CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

UK stance on European rights court attacked

Published: 29 Dec 2013 - 07:24 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 11:37 pm

London: British ministers’ plans to withdraw the UK from the European court of human rights (ECHR) are encouraging the government of Ukraine to trample on the liberties of its people, the shadow justice minister (Labour party spokesman on constitutional affairs) has claimed.
Labour MP Sadiq Khan yesterday claimed that Ukraine has been justifying its human rights breaches by citing the British government’s negative attitude to the court.
Khan, who described the UK as a world leader on human rights to which other countries looked for guidance, said: “The Ukraine government is saying: ‘You know what? We don’t really care. If someone like the UK, the beacon of human rights, can say two fingers to the European court, why can’t we?’ We now have a real example of one of the emerging democracies saying if the UK can do it, so can we.”
At the Conservative (Tory) party conference this year, British prime minister, David Cameron, said he was ready to pull the UK out of the court on the grounds that its rulings were stopping the government from deporting foreign criminals and illegal immigrants. Chris Grayling, the UK’s justice secretary, who is also the lord chancellor (responsible for the efficient functioning and independence of the UK’s courts), has been the most vociferous cabinet minister on the issue, claiming that the Strasbourg court was being allowed to take precedence over homegrown law.
But Khan said that evidence had emerged that ministers’ negative rhetoric towards the court was provoking a breakdown in the checks on human rights abuses internationally, including in Ukraine, where the government has been criticised for its handling of mass demonstrations by anti-government activists.
Khan cited the example of Oleksandr Volkov, a judge in the Ukrainian supreme court, who was found to have been dismissed unlawfully by the Ukrainian government in a judgment by the ECHR this year. It found four separate violations of article six of the convention on human rights, the right to a fair trial. The ECHR ordered that Volkov should be reinstated at the earliest possible date, but that was dismissed by politicians in the regime, apparently emboldened by the UK’s attitude towards 
the court.
Aleksandr Lavrinovich, a former minister of justice and the current chair of the high council of justice in Ukraine, reportedly said in justification: “Great Britain would very much like to leave the European convention on human rights.” The ECHR rules on whether the 47 signatory states. 
The Guardian