U.N. hits out at UK "anti-terror" laws
The United Nations human rights committee said on Thursday Britain should ease back on tough "anti-terror" measures and take firm action to combat "negative public attitudes" towards Muslims.
In separate comment, the 9-member body, composed of legal experts from a range of countries, also called on Ireland to open up its largely Catholic primary school system to secular education, and to moderate tough abortion laws.
The strictures were issued in summary observations by the committee on reports presented by both countries earlier this month on how they were carrying out obligations under the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Expressing strong concern over government plans to extend pre-trial detention of terrorist suspects from 28 to 42 days, the committee said suspects should be brought to court "within a reasonable period of time, or released".
People suspected of being involved in terrorism and subject to control orders and curfews limiting their movements should be "promptly charged with a criminal offence" and their lawyers given access to the evidence against them, it added.
The body, whose members are expected to be independent of their governments, said it was concerned "negative public attitudes towards Muslim members of society" continued to develop in Britain.
The government "should take energetic measures to eliminate this phenomenon and ensure that authors of such acts of discrimination on the basis of religion are adequately deterred and sanctioned".
It said the government should conduct prompt and independent investigations into all allegations of suspicious deaths, torture or cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment or punishment inflicted by its personnel in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Britain "should ensure that those responsible are prosecuted and punished in accordance with the gravity of the crime," said the committee, which has members from Australia, Benin, Britain, Colombia, Ecuador, Egypt, Ireland, Mauritius and Sweden.
In comments on the Irish government report, it said Dublin "should take measures to help women avoid unwanted pregnancies so that they do not have to resort to illegal or unsafe abortions...."
- 1 RBS gets Chinese approval for Suzhou stake
- 2 June retail sales fall less than expected
- 3 Birth control battle weighs on Philippine economy
- 4 Saudi Telecom in sponsorship deal with Man United
- 5 Glasgow loss deals blow to Labour
- 6 Besley says fighting inflation tough task
- 7 Asia stocks at two-year low
- 1 Banks may avoid worst of household debt pain
- 2 FAA proposes 3.8 million fine against American
- 3 Swaps spreads highlight credit stresses
- 4 Slower economy saps climate action
- 5 Besley says fighting inflation tough task
- 6 Poll shows leader swap would not save Labour
- 7 Weak sterling may not curb recession
- 1 Glasgow loss deals blow to Labour
- 2 Saudi's economic cities under pressure to deliver
- 3 Magnitude 4.5 earthquake shakes eastern Japan
- 4 Resilient storm Fay could hit Florida a third time
- 5 Speculation rife on U.S. VP running mates
- 6 France's Sarkozy in Afghanistan after troop deaths
- 7 Russia says troops to leave Georgia
|
|


















