Apologies and junk.
Yesterday, however, Lord Justice Laws and Mr Justice Owen finally addressed this lapse in the equal application of the law, ruling that it was "impossible" to conclude "that in bail cases a less stringent procedural standard is required" than in control order cases. The judges also rejected a claim by Siac that its decisions should be "immune from judicial review".
The judges' ruling came in the case of XC, a Pakistan student (and one of 10 students arrested in April), who was refused bail on the basis of secret evidence, and the case of U, an Algerian. Imprisoned without charge or trial for seven years, U had finally secured bail last summer, and lived for a short time, under a 24-hour curfew in a rented house in southern England, until, in February, then home secretary Jacqui Smith decided that he was likely to abscond, and persuaded Siac to revoke his bail and return him to prison.
And have some rather lovely dubstep while we're at it:
Labels: apologies, civil liberties, dubstep, music, terror suspects
I never had you down as a dub-stepper sir!
Great stuff, just listening to Mr Bug and London Zoo LP.
Posted by Daniel Hoffmann-Gill | Sunday, December 06, 2009 4:04:00 pm
Haven't been listening to much else for the last few months. Dubstep and the stuff that dBridge and Instra:mental are doing which bridges the gap between drum and bass, dubstep and general electronic.
Posted by septicisle | Monday, December 07, 2009 2:18:00 am
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