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UK Can Now Hold People Without Charge For 42 Days

the_leander writes "Prime Minister Gordon Brown has narrowly won a House of Commons vote on extending the maximum time police can hold terror suspects to 42 days. There is talk of compensation packages available for the falsely accused. The chances of you getting that money however are slim to none, lets not forget, this is the same country that charges prisoners who have been falsely accused for bed and boarding costs."

92 of 650 comments (clear)

  1. The Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is that 42 in base 13?

    1. Re:The Question by Dunbal · · Score: 5, Funny

      Nobody makes jokes in base 13...

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:The Question by martin-boundary · · Score: 5, Funny

      Va Fbivrg Ehffvn, onfr 13 rapelcgf wbxrf.

    3. Re:The Question by phagstrom · · Score: 5, Informative

      For the one or two outsiders who reads this, it's ROT-13 and reads:

      In Soviet Russia, base 13 encrypts jokes.

      Oh wait...am I now in violation with the DMCA?

    4. Re:The Question by Patrik_AKA_RedX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh wait...am I now in violation with the DMCA?
      Depends on where you live. If you happen to live in the US, well, then I can only say, I'm happy to have met you before your relocation to a certain bay.
  2. Jumping the gun a bit.... by Cambo67 · · Score: 5, Informative

    ....as the Bill in question has only been passed by the House of Commons. It's got to go before the House of Lords yet. Many commentators think it is not going to do too well there.

    1. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by mpe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ....as the Bill in question has only been passed by the House of Commons. It's got to go before the House of Lords yet. Many commentators think it is not going to do too well there.

      However there are still 315 people who really should be held for 28 days without charge. Are there enough truely patriotic police to do this though.

    2. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's got to go before the House of Lords yet

      Ah yes, our fine tradition of having decisions by the people we elect overturned by a bunch of unelected lords.

      Nope, nothing wrong with our system at all. Those unelected lords are there precisely to stop bad (but popular) laws from being passed.
    3. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Spad · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I prefer to think of it as our fine tradition of having legislation sanity checked by a bunch of people who aren't primarily motivated by re-election and "making their place in history".

    4. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by iserlohn · · Score: 4, Informative

      Um.. the House of Lords have their powers severily curtailed by the Parliament Act and for the most part the Lords is only able to delay legislation. It a part of the UK's unwritten constitution.

    5. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by vidarh · · Score: 4, Informative
      Except it's not unwritten. All of what's considered part of UK constitutional law is written in the form of acts, treaties and to a very limited extent precedent.

      (IANAL, but I'm married to one, and one of the first things they drill into UK law students when dealing with constitutional law is that they better not ever write on an exam that it's unwritten).

    6. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You cite three persons all a product of the 20th Century - the House of Lords has been a part of British Parliament since 1295. It seems to have done us well in the past 713 years....

    7. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by rpjs · · Score: 3, Informative

      I do think the Lords will get the 42 days struck from the bill. I don't think they'll back down on this one and accept it, and so the government will have the choice of dropping 42 days or losing the whole bill for a year before being able to resubmit it under the Parliament Act - I think they'll prefer to drop the 42 days.

    8. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by iworm · · Score: 3, Funny

      You asked: "What do your lords use for guidance over there?"

      The answer is "whether or not they had a jolly good lunch at the club."

    9. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think 'unwritten' is self deprecation or cynicism. It's true in the sense that there isn't one document with a small set of authors that describes the British system. That doesn't mean that you can piece together a constitution from the sources you descibe though. Mind you that constitution would be very complex and not at all logical.

      Though as a Tory and programmer I think it's like a very old piece of code which has been patched for a long time, hard to understand but for good reasons. Certainly the English system has a lot of staying power. It's been tested by much worse things than the current Islamist threat and it has survived. Other simpler systems might not be as lucky.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    10. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by p0tat03 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Except if you're Canada, where the Senate (our parliamentary equivalent to the House of Lords) is consisted of members appointed by the PM, and therefore highly susceptible to voting with the party. They are also known for rubber-stamping legislation through, and spend a ludicrously small amount of time in session each year.

    11. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by iserlohn · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes, you are right. Some components of the constitution are act and treaties, which are indeed written. Precendent and conventions are also a part of the constitution and although they are unwritten, are largely observed.

      The difference that distinguishes it to written constitutions is that there is no single document that outlines the framework of government. Rather, it is much like the common law itself.

    12. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by jeevesbond · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not to disagree with you, just wanted to point out that this law is not popular in Britain.

      IIRC the Lords can bounce this back (with good reason) to the Commons, by the time this goes back and forth a couple of times the media will be in a good frenzy about it. The fact that Gordon Brown had to do a deal with another political party to get this through is not going down well:

      But there was uproar in the Commons as the result of the key vote on 42 days was announced after five hours of tense debate - with Tory and Lib Dem MPs shouting "You've been bought" at the DUP benches.

      They claim the DUP was offered a string of inducements - including extra financial help for Northern Ireland - to guarantee its support.

      I for one am hoping this gets pushed back by the Lords.

      --- Back to the article ---

      this is the same country that charges prisoners who have been falsely accused for bed and boarding costs.

