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March 29, 2007: New Ministry of Justice
Prime Minister Tony Blair has announced major changes to the
Home Office, which will be divided
and refocused. The National
Offender Management Service (NOMS), including the
Prison and
Probation
Services, will move from the Home Office to the
Department for Constitutional Affairs
on 9th May, 2007, creating a Ministry of Justice. The Home Office will retain
its other existing responsibilities, including for policing, anti-social
behaviour, drugs, overall crime reductions, immigration, asylum and identity
management (ID cards and passports).
The Home Office will take on a stronger role in tackling the
threat of terrorism, alongside its existing responsibilities of the police
service, crime reduction, immigration and asylum, and identity and passports. A
new Office for Security and Counter-terrorism will be set up within the Home
Office, responsible for developing and supporting the country's overall
counter-terrorism strategy.
As part of the changes, which build on the government's
recently published
Security, Crime and Justice Policy Review, the government will form a new
Ministerial Committee on Security and Terrorism, chaired by the
Prime Minister, which
will meet regularly to share information on security issues. A national security
board chaired by the Home Secretary will meet weekly to study threats to the UK.
A new Ministry of Justice will be created, in order to provide a stronger focus
on the criminal justice system, and on reducing re-offending. The Prime Minister
said the new Ministry of Justice will take the leading role in delivering a
fairer, more effective, speedy and efficient justice system. This new ministry
will take over the staff and responsibilities of the Department for
Constitutional Affairs, and NOMS, including the prison and probation services,
and have lead responsibility for criminal law and sentencing. Finally, the
Office of Criminal Justice Reform will remain a tripartite office, as it is
now, but will operate from the new ministry, rather than from the Home Office.
In a written ministerial statement, the Prime Minister stated that the security
and counter-terrorism changes will have immediate effect:
"Separately I have decided to bring the agencies that
deal with offenders into a new Ministry of Justice. Protecting the public
demands we grip those who commit crime from the moment they enter the criminal
justice system right through court, prison and probation".
In a statement to Parliament, Home Secretary John Reid
explained that in the wake of reviews conducted last year, the Prime Minister
had decided to enhance the Home Office's focus on issues critical to national
security. The relationship between the Home Office and the Ministry of Justice
will be vital, and strong agreements will be put in place between NOMS, the
police, and the Immigration and Nationality Directorate, to ensure that they all
work together smoothly.
Alongside these changes the Prime Minister today announced the creation of a
Ministry of Justice that will bring together the main agencies dealing with the
offender. The National Offender Management Service (including the Prison and
Probation Services) and lead responsibility for criminal justice and sentencing
policy will move from the Home Office to the Department for Constitutional
Affairs from May 9.
The Ministry of Justice will be responsible for policy on the overall criminal,
civil, family and administrative justice system, including sentencing policy, as
well as the courts, tribunals, legal aid and constitutional reform. It will help
to bring together management of the criminal justice system from end to end,
meaning that once a suspect has been charged their journey through the courts,
and if necessary prison and probation, can be managed seamlessly. The Ministry
will take a leading role in delivering a fairer, more effective, speedy and
efficient justice system, and also in reducing re-offending. In doing so it
will, with the Home Office and the Attorney General's Office, respect the vital
roles and independence of the judiciary and the Prosecuting authorities.
Public protection and crime reduction will continue to be the core focus of
Government policy. The Government has made clear that prison will continue to be
necessary to protect the public from the most serious offenders, although some
non dangerous offenders do not need to be in custody because their offending can
be better addressed through non-custodial means, the Government has announced
plans to build a further 8,000 prison places by 2012, having already increased
capacity by 19,700 since 1997.
Criminal Law and sentencing policy will move to the new Ministry of Justice. In
order to maintain the Government's clear focus on public protection, and crime
reduction, the Home Secretary will continue to have a core role in decision
making in this area, reflecting his responsibilities for crime reduction. The
Secretary of State for Justice will work with the Home Secretary, Attorney
General and other Ministers to ensure flexible and effective responses to
different types of crime, from anti-social behaviour, to serious and organised
criminality, including through the expansion of summary powers. Government
policy in this area will in future be decided by a new Cabinet committee on
Crime and the Criminal Justice System, chaired by the Prime Minister.
Responsibility for the Crown Prosecution Service and the other prosecuting
authorities will remain with the Attorney General, who has a statutory duty to
superintend them. The prosecuting authorities are an integral part of the
Criminal Justice System and the Ministry of Justice will continue to work with
the Office of the Attorney General to deliver a world-class criminal justice
system.
There will continue to be a shared National Criminal Justice Board and an Office
for Criminal Justice Reform, based in the Ministry for Justice and working
trilaterally between the Home Office, the Ministry of Justice and the Attorney
General's office. This will ensure that the police and prosecutors continue to
work closely and effectively with the courts, prison and probation.
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