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"Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong; they are the ones to attain felicity".
(surah Al-Imran,ayat-104)
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User Name: Amjad_Malik
Full Name: Amjad Malik
User since: 15/Jun/2007
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APL UK hails European Court ruling

By Asif Mehmood Submitted 18 hrs 7 mins ago
LONDON – The Association of Pakistani Lawyers (APL) has welcomed European Court of Human Rights ruling of January 12 where they found that Britain’s stop-and-search powers were illegal, and ruled powers under Section 44 of UK’s Terrorism Act of 2000 to ‘stop and search’ people without grounds violated Article 8 ‘right to family and private life’ of the European convention on human rights.
Chairman APL Barrister Amjad Malik maintained that they have been long concerned about the usage of administrative measures.
‘The Stop and search and powers of arrest for 28 days without charge on suspicion in terror related offences and terrorism legislation have all been targeted against Muslim community and looking at statistics in last 10 years of convictions and the number of people who have been arrested, harassed, and either released and or were declared not guilty by courts are mostly Muslims’, he added.
He said that British courts have played genuinely a praiseworthy role by separating the chaff from grain.
‘They ensured that due process of law, fair trial and citizens liberties remain intact whilst govt in the name of terrorism continued eroding civil liberties to protect the public and look after the interest of the State’.
Malik said that there are many examples where in last 10 years courts held a different view that of the executive.
He said:’In 1999 Muslim Imam Shafiqur Rehman won his appeal on facts by the first tribunal (SIAC) which was set up to adjudicate national security deportations as same tribunal hears appeals of all foreigners who faces eviction and Pakistani students are facing their appeals before them now’.
British Law Lords in 2004 refused to allow 17 Saudis to be detained forever without a charge creating a sense of justice in the victim communities. On 16 December 2004, a specially-convened committee of nine Law Lords in House Of Lords upheld an appeal by nine foreigners who have been detained without charge or trial, most of them in London’s famous Belmarsh prison for around three years and ruled that, ‘detaining foreigners without trial under emergency anti-terror powers breaks European human rights legislation’, he said.
He further said in the same tone ‘control orders’ were scrapped if they were unreasonably restrictive in free movement jeopardising liberty of foreign individuals facing curfew of more than 20 hours.
‘In 2008, one of the friends of Osama, Abu Qatada was released on bail when continuous detention was sought without charge. Abu Hamza Al Masri was offered a fair trial and free legal access to his lawyers whilst he was facing strip off his nationality and extradition to United Sates on terrorism charges and Samina Malik’s conviction was quashed on the premises that it was too excessive’.
Looking at the judicial trend and European Court ruling which will force UK to amend the stop-and-search legislation as part of the government’s policy to combat terror — to ensure it complies with human rights. The Section 44 of the Terrorism Act which allows the Home secretary to authorise random searches by police under certain circumstances, now could come under review, he said.
Amjad Malik said: ‘We are assured that Courts have not only gained respect but allowed the government to function as well as keeping the civil liberties intact. It was a fine balance between the interest of individuals and that of the State which was kept under check by Courts as opposed to its counterparts US courts where detention in Guantanamo Bay and torture continued unnoticed’.
Life would be miserable if on the basis of fear, further fear is created and these liberties which were achieved by continuous sacrifices of our ancestors are lost on the basis of some threats of a few fanatic and or a tiny group, who are, and will remain in a small minority, and implementation on such judgement is vital to seek good community relations and tackling radicalisation with hand and glove approach, he added.
http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online//Politics/15-Jan-2010/APL-UK-hails-European-Court-ruling  
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