      Got a decent reference? Seriously, that link is to the 'Daily Mail', the sensationalism in that paper is renowned. Even its founder (Lord Northcliffe) said its winning formula is to give readers: 'a daily hate'. This is the same paper that pays foreign people to break the law, so they can report about how East Europeans are 'destroying Britain'.

      --
      I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
    13. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by kraut · · Score: 4, Funny

      > Yes! You know who else was part of that fine tradition? Stalin, Hitler, Mussolin
      All three renowned for being upstanding members of the house of Lords?

      --
      no taxation without representation!
    14. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 5, Informative

      Charles I - executed 1649.
      Oliver Cromwell - died in 1658, his regime was overthrown in 1660.
      George III - ruled with a majority in the elected Parliament.

      Seems the system worked during all those cases.

    15. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by actiondan · · Score: 4, Informative

      I think you misunderstand the relationship between the House of Commons and the House of Lords.

      The House of Lords can send legislation back to the House of Commons for a re-think but ultimately, the Government can force the will of the House of Commons through by invoking the Parliament Act.

      All the House of Lords can do is delay things, which means they can prevent bad laws being rushed through without anyone knowing about them but they can't prevent the elected members getting their way in the end.

    16. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by call-me-kenneth · · Score: 5, Insightful
      As good a point as any to suggest to any UK citizens about to post a rant about the new police state, destruction of civil libs, etc, that you get off your fat arses and join Liberty? A polite letter to your MP, believe it or not, does have an effect on them - especially Labour MPs who voted for the bill with majorities of 15% or less.

      Those two things will take you about 20 minutes, and when you've done em you can come back here and rant along with me, with a new-found sense of entitlement and smug self-satisfaction at your personal involvement in the issue. Hey it works for me.

      So, yeah, Labour MPs who voted for this disgraceful attack on fundamental rights we've had since Runnymede ought to be utterly ashamed of themselves; they've revealed that they are unprincipled bunch of spineless tossers, and I think there's a line about weasel's and god's clean air from Blackadder that springs to mind, too. Fuck Brown, and fuck this government, too. I've even crossed a personal rubicon whereby I now think a Tory govt would be preferable, something I never thought I'd say.

    17. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Admiral+Ag · · Score: 4, Funny

      "Though as a Tory and programmer I think it's like a very old piece of code which has been patched for a long time, hard to understand but for good reasons. "

      So essentially you're saying it is like Microsoft Windows. That should go down well here.

      --
      "by that I mean people who don't sit on slashdot all day wondering why everyone else isn't building robots" DECS
    18. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by JosKarith · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Problem is that won't stop it.

      Remember the Fox Hunting Ban? The House of Lords blocked the ban, and Tony B.Liar pushed it through anyway on the crest of a popular mandate - it was an election promise, it was a class issue, the lords had only blocked it cos' they were all evil nasty fox hunters etc...

      But the road to Hell is paved with good intentions. We handed him a precedent to sweep aside the objections of the only body that could act as a brake on his ambitions. And paid the price years later when he took us into an illegal war - a price that is still being paid. What makes you think that Tony's understudy is going to hesitate for a moment to use the same power to force his own pet projects through?

      --
      'Don't worry' said the trees when they saw the axe coming, 'The handle is one of us.'
    19. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by vidarh · · Score: 5, Informative
      The difference was that the hunting ban didn't see anywhere near the same kind of opposition in the Commons. In this case Gordon Brown had to rely on the DUP, and the only other non-Labour MP to vote for it was Ann Widdecombe, while 36 Labour MP's also voted against it.

      If there's enough of an uproar about it, it won't take much before some of those voting for it starts worrying about their re-election and vote against it if it's sent back to the Commons.

    20. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by ewrong · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's a bit of a strange one for me The House of Lords. As a concept it's deeply flawed but for the large part it actually works pretty well.

    21. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by jimicus · · Score: 3, Informative

      I for one am hoping this gets pushed back by the Lords.

      How often does this happen that the Lords send a law back to Commons?

      (No sarcasm intended, I honestly do not know.) Rather less than it used to since Tony Blair replaced most of the Lords with hand-picked cronies and then decided he could use a law which dated from the Second World War to overturn the Lords if they disagreed with him.

    22. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by alan.briolat · · Score: 5, Funny

      Wow - I think that is the only time I've ever seen somebody try to trump tabloid "evidence" with a blog post...

      Not saying that I disagree with the point that the Daily Mail is junk =)

      --
      I swear we should be allowed to give mod points to sigs... "-1, Offtopic"
    23. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by meringuoid · · Score: 5, Funny
      So essentially you're saying it is like Microsoft Windows. That should go down well here.

      Well, let's rewrite the analogy in more /. terms. The Americans - and many other countries - have monolithic constitutions. Ours is modular - a mass of different reform acts and statutes and precedents, on top of the Monarch E2 microconstitution. Britain's running on Hurd, thank you very much.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    24. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by jimicus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      However there are still 315 people who really should be held for 28 days without charge. Are there enough truely patriotic police to do this though. You jest, but I don't think your average MP understands the seriousness of the matter. S/he gets wrongly held for 28 days, then at the end of it they go back to whatever it was they were doing and there's no harm done.

      You or I get held for 28 days - potentially without communication with the outside world, let's not forget that - and when you get out your employer will have given up on you and sought a replacement. Your personnel record will say "Disappeared off the face of the earth one day" - which I'm sure would look just great if an alternate employer contacted them for a reference.

