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ECHR Debate: Political Theatre or Genuine Crisis?

29/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

ECHR Debate

The Observer’s deep dive into the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR Debate ) debate exposes something uncomfortable: much of what we’ve been told about human rights law blocking deportations is complete nonsense. Remember the Albanian criminal supposedly kept in Britain because his son didn’t like foreign chicken nuggets? Never happened. The Iranian who couldn’t be deported so he could cut his son’s hair? Fabricated. These myths have poisoned the political debate, yet politicians from Kemi Badenoch to Nigel Farage continue weaponising them.

The Positives:

The article’s fact-checking is thorough and necessary. Oxford University’s Bonavero Institute data reveals that only 0.73% of foreign national offenders successfully appeal deportation on human rights grounds. The Strasbourg court has ruled against the UK just three times in 45 years on immigration cases. These statistics demolish the narrative that the ECHR is some insurmountable barrier to border control.

The piece also provides valuable historical context—reminding us that British lawyers drafted the ECHR after World War II, and it’s helped secure justice for Hillsborough families and protected vulnerable people during the pandemic. The practical complications of withdrawal are clearly laid out: the Good Friday Agreement embeds the ECHR, and leaving it would reduce European cooperation on asylum seekers.

The Negatives:

What’s deeply concerning is the cynicism on display. Politicians across the spectrum are treating human rights as a “useful political scapegoat” (as Liberty’s Akiko Hart notes), offering “disingenuous solutions” they know won’t work. Reform UK’s promise of a “department of believers” staffed by anti-ECHR civil servants sounds dystopian. Even Labour MPs in red wall seats are signalling hostility to human rights to appear tough on immigration.

The article perhaps doesn’t emphasise enough how dangerous this erosion of principle is. As former Lord Chancellor Charlie Falconer warns, abandoning rights for immigrants sets a precedent:

“there is essentially no limitation on what the government may do in other areas where there is political pressure.”

For Keir Starmer—who once called the ECHR his “lodestar”—this represents a pivotal test. Will he defend fundamental rights against populist pressure, or will he join the race to the bottom? The answer matters far beyond immigration policy. When politicians compete to see who can abandon human rights fastest, we all lose.

We All Lose

 

#ECHR #HumanRights #UKPolitics #Immigration #FactCheck #BorderControl #AsylumSeekers #PoliticalDebate #LegalAnalysis #MythBusting #Brexit #ReformUK #Labour #Conservatives #UKImmigration #HumanRightsAct #GoodFridayAgreement #Deportation #PoliticalAccountability #UKNews

 

Links:

  • The Observer – Misinformation and myth: the UK’s phoney war over human rights
  • Human Rights – The Legal Act in the UK

Filed Under: Editor to ACOMSDave Tagged With: asylum seekers, border control, Brexit, deportation laws, ECHR, European Convention on Human Rights, Good Friday Agreement, Human Rights Act, human rights debate, immigration myths, Keir Starmer, Kemi Badenoch, legal analysis, political scapegoating, Reform UK, UK immigration

1983 – Gay Conference Comes To Belfast

12/10/2024 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

 
 

Gay Conference Comes To Belfast1983 – Gay Conference Comes To Belfast, what a headline.  When you consider that the Good Friday Agreement was 5 years away.  The ‘troubles’ were still happening all around us, and we were also 8 years away from our first Pride March in Belfast, the fact that a gay conference was held is nothing short of remarkable.  This is the small article that was published in Northern Ireland’s only gay publication, which can be found in the Linen Hall Libary Political Collection on the fourth floor.

 

…This is a short report on the All Ireland Lesbian and Gay Men’s Conference which was held in 1983 in Belfast, at the Crescent Arts Centre and the Gay Centre.  As many as 200 lesbians and gay men were expected at this 3rd annual conference.

The first conference was in Cork in 1981, and in 1982 was in Dublin.  The two of them were organised by ‘independent’ lesbians and gay men and supported by national organisations that provided facilities.  It was significant that only a handful of delegates from Northern Ireland were present at both conferences.

In January 1983 a planning meeting was in Belfast for the 1983 conference which was attended by many of the former committee members from 1981 and 1982.  Belfast representation was limited to half a dozen men – all members of NIGRa (Northern Ireland Gay Rights Association).

The Dublin Conference had been uniquely successful in having equal numbers of women and men attending.  The absence of women from this planning conference augured poorly for the future of a Belfast conference.

The afternoon session was better attended by Belfast/Derry people and a meeting was planned for a fortnight later to bring together ‘non-organisation’ lesbians and gay men in the region.  Six women and six men attended, including Charles Kerrigan of the Dublin Gay Collective.

It was decided in principle, that those non-organisational people would determine the nature and organisation of the conference.

NIGRA’s role was to provide facilities, admin and any other help…

 

We talk about our history, but we have done little to mark it, to record it and remember it.  If you wish to have your history recorded, don’t forget the LGBTQIA+ Heritage Project (link below).

 

Links:

  • World Congress of Families – Conference Speaker
  • The National Union of Students (NUS), Lesbian and Gay Liberation Campaign Conference 1988
  • The Linen Hall Library – Northern Ireland Political Collection
  • LGBTHistoryni
  • Welcome to Queer NI – 
  • LGBTQIA+ Heritage Project

 

 

 

Filed Under: Community Journalist, Editor to ACOMSDave Tagged With: 1983 Conference, Activism, Belfast History, Community Organizing, crescent arts centre, Cultural Events, gay conference, gay rights, Gender Equality, Good Friday Agreement, Irish LGBTQ History, Lesbian and Gay Rights, LGBTQ+ History, LGBTQIA+, LGBTQIA+ Heritage Project, NIGRA, Northern Ireland, Political History, Pride March, Social Movements

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