Jan 2019
Rory Stewart: ‘I’ll resign if prison violence doesn’t improve’ http://ow.ly/tiwj30nqQKZ
.........................................................
Rory Stewart: ‘I’ll resign if prison violence doesn’t improve’ http://ow.ly/tiwj30nqQKZ
.........................................................
Justice Secretary David Gauke has set out his vision for the future of 
probation services in England and Wales today, announcing plans to 
change and improve the current system and invest £22 million in extra 
support for offenders leaving prison. "Perhaps David Gauke should of 
versioned the failing of the Moj. 
 

- Government is strengthening offender supervision in existing CRC contracts and investing an extra £22 million each year to improve through-the-gate support
- CRC and NPS areas to be aligned - improving joint working and strengthening ties with key partners, including the third sector, local authorities and PCCs
- Community Rehabilitation Company (CRC) contracts will end two years early in 2020, with plans to work with the market to design new and improved contracts.
A consultation document
 published today outlines the Ministry of Justice’s intention to 
strengthen the supervision of offenders and increase confidence in 
community sentences.
It builds on the recent publication of our female offender and 
employment and education strategies, to demonstrate the department’s 
commitment to tackling reoffending by: investing in community provision;
 strengthening alternatives to short custodial sentences; and boosting 
rehabilitation and prospects for offenders.
Probation relies heavily on joint working with a range of agencies 
and today’s consultation outlines plans to create a more integrated and 
collaborative system, by improving partnerships with PCCs and the third 
sector.
In the future, CRC and NPS areas will be aligned, with ten new 
probation regions in England, simplifying and strengthening ties with 
key local partners and creating opportunities to co-commission 
rehabilitation services with PCCs.
Reforms to probation in 2015, known as ‘Transforming Rehabilitation’,
 were challenging, ambitious and have led to 40,000 extra offenders a 
year receiving support and supervision on release - a positive change 
for public safety.
This additional monitoring has been carried out by newly formed, 
‘Community Rehabilitation Companies’ (CRCs) who manage low and 
medium-risk offenders, and the publicly funded National Probation 
Service (NPS), who manage higher-risk offenders.
While CRCs have reduced the overall number of people reoffending, it 
is clear that probation providers have faced significant challenges. 
Unforeseen changes in the types of offenders coming to the courts and 
the sentences they receive have substantially reduced CRC income and 
affected the quality of frontline services.
That is why the consultation document sets out urgent action being 
taken to address existing issues with CRC contracts. This includes 
ending current CRC contracts early in 2020, improving supervision and 
through-the-gate support in the meantime, and using the lessons learnt 
so far to put in place improved services in the future, with more 
effective commercial arrangements.
Secretary of State, David Gauke said:
I am determined to have a probation service that
 protects the public, commands the confidence of the courts and 
ultimately reduces reoffending.
So we are taking decisive action now to improve the delivery of probation services in England and Wales.
We want to see less reliance on ineffective 
short prison terms, and in order to achieve this courts must have 
confidence that probation services will deliver tough community 
sentences - sentences that punish, but also help those who commit crime 
to turn their lives around and stop offending.
I am confident that the proposals set out in this consultation will play a major role in helping us to achieve this aim.
To improve services in the next two years, the Ministry of Justice is
 investing an additional £22 million a year in through-the-gate support 
for offenders when they leave prison, as part of wider changes to 
contracts to stabilise CRC delivery until the end of 2020 and allow CRCs
 to continue to deliver the level of service required.
The Ministry of Justice will also work with London and Greater 
Manchester to co-design future services in those areas as part of 
existing devolution arrangements.
In addition, the devolved responsibilities of the Welsh Government 
and existing arrangements in Wales make the delivery of probation 
services fundamentally different to England.
To reflect this, the consultation sets out proposals to bring the 
supervision of all offenders in Wales into the NPS and explore how wider
 partners can help to improve rehabilitative support for offenders, by 
better joining up with health, housing and other local services.
Alongside the structural and contractual changes, a new professional 
register will be introduced, helping staff to move between roles and 
develop their careers. The consultation also seeks views on improving 
the training and development of staff.
The consultation will seek to gather views and expertise from a range
 of potential providers, including the voluntary sector, as well as 
other stakeholders, and will inform the future delivery of probation 
services in England and Wales.
Ministry of Justice (MoJ) staff have access to their usual computer 
systems. Work continues with our main suppliers Atos and Microsoft to 
restore services, and we expect all court sites to be fully operational 
by the time they open in morning
..........................................................................................................
Moj the past week had experienced major IT network issues. They say it not a cyber attack and there has been no loss of data.
It was said today , most Ministry of Justice (MoJ) staff have access to their 
usual computer systems. Work continues with our main suppliers Atos and 
Microsoft to restore services, and we expect all court sites to be fully
 operational by the time they open tomorrow morning.
The current situation
currently (as of 23 January):
- most MoJ staff have access to the IT systems
- we have restored access to a further 309 MoJ sites
- we expect to have restored access to all HMCTS sites by Thursday morning and we hope to have restored access to all National Probation Service sites by the end of Thursday
- email and internet access is working across the estate via Wi-Fi and on mobile devices
- the prison estate is unaffected
- reformed online services such as divorce and probate have continued to work throughout the disruption
- hearings are continuing to progress in our courts (though we appreciate the extra burden placed on court users still without network access)
Impact on prisoners
The issues have caused frustration and inconvenience for our staff 
and users. But they have not led to detaining defendants or freeing 
criminals unlawfully.