      And if you're asked why you left your job - well, I'd love to see the look on the interviewer's face when you say "I was detained under the Terrorism Act and not allowed to contact anyone, so my employer had to find someone else to do the job" but I don't think it's an answer that would do you any favours.

      Compensation? What compensation? They'll base compensation on the 28 (or 42) days you were detained, not the repercussions. If the repercussions include "having to sell the house because you can no longer afford it because you lost a £40,000 per year job and had to take a £25,000 per year job", that's your problem.
    25. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Dark$ide · · Score: 5, Informative

      The bill can't become law before the House of Lords votes on it. It's then sent back to the Commons to change the stuff that the Lords don't like. Only after the bill has passed both houses does it then go to Her Majesty The Queen for Royal Ascent. If the Lords keep rejecting it then the Commons can invoke the Parliament Act to force it through.

      --

      Sigs. We don't need no steenking sigs.

    26. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by vidarh · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You've gotten one reply showing you why those people aren't good examples, but more importantly you're confusing the issue:

      The House of Lords aren't "rulers". They don't even have any power to prevent the House of Commons from passing a law - the Parliament Act of 1911 (and it's subsequent replacements) effectively took away the Lords power by asserting the supremacy of the Commons and allowing them to override the Lords at any point. It is considered bad form to do so without trying to address the concerns raised by the Lords and voting on an act again in both chambers, and so it's only been used a handful of times since 1911, but it's up to the Commons.

      Even before the Parliament Act the Lords had for a long time had their powers severely restricted, as the governments of the time tended to have ways of forcing the Lords into submission on more than one occasion. The Parliament Act itself was passed, after having previously been rejected by the Lords, by getting George V to agree to create a large number of new liberal peers (that would then get seats in the Lords) to essentially stack the Lords in favor of the Parliament Act.

      We can argue about the benefit of having a non-elected chamber, but as non-elected chambers go, comparing the House of Lords to despotic rulers is at best ignorant.

    27. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by meringuoid · · Score: 5, Interesting
      "have an unelected monarch who is a militaristic nutter pissing around in America largely out of spite and who then descends into mental illness but you can't get rid of him because he claims to be appointed by a god"

      We did get rid of him. Shut him quietly away and his son took over. Said son did bugger all because he was a lazy fat drunken gluttonous lecherous oxygen thief, so Parliament ran the country. During this period our Empire in Canada was attacked by the United States; in response we invaded and burned Washington to the ground. We were also at war with Napoleon Bonaparte, whose total defeat ushered in a century of British global hegemony. Not bad going, for a country being run while the king's in the loony bin and the regent's in bed with a hangover.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    28. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by P+Fayers · · Score: 5, Insightful

      69% of the UK population in favour of 42 days detention without charge - if you believe the results of a YouGov Poll (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/2107480/42-day-terror-detention-British-public-overwhelmingly-in-favour-,-poll-shows.html)

      Which brings us back to the point that one of the benefits of the House of Lords is that it's populated by people who don't listen to public opinion.

    29. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by JosKarith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      True, and the uproar about how he managed to get the votes necessary may well scupper the bill at a re-reading. The point I was making is that due to the Parliment Act the House of Lords now has _no_ power to block a bill against a determined government, merely send it back twice for re-debate. That's it.

      --
      'Don't worry' said the trees when they saw the axe coming, 'The handle is one of us.'
    30. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      69% of the UK population in favour of 42 days detention without charge - if you believe the results of a YouGov Poll

      In other news, 69% of the population are so ignorant of history they forgot why the Magna Carta was so damned important, or probably even that the UK has a constitution (although it's not actually written in a single document... we have a rather more complex history than allows for that).

      "NO Freeman shall be taken or imprisoned, or be disseised of his Freehold, or Liberties, or free Customs, or be outlawed, or exiled, or any other wise destroyed; nor will We not pass upon him, nor condemn him, but by lawful judgment of his Peers, or by the Law of the Land. We will sell to no man, we will not deny or defer to any man either Justice or Right."

      Sometimes you in the US are lucky.. you're still taught about your bill of rights, etc. so when the government seeks to overturn it you at least realize it's wrong.

    31. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Jellybob · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What do your lords use for guidance over there?

      From what I've seen of their reactions to things in the past, common sense. And it's a damn good thing as well, since the commons seems to have lost most of theirs in the battle to get themselves reelected.
    32. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by NickFortune · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not to disagree with you, just wanted to point out that this law is not popular in Britain.

      Mmmm, I've been wondering about that myself. The beeb keep telling us "surveys" show how this is a popular measure, but I haven't heard any reference to which surveys, or who it was that commissioned them.

      In any event, I'd love to know how the questions were phrased:

      Q: Which of the following statements most closely describe your feelings

      A: I want to see my children suffer horribly then die before my helpless eyes

      B: I think 42 day detention without trial is a stonking good idea, and Gordon Brown a Jolly Good Chap!

      Something like that, I'll bet you....

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    33. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Archtech · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is the same Anne Widdecombe who said that her own boss, Michael Howard, "had something of the night about him" when he was Home Secretary.

      Whatever that "something of the night" was, it seems to have been catching.

