13/10/2006
Beckett criticises Guantanamo detentions
UK Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett has mounted an attack on the continuing operation of the US detention camp in Guantamo Bay.
Describing the camp as a "radicalising and destabalising influence," the Foreign Secretary said: "The continuing detention without fair trial of prisoners is unacceptable in terms of human rights, but it is also ineffective in terms of counter-terrorism."
Mrs Beckett used the announcement of the Foreign Office annual report on human rights to further distance the British Government from White House policy.
However, Mrs Beckett was accused of hypocrisy for failing to intervene directly on behalf of UK residents incarcerated in Guantanamo Bay.
MPs and human rights campaigners have been critical of the government following a failure of a legal bid to force the Foreign Office to intervene.
Three detainees being held at the Guantamo Bay detention facility have a legal right to reside in Britain, but are not UK nationals.
The Court of Appeal ruled that the Foreign Office did not have a duty to act as the detainees were not British nationals. Human rights groups had contended that the government had a moral obligation to help those detained.
The Foreign Office report highlighted human rights abuses in Iraq as widspread and representing a "serious challenge."
US officials have maintained that the camp performs an essential function, detaining persons believed to have been behind the 9/11 attack on the US.
(SP/KMcA)
Describing the camp as a "radicalising and destabalising influence," the Foreign Secretary said: "The continuing detention without fair trial of prisoners is unacceptable in terms of human rights, but it is also ineffective in terms of counter-terrorism."
Mrs Beckett used the announcement of the Foreign Office annual report on human rights to further distance the British Government from White House policy.
However, Mrs Beckett was accused of hypocrisy for failing to intervene directly on behalf of UK residents incarcerated in Guantanamo Bay.
MPs and human rights campaigners have been critical of the government following a failure of a legal bid to force the Foreign Office to intervene.
Three detainees being held at the Guantamo Bay detention facility have a legal right to reside in Britain, but are not UK nationals.
The Court of Appeal ruled that the Foreign Office did not have a duty to act as the detainees were not British nationals. Human rights groups had contended that the government had a moral obligation to help those detained.
The Foreign Office report highlighted human rights abuses in Iraq as widspread and representing a "serious challenge."
US officials have maintained that the camp performs an essential function, detaining persons believed to have been behind the 9/11 attack on the US.
(SP/KMcA)
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19 September 2003
Government publishes annual report on human rights
The government's response to human rights challenges around the world over the last year has published in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office's Annual Report on Human Rights. The human rights situation in Iraq is one of the major elements of the report, and the government has outlined two strands to its human rights policy in Iraq.
Government publishes annual report on human rights
The government's response to human rights challenges around the world over the last year has published in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office's Annual Report on Human Rights. The human rights situation in Iraq is one of the major elements of the report, and the government has outlined two strands to its human rights policy in Iraq.
24 March 2005
Ethiopian army branded ‘murderers and rapists’
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Ethiopian army branded ‘murderers and rapists’
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16 September 2010
NI Bill Of Rights Wins UK Backing
As the Stormont Justice Minister David Ford vowed to reshape the region's justice system to fit the needs of the people of Northern Ireland, human rights commissions across the UK have backed a proposed Bill of Rights for Northern Ireland.
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As the Stormont Justice Minister David Ford vowed to reshape the region's justice system to fit the needs of the people of Northern Ireland, human rights commissions across the UK have backed a proposed Bill of Rights for Northern Ireland.
31 August 2004
North Korea to receive UK's first Ministerial visitor
North Korea's nuclear programme and their human rights record will top the agenda when Bill Rammell visits the country next month in the first-ever trip by a British minister to the communist nation. High-level discussions with North Korean Foreign Minister Paek Nam Sun, and other senior figures, are planned.
North Korea to receive UK's first Ministerial visitor
North Korea's nuclear programme and their human rights record will top the agenda when Bill Rammell visits the country next month in the first-ever trip by a British minister to the communist nation. High-level discussions with North Korean Foreign Minister Paek Nam Sun, and other senior figures, are planned.
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Foreign Office Announces Further Libyan Support
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