Criminal Justice secure email system (CJSM)
The separate and unrelated issue last week affecting 12.5 per cent of
 users of the Criminal Justice secure email system (CJSM) has now been 
resolved.
All users can currently send and receive secure emails and we have restored the email history of all inboxes affected.
Why has this happened?
The network disruption initially affected devices connecting to the 
main MoJ network. This network is also used by HMCTS and other MoJ 
agencies and a number of arms-length bodies.
Together with our suppliers Atos and Microsoft, we are working hard to identify the root cause of the issues.
The network issues are unrelated to our £1 billion modernisation of 
the courts system. The disruption in recent days has been to the 
existing MoJ network. The Common Platform system is still in testing 
phase so, contrary to earlier reports, has not been affected.
Teams will continue to work around the clock to resolve the remaining
 issues. We will continue to update this news story with progress made.
Law courts in chaos as IT meltdown disrupts thousands of cases
Embarrassment for MoJ as network repeatedly crashes across England and Wales

Thousands of cases have been disrupted or delayed across England and 
Wales after the courts service’s main computer network repeatedly 
crashed, preventing lawyers and judges from working.
The communication failures, which started last week, are a 
significant embarrassment for the Ministry of Justice, which is 
investing £1.2bn in a high-profile programme promoting online hearings 
which aims to replace the legal profession’s traditional reliance on 
mountains of paperwork.
The IT breakdown meant that staff at the MoJ were unable to send 
emails, wireless connections went down, jurors could not be enrolled and
 barristers could not register for attendance payments. Courts were left
 unsure of when some defendants were due to appear and some court files 
could not be retrieved, leading to prosecutions being adjourned.
usan Acland-Hood, the head of HM Courts & Tribunal Service (HMCTS), tweeted on Tuesday evening:
 “update on the issues across MoJ systems that have been affecting 
courts & what is being done to fix them. I’m hugely grateful to 
HMCTS staff, professional users & others who’ve worked so hard to 
keep courts working through the problems – very sorry it was necessary.”
 longer statement on the MoJ’s website
 apologised to those who had been affected, admitting: “We know this is 
unacceptable and how deeply frustrating this has been for our staff and 
users.”
The department said access had been restored to “a large number of 
Ministry of Justice sites” and that the main suppliers of the affected 
technology, including Atos and Microsoft, were “working hard to restore 
access for the remaining sites and users”.
The MoJ denied that the disruption was due to a cyber-attack and insisted that there had been no loss of data.
Richard Atkins QC, the chair of the Bar Council, which represents 
barristers in England and Wales, said: “I have no doubt that the 
Ministry of Justice and 
HMCTS are doing all that they can to rectify this major problem, but 
it illustrates how vulnerable the delivery of justice is with reliance 
on weak IT systems in our courts.
“Whilst HMCTS is moving forward with its programme of online justice,
 these problems would suggest that more investment in the basics is 
needed first. We cannot have a justice system that comes to a shuddering
 halt the moment the IT does not work properly.”
Chris Henley QC, the chair of the Criminal Bar Association, told the 
Law Society Gazette: “Short-term savings often result in wider costs to 
the public purse and cause a broken criminal justice system to fall 
further apart. Crumbling court buildings are bad enough for court users –
 both the public and criminal practitioners – but digital failures can 
have far more profound 
consequences for all those awaiting trial.
“Prolonged IT failures do a disservice to the victims of crime and 
their families who may have already suffered the costs of delays from an
 already overstretched, chronically underfunded, broken criminal justice
 system.”
The Secret Barrister, an influential legal commentator on the state of the courts, tweeted:
 “The entire digital infrastructure of the courts has been broken for 
days. Phones aren’t working, court computers are offline, email is down.
 Imagine the headlines if it were the NHS. But it’s only justice, so no 
one cares. No accountability, no lessons learned.”
.........................................................................................................................

Jan 2019
First ever cross-government
The plan for reducing deaths from suicide in England has a focus on 
how social media and the latest technology can identify those most at 
risk.
  
The government has published the first cross-government suicide prevention plan.
 The plan has a focus on how social media and the latest technology – 
such as predictive analytics and artificial intelligence – can identify 
those at risk of suicide.
The plan will be led by the Minister for Mental Health and Suicide 
Prevention Jackie Doyle-Price. It sets out actions for local government,
 the NHS and the criminal justice system.
The plan commits the government to improving data held on causes of 
death among veterans to better understand the triggers that can lead 
someone to take their own life, such as debt and gambling addiction.
It also includes greater focus on addressing the increase in suicide 
and self-harm among young people, while social media companies will be 
asked to take more responsibility for online content that promotes 
methods of suicide and self-harm.
Other parts of the plan include:
- every local authority putting an effective suicide prevention plan in place
- ensuring every mental health trust has a zero-suicide ambition plan for mental health inpatients by the end of 2019
- every prison putting actions in place to reduce suicides and self-harm and improve staff awareness and training
- addressing the specific needs of the highest risk groups, including middle-aged men, with £25 million funding
- improving research on things that can be linked to suicide, such as debt and gambling addiction
There are 4,500 suicides each year in England, and around 13 people 
end their life every day. Men are 3 times more likely to die by suicide 
than women, and suicide is the leading cause of death in men under 50. 
Suicide is also a leading cause of death in young people.
The Prime Minister appointed Jackie Doyle-Price as the UK’s first 
Suicide Prevention Minister in October 2018. Part of her role is to work
 across local and national government to carry out the national suicide prevention strategy, published in 2012.