      --
      I am sure that there are many other solipsists out there.
    34. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Stooshie · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The people in the lords have many centuries experience between them. Some of them are getting a bit old, granted, but their experience is across just about every field of knowledge.

      The advantage of the lords is that they are not looking over their shoulder to see whether their next action is going to see them voted out at the next election. They can be much more confident about debating the issues rather than spouting popular rants.

      At the risk of Godwin-ing this post, Hitler was originally elected by popular vote.

      --
      America, Home of the Brave. ... .and the Squaw.
    35. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by who+knows+my+name · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Fuck Brown, and fuck this government, too. I've even crossed a personal rubicon whereby I now think a Tory govt would be preferable, something I never thought I'd say. woah, steady on now...
      But seriously I hope the sequence of events goes like this:
      1. Brown gets defeated by Cameron at next Election
      2. Milliband replaces Brown and learns how to shave
      3. Cameron has one term where he learns to become unpopular
      4. A labour government which is a bit more principled gets elected.

      I'm dubious about whether anyone can be principled in party politics though
      --
      Nothing to see here.
    36. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by vidarh · · Score: 3, Interesting
      It's mostly hypothetical. The UK Parliament has the right to depose the monarch, and combined with the principle of parliamentary sovereignty and the Parliament Act, the House of Commons has all the tools it needs to override whatever it bloody well pleases.

      Withholding Royal Assent would cause a slight delay and creating a media frenzy. It might be enough to cause some MP's to change their minds, but it would also seriously jeopardize the future of the monarchy.

      The way parliament has gotten unfettered power in the UK has been by using the power it did have to hint, threaten or force the monarchs into yielding more and more of their power, and they have not been shy of doing it - the monarchy in the UK is there because the British rather enjoy tradition and because the current monarch is putting on a decent show and not being a bother. If she does start being a bother, it would likely start a process towards the monarchy at the very least being stripped of the last vestiges of influence.

    37. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by mpe · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm for this 42 day thing myself.

      See you in 42 days then :)

    38. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Builder · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I wrote my MP both before and after this vote pointing out among other things the flagrant abuses of the law already.

      He wrote back on the one before the vote telling me that "for security reasons, we cannot share the information that we have that makes this extension a requiement, but we only have the public's best interests at heart". I don't expect a reply to my letter post vote.

      I also got both of my neighbors to do the same, and they were quite blown away to learn about http://www.writetothem.com/

      Nothing changes and until we learn to make a noise in the streets, the politicians won't listen to us.

    39. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by speculatrix · · Score: 5, Informative

      the fox hunting bill was a massive smokescreen for the Civil Contingencies Bill, now an Act, which took away some fundamental rights. Even now, many people have not heard of it despite it giving the government the right to do anything they damn well please merely by asserting there is some kind of emergency!

    40. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by Ash+Vince · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Rather less than it used to since Tony Blair replaced most of the Lords with hand-picked cronies..... This was actually part of his manifesto though from before he was elected so it not like we the British public can say he sprung it on us. We knew he was going to remove most of the hereditary peer and most people I know fully supported this.

      The hereditary peers were mostly just old members of the British aristocracy whose great great great granddad had done something that amassed them huge amounts of wealth, probably at the expense of the common British people of the time. Those that did not get rich by screwing the common British people got rich by screwing the common people in foreign lands and built us an empire instead.

      I know that the House of Lord performs a valuable function as a check on the power of parliament and often prevents ridiculous laws from being rushed through on a wave of hysteria whipped up by the press, however it can do that just as well without being full of people whose only contribution to modern society is being vastly rich. The House of Lords as it now stands is mostly full of retired politicians, senior lawyers and a few remaining hereditary peers so I think performs its function much better than it used to.
      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    41. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by digitig · · Score: 4, Informative

      In the particular case of the Daily Mail, though, I suspect blog posts are more reliable.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    42. Re:Jumping the gun a bit.... by ravenshrike · · Score: 3, Informative

      Of course, the only reason he got elected in the first place was because the Brits and the French decided that the republic should pay for the sins of the previous govt. and instituted grievous reparations upon them, all the while being warned by the Americans that this was a bad idea. The economy subsequently collapsed under the weight of the reparations, and people began seriously searching for pipe dreams. Along came Hitler, with the pipe dream of revenge and German supremacy. Is it any real surprise people voted for him?

  3. At least... by NoobixCube · · Score: 4, Funny

    At least the English know not to do something like Guantanamo Bay. They tried that 220 years ago, and created Australia.

    --
    Admit it. You post strawman arguments as AC so you get modded Insightful for refuting them, rather than Troll
    1. Re:At least... by NoMaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No fair - the ones sent to Australia were already charged, tried, convicted, and sentenced; and at least they were still in the Commonwealth & subject to British/colonial law & legal process.

      Only barbarians would ship their alleged criminals to some overseas outpost then claim they had no recourse to the laws of the country...

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    2. Re:At least... by invader_vim · · Score: 5, Funny

      So you're saying that in 200 years, the descendants of the Guantanamo Bay inmates are going to thrash the Americans at all their sports?

    3. Re:At least... by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Correct, but, well, some of those convictions were for trivial offences like fruit stealing.

