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| 'Coroner system unfit for purpose', Inquest comment on the Coroners and Justice Bill |
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Monday 18th May will see the second reading of the Coroners and Justice Bill: Investigating deaths of people detained by the state.
African Caribbean's over represented in all custodial settings
Helen Shaw's co-director at Inquest , the only organisation in the UK that provides specialist free advice on contentious
deaths and their investigation to bereaved people, shares her views on why it
is so important to get this legislation right.
‘The justice secretary brought forward
hastily drafted amendments aiming to quell disquiet about the draconian proposals for secret inquests ahead of the Commons report stage of the coroners
and justice bill. This has dominated the important parliamentary process of
scrutinising long awaited government proposals for reform of the inquest
system. Although the amendments are welcome and an indication that the
government is listening to widespread criticism, they do not go far enough.
Hope MPs will vote to remove these draconian
measures in their entirety
Despite verbal assurances that these would only be "partially
secret", there is nothing in the legislation that specifies that to be the
case. Many parliamentarians, including the Joint Committee on Human Rights, the House of Commons Justice Committee and the House of Lords Select Committee on the Constitution have been vocal in their opposition. Serious concerns have also been raised by the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission, INQUEST, Liberty Justice and the Royal British Legion. Despite these eleventh hour amendments, the government has still failed to justify the case for certification and we hope MPs will vote to remove these draconian measures in their entirety alongside ensuring that the measures to reform the inquest system are strengthened. INQUEST has been proud to be associated with the process that has led to this bill finally being considered by parliament. As the only organisation that works directly with families bereaved after contentious deaths INQUEST contributed to the Fundamental Review of Coroner Services in 2003, the Joint Committee on Human Rights Inquiry into Deaths in Custody in 2004 and the Constitutional Affairs Committee inquiry into reform of the coroners system in 2006. The government's stated objective was to put the bereaved at the heart of the process and the bill makes progress in remedying what has historically been an unnecessarily distressing situation for the families of the deceased.
It would be a proud achievement to have a Coroner Service that makes a contribution to death prevention It would be a proud achievement if society has a Coroner Service that makes an important contribution to death prevention. A recurring theme common to virtually every family with whom we have journeyed through the coronial system is simple: an unswerving desire that other families should not have to suffer the often preventable ordeal which they have had to endure. Significant changes in the legal framework governing inquests into deaths that raise questions of state and corporate accountability were made in principle to the investigation and inquest process following implementation of the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA). However, the reality is that bereaved families and their legal teams have been the driving force behind securing practical applications for these changes, and for making the HRA and its associated rights under the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) a functioning reality. In particular, we have worked with families and lawyers to press for a more purposeful interpretation of the core rights, a broader scope of inquiry and the opportunity for the delivery of more meaningful verdicts by juries. The use of narrative verdicts in particular has been a tool for enhancing the participation of the jury in the analysis of systemic failure, and as such is a crucial expression of democratic accountability and aids the prevention of unnecessary future deaths. Many of these inquests have informed change to policies and practices, but there is undoubtedly more work to do in this important area.
Inadequate information and
support to bereaved families facing inquests at all stages The legal rights of bereaved families in the proceedings are artificially and unnecessarily restricted, and their current place within it is anomalous and inadequate since the rules governing an inquest create a structure where the inquiry is not for them. Consequently, the administrative framework is not directed at their full inclusion in the process. There is inadequate provision of information and support to bereaved families facing inquests at all stages which affects their capacity to participate effectively in the inquest process. This has been recognised by the government and addressed partially in the draft Charter for Bereaved People published alongside the bill. But the Charter alone, without accompanying reform to ensure funding for legal representation, mandatory disclosure of information, (proposals currently missing from the bill), and a fully accountable Coroner Service, will make it difficult for families to enforce the rights outlined and transform them from paper rights into genuine expressions of our community's commitment to enhanced standards of care, decency and justice.
System is especially ill-equipped to deal
with deaths involving state or corporate accountability The Court considers that the State's obligation under Article 2 § 1 of the Convention to carry out an effective investigation arises independently of the position taken by the victim's relatives. The fact that there has been no request for particular lines of inquiry to be pursued or items of evidence obtained cannot relieve the authorities of their duty to take all possible steps to establish the truth and ensure accountability for deaths caused by agents of the State. Furthermore, an investigation will not be effective unless all the evidence is properly analysed and the conclusions are consistent and reasoned. [Nachova v Bulgaria]. The irony is that in the coronial courts of England and Wales it has been consistently incumbent upon the families of the bereaved - those with the least power, authority, resources and access to information - to drive the search for truth after a death in the care of the state. It is a remarkable testament to the families we have worked with that through their quiet dignity, moral courage and simple persistence time and again the truth about the death of their loved ones has been slowly and painstakingly revealed. This process has been too haphazard and inconsistent, and the opportunity must be taken to effect lasting change.
This comment has been edited for Black Mental Health UK and first appeared on Politics.co.uk on 23 March 2009
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