Tory ministers condemn ECHR ruling on whole-life prison sentences

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David Cameron said he would not rule out abandoning the ECHR if he won the next general election. Photograph: Ye Pingfan/Xinhua Press/CorbisTory ministers condemn ECHR ruling on whole-life prison sentences

No 10 'very, very disappointed' with ruling that whole-life sentences without review breach human rights law

Nicholas Watt and Alan Travis

Tory cabinet ministers have condemned the European court of human rights for its ruling on whole-life prison sentences, with the prime minister, justice secretary and home secretary all voicing their "profound disagreement".

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Chris Grayling, the justice secretary, said the ruling would leave the original authors of the European convention on human rights "turning in their graves" and said it reinforced his determination to curtail the role of the Strasbourg court.

"The British public will find this ruling intensely frustrating and hard to understand," he said.

Theresa May, the home secretary, said she was dismayed by the decision but also surprised as it went against several rulings last year by the same court, which upheld the extradition of several suspects to face life terms without the possibility of parole.

They found strong support from the former Labour home secretary David Blunkett, who defended his 2003 decision to scrap the right to a review after 25 years for life-sentenced prisoners, saying he had made it "to ensure that life means life" in the most heinous cases.

Backbench Tory MPs were less measured, with Dominic Raab claiming it as evidence of Strasbourg's "warped moral compass", a gross distortion of the human rights convention and toxic for the reputation of human rights with the public.

The prime minister's spokesman said David Cameron would not rule out abandoning the ECHR if he won the next general election.

The spokesman said: "[The prime minister] is very, very, very, very disappointed. He profoundly disagrees with the court's ruling. He is a strong supporter of whole-life tariffs."

Asked about the ruling that tariffs without a review amounted to a breach of human rights, the spokesman said: "We profoundly disagree. [The prime minister] is a strong supporter of judges, of course, having the ability to award whole-life tariffs. Sentencing obviously is a matter for the judges. But the PM believes that should be available in certain cases."

The spokesman said nothing would be off the table in reforming Britain's relationship with the ECHR when the Conservative party draws up its manifesto for the next general election.

"I would simply point you back to his words at the weekend with regard to the ECHR and the next Conservative manifesto where he said nothing was off the table."

Downing Street conceded that Britain could not appeal against the decision of the grand chamber of the ECHR. "The next step is the government, through the Ministry of Justice, has six months to consider its response. We will consider the detail of that judgment."

Juliet Lyon, of the Prison Reform Trust, said restoring the principle of review of whole-life sentences would help restore balance to a penal system distorted by the 2003 Criminal Justice Act:

"Rehabilitation is a purpose of sentencing alongside punishment. Reinstating the possibility of review, albeit with little prospect of release, puts a degree of hope into the lives of those very few people serving whole=life tariffs and affirms prison staff in their work to enable prisoners to progress even the longest of sentences," she said.

"In fairness, it might be better if the prime minister were a strong supporter of rehabilitation and redemption rather than the eternal punishment and damnation that is a whole-life tariff with no prospect of review."

Source: The Guardian UK





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