The minutes of the group meeting in March 2019 are available thanks to group member Lesley for compiling them. A full meeting with several events planned, see the end of them for the list. You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr.
Group meeting
The next group meeting is on Thursday 14th March at 7:30 but in Attwood Road number 28. It will be a busy agenda as we have a lot of things planned at present. All supporters welcome but to note it is a working meeting so there won’t be a speaker. Last month’s minutes are available here.
Film: The Breadwinner
The Oscar nominated film The Breadwinner is showing this Friday, 8 March at the Arts Centre in Salisbury at 7:30 pm. It concerns a young girl who pretends to be a boy in Taliban controlled Afghanistan to enable her to look after her family. Cert 12A. Tickets available from the Arts Centre, 01722 320 333, at the door or on line https://www.wiltshirecreative.co.uk/whats-on/salisbury-arts-centre/the-breadwinner/#book-tickets
There will be a short introduction by a member of our group. If you are interested in joining the group we shall be around before and after the showing so it would be a good time to make yourself known.
February minutes
Minutes of the February 2019 meeting are now available thanks to group member Lesley for preparing them. It was a full meeting and we discussed a wide variety of topics including refugees, the death penalty, North Korea, the threat to human rights in the UK, and future events including a film. At the end of the minutes is a list of forthcoming activities we are planning and if you live in the Salisbury, Amesbury, Downton or Wilton areas and are interested in getting involved, coming to one of these events and making yourself known is the best way to do that.
Human Rights under threat post Brexit
The risk to human rights legislation and specifically the Human Rights Act seem to have risen in past week. This concern has come about because of some equivocal statements by ministers in a recent House Of Commons debate. Dislike of the HRA by some members of the government is well known and there have been plans to abolish it for some time. They seem to have been kicked into the long grass because of the all consuming nature of the Brexit process and also because it has proved difficult to introduce a fresh piece of legislation – HRA2 we might say – that would get through parliament.
The recent row has emerged because a junior minister, Edward Agar, said the HRA ‘would be reviewed post Brexit’. SNP politician Tommy Sheppard was quoted as saying at the end of a 90 minute debate:
[he] felt he was “left without the unequivocal and categorical assurances I was seeking, in terms of the commitment to the existing Human Rights Act and the protection that it affords” Source; RightsInfo 13 February 2019
So it seems that once we leave, a review of the Act and its possible replacement is a possibility. This story has a long genesis going back to when David Cameron was prime minister. Theresa May was a keen abolitionist as home secretary.
The problem that some politicians have with it are several. Firstly, a failure to appreciate the positive effects it has had on various issues large and small. In countless cases, involving individuals and their dealings with government or local authorities, the act has been a key element in the defence of their rights. Only rarely do these get reported and frequently, the role of the act in the proceedings is omitted.
Secondly, there is a belief that British rights are somehow superior to anything Europe could do and go all the way back to Magna Carta. The imperfections of the British system are brushed aside. Before the HRA was in place there was a steady procession of litigants going to Strasbourg to get justice denied them in the UK. These judgements were often embarrassing to the British legal system.
Thirdly, the issue of human rights has got caught up in the Brexit debate and a belief among those wishing to leave that anything with a European tag to it is to avoided. As Anthony Lester QC puts it:
Because the Human Rights Act use the [European] Convention rights as a substitute for homegrown constitutional rights, it arouses the hostility of euro sceptics, our system has come under increasing onslaught, not from activist judges but from political opportunists supported by right-wing newspapers that have made ‘human rights’ a dirty word. Five Ideas to Fight For, One World, 2016 p39
Finally, and perhaps crucially, the HRA alters, in a quite fundamental way, the balance of power in our society. For the first time in our history, the people have a set of rights. Since we do not have a written constitution, this is a significant development. It is perhaps not surprising that those – especially from the privileged classes – who enjoyed the power and influence it gave, feel a little resentful at its loss.
What happens after Brexit we will have to see. Perhaps there are people who think coming out of Europe will mean coming out of the Convention. They are in fact two different bodies and the Convention stems from the Council of Europe which we entered long before we entered the EEC. It will still be in place. It is possible that some will be disappointed to discover that we are still in the Council post March 29.
The local Amnesty group will, along with Amnesty International itself, be keeping an eye of events and will be campaigning if the plans to repeal the act become real.
Human Rights Act under threat again?
Government minister gives equivocal answer
January 2019
The threat by the current Conservative government to do away with the Human Rights Act (HRA) has lain dormant for some time due to the considerable time being devoted to the Brexit negotiations. However, it reared its head again this week when a House of Lords EU Justice subcommittee asked a government minister for reassurance that it (the government) will not repeal or replace the act.
The Parliament Website has the following piece:
The House of Lords EU Justice Sub-Committee wrote to Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice David Gauke in December regarding the rights of citizens post-Brexit. The Committee sought an explanation for the dilution of the Government’s commitment to the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).
Last week the Committee received a troubling response. While again pledging an unchanging commitment to human rights and fundamental freedoms, the letter from Edward Argar MP, Undersecretary of State at the Ministry of Justice, ended with reference to the Government’s intention to revisit the Human Rights Act once the process of leaving the EU is concluded. 18 January 2019 [accessed 22 January 2019 our italics]
This is very troubling. The hostility of many ministers and politicians to the HRA is well known and echoes the frequent stories and campaigns in the tabloid press. It is seen by some as a threat to our way or life and to giving terrorists and criminals a ‘get out of jail card’.
