Ken Clarke Immigration: Justice Secretary To Secure Legal Reform On European Immigration Cases

Why Is Ken Clarke Taking On Europe Over UK Immigration Cases?

Britain is set to secure major legal reforms that would stop the European Court of Human Rights overruling UK judges on immigration cases, it has been reported.

Justice Secretary Ken Clarke has disclosed an agreement is expected to be reached that would prevent individuals being able to repeatedly challenge deportation rulings, according to The Daily Telegraph.

The deal, set to be agreed at a conference in London next April, would end the situation where "everybody who's just lost his arguments about deportation should be able to go there and get in the queue, wait a few years to get it all reheard again when he's lost the argument three times already" in the UK, the Tory MP said.

In an interview with the newspaper Mr Clarke added: "What we are trying to do is get the role of the court sorted out so that it deals with serious human rights issues of the kind that require an international court.

"We want the court back to its proper business as an international court which takes up serious issues of principle when a member state or its courts, or its parliament, are arguably in serious breach of the [European Human Rights] convention."

Britain took over chairmanship of the Council of Europe, which oversees the court, at the beginning of November and will hold the reins for six months.

"To get any decision out of any international body usually takes at least 20 years," Mr Clarke told the newspaper. "You would take the first two years trying to agree to where to put the commas in the memorandum. [But] it's not like that.

"A lot of member states have been pushing for similar things, and a lot of them believe a British chairmanship is the best time to deliver it, and they think we're the best hope of drawing this to a conclusion."

He added: "The term human rights, it gets misused. There is a tendency in this country for the words human rights to get thrown about as much as health and safety. Both of them get hopelessly misused.

"When some official, some policeman, whoever, has made some mistake in taking some absurd decision, the first thing they do to fend off criticism is to blame it on health and safety and blame it on human rights. The truth is that someone's made a pig's ear in the office."

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