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Sweeping reforms to restore British liberties
Millions of people will be protected from unwarranted state intrusion in their private lives with a return to common sense government, the Home Secretary outlined today in the Protection of Freedoms Bill.
The Bill steps up the coalition government's commitment
to restore hard-won British liberties.
An array of sweeping reforms will put an end to unwarranted
local authority snooping and unnecessary scrutiny of individuals.
It will see:
* an end to the routine monitoring of 9.3 million people
under the radically reformed vetting and barring scheme;
* millions of householders protected from town hall snoopers
checking their bins or school catchment area;
* the scrapping of Section 44 powers, which have been used to
stop and search hundreds of thousands of innocent people;
* the permanent reduction of the maximum period of pre-charge
detention for terrorist suspects to 14 days;
* DNA samples and fingerprints of hundreds of thousands of
innocent people deleted from police databases;
* thousands of gay men able to clear their name with the
removal of out-of-date convictions for consensual acts; and
* thousands of motorists protected from rogue wheel clamping firms.
Home Secretary Theresa May said:
"The first duty of the state is the protection of
its citizens, but this should never be an excuse for the
government to intrude into people's private lives.
"Snooping on the contents of families' bins
and security checking school-run mums are not necessary for public
safety and this Bill will bring them to an end.
"I am bringing common sense back to public
protection and freeing people to go about their daily lives
without a fear that the state is monitoring them."
The Protection of Freedoms Bill follows the review of
counter-terrorism and security powers and the scrapping of ID
cards as the coalition government delivers on its agreement to put
traditional British freedoms at the heart of the Whitehall agenda.
It also drew on views put forward by the public through the
radical Your Freedom website set up after the coalition government
came to power.
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said:
"This is a landmark Bill which will result in an
unprecedented rolling back of the power of the state. The
Protection of Freedoms Bill brings together a huge range of
measures to restore the hard-won British liberties that have been
lost in recent years.
"Freedom is back in fashion - 2011 will be the year that
the coalition government hands people their liberty back. I have
campaigned for this for many years and I am delighted that we have
been able to deliver the Freedoms Bill in government."
Other elements of the Protection of Freedoms Bill include:
* an end to the fingerprinting of children in schools without
parental consent;
* the introduction of a code of practice for CCTV and
Automatic Number Plate Recognition systems (overseen by a new
Surveillance Camera Commissioner) to make them more proportionate
and effective;
* restrictions on the powers of government departments, local
authorities and other public bodies to enter private homes and
other premises for investigations and a requirement for all to
examine and slim down remaining powers;
* the repeal of powers to hold serious and complex fraud
trials without a jury;
* the liberalisation of marriage laws to allow people to
marry outside the hours of 8am-6pm; and
* the extension of the scope of the Freedom of Information
Act and strengthening the public rights to data.
Alongside the Bill, draft emergency legislation on pre-charge detention of terrorist suspects was also laid. The draft, which is in line with the commitment given in the review of counter-terrorism and security powers, will allow for parliamentary scrutiny should pre-charge detention need to be increased in an emergency.
The Protection of Freedoms Bill is being introduced with the aim
of gaining Royal Assent by late 2011 or early 2012.
NOTES TO EDITORS
1. The full contents of the Protection of Freedoms Bill will
be uploaded to http://services.parliament.uk/bills/
after publication.
2. For more detail, contact the Home Office Press Office.
Contacts:
Home Office Press Office
Phone: 020 7035 3535
NDS.HO@coi.gsi.gov.uk