The cross-government suicide prevention plan published in January 
2019 supports the national suicide prevention strategy, following 
recommendations from the Health Select Committee’s inquiry into suicide 
prevention in 2016.
Minister for Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Jackie Doyle-Price said:
As a society we need to do everything we can to support vulnerable and at-risk people, as well as those in crisis, and give them the help they desperately need.I will be working with local councils, the NHS and the justice system to make sure suicide prevention plans are put in place across public services.Together, we will do everything in our power to meet our ambition to reduce suicides by at least 10% by 2020 – and I look forward to working collaboratively with social media and tech companies to help achieve our ambitions.
Samaritans CEO Ruth Sutherland said:
We welcome the publication of the workplan and hope it will help save more lives.Every 6 seconds someone contacts Samaritans volunteers for support, so we know that there is a huge amount to be done to help those struggling to cope.When we can work in partnership, we can make a bigger impact in preventing suicide, particularly among the hardest to reach high-risk groups such as low-income and middle-aged men, and those whose occupation puts them at higher risk. Working to address inequalities in suicide is key.We also need more research into the increases in self-harm and suicide among young people, and why gambling addiction and debt can drive suicides. Improving suicide data is essential to help us put more effective suicide prevention in place.
.................................................................................................................................
Theresa May considering scrapping Human Rights Act following Brexit

 January 2019 
Rory Stewart OBE MP
Under Secretary of State for Prisons and Probation,
Rehabilitation and Sentencing
Ministry of Justice
102 Petty France
London SW1H 9AJ
Under Secretary of State for Prisons and Probation,
Rehabilitation and Sentencing
Ministry of Justice
102 Petty France
London SW1H 9AJ
Dear Minister of State
The Rt Hon David Gauke MP
Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice
102 Petty France
London SW1 9AJ
Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice
102 Petty France
London SW1 9AJ
Dear Secretary of State
We write to express our collective concern regarding the proposal to 
re-let the Community Rehabilitation Company (CRC) contracts. 
Even without making any presuppositions about the long-term future and 
viability of these contracts, we are very concerned over the short time 
frame that the government proposes during which it is intended to 
re-align and re-let these undertakings.
he prime minister is to consider 
repealing the Human Rights Act after Brexit, despite promising she is 
“committed” to its protections, a minister has revealed. This is, after 
all, a government that has always tended to regard the human rights of 
some social groups as nothing more than a bureaucratic inconvenience. 
Many of us have been very concerned about the implications of Brexit for human rights in the UK.
The House of Lords EU Justice Sub-Committee has exchanged correspondence with the Government about clarifying the wording of the Political Declaration regarding the European Convention on Human Rights. 
There is no justification for editing or
 repealing the Human Rights Act itself, that would make Britain the 
first European country to regress in the level and degree of our human 
rights protection. It is through times of recession and times of 
affluence alike that our rights ought to be the foundation of our 
society, upon which the Magna Carta, the Equality Act and the Human 
Rights Act were built – protecting the most vulnerable citizens from the
 powerful and ensuring those who govern are accountable to the rule of 
law.
Observation of human rights 
distinguishes democratic leaders from dictators and despots. Human 
Rights are the bedrock of our democracy, they are universal, and are a 
reflection of a society’s and a governments’ recognition of the equal 
worth of every citizens’ life.
Nonetheless, the government will decide 
on the future of the landmark legislation once “the process of leaving 
the EU concludes”, according to a letter submitted to a parliamentary inquiry.
This disclosure comes despite the Brexit
 white paper stating last year that the UK would remain in the European 
Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), after  following a warning from the 
European Union (EU) that pulling out would jeopardise a future security 
deal. However, the prime minister has previously pledged to leave the 
ECHR, expressing frustration because there was no Commons majority for 
doing so. 
It is in this context of previous 
statements of intent that the wording of the letter was described as 
“troubling” by the Lords EU Justice Sub-Committee, which has warned that
 the letter casts doubt on more recent, repeated pledges from the 
government to protect the ECHR.
“Is the government sincere in its commitment to the ECHR?”, Baroness Kennedy of The Shaws, the committee’s chair, asked.
“If so, why has it failed to give 
assurances that it will not repeal or reform the Human Rights Act, which
 in essence incorporates the rights set out in the ECHR into domestic 
British law?”
The committee wrote to the Ministry of 
Justice after the alarm was raised by the wording of the political 
declaration, which was agreed with the EU in December alongside the 
legally binding divorce deal.
The declaration said the UK would merely
 agree “to respect the framework of the European Convention on Human 
Rights” – dropping the previous pledge of being “committed” to it. 
Previous plans to replace the Human Rights Act with a ‘British Bill of 
Rights’ appeared in the 2010 Programme for Government, and
 in the Conservative manifesto in 2015. included an emphasis on 
interpreting rights more subjectively, rather than regarding them as 
‘absolute’. 
In response, Edward Argar, a junior 
justice minister, wrote: “The difference in wording does not represent a
 change in the UK’s position on the ECHR
“A central tenet of our future 
relationship with the EU is our mutual belief in the importance of human
 rights and fundamental freedoms.”
But he went on to suggest that the Human Rights Act may be scrapped when Brexit is concluded.
He wrote: “Our manifesto committed to 
not repealing or replacing the Human Rights Act while the process of EU 
exit is underway.” 
“It is right that we wait until the 
process of leaving the EU concludes before considering the matter 
further in the full knowledge of the new constitutional landscape.
