Member of Party and now- Home Secretary Amber Rudd faces allegations that she had violated several legislations upon handling the applications of Calais refugee children's entry into the United Kingdom. Thirty-six children applying for asylum in the UK had filed their complaint as 28 of them had their applications refused upfront. Hundreds of Calais refugee children have their applications refused for no clear reason.
Children filing their complaints are aged from fourteen to seventeen years old coming from different war-torn countries including Sudan, Eriteria, Afghanistan and Africa. The refugee children currently live in the unruly Calais jungle -- home to many other refugees for years between Britain and France.
The UK faces harsh criticism from human rights groups because even the most vulnerable children are not granted entry into the country. According to the children's legal representatives, many of the applicants have faced depression and trauma before and as they continue to live in Calais.
One case described an Afghan boy whose father had helped NATO triops during its anti-Taliban operations. The boy's family was killed and he was forced to seek refuge in the United Kingdom. However, his application was denied and his representatives at the Duncan Lewis Solicitors did not receive any Home Office response when they raised his concerns. They boy had tried to kill himself in the camp four times.
Thursday, 29 December 2016
Thursday, 24 November 2016
Things To Remember About UK's Child Seat Law For 2016
A third of UK's parents had fitted their children's car seats erroneously according to data by Insurer Sheila's Wheels. Data suggests that one out of 10 of these instalments may be dangerous as they can unhinge and injure children.
UK and EU law states only EU-approved seats used in the United Kingdom. If the parents could not follow proper seating instalment and placement for children their insurer may render them ineligible to claim for insurance. Of course, the primary concern is the safety of children.
Here are a few pointers to make sure you comply with 2016's new car seat laws for children.
• Kids under 12 years old must use car seats.
• Children under 135cm tall must use car seats.
• Kids under 150cm still recommended under laws in Ireland, Germany and France.
Children are to travel in rear-facing seats designed for toddlers and infants until they are at least 15 months old. Parents may need a larger rear-facing seat when the baby outgrows their rear-facing seat.
To fit the seat correctly, the Scottish Sun has a few steps to help you.
Children can only travel legally without a car seat if they're travelling in a public vehicle such as a taxi, cab or minivan. But they could only sit at the back of the car. In a minibus or coach, young kids are to sit in the back. Parents with more than three children are also legally entitled to seat their children where they can most fit.
Wednesday, 19 October 2016
UK Threatened With Legal Action Over Children's Conditions in Calais Camps
Concerned
UK citizens threaten to lodge a claim against the UK government for avoiding
intervention in the case of 30 children stranded in the desolate French camp.
Citizens
UK, a charity working with the Home Office on the current Calais operation, the
current programme of the UK government in the territory is slow and
one-dimensional.
They
threaten to launch legal actions against the government unless it intervenes in
the case of 30 of the most vulnerable children stranded in the area.
The charity
claimed the Home Office programme has ignored a group of over 500 unaccompanied
children about eight to 15 years old most of them females due to their lack of
relatives in the United Kingdom.
“The
government has still not set up a system to assess their best interests and
transfer these children, who include 38 girls from the Calais camp. Zero
children have been transferred to date under the amendment’s terms,” the
charity said in a statement.
George
Gabriel, community organiser with Citizens UK, said: “There are over 1,200
children in the middle of a muddy, freezing field surrounded by 10,000 adults
they do not know. The idea that as a country we cannot successfully reunite the
small number eligible with their families is ridiculous.
“The real
problem here is that the provisions introduced specifically to protect the very
youngest and most vulnerable children under the Dubs amendment have never been
acted on.”
Thursday, 15 September 2016
UK Called To Stop Arms Sales To Saudi Over Human Rights Violations
A House of Commons
Business and International Development Committees report indicate that the sale
of UK's arms to Saudi Arabia should halt following the latter's involvement in
Yemen.
The Committee said it
had received evidence of "clear violations" of international
humanitarian law (IHL). About 47 civilians including 21 women and 15 children
were killed in Saudi Arabian
skirmishes using UK weaponry. The report also
included injuries to 58 more individuals after a house hosting a wedding party
was hit by Saudi Arabian aircraft ammunition.
MPs are split on the
issue. According to the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee's rival report, the
government must block exports if the UK courts say the weapon sales are
unlawful.
The Saudi Arabian Air
Force including other allies of the US-led coalition have also struck other
neutral parties in Syria.
Medicins Sans
Frontieres accused the coalition of war crimes after attacking several of their
volunteer hospitals in the area that killed 11 the previous month.
According to FAC
Conservative Chairman Crispin Blunt the report was one-sided. He had walked
out
of a private meeting between the House of Commons Committees on Arms Export
Controls (CAEC) to avoid a vote from being taken on the draft report.
The UK Defence
Committee did not comment whether they will publish their own report on the
matter.
Friday, 12 August 2016
Legal Challenge Against Brexit Involves Ulster Volunteer Force Victims
Raymond McCord did not
receive the news of Brexit quite well, I believe.
Currently, Mr McCord
is seeking a judicial review that would allow him to challenge the decision
over Brexit as it would impact the benefits he receives from the European
Union.
