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item0081D 1116, 1117 1116 17 October 2005 Turkey
Praise the Lord! In a manner of speaking. Political disaster was averted by the EU decision to launch accession negotiations with Turkey. We now have ten years to make the case for a culturally neutral political order in our part of the world, one which will progressively match the political requirements of the global community.
If we seek to define Europe in "monocultural" terms - or indeed in cultural terms at all - that will be a grave setback to the emergence of a truly successful social and political order. This view was upheld brilliantly by Nick Cohen in a piece about the human rights campaigner Maryam Namazie. For me, the only relevant "religion" is that of universal human rights. Or as George Fox put it, in the simple language of his time, our response to "that of God in every man".
Where do you stand, on Turkish membership of the EU? Drop me a line
1117 17 October 2005 Roger
I am sensitive to this criticism. The present system respects the traditional separation of powers: there is an "administrative" or executive phase of the proceedings, within the Home Office, and a second "judicial" phase, organised by the Asylum & Immigration Tribunal. Lawyers have been removed altogether from the first phase, and are intended to inhabit the the second phase. In text-book terms, the theory is sound.
The better course would be to give every applicant a lawyer from the outset, and to use more senior adjudicators to take the primary executive decision (perhaps indeed one could use the present "Immigration Judges", who are not really judges anyway, but super-administrators whose re-labelling has been "spun"). The real judicial phase would then consist only of challenges on points of law. Such Adjudicators would be like Planning Inspectors, appointed to take an executive decision, sometimes with full executive powers, sometimes with power only to recommend a course of action to the Home Secretary. Such a system would be much more transparent and satisfactory to all parties, cheaper and quicker.
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