Many Conservatives are critical of 
Labour’s Human Rights Act, claiming it gives “too many rights to 
criminals” and some have even claimed it undermines “personal 
responsibility.”
However, in 2015 Amnesty UK commissioned a poll that
 indicated the British public are not particularly willing to see any 
change to existing Human Rights legislation, with only one in 10 people 
in the UK (11%) believing that scrapping the Human Rights Act should be a
 government aim.
It’s extremely worrying that a 
government thinks it should pick and choose which rights we are entitled
 to and select who they deem worthy of them. The whole point of rights 
and protections is that they are universal: they must apply to everyone 
equally in order to work at all.
It took people in the UK a very long 
time to claim the rights we have and we mustn’t let the Conservatives 
take them away with the stroke of a pen.
The peers said it would imperil human 
rights if the government “intend to break the formal link” between the 
UK courts and the EHCR.
Baroness Kennedy said: “Again and again 
we are told that the government is committed to the European Convention 
on Human Rights, but without a concrete commitment, and with messaging 
that is changing and becoming diluted.”
The government have played a long game, 
however, and have almost certainly always intended to repeal the Human 
Rights Act. One issue that prevented that happening over the last few 
years is the Good Friday Agreement, as the Labour government also 
committed to incorporate the European Convention of Human ECHR into 
the law of Northern Ireland and to the establishment of a Northern 
Ireland Human Rights Commission. 
The politics of regression
In 2015, wrote about how the government has quietly edited the ministerial code,
 which was updated on October 15  without any announcement at all. The 
code sets out the standard of conduct expected of ministers. The latest 
version of the code is missing a key element regarding complicity with 
international law.
The previous code, issued in 2010, said there was an “overarching
 duty on ministers to comply with the law including international law 
and treaty obligations and to uphold the administration of justice and 
to protect the integrity of public life”.
The new version of the code has been edited to say only that there is an“overarching duty on ministers to comply with the law and to protect the integrity of public life”.
A Conservative party policy document had
 revealed that the ministerial code will be rewritten in the context of 
the UK withdrawing from the European convention on human rights. In 
order to help achieve these aims the document says: “We will amend 
the ministerial code to remove any ambiguity in the current rules about 
the duty of ministers to follow the will of Parliament in the UK.”
In the original Conservative proposals 
to scrap our existing human rights framework, and replace it with their 
own, one sentence from the misleadingly titled document –Protecting Human Rights in the UK, (found on page 6 ) – is particularly chilling: “There will be a threshold below which Convention rights will not be engaged.”
Basically this means that human rights 
will no longer be absolute or universally applied – they will be subject
 to state stipulations and caveats. And discrimination. The government 
will establish a threshold below which Convention rights will not be 
engaged, allowing UK courts to strike out what are deemed trivial cases.
The Conservatives’ motivation for 
changing our human rights legislation is to allow reinterpretations to 
work around the new legislation when they deem it necessary. The
 internationally agreed rights that the Conservatives have always seen 
as being open to interpretation will become considerably prone to 
ideological bias, prejudice and open to subjective challenge.
Breaking the formal link between the 
European Court of Human Rights and British law would mean any judgement 
from Europe would be treated as “advisory” only, rather than legally 
binding, and would need to be “approved” by parliament. Such a Bill 
would profoundly disempower citizens because it will shift the balance 
of democracy completely, placing power almost entirely in the hands of 
the state.
Whatever constitutional or political 
configurations emerge following Brexit, the present threat to rights and
 equality is a major threat to citizens’ liberties and freedoms. It 
demands coherent and collective action in the public interest.  
The government’s shameful lack of progress on disability rights in the UK. I discussed the details of a new report and the recommendations made by the UK Independent Mechanism update report to the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

his is a summary of some key concerns that I only touched on in my original write up, and it also focuses on one of the important themes that emerged in the report: the potential impact of Brexit on disabled people’s rights.
The new report and submission to the UNCRPD – UK Independent Mechanism update report to the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (published
 October 2018) – provides an independent assessment of the UK 
Independent Mechanism (UKIM) on the “disappointing” lack of progress by 
the UK governments to implement the UN’s recommendations since August 
2017. 
A year on, there is still 
no comprehensive UK-wide strategy demonstrating how the UK will 
implement the CRPD Committee’s recommendations. There
 has also been “continued reluctance” from the UK Government to accept 
the conclusions of the CRPD Committee’s inquiry report on the impact of 
the UK Government’s policies on the rights of disabled people. 
Disabled people across the UK continue 
to face serious regression of their rights to an adequate standard of 
living and social protection, to live independently and to be included 
in the community. UKIM has reiterated that the grave and systematic 
violations identified by the CRPD Committee need to be addressed as a 
matter of urgency and that the overall approach of the UK Government 
towards social security protection requires a complete overhaul, so that
 it is informed by human rights frameworks, standards and principles, to
 ensure disabled people’s rights are respected, protected and fulfilled.
Despite the empirical evidence presented
 from a variety of researchers and the UN investigation concerning the 
significantly adverse effect of welfare reform on disabled people’s 
rights to independent living and to an adequate standard of living and 
social  security, the UK Government has failed to act on this evidence 
and to implement the CRPD Committee’s recommendations regarding these 
rights. 
The authors of the report remain 
seriously concerned about the continued failure of the UK Government to 
conduct an assessment of the cumulative impact on disabled people  of 
multiple policy, cuts and law reforms in relation to living standards 
and social security. 