On the contrary, it is in our view, one of the most important pieces of legislation in the last 20 years. It has shifted power away from the state and given ordinary people a means to challenge faulty decisions. The Hillsborough enquiry is a recent example and would not have happened without it. As an Amnesty spokesperson put it:
The Human Rights Act has been central to the vital pursuit of justice in this country for the last 20 years. It is the unsung hero of UK life, holding powerful people and institutions to account when ordinary people are let down. It is deeply concerning that the Government refuses to acknowledge that reality.
The Human Rights Act is a critical safety net for everyone in our society. Any attempt to dilute or remove the essential protections the Human Rights Act provides should be categorically ruled out.
They are mounting a petition which you can take part in if you wish.
If the act is abolished, all that will happen is that we go back to the bad old days of people having to beat a path to Strasbourg to get justice.
Sources: Amnesty, Rights Info, Parliament Website
If you live in the Salisbury or South Wilts area and would like to join us, you would be very welcome. Keep and eye on this site or on Facebook @salisburyai for one of our events and come along and make yourself known.
Forthcoming events
We have a number of events being planned and this is a brief summary for members and supporters.
I Welcome
At the Methodist Church in Salisbury we have part of the series of photographs taken by Magnum photographers on display. These show the life of refugees in camps around the world. On until early February. Please check opening times on their website
Refugees
still on the subject of refugees, there will be a coffee/mint tea morning at the Methodist Church on Saturday 2 February 10:30 till noon in support of Salisbury Syrian refugee families. You will be able to do both these events at the same time
Refugee vigil
being organised for March/April. Keep an eye on this site or Facebook for details
Cathedral Evensong – date TBC
Arts Centre Film
This will be a screening of The Breadwinner on 8th March 2019. This film is set in Taliban controlled Afghanistan and concerns a girl dressing as a boy so she can feed her family. Further details nearer the time or from the Arts Centre
Market Stall – 8th June 2019
Refugee Week – 17th-23rd June 2019
Joining. If you live in the Salisbury/Amesbury/Wilton area you would be welcome to join us. Human rights are under threat as never before and the situation in the UK is not fully assured. Some want to abolish the Human Rights Act. The best thing is to make yourself known at one of our events. It is free to join us locally but if you want to join AIUK there is a membership fee.
January meeting minutes
Minutes of the January meeting are now available thanks to group member Lesley for preparing them. The group discussed recent actions and future activities. These include the film The Breadwinner on 8 March; the market stall on 8 June; Refugee week from 17 – 23 June and the photo exhibition currently on at the Methodist Church (Free).
If you would like to join the group you would be very welcome. Best thing is to come to an event we are running and make yourself known.
Refugee exhibition
‘I Welcome’ photos on display at the Methodist Church
The plight of refugees entered the news again this year with the attempts by them to cross the Channel in small boats. This prompted the home secretary Sajid Javid to declare that a ‘major incident’ had occurred and he received considerable favourable coverage from the tabloid press. About 221 attempted the crossing between the beginning of November 2018 and the end of December. This compares with the hundreds of thousands who have entered Italy and Greece. To compare the 221 attempts to cross since the beginning of November with the hundreds of thousands who have entered other European states and calling it a ‘crisis’ is absurd.
The Daily Express for example, under a headline ‘Migrant Crisis’ quotes a former home office chief as saying that ‘Britain faces a humanitarian crisis unless it sends back migrants’.
As Roy Greenslade discusses in the Guardian:
For the past couple of weeks, in a period we like to call the season of goodwill, Britain’s newspapers and broadcasters have been reporting on the arrival of desperate men and women on our shores as if they are criminals unworthy of charity or understanding
Guardian 7 January 2018
The Refugee Council regrets the action Sajid Javid took and his reported doubts that these were genuine asylum seekers and that they should be deterred from crossing to make it harder to claim asylum. In response to these comments, Dr Lisa Doyle, Director of Advocacy at the Refugee Council, said:
The comments made by the Home Secretary today are deeply concerning. The outcome of an asylum application cannot be pre-judged before it has been made and must be processed on its individual merit, irrespective of how that person reached the country. Let us not forget that we are talking about people who are in desperate need of protection, having fled countries with prolific human rights abuses. What is more, we are hearing time and again that the conditions in France do not make people feel safe, with migrant camps being razed from the ground and people experiencing violence from the authorities. It’s a shame that the Home Secretary seems to need reminding that seeking asylum is a right and the UK has an obligation to assess claims fairly and grant protection to those who need it.
Refugee Council 2 January 2018 [accessed 7 January]
Immigration, asylum seekers and refugees raise considerable passions in the country and it was a key issue behind the 2016 Referendum. It is likely that many people voted in favour of leaving the EU because they believed it would end immigration of all kinds into the country.
The Salisbury group has mounted a photographic exhibition in the Salisbury Methodist Church during January featuring award winning pictures of refugees in various locations around the world. There are around 40 million internally displaced people and 25.4 million refugees according to UNHCR. The images show some of the desperate situation many of these men, women and children live in.

We are grateful to the church for letting us use their space for these photographs.
Death penalty report: Nov – Dec
This is the latest death penalty report from around the world compiled by group member Lesley.