Mr McCord's son
Raymond Jr was beaten to death by the Ulster Volunteer Force in 1997 while they
lived in Belfast. The 'Troubles' had many human rights victims that the EU
supports under a collective ruling.
The support from the
EU could be altered once the United Kingdom leaves the European Union
officially in a few years.
According to his
lawyer:
"As a victim of
the most recent conflict in Northern Ireland, Mr McCord is very concerned about
the profoundly damaging effect that a unilateral withdrawal of the UK from the
EU will have upon the ongoing relative stability in Northern Ireland."
His legal team claim
it would be unlawful to begin the formal process of the UK leaving the EU
without a parliamentary vote.
They also claim it
could undermine the UK's treaty obligations under the 1998 Good Friday
Agreement and the peace process.
It is also one of the
first types of challenge to come out from Northern Ireland in light of Brexit.
Thursday, 14 July 2016
Theresa May On Environment, Surveillance and Drugs
As David
Cameron steps down, a post-Brexit Prime Minister for the Tories accepts the
torch.
To fulfil
the last three years of Tories as big bosses, former Home Secretary Theresa May
takes the keys to Number 10.
To clarify
her controversial stances regarding the environment, surveillance and drugs,
Wired's Matt Burgess analyses the possible future of Britain under her command.
On
surveillance, Mrs May had under-success in changing surveillance methods available
to police forces, the GCHQ, and the MI5.
She plans
to publish the draft of the new Investigatory Powers Bill, which was published
in November 2015. According to Mrs May, the draft published is different from
the Communications Bill of 2012, which only added a few minor clauses without
actually fixing the issue of surveillance.
This would
mean that communication companies would store information about their consumers
and have legal powers to hack mobile phones and other gadgets without user
permission.
On the environment,
Mr Burgess speculates that Mrs May might not be the best candidate to reduce
the pollution and balding forestry in the country.
Mr Burgess'
research with information from TheyWorkForYou, Mrs May had voted against measures
that would have stopped climate changed. She in fact had voted to sell
England's state-owned forests for better economic measure.
On drugs,
the new Prime Minister had oversee the Psychoactive Substances Bill during her
time as Home Secretary. This allows authorities to seize and destroy any
psychoactive substances and obtain a warrant to search the homes of suspects possessing
or creating them.
Sunday, 12 June 2016
Canadian Government to Legalise Marijuana Under Two Conditions
Canadian
President Justin Trudeau seeks to legalise marijuana however it takes.
Obviously, he's using regulation versus banning and the procurement of
marijuana in the black market. During an economic conference in Canada last
Wednesday, he said:
"Look,
our approach on legalising marijuana is not about creating a boutique industry
or bringing in tax revenue. It's actually based on two very simple principles:
The first
one is, young people have easier access to cannabis now in Canada more than
they do in just about any other country in the world. Of 29 different countries
studied by the UN, Canada was number one in terms of underage access to
marijuana.
"And
whatever you may think of studies about marijuana and cannabis being less
harmful than alcohol or even cigarettes, it is still bad for the developing
brain and we need to make sure it's harder for underage Canadians to access
marijuana.
"The
other piece of it is there are billions upon billions of dollars flowing into
the pockets of organised crime, street-gangs and gun-runners due to the illicit
marijuana trade. If we can get them to a more regulated fashion we can reduce
the amount of criminal activity profiting from these and its offshoots into
other criminal activities."
According
to Trudeau, Canada "could be to Cannabis as France is to wine",
encouraging the country's top entrepreneurs and innovators to think of ways to
proliferate the about-to-boom Cannabis trade in the country.
Trudeau
said his primary concern is the safety of children often dragged into the world
of Cannabis and its darker areas.
Monday, 16 May 2016
Petition For Change In Women's Dress Code Receives 120,000 Signatures
A London
PwC female employee who refused to wear heels going to work had started a
petition that has so far earned 120,000 signatures from the rest of the United
Kingdom.
Worldwide,
the petition gained support after it had made headlines.
Nicola
Thorpe, a PwC former clerk, had started the petition after she was "made
fun of" of her superiors, who had her go home without pay until she changed
her outfit.
"It's
still legal in the UK for a company to require female members of staff to wear
high heels at work against their will," the petition states. "Dress
code laws should be changed so that women have the option to wear flat formal
shoes at work, if they wish. Current formal work dress codes are outdated and
sexist."
Thorpe said
employers still have the right to impose different dress codes for men and
women. However, this is only fair when the dress code doesn't favour one of the
sexes," according to Thorp.
Studies
have shown repeatedly the effects of wearing high-heels for more than eight
hours, which are often required of these women. Some studies have highlighted
that females who wear high heels more than one hour and 30 minutes start to
experience excruciating pain.
Monday, 18 April 2016
Explaining The North Carolina LGBT Battle
On April
12, 2016, North Carolina's LGBT community had taken to the streets after North
Carolina Governor Pat McCrory (R) announced Executive Order 93.
The state
passed an anti-discriminatory law that excluded protections for discrimination
based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
Now, this
had left LGBTs the inability to use public restrooms that match the gender on
their birth certificate.
