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March 14, 2005: New Prevention of Terrorism Act
The
Prevention of
Terrorism Act 2005 received Royal Assent on 11 March 2005. The Act
introduces a system of control orders which are aimed at disrupting and
preventing terrorist activity.
Non-derogating control orders allow the
Home
Secretary to impose a range of conditions including a ban on internet or
mobile phone use, restrictions on movement and travel, restrictions on
associations with named individuals and the use of tagging for the purposes of
monitoring curfews.
The Home Secretary is required to apply for leave from a judge of the High Court
in order to make a non-derogating control order. In an urgent case where it is
not possible to wait for leave from a judge, the Home Secretary will certify as
to the urgency of the case on the face of the order and it will take effect
immediately. In this case the order must be referred immediately to the Court
for confirmation within seven days, and if confirmed, it would be referred for a
full hearing.
The Act also makes provision for the Home Secretary to apply to a court for the
court to make a derogating control order which could require someone to remain
in a particular place at all times, if the threat to the UK changes. A
designated derogation order, derogating from Article 5 of the
European Convention on Human
Rights, would need to be made before the Home Secretary could apply to the
court for a derogating control order. The designated derogation order would be
made and laid before Parliament. It would come into force immediately, but would
need to be confirmed by both Houses, following a debate, within 40 days.
The Act also includes a requirement that the powers to make control orders, both
derogating and non-derogating, will lapse unless renewed annually by a vote by
both Houses. The powers could be revived if they have lapsed by a further order
subject to a vote by both Houses of Parliament.
Other proposals already in the Bill require the Home Secretary to:
- appoint an independent reviewer to produce a report on the
whole Act to Parliament annually
- report to Parliament every three months on the use made of
the control order powers during that period
- annual renewal of the power to make derogating orders
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