‘Responsibility for ambulance crisis is with a Government that has failed to invest in NHS’

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https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/responsibility-ambulance-crisis-government-failed-29768725

The average time for an ambulance to arrive for someone suffering stroke, severe burns or chest pain is now 93 minutes. This is five times longer than the target of 18 minutes

NHS sign

Each day 120 people on average die before an ambulance can reach them.

Many of these lives could have been saved if we had an NHS that was fit for purpose.

But under the Tory Government, emergency response times have hit a record high.

The average time for an ambulance to arrive for someone suffering stroke, severe burns or chest pain is now 93 minutes. This is five times longer than the target of 18 minutes.

The blame cannot be laid at the door of paramedics, who provide the best possible service under increasingly stressful conditions.

The responsibility lies with a Government that has failed to invest in the NHS.

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/responsibility-ambulance-crisis-government-failed-29768725

Continue Reading‘Responsibility for ambulance crisis is with a Government that has failed to invest in NHS’