Justice secretary Dominic Raab’s proposals will ‘slash away’ at rights of ordinary people to challenge government, group says

Amnesty International has criticised plans by the justice secretary Dominic Raab to replace Labour’s Human Rights Act with a British bill of rights.

Raab has argued that the proposal will better protect the press in exposing wrongdoing and said he feared free speech was being “whittled away” by “wokery and political correctness”.

The deputy prime minister told the Daily Mail that under plans being drawn up, there would be only limited restrictions placed on the protections on free speech with checks to stop people abusing it to promote terrorism.

Laura Trevelyan, Amnesty’s human rights in the UK campaign manager, hit out at his plan on Saturday.

“Scrapping the Human Rights Act has long been the intention of Mr Raab and others not because they want to extend any protections, but because they want to slash away at the powers ordinary people have got to challenge the government and its decisions,” she said.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Jenny Offill: ‘I don’t miss the world as much as, perhaps, I should’

The US novelist on getting through the pandemic, Trump’s legacy of fear,…

Truss 2, Kwarteng 164: wide variance in ministers’ declared meetings

Analysis also finds Priti Patel was only minister to register receiving hospitality…

Emma Raducanu drowns out the noise as she makes her Centre Court debut

British No 1 aims to ‘ignore the negativity’ as she returns to…

NHS mental health hospital staff filmed ‘mocking and slapping’ patients

Police investigating allegations of bullying and verbal abuse at Edenfield centre near…