In the section about prejudice and 
negative attitudes, the report also cites a shameful example of rhetoric
 from the government that has potentially reinforced negative attitudes 
and the stigma surrounding mental health and disability: 
“This includes 
the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, stating before a 
Committee of the UK Parliament: ‘It is almost certainly the case that by
 increasing participation in the workforce, including far higher levels 
of participation by marginal groups and very high levels of engagement 
in the workforce, for example of disabled people – something we 
should be extremely proud of – may have had an impact on overall 
productivity measurements.’ 
Many people understood this statement as
 indicating that the increase in disabled people in employment is partly
 responsible for the UK’s decreasing productivity.” 
The report also says that employment rates for disabled people have actually risen only very marginally.  
Conservative prejudice is embedded in social security policy and administration
The UKIM report says that government has
 not taken appropriate measures to combat negative and 
discriminatory stereotypes or prejudice against persons with 
disabilities in public and the media, including the government’s own claims that ‘dependency’ on benefits is in itself a disincentive of employment. This
 is important because it shows just how embedded Conservative prejudice 
is in policies and within our social security administration. 
The idea that welfare somehow creates 
the problems it was designed to alleviate, such as poverty and 
inequality, has become almost ‘common sense’ and because of that, it’s a
 narrative that remains largely unchallenged. Yet international research has shown that generous welfare provision leads to more, better quality and sustainable employment. 
Moreover, this ideological position has 
been used politically as a justification to reduce social security 
provision so that it is no longer an adequate amount to meet citizens’ 
basic living needs. The aim is to discredit the welfare system itself, 
along with those needing its support. The government have long wished to
 replace the publicly funded social security provision ultimately with 
mandatory private insurance schemes.
The idea that welfare creates 
‘dependency’ and ‘disincentivises’ work has been used as a justification
 for the introduction of cuts and an extremely punitive regime entailing
 ‘conditionality’ and sanctions. The governenment have selectively used 
punitive behavioural modification elements of behavioural economics 
theory and its discredited behaviourist language of ‘incentives’ to 
steadily withdraw publicly funded social security provision.
However, most of the public have already
 contributed to social security, those needing support tend to move in 
and out of work. Very few people remain out of work on a permanent 
basis. The Conservatives have created a corrosive and divisive myth that
 there are two discrete groups in society: 
tax payers and ‘scroungers’ –
 a class of economic free riders. This of course is not true, since 
people claiming welfare support also pay taxes, such as VAT and council 
tax, and most have already worked and will work again, given the 
opportunity to do so. For those who are too ill to work, as a so-called 
civilise society, we should not hesitate to support them.
In the recommendations, the authors say 
the government should implement broad mass media campaigns, in 
consultation with organisations representing persons with disabilities, 
particularly those affected by the welfare reform, to promote them as 
full rights holders, in accordance with the Convention; and adopt 
measures to address complaints of harassment and hate crime by persons 
with disabilities, promptly investigate those allegations, hold the 
perpetrators accountable and provide fair and appropriate compensation 
to victims. 
As a society we take tend to take human 
rights for granted. We seldom think about rights because much of the 
time, there is no need to. It’s not until we directly experience 
discrimination and oppression that we recognise the value of having a 
universal human rights framework. Our rights define the relationship 
between citizen and state, and ensure that there is no abuse of power. 
However, we no longer have equal access to justice and redress for human
 rights breaches and discrimination. 
The high demand for advice on disability
 benefits since the government’s welfare reform means that the almost 
complete removal of welfare benefits from the scope of legal aid has had
 a disproportionate impact on disabled people or those with a long-term 
health condition. 
People entitled to disability benefits 
relied on legal aid to support appeals of incorrect decisions and to 
provide a valuable check on decision-making concerning eligibility for 
welfare support. The revisions to the financial eligibility criteria for
 legal aid have had a disproportionate impact on various groups 
including disabled people, women, children and migrants. This is because
 of the restrictions that the government placed on legal aid 
accessibility with the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 (LASPO).
There has been a 99% decrease in 
support provided by the Legal Aid Agency for clients with 
disability-related welfare benefits issues, compared with pre-LASPO 
levels, and the total number of such claims has plummeted from 29,801 in
 2011/12 to 308 in 2016/17. 
The government has failed to 
ensure access to justice, removing appropriate legal advice and support,
 including through reasonable and procedural accommodation for disabled 
people seeking redress and reparation for the violation of their rights,
 as covered in the  report. 
It’s difficult to imagine that this 
wasn’t a coordinated effort on the part of the government to restrict 
citizen freedoms, support and access to justice for precisely those who 
need justice and remedies the most.
Human rights don’t often seem as though they matter, until they do. But by then, it may be too late. 
Concerns about the impact of Brexit on the human rights of disabled people
In 2016, I wrote an article about concerns raised regarding the rights of disabled people following Brexit. Earlier this year, I wrote another article
 about my concerns that the European fundamental rights charter was 
excluded in the European Union (EU) withdrawal Bill, including 
protection from eugenic policy.
The result of the EU 
referendum on the UK’s membership of the European Union, and forthcoming
 withdrawal, carries some obvious and very worrying implications for the
 protection of citizens rights and freedoms in the UK. Historically the 
UK Conservative government has strongly opposed much of Europe’s social 
rights agenda.
So it was very concerning that the House
 of Commons voted down a Labour amendment to ensure that our basic human
 rights are protected after Brexit, as set out in the European Union 
Charter. 
