This day old news has been reported in some UK print media but its content seeks repetition. Who can still swallow the claim of 'a democratic society' when such events are revealed to the light? Are we to presume that the two unknown men have already been judged guilty? And what else is still hidden from us in the dark?
For the first time in the UK's modern legal history, two men could
face an entirely secret criminal trial for terrorism charges, their
identities, the proceedings, and the verdict concealed from the public
record.
First reported Wednesday, the blackout sparked alarm among human rights campaigners, lawyers, and politicians.
“To hold trials entirely in secret is an outrageous assault on the
fundamental principles of British justice," Clare Algar, executive
director of UK human rights organization Reprieve, told the Telegraph.
Until Wednesday, the media was banned from reporting the trial at
all. After a challenge to the gag order by UK media organizations,
including the Guardian and the Daily Mail, the press
won the right to cover a Wednesday hearing challenging the gag order.
The court will rule on the appeal to the media blackout in the coming
days.
The case involves two men, identified as "AB" and "CD," who will face
terrorism charges in a criminal court. The Crown Prosecution Service
successfully pushed for the secrecy, which would ban any public report
on the trial's proceedings and outcome, on the grounds that it is
necessary for the protection of national security, with the specifics
unknown to the public.
Yet, lawyers challenging the secrecy warn that the blackout
constitutes a severe threat to civil liberties and justice. In modern
history, no UK criminal trial has been this closed to the public, although partial gag orders have been imposed.
"The Crown has sought and obtained an unprecedented order that the
trial of two defendants charged with serious terrorism offenses should
take place entirely in private with the identity of both defendants
withheld and a permanent prohibition on reporting what takes place
during the trial and their identities," said Anthony Hudson, who is
providing counsel to media organizations appealing the gag order, at
Wednesday's hearing, according to the BBC.
"This appeal raises important issues relating to not only the
constitutional principle of open justice but the equally important
principle of fairness and natural justice," he added.
"Transparency isn't an optional luxury in the justice system – it's
key to ensuring fairness and protecting the rule of law," Shami
Chakrabati, director of UK-based civil liberties organization Liberty, told the Guardian.
"This case is a worrying high water mark for secrecy in our courts –
extensive restrictions set without robust reasons or a time limit.
“For an entire trial to be heard in camera, this is unprecedented,
very serious and worrying,” Keith Vaz, chairman of the Commons home
affairs committee, declared Wednesday following the hearing, according to the Telegraph.
from here
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