By Amy Taylor, Natasha Salari and Alex Dobson
Immigration chaos engulfs Labour
Immigration minister Beverly Hughes yesterday resigned
from her post for misleading the public.
Home secretary David Blunkett admitted that yesterday was the
"worst day" of his political life.
Hughes admitted that she had misled the public by giving the
impression in interviews that she had not known about a suspected
visa scam in Eastern Europe.
Source:- The Times Friday 2 April page 1
Safe pair of hands for a tough job
Desmond Browne is to become the immigration minister after
Beverley Hughes' resignation yesterday.
Browne, a lawyer by training, was a junior minister in Northern
Ireland before being promoted to minister for work in June last
year.
Source:- The Times Friday 2 April page 10
Mother snatches girls at knifepoint
Police are concerned for the welfare of two young girls
abducted from their foster parents at knifepoint by their
mother.
Salina Hafeez and her sister Sarah were bundled into a car by their
mother, Shanaz Hafeez, and two men.
Cleveland police said that Hafeez was extremely depressed.
Source:- The Times Friday 2 April page 11
Legal system is failing fathers, says judge
One of the country’s most senior family judges has launched
an attack on the legal system for failing divorced and separated
fathers.
Mr Justice Munby said he felt “ashamed” after dealing
with a man who had fought unsuccessfully for five years to see his
daughter.
He argued that mothers who repeatedly defied court rulings on
access should be jailed.
He said a lack of resources and “scandalous” court
delays were major problems. But he also regarded the legal process
as “adversarial” and counter-productive because it
focused on the arguments of the parents, not the child.
Source:- The Daily Telegraph Friday 2 April page 3
Check on Shipman’s early career
The years that Dr Harold Shipman spent as a junior hospital doctor
will be re-investigated by the judge leading the inquiry into the
serial killer.
The decision was made by High Court judge Dame Janet Smith after a
health professional from Pontefract General Infirmary, in West
Yorkshire, contacted the inquiry with fresh concerns.
Shipman, who committed suicide in prison in January, was a junior
doctor at the infirmary from 1970 to 1974.
Source:- The Daily Telegraph Friday 2 April page 9
Falconer guilty of contempt for attacking
whistleblower
The Lord Chancellor has been rebuked by a parliamentary standards
watchdog after he disciplined a whistleblower who gave evidence to
a Commons committee.
Lord Falconer of Thoroton was accused of “contempt”
after he tried to remove Judy Weleminsky, who had submitted written
evidence to MPs about the shortcomings of an official child
protection agency, from her job.
He wrote to Weleminsky, a member of the board of the Children and
Family Court Advisory Support Service, and accused her of failing
to “observe confidentiality” and failing to
“behave in a corporate manner”. He suspended her and
called on her to resign from the board.
MPs on the standards committee agreed no further action should be
taken against Lord Falconer or the former Cafcass board
chairperson, Anthony Hewson, and David Crawley, a senior official
in the Department for Constitutional Affairs.