---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: HREA <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, May 18, 2009 at 1:58 AM
Subject: [hr-legal-professionals] UK: Secret inquests threaten
accountability
To: [email protected]


 Human Rights Watch Press release
MAY 15, 2009

*House of Lords should reject proposal in draft law*

UPDATE: On May 15, 2009, the UK Ministry of Justice announced that it would
drop provisions in the Coroners and Justice Bill provisions allowing
inquests into deaths to be held in secret and without a jury, citing a lack
of cross party support in Parliament. The House of Lords is due to debate
the bill on May 18. Human Rights Watch welcomes the decision to abandon the
plans, which would have fundamentally undermined the inquest system.

(London) - Legislation to allow the government to hold secret investigations
into suspicious deaths involving state agents would undermine accountability
and breach human rights law, Human Rights Watch said in a submission to the
House of Lords released April 24, 2009. The upper house of Parliament is to
debate the proposed measure on Monday as part of a wide-ranging Coroners and
Justice Bill.

The bill would allow the home secretary to decide that an investigation into
a wrongful death, usually held in open court, should be held in secret. Such
investigations (known as "inquests") would be declared "certified" and could
be held without a jury, with "sensitive" material discussed in closed
sessions from which the families of the victims, the public, and the media
would be excluded. Certification could be justified on the grounds of
national security, preserving diplomatic relations with another country,
witness protection, or preventing crime.

"When the state is involved in a person's death, open justice is crucial,"
said Ben Ward, associate director for the Europe and Central Asia Division
at Human Rights Watch. "But under these plans, the cases most in need of
public scrutiny, such as ‘friendly fire' military deaths and deaths at the
hands of police, would probably be held behind closed doors."

Human Rights Watch said that an 11th-hour government amendment in the House
of Commons giving a judge, rather than the Home Secretary, authority to
determine whether a "certified" inquest should be held without a jury, and
the fact that this decision is subject to judicial review, do not allay
concerns. Neither addresses the fundamental problem of executive
interference in what are supposed to be independent inquiries into state
involvement in a person's death.

"The combination of executive interference and secrecy fundamentally
undermines the inquest process," said Ward. "With such broad grounds for
certification and no access to the secret evidence, families have little
chance of overturning decisions to hold inquests in secret."

The proposal for closed inquests was originally included in the
Counter-Terrorism Bill 2008, but was withdrawn by the government before the
bill was submitted to the House of Lords. The proposal was re-introduced in
the Coroners and Justice Bill without significant improvement. Thus far the
government has not made a convincing argument that closed inquests are
necessary, given the range of existing measures (including Public Interest
Immunity certificates) to protect against disclosure of sensitive material.

The power to order secret inquests is incompatible with the UK's obligations
under international law, Human Rights Watch said. Under article 2 of the
European Convention on Human Rights, which guarantees the right to life, the
UK has a duty to conduct independent and effective investigations into
wrongful deaths where state agents may have been involved. These
investigations should be open to public scrutiny, and family members of
victims have a right to participate in the process as much as reasonably
possible.

Withholding core evidence from interested parties and the media prevents the
meaningful public scrutiny of alleged state involvement in deaths that is
essential for ensuring accountability, Human Rights Watch said. Openness is
paramount not only for credibility, but also to enable meaningful debate
about measures to prevent reoccurrence.

Secret inquests inevitably conflict with the legitimate interest of family
members to know the truth about the death of their loved one. The government
proposal to have security-cleared "special counsel" represent the interests
of next-of-kin in closed sessions would essentially replicate the seriously
flawed system of special advocates used in terrorism cases involving
deportations and control orders. If, as in those cases, the rules do not
permit the special counsel to discuss with family members information
directly relevant to the investigation, it is difficult to see how the
special counsel could properly represent their interests.



-- 
W A Laskar
Freelance Reporter and Human Rights Activist
with Barak Human Rights Protection Committee,
http://bhrpc.net.googlepages.com
15, Panjabari Road, Darandha, Six Mile,
Guwahati-781037, Assam, India
Cell: +919401134314

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