      In particular, many people were transported for stealing food during the Irish famine, when it was literally that or starve to death with your family. As it turned out this wasn't much of a deterrent; in Australia you'd at least be fed.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    4. Re:At least... by Xophmeister · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Only barbarians would ship their alleged criminals to some overseas outpost then claim they had no recourse to the laws of the country... You give barbarians a bad name.
      --

      Christopher Harrison

    5. Re:At least... by sTalking_Goat · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Only barbarians would ship their alleged criminals to some overseas outpost then claim they had no recourse to the laws of the country...

      You're right. Austrailians would never do anything like that

      --

      My days of not taking you seriously are certainly coming to a middle...

  4. Obligitory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    The answer to life, the universe and everything now includes the number of days the UK can hold you without charges.

  5. As opposed to the US ... by NoMaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... where it's currently 6+ years and counting.

    Oh wait, I forgot - they're not being held by the police, and they're not actually in America. My bad.

    --
    What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    1. Re:As opposed to the US ... by Digestromath · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You might be interested in the Maher Arar case. He was apprehended at Kennedy International Airport and held for 2 weeks, no charges, no lawyer, and no consular representation. And then the US ultimately sent him to Syria to be tortured by proxy.

    2. Re:As opposed to the US ... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The guy held dual Syrian and Canadian citizenship. He had been under investigation by the Mounties for years for his friendship with a guy allegedly tight with senior al Qaeda leadership. To put it more succinctly, a friend of a friend. He was detained and deported because he was at worst the friend of a friend. The alleged #1 guy himself was never convicted, or even charged. What he did was set up charities and orphanages in Afghanistan as part of his work at a canadian NGO. While

      Wise people are careful. They don't flip off cops. They're polite and cooperative and don't make sudden moves at traffic stops. They say "Your Honor" to the judge in the courtroom. And, in this guy's case, maybe he should have thought more carefully about (1) his associations with certain folks from the old country, or (2) visiting (or stopping over in) the United States. That may not be what we should expect to be possible in a perfect world, but we don't live in such a world. Damn that is pathetic. This is the fucking united states. Land of the free and home of the Brave. We aren't supposed to have to worry about living that way. We aren't supposed to kowtow to authoritae. Its not about a "perfect world" its about the fundamental egalitarianism this country was founded on "... all men are created equal..." To so blithely accept those requirements as "just the way it is" is BS.
      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  6. Great... by zebslash · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We don't need terrorists anymore, we are doing their job for them. Thanks Gordon.

  7. Hmmm.... by Space+cowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As mentioned above, the bill has to make it through the house of lords yet, and since the Lords are usually the "conscience" of the legal process in the UK (weird, but true), it's highly unlikely to make it.

    And, of course, 42 days in police custody, still with all human-rights privileges and in a standard jail subject to standard civilian law is a significantly better deal than several years in a foreign military jail, with questionable legal status, and subject to military law and "process". I very very much doubt these suspects, held for 42 days maximum, will be tortured and humiliated, either.

    In other words, glass-house-dwellers, throw no stones...

    Simon.

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
    1. Re:Hmmm.... by tomalpha · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The tragic thing about all this, is that it won't get through the upper chamber and Gordon Brown knows this. His problem was that losing the vote would show him up as a weak leader, and not in control of his own party. This way he'll get to blame the unelected House of Lords (many of whom he and Tony appointed under their People's Peers programme) for the legislation not being passed.

      Ironically, we may end up with all the negative effects from such legislation without any of the (supposed) benefits - i.e. actually being able to lock people up. World + dog outside the UK will believe that it's been passed, removing us even further from what little moral high ground we've got left to stand on and eroding UK citizens' perceptions of their own liberty. This is perhaps the first time I've ever said this, but thank god for the unelected, undemocratic House of Lords. Without them, this would already be law.

      Am I simplifying this? Probably, yes. It just seems that regardless of the merits or otherwise of this legislation (and no Slashdot, I'm not arguing in favour of it), getting the vote through the House of Commons was more about saving Brown's arse than actually achieving anything.

  8. Slashdot, as usual, can't wait to bash Britain. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To hell with facts, let's just post grossly misrepresented stories. The police *can't* hold terror suspects for 42 days, until this is passed by the House of Lords, which is unlikely to happen.

    I could understand it if /. got similar stories in the US so utterly wrong, for example if some congressman from Bumfuck, Iowa proposed the death penalty for people caught with more than 1g of cannabis, and /. reported it as a huge roundup and mass execution of dope smokers.

    Of course, it's posted by samzenpus, who seems to have a particular dislike of the UK.

  9. Billing the prisoners by zmollusc · · Score: 4, Funny

    Did they pass the bill for charging prisoners for their Information Retrieval Procedures yet? Is that next week?

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  10. Re:Vote the Labour^H^H^HTerrorists out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As if that'd make any difference. It's the game that's the problem, not the players. Time to leave this country I think. Anyone recommend a decent country that respects human rights, has sensible drug legislation, and fast, cheapish internet connections?

  11. With two words, I destroy your argument by Space+cowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Guantanamo bay"

    or how about: "Abu Ghraib"

    The US certainly has no moral high ground. They rape, torture, and sexually humiliate *suspected* terrorists, in a foreign land, out of sight of the people because they're so ashamed of what they do in the people's name.

