Author: Brian

Devo Max for Scotland? Why not?

Financial Times, November 5, 2011: Letters:  Salmond’s ‘devo max’ option is a camouflage device From Sir Brian Barder. Sir, You are surely unnecessarily alarmed by the Scottish first minister’s “shrewd” decision to include “devo...

How Labour should respond to Ken Clarke’s sentencing reforms

The Labour leadership is making a sad mistake in opposing the government’s decision to abolish IPPs (Indeterminate Sentences for Public Protection), as I argued in a new blog post yesterday.  The other sentencing changes...

The end of Indeterminate Sentences at last seems imminent

At last the prime minister himself has signalled the firm intention “shortly” to end the cruel injustice of Indeterminate Sentences for Public Protection (IPPs). David Hanson, Labour MP for Delyn, who was a minister...

Salmond’s referendum: UK federation beats disintegration

My letter in today’s Guardian argues that rising demand for fuller self-government in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland points to full UK federation as a better culmination of devolution than the disintegration of our...

End indeterminate sentences: please act urgently now (with update 14 Oct 2011)

Indeterminate Sentences for Public Protection (IPPs), which keep thousands of people indefinitely in prison long after they have been punished for their offence, inflict needless misery and injustice on IPP prisoners and their families. ...

Labour still stuck to the right of Ken Clarke when support for his reforms is urgently needed

Labour’s shadow Justice Secretary, Sadiq Khan, has again attacked Ken Clarke’s humane, courageous and progressive programme of penal reforms designed to reduce our bloated prison population, improve prison conditions by enabling prisoners to work...

The BBC and UK aid to Ethiopia: a mystery (with update of 29 Sept 2011)

Someone at the BBC seems to have it in for Ethiopia, for some reason.  Newsnight, the BBC’s most trusted and supposedly authoritative of current affairs programmes, this week (on 21 September 2011) thriftily recycled...

Libya: please don’t let ‘success’ go to our heads

As soon as the Libyan rebels appeared to have captured most of Tripoli, there was an outbreak of decidedly premature triumphalism by some, but not all, of the noisiest cheer-leaders for the NATO bombing...