The EU Withdrawal Bill threatened to 
significantly reduce existing human rights protections. It excluded both
 the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights (in its entirety) and the right of
 action for violations of EU General Principles from domestic law after 
the UK’s withdrawal. It also handed sweeping powers to ministers to 
alter legislation without appropriate parliamentary scrutiny, placing 
current rights and equality laws at risk.
Worryingly, Suella Fernandes, who was promoted to the Brexit department earlier this year warned
 in November last year that transposing the ‘flabby’ charter into 
British law would give UK citizens additional protections on issues such
 as “biomedicine, eugenics, personal data and collective bargaining.”
However, the very fact that anyone at 
all in government objects to retaining these fundamental rights and 
protections indicates that we do very clearly need them.
It should be inconceivable that a 
democratic legislature would vote to take away citizens rights. The 
regressive step means the loss of the Charter goes rights that simply 
don’t exist in the Human Rights Act or in our common law. 
Gone is the 
enforceable right to human dignity. Gone are our rights to data 
protection, comprehensive protection for the rights of the child, a 
free-standing right to non-discrimination, protection of a child’s best 
interests and the right to human dignity, refugee rights, the right to 
conscientious objection, academic freedom and wide-ranging fair trial 
rights to name but a few. Then there are the losses of economic and 
social rights. Gone too, are the right to a private life, freedom of 
speech, equality provisions and employment rights governing how workers 
are treated. These are all laws that protect us all from abuses of 
power. 
A group of more than 20 organisations 
and human rights legal experts, including the Equality and Human Rights 
Commission, signed an open letter on the importance of the Charter of Fundamental Rights ahead of the EU (Withdrawal) Bill returning to Parliament on 16 January this year. The letter was published in the Observer.
Trevor Tayleur, an associate professor 
at the University of Law, explained that the charter, although narrower 
in focus than the Human Rights Act, offers a far more robust defence of fundamental rights.
“At present, the main means of 
protecting human rights in the UK is the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA) ,” 
he said. “This incorporates the bulk of the rights and freedoms 
enshrined in the European convention on human rights into UK law and 
thereby enables individuals to enforce their convention rights in the UK
 courts. However, there is a significant limitation to the protection 
afforded by the HRA because it does not override acts of parliament.
“In contrast, the protection afforded by
 the EU charter of fundamental rights is much stronger because where 
there is a conflict between basic rights contained in the charter and an
 act of the Westminster parliament, the charter will prevail over the 
act.” 
Under the HRA, only an individual who is
 a “victim” of a rights violation can bring a claim, whereas anyone 
with “sufficient interest” can apply for judicial review based on the 
Charter (see this briefing at p 11)
In their report, UKIM say:  “There are 
fears that the significant uncertainty in relation to Brexit will lead 
to a further deterioration of disabled people’s rights. 
“The lack of a devolved government in 
Northern Ireland is also a specific concern to that jurisdiction, 
because it is significantly inhibiting the relevant departments from 
taking the required steps. Without a clear and coordinated plan for how 
the UK and devolved governments will address the UN recommendations 
systematically, the limited steps taken so far are unlikely to be enough to address the concerns raised by the CRPD Committee.”
The report goes on to say: “Following 
the European Union (EU) referendum in June 2016, there continues to be 
significant uncertainty regarding the future applicability of  existing 
human rights protections in the UK that derive from EU law. The EU 
Charter of Fundamental Rights was excluded from the European Union 
(Withdrawal) Act 2018, meaning that from ‘exit day’ it will no longer 
apply in domestic law. 
“As a result, domestic protections are 
more vulnerable to repeal. The Charter goes further than the 
non-discrimination provisions in the Equality Act 2010 or the European 
Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Article 26 of the Charter, 
in particular, is a useful interpretive tool to support disabled 
people’s right to independence and integration and participation in the 
community. 
The European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018
 also leaves human rights protections at risk of being changed through 
the use of wide-ranging delegated powers. This means that changes to 
fundamental rights currently protected by EU law can be made by 
ministers through secondary legislation [statutory instruments, usually 
reserved for ‘non-controversial policy amendments] without being subject
 to full parliamentary scrutiny.
The EU is itself a party to the CRPD. 
Under EU law, international treaties to which the EU is party have a 
different status than they do under UK law. For example, EU law (unlike 
UK law) must be interpreted consistently with the CRPD. To ensure there 
is no regression, and that disabled people in the UK benefit from future
 progress driven by the CRPD, the UK Government should ensure 
these protections are incorporated into UK law, for example by giving 
enhanced status to the CRPD. 
The Conservatives have used secondary 
legslation to try and quietly push through several very controversial 
policies over recent years, such as £4bn-worth of cuts to family tax 
credits, and the removal of maintenance grants from around half a 
million of the poorest students in England. The changes mainly hit 
disabled, ethnic minority and older students. 
The government have introduced swathes 
of significant new laws covering everything from fracking to fox hunting
 and benefit cuts without debate and scrutiny on the floor of the House 
of Commons. Many of these policies were not included in the 
Conservatives’ election manifesto and were nodded through by obscure 
Commons committees without the substance of the change being debated.

After the House of Lords successfully 
challenged the tax credit instrument, the Government then proposed 
limiting peers rights to reject statutory instruments. This would mean 
if one was rejected by the Lords, the ministers would simply have to 
retable it and it would pass automatically.  All of this should be seen 
alongside other Conservative proposals – including limits on freedom of 
information, changes to constituency boundaries and electoral 
registration, attempts to choke the opposition of funding within the 
Trade Union Bill, and the Lobbying Act. 