    If (I'm not, but *if*) I was a suspected terrorist, I'd take 42 days maximum in a standard UK jail, held under standard UK law by standard UK law-enforcement over indefinite detainment in a foreign military prison, with no legal status, and denied the right of habeus corpus. I'd prefer to be jailed in the UK rather than tortured and sexually abused by the US military.

    Just saying. I continue to hope that the American people abhor and remove this stain on their countries honour, but it seems to be getting worse, not better.

    Simon.

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
    1. Re:With two words, I destroy your argument by Space+cowboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, no, obviously it is *not* the policy of the UK that they can be held for 42 days. It's passed one house, barely. The house entrusted with the duty of rejecting popular but bad laws has yet to rule on it. It's *entirely* within the remit of the house of Lords to reject this out of hand, and it's one of the checks-and-balances that the second house is there to provide...

      Abu Ghraib may have been an isolated "incident" (though an awful lot of people would have needed to conveniently ignore what happened there...), but Guantanamo Bay is precisely current US policy.

      If you are a citizen in the US, they'll simply fabricate evidence and send you to be tortured in one of the less squeamish regimes that the US has links with (eg: Syria)...

      Given the amount of illegal wiretapping, the removal of habeus corpus for non-citizens, the policy of torturing suspected terrorists coupled with the ability of the president to arbitrarily designate someone a terrorist, (I could go on and on...), I find the implications disturbing in the extreme.

      I don't agree with the 42 days thing, but I think the glass-houses line really does apply here...

      Simon.

      --
      Physicists get Hadrons!
    2. Re:With two words, I destroy your argument by Space+cowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I guess my point in all this was people like to point at Gitmo and so forth and be like "OMG US IS TEH SUXXOR" but the fact remainds if their government was confronted with a similar situation it's highly likely they would ot he same. Or worse. Then your point was poorly made. Very poorly made.

      The UK suffered at the hands of terrorists (these terrorists mainly funded by US organisations like Noraid, actually) for several decades. Nothing like Gitmo was ever set up - people committing acts of terrorism were in fact denied the status of terrorists and charged as common murderers, then locked up in civilian jails if found guilty under the normal due process of law.

      Now the UK was hardly blameless in the actions that started the terrorism, but it tried to maintain a diplomatic solution (even engaging with the political wing of the terrorist organisations) that eventually more or less worked. Throughout "the troubles" in Northern Ireland, even though the military were called in to keep order, all suspected terrorists were processed through a civilian court.

      There is no possible defence of the existence of Guantanamo Bay. None. Yet it remains the policy of the US government. The contrast between the UK and the US approach to terrorism is actually quite startling.

      Simon.
      --
      Physicists get Hadrons!
    3. Re:With two words, I destroy your argument by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Informative
      Nothing like Gitmo was ever set up

      Really?

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  12. Tories vs Labor by prakslash · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I am not from the UK but what I find interesting is that this bill was opposed by the Tories. The Tories (i.e. the Conservative party) in the UK used to be more like the Republican party in the USA. The Tories were after all the party of Margaret Thatcher - Reagan's best friend.

    Now, the Tories have become the more liberal party like the Dems in the USA and are vehemenetly trying to prevent the degradation of Habeas Corpus principles. The Labor party (which used to be more left-leaning Jimmy Carter type) has turned into a Neocon haven under Blair and Brown.

    1. Re:Tories vs Labor by thermian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The Tories opposed it because they need contentious issues to argue over, not because they wouldn't do it themselves.

      Note that they also argue against the governments attempts to have private health bosses take over failing hospitals, even though it was the Tories who started the privatisation of publicly owned services in the first place.

      Personally I don't think there's much difference between the Labour Party and the Conservatives any more. That's no big deal, in spite of what whichever one isn't in power says about the others failings, they end up doing almost exactly the same things.

      --
      A learning experience is one of those things that say, 'You know that thing you just did? Don't do that.' - D. Adams
  13. not yet it can't by aristolochene · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Except, of course, the bill has to get through the Lords. Which it almost certainly won't. Even Lord Goldsmith (ex attorney general, promoted to Lords) is against it.

    Then it has to be voted on again by the Commons - which could be in a few months time. Only then will it become law (ignoring formality royal assent, and possible rare use of Parliament Act).

    Who knows what Brown's ability to force sick MPs into the house to vote, and what deals N. Ireland MPs will insist upon then?

    I honestly think a few months down the line, when it comes to the crunch, the government could loose this, and force a vote of no confidence vote on Brown.

    In any case UK is still a way off from 42 day detention......

    --
    echo $SIGNATURE
  14. 42 days by elmartinos · · Score: 4, Funny

    Looks like the Brits finally have acknowledged that 42 is the answer to everything.

  15. Jose Padilla? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wasn't Jose Padilla held without charges for a number of years in South Carolina?

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  16. it's without CHARGE, not without trial by Quadraginta · · Score: 4, Informative

    The bill defines how long you can hold someone without charging him with a crime. That's got nothing to do with how long, after he has been charged, it can take before he is tried.

    As I understand it, the current limit is 28 days, so they're just tacking on an extra two weeks, and according to the BBC, they want the right on a "contingency basis" when the crime in question is particularly complicated and time-consuming to unravel, so they can figure out who's who and know whom to charge and whom to let go. An example they give is when there are international complications, e.g. the police need to get info from another country's police, immigration, or security services, which, of course, can take an annoyingly long time, since you have to rely on purely voluntary cooperation (no English judge can compel a French police caption, or a Saudi immigration agency, or the FBI).

