I have just returned from Belfast's Wellington Park Hotel where 30 or so members of the Bill of Rights Forum are slaving over their draft report on what a new Bill should contain. They are expected to advocate a prohibition on slavery and forced labour but this does not, it seems, stop Forum members working away over the weekend in the dimly lit McWilliam suite (not named, I think, in honour of our Chief Human Rights Commissioner).
I was at the Forum to record a discussion between 3 Forum members, Sinn Fein's Martina Anderson, the UUP's Paula Bradshaw and the Committee on the Administration of Justice's Aideen Gilmore. This will be broadcast on Inside Politics at a quarter to one tomorrow and we range across the right to march, abortion, the promotion of women in public life, and the right to define yourself in any way you want, rather than being categorised as a unionist or nationalist.
The Bill is still in draft form and members are going through the text line by line indicating their support or opposition. But one draft I have obtained sets out the following categories:
1. Dignity and Equality
2. Personal Integrity (including the Right to Life)
3. Freedoms (including Rights to Liberty, Privacy, Freedom of Thought, Conscience and Religion, Freedom of Expression, Freedom of Assembly and Association, Right to Self Identification, and Right to Nationality)
4. Social Participation (various Social, Economic and Health related Rights)
5. Justice (Right to a Fair Trial, Rights of Victims and Witnesses and the recommendation on the age of criminal responsibility which has previously caused controversy)
6. Citizen's Rights (Right to participation and Good Governance, Freedom of Movement)
7. Rights Particular to Specific Groups (Rights of Children and Young People, who amongst other things, have a Right to Play, and Rights of Women and Victims)
With unionists generally far more sceptical about the proposed Bill than nationalists, there will not be any agreed text presented by the Forum Chair, Australian lawyer Chris Sidoti, to the Human Rights Commissioner, Monica McWilliams, on Monday. Instead the document will reflect a majority view with the opinions of those who dissent being recorded. Proposals for the Bill will eventually go from the Human Rights Commission to the Secretary of State Shaun Woodward, whose job it will be to put the Bill into Westminster legislation, bearing in mind the views of the Assembly.
As the draft document I have seen is very long I am putting it in the extended entry for your delectation. I should stress again that this is a working text. The final version is due to be published on Monday. As I sat in on the Forum's meeting, I could see some of the language being changed in front of my eyes.
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