Secret
court proposals compared to superinjunctions
Disclosure
that applications for courts to sit in secret could themselves remain
secret is described as 'deeply disturbing
19
August, 2012
Opponents
say the public will be prevented from learning about the UK
government’s involvement in human rights abuses, such as the
torture of Binyam Mohamed (pictured above). Photograph: Shaun
Curry/AFP/Getty Images
The
government's plan to establish a new generation of secret courts has
sparked fresh controversy after it emerged that the fact that a
hearing is to be held behind closed doors may itself be kept secret.
During
House of Lords debates, it was disclosed that a government
application for a court to sit in secret – with the public, the
media and even the claimant and their lawyers being excluded –
could itself remain completely secret under the proposals.
The
admission drew immediate comparisons with so-called superinjunctions,
which not only prevent the media from publishing information said to
be confidential or private, but also ban publication of the fact that
the injunction exists.
The
secrecy proposals, contained in the government's justice and security
bill, allow government ministers to apply for special courtroom
measures known as closed material procedure (CMP) whenever the
government or its intelligence agencies are being sued in the UK
courts.
Ministers
say the measures are needed to prevent intelligence material handed
over by friendly governments being disclosed in open court.
Many
lawyers and human rights activists deny that such wide-ranging
secrecy is necessary, and point out that once the bill becomes law,
the public will be prevented from learning about the UK government's
involvement in human rights abuses, such as the torture of Binyam
Mohamed, the decision to consign British citizens to Guantánamo, and
the existence of the last Labour government's secret torture policy.
Lady
Stowell of Beeston, a government whip in the Lords, told peers: "As
to whether the press should be notified at the point of application
for a CMP, it may well be informed, but it will not be informed if
the issue is related to national security."
Asked
by Lord Falconer of Thoroton, the former lord chancellor, for
clarification that it was the government's intention "that there
will be certain circumstances when even the fact of an application …
is to be kept secret", Stowell replied that not all CMP
applications would necessarily be kept secret, but that "if the
knowledge that the application has been made could give rise to
concern about national security, it would not be made public."
The
admission was described by Reprieve, the legal charity that helped
represent Mohamed when he brought proceedings against the British
government, as a "deeply disturbing development".
Clare
Algar, its executive director, said: "This is reminiscent of
superinjunctions in its excessive secrecy. Yet instead of merely
covering up footballers' indiscretions, these courts could be used to
sweep serious state human rights abuses, such as torture, under the
carpet. If this bill passes, it will badly damage centuries of
British legal tradition and make it far harder for the citizen to
hold the state to account."
The
Ministry of Justice said those making allegations against the
government, and MI5 or MI6, would still be able to do so in public,
and their claims were more likely to result in trials – albeit
partly in secret – rather than being settled out of court. The
media would then be able to report on the courts' decisions.
A
spokesman said: "Nothing currently heard in open will go into
closed session. These measures have no impact on claims that the
government, or the security and intelligence agencies, have been
directly involved in wrongdoing."

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