    In other words, as a general rule, the 28-day limit stays in effect, but in certain unusual circumstances -- e.g. something like the London bombing, evidence that some major operation has taken place, or is about to take place -- then the government can raise the 28-day limit to 42 days temporarily. Even if the limit is raised, a judge needs to sign off on applying it to any particular individual. Parlaiment can step in at any time after the limit is raised and reverse it. And, in any event, the raising expires after 60 days.

    I dunno, when you look at the bill in detail, it seems rather, well, moderate. Not quite like the massive Armageddon / burning pile of civil liberties / return of the Gestapo, Inquisition, and the rack that lots of Chicken Littles seem to think it is. *shrug*

    1. Re:it's without CHARGE, not without trial by fyngyrz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Legislating for the sake of "sending signals" or making people feel like "something is being done" is corrosive of liberty and any kind of respect for the law. A law should either be damn necessary, and obviously so, or it should not exist.

      ...and this is precisely why a growing number of Americans have no respect for the American legal system as presently implemented.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    2. Re:it's without CHARGE, not without trial by 1u3hr · · Score: 3, Insightful
      as a general rule, the 28-day limit stays in effect, but in certain unusual circumstances -- e.g. something like the London bombing, evidence that some major operation has taken place, or is about to take place -- then the government can raise the 28-day limit to 42 days temporarily. Even if the limit is raised, a judge needs to sign off

      If there is enough evidence to convince a judge to "sign off" on keeping the (un)accused locked up, surely there must be enough evidence to charge him with some offence. Four weeks locked up with no charge already seems a brutal denial of justice to me.

    3. Re:it's without CHARGE, not without trial by actiondan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Remember the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIP Act)?

      It was supposed to be used against terrorists and organised crime but is now finding use against minor criminals such as litter droppers.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7369543.stm

      In one memorable case, a council invoked it to spy on a family to see if they lived close enough to the school they wanted their child to attend.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/dorset/7341179.stm

      I have no confidence that this new power to hold people without charge will be restricted to circumstances where it is absolutely required. The actual text of the act is remarkably vague on when and how it should be applied.

    4. Re:it's without CHARGE, not without trial by polar+red · · Score: 4, Interesting

      , it seems rather, well, moderate. WHAT ??? Such laws are the BASIS of a dicatorship. You can be jailed for NO REASON, without compensation, for 42 days ! In my country, you have to be charged with anything, before 24 hours are passed after you have been taken from the street. This law gives too much power to the police.
      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    5. Re:it's without CHARGE, not without trial by Des+Herriott · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I dunno, when you look at the bill in detail, it seems rather, well, moderate.

      It's the old "boiling a frog" situation. This government continually chips away at civil liberties, a little at a time. It's two steps forward, one step back, but it's still a steady march towards authoritarianism.

    6. Re:it's without CHARGE, not without trial by Quadraginta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh balls. First of all, you should be talking about the legislative system, not the legal system. The people who write the laws, not the people who enforce them.

      Secondly, you're wrong. I know of no persuasive evidence that any substantial number of Americans have "no respect" for the legal (or legislative) system. People have bitched about a do-nothing grandstanding Congress and an expensive legal system that is either (1) overly activist or (2) insufficiently moral (take your pick) in every year of my life since I noticed these things, which would be roughly in 1977 or so. And if you read any history, or just Mark Twain ("America has no native criminal class, excepting Congress") you'll realize they've been doing it for centuries.

      Nevertheless, we generally obey the law, we generally serve on juries and believe the verdicts we deliver are just and will be implemented fairly, we mostly trust the police, and we generally return incumbents to office. We certainly love grumbling about politicians, like the weather, but our actions say we are not much less trusting than we've ever been.

      Finally, a strong and healthy disrespect for legal authority is one of the fine principles on which this country was founded. We have always believed that We the People are the only true ultimate sovereign, and that we dole out bits of our authority to police, congressmen, and other such riff-raff with the same squinty-eyed distrust and caution as we dole out our cash to used-car dealers, ready to snatch it back at the slightest sign of fraud or abuse. That's as it should be. A powerful distrust of authority and power, however sweetly decorated with noble intentions, is one of the foundation stones of liberty.

  17. It's a long, long time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Lords are only allowed to send Bills back to the Commons twice. They have no power other than to force debate and thought. It's not part of the "unwritten constitution", it's the Parliament Acts of 1911(Liberal) and 1949(Labour). The British constitution is mostly written, it's just written all over the place.

    I would ask the grandparent how much he would like to be imprisoned for a month and ten days, only to be dumped back on the streets having no idea of why, no legal right to be told why and a scant chance of limited compensation. Can you imagine the effect on your family, your job, your reputation? This allows the state to destroy individuals with only limited checks and balances.

    There isn't a day now where I don't thank god for the House of Lords injecting, unbelievably, some sanity into Parliament.

  18. And to think... by WoollyMittens · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's been hardly 60 years since millions died fighting for freedom. Does there have to be a genocide every three generations?

  19. Needs to pass European Parliment as well as Lords by SomethingOrOther · · Score: 3, Informative


    There is also the fact that this is very likely to be in breach of EU human rights act.