In light of this repressive pattern of 
behaviour, you could be forgiven for thinking that we’ve entered the 
realms of constitutional gerrymandering, with an authoritarian executive
 waging war on the institutions that hold them to account. With its fear
 of opposition and loathing of challenge, the government wants to stifle
 debate, shut down opposition and block proper scruting and democratic 
accountability. 
It is within this authoritarian 
political context that many of us have raised concerns about the impact 
of Brexit on the human rights of disabled citizens. 
I’m always concerned that language use 
sometimes reinforces prejudices against disabled people by focusing on 
us as a group as ‘vulnerable’ and as ‘those in need’, as opposed to 
citizens and rights holders. However, grave and systematic violations of
 disabled peoples’ human right inevitably increases our vulnerability to
 further political abuse. 
The Yogyakarta Principles, one of the international human rights instruments use the term “vulnerability” as such potential to abuse and/or social and economic exclusion.
 Social vulnerability is created through the interaction of social 
forces and multiple “stressors”, and resolved through social (as opposed
 to individual) means. 
Social vulnerability is the 
product of social inequalities. It arises through social, cultural, 
political and economic processes. 
While some individuals within a socially vulnerable context may
 break free from the hierarchical order, social vulnerability itself 
persists because of structural – social, cultural economical and 
political – influences that continue to reinforce vulnerability. Some 
campaigners are very critical of the use of the word ‘vulnerability’, 
because they feel it leads to attitudes and perceptions of disabled 
people as passive victims. 
Since 2010, no social group has 
organised, campaigned and protested more than disabled people. Many of 
us have lived through harrowing times under this government and the 
last, when our very existence has become so precarious because of 
targeted and cruel Conservative policies and disproportionate cuts to 
our lifeline support. Yet we have remained strong.in our resolve. 
Despite this, some of our dear friends and comrades  have been tragically lost – they have not survived, yet many of them were very strong in their resolve to challenge discrimination and oppression.
In one of the wealthiest democratic 
nations on earth, no group of people should have to fight for their 
survival. Vulnerability is rather more about the potential for some 
social groups being subjected to political abuse than it is about 
individual qualities. Disabled people currently  are and have been. This
 is empirically verified by the report and conclusions drawn from the United Nations inquiry into
 the grave and systematic violations of disabled people’s human rights 
here in the UK, by a so-called democratic government. 
The government’s ‘paternalism’ is authoritarian gaslighting
Over recent years, Conservative policies have become increasingly ‘paternalist’, also reflecting the authoritarian turn, in that they are designed to act upon us,
 to ‘change’ our behaviours through the use of negative reinforcement 
(‘incentives’), while we are completely excluded from policy design and 
aims. Our behaviours are being aligned with neoliberal outcomes, 
conflating our needs and interests with the private financial profit of 
the powerful. 
As one of the instigators of the United 
Nations investigation, to which I regularly submitted evidence regarding
 the government’s systematic violations of the human rights of disabled 
people, and as a person with disability, I don’t care for being  
described by Damian Green as
 “patronising” or being told that disabled people – the witnesses of the
 investigation – presented an “outdated view” of disability in the UK. 
This is a government minister attempting to discredit and re-write our 
accounts and experiences while ignoring the empirical evidence we have 
presented. Such actions are profoundly oppressive.
The only opportunity disabled people 
have been presented with to effectively express our fears, experiences 
and concerns about increasingly punitive and discriminatory policies, to
 voice a democratic opinion more generally and to be heard, has been 
in dialogue with an international human rights organisation, and still this government refuse to hear what we have to say. Nor
 are we consulted with, democratically included or invited to 
participate in the executive’s decision-making that directly affects 
us. As UKIM note: 
“There is a continued lack of action 
from the UK and devolved governments on the CRPD Committee’s 
recommendations. This includes setting up systems that will  ensure that
 disabled people and their organisations are involved in the design, 
implementation, and monitoring and evaluation of legislation, policy or 
programmes that affect their lives. It remains unclear how the new 
Inter-Ministerial Group on Disability and Society will work with 
disabled people and their organisations, and UKIM, to promote 
and monitor implementation of UN CRPD. 
“It is particularly concerning that the 
UN CRPD’s requirement to effectively involve disabled people and their 
organisations is not specifically reflected in the inter-ministerial 
group’s terms of reference. Nor do the terms of reference refer to the 
CRPD or the CRPD Committee’s recommendations.”
Oppression always involves the 
objectification of those being dominated; all forms of oppression imply 
the devaluation of the subjectivity and experiences of the oppressed.
This is very evident in the government’s approach to designing policies that act upon us. 
 The government has consistently failed to actively consult, engage with
 and include disabled people, our representative organisations and give 
due consideration to our views in the design, implementation, monitoring
 and evaluation of any legislation, policy or programme action related 
to our rights. Furthermore, the current Minister of State for Disabled 
People, Health and Work, Sarah Newton, has refused to meet with disabled people and allied organisations. (See also I’m a disabled person and Sarah Newton is an outrageous, gaslighting liar.)
Last year, Theresia Degener, who leads 
the UN’s Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), 
said the UK Government has “totally neglected” disabled people, during 
a two day meeting with UK government officials in Geneva.
Degener told them: “Evidence before us 
now and in our inquiry procedure as published in our 2016 report reveals
 that social cut policies have led to a human catastrophe in your 
country, totally neglecting the vulnerable situation people with 
disabilities find themselves in.” 
The Government’s welfare cuts have 
resulted in “grave and systematic violations” of the rights of disabled 
people – a claim opposed by ministers but supported by UK courts.
