•
Kids
too annoying? UK bill seeks to criminalize children’s ‘nuisance’
RT
News
Published time: November 12, 2013
17:42
|
|
|
|
The UK government is moving towards
passing legislation which could criminalize behavior deemed capable of causing
a “nuisance or annoyance.” The bill has already passed through its second
hearing in the House of Lords and looks set to become law.
The Anti-Social Behavior, Crime and Policing
Bill will grant powers to police, local authorities, and even private security
firms to restrict any activity deemed to have a “detrimental effect on the
quality of life of those in the locality.”
“Essentially what they’re attempting
to do is give police the authority to make any lawful protest immediately
illegal, simply because it “may, has, or is likely to cause nuisance or
annoyance,” Kerry-Anne Mendoza, a campaigner
against the Anti-Social Behavior Bill told RT.
The bill purports to “streamline” the
governmental “toolkit” against disorderly conduct, by replacing nineteen
of the powers with six new ones, such as enabling the arrest of intentional and
persistent beggars and the “police dispersal power to direct people away
from an area in order to prevent anti-social behavior.”
One of the schemes the bill encompasses is the
IPNA (Injunction to Prevent Nuisance and Annoyance) - a replacement for the
Anti-Social Behavior Orders (ASBOs) which have fallen under repeated criticism
since their introduction in 1998. One man from Loch Ness named Stuart Hunt has
faced court proceedings 2,100 times since 2007 for breaching an ASBO placed
upon him for slow-hand clapping, laughing, and staring.
A 13 year old has been banned from using the
word ‘grass’ in England or Wales, and an 87 year old was allocated an ASBO,
threatening him with a prison sentence if he was sarcastic to his neighbors.
The IPNA, on the other hand, means that people
charged could be subject to up to two years imprisonment or an unlimited fine
for people over the age of 18. Council would as well no longer seek Criminal
Behaviour Orders at local Magistrates’ Courts. Instead the High Court, County
Court and Youth Court would handle the IPNAs.
While the ASBO was targeted at cracking down on
behavior considered as causing “harassment, alarm or distress,” the IPNA
replacement will target conduct “capable of causing nuisance or annoyance to
any person.”
The potential measures have already been
condemned for their ambiguity and broad-reach, while having minimal checks and
balances to protect civilians.
“It allows police to bar people from what they
call a ‘locality’ and ‘locality’ hasn’t been defined, it could be a city, a
county, a country….nobody really knows,” said Mendoza.
Jacqui Cheer, the chief constable of Cleveland
Police has also criticized the potential new law, stating on Tuesday that
“What’s antisocial to one person is just what I did and what many young people
do.” Cheer made the comments while speaking to the All-Party Parliamentary
Group for Children.
“We are here to protect everybody. But we need
to be careful where the line is,” she added.
The bill underwent its second hearing in the
House of Lords last week and is expected to be enshrined in law by Christmas.
Sinn Féin Mountmellick - Serving The Community
No comments:
Post a Comment