    Even if this does pass the Lords (unlikely), the European Courts will take interest and may very well overturn it. Remember that the British Courts & Parliment are answerable to Europe.

    --
    Anyone quoted by a reporter knows how little they understand
    Don't believe what you read is the truth.
  20. Re:Hm. Nice spin on the summary... by Half+a+dent · · Score: 3, Interesting

    True, but why should he have to pay at all? The compensation was for wrongful imprisonment. Are kidnap victims made to pay their kidnappers for board and lodgings? Same principle.

  21. overwhelming public support by clickclickdrone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We keep being told there is overwhelming public support for this but I'm yet to meet anyone who thinks it's a good idea. I'd like to know *exactly* wat the question was the government asked that go such a high support rate. I'm guessing based on previous ones they'e weasled their way with it was "Would you support 42 days if we could guarantee your safety from all future attacks and promise only to detain proper terrorists not innocent people?'
    The question that showed people apparantly supporting the ID card was along the same lines.

    --
    I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
  22. Re:Hey! by travbrad · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Only if you don't count Iraqis as people. They have lost around 1 million CIVILIANS, which is actually a lot more (per day) than when Saddam was in power.

  23. Beware the shiterags (a bit off-topic) by lysse · · Score: 3, Informative

    this is the same country that charges prisoners who have been falsely accused for bed and boarding costs

    Er, even the article states that his £252k compensation was reduced, on audit, by £12.5k to cover the cost of keeping him for three years - and that in itself is a sum that works out at about what his SSP entitlement would have been over the period in which he was imprisoned, which is likely far less than the cost of actually imprisoning him (prisons being hellishly expensive to run). In short - he still walked away with £240k compensation. The implication that he somehow had to write a cheque himself is grossly misleading.

    Moreover, the article is from the Daily "Hate" Mail, the newspaper that defines journalistic standards by contradiction; I'd more or less regard anything it prints as false by default, unless corroborated by a reliable source.
  24. Re:Needs to pass European Parliment as well as Lor by lysse · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, they're not - at least, not according to British law. As far as I'm aware (from a year and a half of a law degree), not even the ECtHR can force the British government to change the law - they can award damages against governments, and their opinion can have the effect of rendering such a law unenforceable, but that's all. Meanwhile, because of the longstanding doctrine of parliamentary supremacy, the British courts are estopped from examining the procedures of Parliament at all, despite HRA 1998; even if they find a law to be morally wrong, the most they can do directly is issue a "declaration of incompatibility" - which the government can counter by simply having a minister stand up in the Commons and say "No it isn't". (In fact, as all bills are required to be since HRA'98, this bill will have been declared by the government to be compatible with the ECHR; the onus will be on someone whose human rights have been damaged by it to prove that no such compatibility exists.)

  25. Breaking news by Andy_R · · Score: 4, Informative

    Shadow home secretary David Davis has resigned as an MP, and will run for re-election on the single issue of fighting the 42 day rule.

    Details still emerging, BBC News has some details

    --
    A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
  26. Remember the Guildford Four / Maguire Seven? by DoctorFrog · · Score: 4, Interesting

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guildford_Four

    As it happens I rewatched the Daniel Day movie In The Name Of The Father a short time back. It's odd to see, and recall from real life, the aghast reactions to the "Prevention of Terrorism Act" which gave UK police the unprecedented (and almost immediately abused) power to hold suspects without charge for an entire week - 7 days.

    That was long enough to obtain at least 11 false convictions pretty much straight away. The modern UK police must be softies, if it takes them six times as long to extract a confession from whomever they decide to detain.

  27. Brazil... by sesshomaru · · Score: 4, Insightful

    here is talk of compensation packages available for the falsely accused.

    SAM: It's a refund... I'm afraid there was a mistake.

    MRS. BUTTLE: Mistake?

    SAM:(encouraged) Yes. Not my department... I'm only records. It seems that Mr. Buttle was overcharged by Information Retrieval. I don't think they usually make mistakes... but, er... I suppose we're all human.

    SAM: Oh... what happened to the...? ...Actually, my bringing this here is rather unorthodox... Usually any payments are made through the central computer... but, er... there were certain difficulties, and rather than cause delay, we thought you might appreciate this now... it being Christmas.

    MRS. BUTTLE: My husband's dead, isn't he?

    SAM: Er... I assure you Mrs. Buttle, the Ministry is always very scrupulous about following up and eradicating error. If you have any complaints which you'd like to make, I'd be more than happy to send you the appropriate forms.

    MRS. BUTTLE: What have you done with his body?

    --
    "MIT betrayed all of its basic principles."
  28. Re:No you don't by digitig · · Score: 4, Insightful

    (although it's not actually written in a single document... we have a rather more complex history than allows for that)


    Nonsense, that's the kind of stupid excuse you'd think people who gave a fuck about their rights wouldn't swallow.

    No, you simply have a retarded attachment to your history that apparently outweighs the need for a Constitution (which you don't have, no matter how many times you crow that an loose assemblage of documents is a "constitution"). And the US constitution has proved such effective protection against the US government detaining people without trial, hasn't it? Remind me, how long have the GITMO detainees been there? How does it compare to 42 days?

    --
    Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?