Even with
the executive order, which was meant to explain the situation, everyone was
still left confused.
This was
what the original House Bill 2 would implement
- Created a mandatory statewide anti-discrimination policy with protections based on “race, religion, color, national origin, age, biological sex or handicap.” Biological sex is defined as “the physical condition of being male or female, which is stated on a person’s birth certificate.” It excluded protections based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
- Required people to use bathrooms and changing facilities in government buildings and public schools that correspond with their biological sex. Agencies could provide other accommodations, such as single-occupancy bathrooms. This did not affect private businesses, companies or universities.
- Banned local governments from requiring private contractors to have anti-discrimination employment policies that include sexual orientation or gender identity, or to impose restrictions such as minimum wage or paid sick leave.
- Prohibited private individuals from suing the state over discriminatory firing, according to employment attorneys in the state. Residents can still file federal discrimination lawsuits.
The
provisions had arcane definitions that rooted from discrimination.
McCrory
received an open letter from 80 corporation CEOs who said:
“We are
disappointed in your decision to sign this discriminatory legislation into law.
The business community, by and large, has consistently communicated to
lawmakers at every level that such laws are bad for our employees and bad for
business.
This is not a direction in which states move
when they are seeking to provide successful, thriving hubs for business and
economic development. We believe that HB 2 will make it far more challenging
for businesses across the state to recruit and retain the nation’s best and
brightest workers and attract the most talented students from across the
country.”
Tuesday, 15 March 2016
Parliament Gives Investigatory Powers Bill A Passing Result
The end is
nigh, my fellow Britons. This year might be the last time we'll ever set foot
to our private lives ever again. If things get worse, it might just spread all
over the world.
The
proposed Investigatory Powers Bill will supply police and authorities powers
that would allow the browsing of every Briton's Internet records for an inquiry
of suspected criminal activity or terrorism.
According
to Home Secretary Theresa May, the powers would be "safeguarded against
abuse". This is to downplay fears that authorities may abuse the
permissions and powers.
About 200
lawyers have signed an open letter opposing the IP Bill. The lawyers
highlighted it was "not fit for purpose" and it required "no
demonstration of terrorism or criminal act to access."
It's like
digital martial law, in a manner of speaking.
Harvesting
a massive amount of online bulk data from each and every one of our Internet
connections would mean anybody in the UK has an eye watching them.
If you've
ever read George Orwell's 1984, where we're going is his world. Yes, you might
say the
Chinese can live with the fact their social media sites are
government-monitored and had led to many arrests, but it's different in
Britain.
And soon
enough, it'll be the same in Britain.
Thursday, 11 February 2016
Ireland Now Has a Law Against Revenge Porn
Now,
anybody who films intimate acts with their ex-lovers, posts it online, and are
found out, will have to carry out a sentence of up to two years in prison in
Northern Ireland.
Stormont
has passed a law that outlaws the publication of explicit sexual images and
videos of former partners. According to Democratic Unionist Alastair Ross:
"It
will send a clear message to potential perpetrators that such behaviour will
not be tolerated, and hopefully it will provide some assurance to victims that
this type of crime is being taken seriously."
Ross added
that any kind of intimate photographs or films initially shared with another
individual trusted at the time and shared online post -relationship can cause
distress especially when the other party has not issued their consent.
Ross added:
"We
all now have smartphones capable of taking photographs and videos, all of which
can be shared online almost instantly.
"Therefore,
I think that the law needs to keep pace with technological changes and
recognise the world that we live in today.
"The
(Justice) Committee believes that introducing a specific offence to deal with
revenge porn will assist the police and the Public Prosecution Service in
tackling this obnoxious crime."
Wednesday, 13 January 2016
It's Like Talking To a Low-Tech Uncle This Whole Backdoor Thing
I
know you've got that slightly annoying uncle that you love so much because
they're just adorable the way they are. But sometimes, it's difficult to
explain how technology works for them.
For
example, I try to explain what Internet marketing is. All they know is the
television era as advertising and marketing. It's hard.
Now,
it's the same situation for many of the US' tech companies when they try to
explain backdoors to Western politicians.
In
an effort to beef up security and intelligence-gathering, Western governments
are urging tech companies to create backdoors and help them gather more
intelligence.
Almost
everyone is in disagreement with this move. UN's Human Rights experts had voiced
out their opposition to the Snooper's Charter. They would probably not
side with this one.
World
governments don't understand that once you urge companies to create backdoors
to messaging and communications applications, it's a backdoor for everybody.
It's not just a mole city for companies and government officials but also for
hackers looking to make some quick buck.
Modern
messaging applications work like this:
The
message from your chat application gets encrypted with a unique decrypter, both
of which are sent to the receiving end of your message. Only the receiver's
messaging app can collect the decrypter and read the message. This is a privacy
guarantee that locks out all tech companies, service providers and the
government from private communications.
Now,
what's the consequence when companies create backdoors? Well, total lack of
confidence for using technology.
And
trust me, that's a sad, sad world to live in.
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