For example, Judges have ruled that 
three of the government’s flagship welfare policies are illegal because 
of the impact they have on disabled people and single parents. In
 January 2016, the Court of Appeal declared the so-called ‘bedroom tax’ 
unlawful because of its consequences for disabled children, as well as 
victims of domestic violence. 
Sanctions imposed on people who refused 
to or could not take part in the Department for Work and Pension’s ‘back
 to work’ schemes were also thrown out by Court of Appeal judges in 
April 2016. In June 2017 the High 
Court said the government’s benefit cap is unlawful and causes “real 
misery for no good purpose”.  This year, a High Court ruling found that 
the Personal Independence Payments (PIP) policy had discriminated 
against people with mental health conditions. 
Between 2011 and 2017 the Department of 
Work and Pensions (DWP) underpaid more than £450,000,000 in means-tested
 benefits, due to its mishandling of the process by which claimants were
 moved from incapacity benefit to employment and support allowance. 
When announcing its
 plans to remedy those underpayments on 14th December 2017, the DWP 
claimed the law ‘barred’ it from paying claimants any underpayments 
arising before 21st October 2014. That would have had two serious 
effects: first, up to £150,000,000 of the underpaid benefit would have 
been kept by the Government instead of passed to citizens who were 
deprived of it through no fault of their own; and second, any arrears 
which were paid to disabled people could after 52 weeks have been 
treated as ‘capital’, and reduced or stopped their ongoing entitlement 
to benefit.
In March 2018 the Child Poverty Action Group, acting for one affected claimant, brought judicial review proceedings in R (Smith) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions JR/1249/2018 arguing that the DWP’s position was unlawful. 
The DWP accepted that it ‘got the law wrong’.
 The DWP said it will now start making those payments. It was necessary 
to take legal action against the Government because it said it had no 
legal power to fully remedy the consequences of a major error it had 
made in transferring claimants from incapacity benefit to employment and
 support allowance.
Ministers have also accused by the UN of
 misleading the public about the impact of Government policies by 
refusing to answer questions and using statistics in an “unclear way.” 
A teacher was 
reportedly fired after CCTV footage showed her dragging a screaming 
9-year-old autistic boy across the floor when he refused to walk.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Gaslighting.
The CRPD Committee has requested that 
the State party (the government) disseminate the concluding observations
 of their inquiry widely, including to non-governmental organisations 
and organisations of persons with disabilities, and to disabled people 
themselves and members of their families, in national and minority 
languages, including sign language, and in accessible formats, including
 Easy Read, and to make them available on the government website on 
human rights. 
That hasn’t happened and is unlikely to do so in the future. So please do share this article, The government’s shameful lack of progress on disability rights in the UK – new report update and submission to the UNCRPD Committee, and the UKIM update and shadow report widely.
A teacher was 
reportedly fired after CCTV footage showed her dragging a screaming 
9-year-old autistic boy across the floor when he refused to walk.
In the footage, Trina Abrams can be seen marching down a corridor of 
Wurtland Elementary School, in Kentucky, while pulling the youngster 
along by his hand.
His mother Angel Nelson, who shared the clip on social media, claims 
that her son was left with a fractured wrist as a result of what 
happened.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Remind Theresa May why human rights is important, its not just about saving money its about defending vulnerable people who cant defend the self. The vulnerable don't even have enough disability solicitors or schools there rights are a constant battle for there family.
A teacher was reportedly fired after CCTV footage showed her dragging a screaming 9-year-old autistic boy across the floor when he refused to walk.

In the
footage, Trina Abrams can be seen marching down a corridor of Wurtland
Elementary School, , while pulling the youngster along by his hand.
The
little boy suffers from numerous diagnoses including autism, ADHD, and PTSD.
The little boy suffers from numerous diagnoses including autism, ADHD, and PTSD.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
In the footage, 
Trina Abrams can be seen marching down a corridor of Wurtland Elementary
 School, in Kentucky, while pulling the youngster along by his hand.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
A teacher was 
reportedly fired after CCTV footage showed her dragging a screaming 
9-year-old autistic boy across the floor when he refused to walk.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
A teacher was 
reportedly fired after CCTV footage showed her dragging a screaming 
9-year-old autistic boy across the floor when he refused to walk.
In the footage, Trina Abrams can be seen marching down a corridor of 
Wurtland Elementary School, in Kentucky, while pulling the youngster 
along by his hand.
His mother Angel Nelson, who shared the clip on social media, claims 
that her son was left with a fractured wrist as a result of what 
happened.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
A teacher was 
reportedly fired after CCTV footage showed her dragging a screaming 
9-year-old autistic boy across the floor when he refused to walk.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
A teacher was 
reportedly fired after CCTV footage showed her dragging a screaming 
9-year-old autistic boy across the floor when he refused to walk.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
A teacher was 
reportedly fired after CCTV footage showed her dragging a screaming 
9-year-old autistic boy across the floor when he refused to walk.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
A teacher was 
reportedly fired after CCTV footage showed her dragging a screaming 
9-year-old autistic boy across the floor when he refused to walk.
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
Read more: https://metro.co.uk/2019/01/11/teacher-fired-breaking-autistic-boys-arm-dragging-along-floor-8335792/?ito=social&fbclid=IwAR2btpEKXSaJ-Gx3TC0amn7DdoJQb91NSAsmtOmovPAzQ-atxYzcrYKsxo0?ito=cbshare
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MetroUK | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MetroUK/
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.