The ironically-titled Justice and Security
Bill, published today, proposes to introduce the highly-flawed system
of Closed Material Procedures (CMP) and Special Advocates into the ordinary
civil law. As a result, the Government would effectively be able to rely on secret evidence
to defend serious allegations in any case where it feels disclosure might harm
“the interests of national security”. The claimant would not be shown such
material or even be allowed in the Court – neither would their lawyer, the
public or the press. Only the judge, the Government itself and the
Government-appointed Special Advocate would be present.
Deputy Prime
Minister Nick Clegg is claiming the Bill as a victory after plans to include
Inquests in the legislation were shelved. But in reality – with the exception of
the removal of Inquests – the Bill is worse than first imagined. It seeks to
remove the current system of hearing sensitive material – via the use of PII –
altogether and replace it entirely with controversial CMP.
PII allows certain sensitive material to be excluded
from a case but, unlike CMP, does not allow the Government to rely on it whilst
shutting the ordinary citizen out of court.
Under the
proposals, the Secretary of State would be able to apply to the Court for a
declaration that CMP should be allowed. The Court would then be required to
grant the application in any case where it considered that the Secretary of
State would be required to make a disclosure damaging to the interests of
national security over the course of the proceedings. The Court is specifically ordered to disregard the
possibility of protecting sensitive evidence under PII in doing so – making the
judicial trigger a complete fig leaf.
The plans could potentially
cover civil actions arising from complicity in torture, police negligence and
compensation claims resulting from friendly fire – indeed, any civil claim
capable of embarrassing the authorities. Incredibly the Government claims the
Bill is an improvement on the original Justice and Security Green Paper – and
that it will actually boost scrutiny and accountability of the Security
Services.
Shami Chakrabarti, Director of Liberty, said:
"Not as spun but as
published, this Bill would end equal open civil justice, putting ministers and
securocrats above the law.
“Judges are made fig-leaves, robbed of their
current Public Interest Immunity discretion and so effectively required to
comply with Ministers’ desires for secrecy.
“We knew the Bill would
create a contest with one team permanently off the pitch. Now the farce is
complete with a gun to the referee's head."
The Bill also ousts the ability of courts to hear applications like that brought by Binyam Mohamed which led to information about the UK’s involvement in CIA rendition coming to light.
Contact:
Liberty Press
Office on 020 7378 3656 or 07973 831128
NOTES TO EDITORS:
1. Find out more about Liberty’s For Their Eyes Only campaign against the Justice and Security Bill
2. Read Liberty’s response to the original Justice and Security Green Paper