I was under the impression that there is an established process for introducing new laws or updating sentencing guidance. You know, one that involves elected representatives, legal professionals and senior judges.GG. wrote: Wed Feb 20, 2019 10:28 am The fundamental problem is that the sanctions under the criminal justice system in the UK simply don't reflect the seriousness of this kind of act.
Under the legislation in force at the time she left, I believe the maximum likely sentence (according to a legal analysis I read) would be 5 years. So potentially out in 2.5 and free to carry on fraternising with extremists in the UK and declaring that ISIS is fine because what they did was not haram under sharia law. Very much inadequate.
There is a more recent (Counter-Terrorism and Border Security Act 2019) legislation that take a more Australian style approach and adds to current legislation in order to:
- confer extra-territorial jurisdiction on a number of further offences to ensure that individuals abroad can be prosecuted for having encouraged or carried out acts of terror overseas; and
- provide for a new offence of entering or remaining in an area outside the United Kingdom that has been designated in regulations by the Secretary of State in order to protect the public from a risk of terrorism.
These would seem to do the job for Begum as far as ensuring she doesn't slip below the factual burden of proof for other existing offences (still TBC whether sentencing would continue to be derisory), but questions are obvious around the ability to apply retrospectively despite the wording around "remaining in an area". She is currently no longer in ISIS territory but a refugee camp as I understand it.
Or is it a new brexit thing - just let facebook decide, make up new laws as you go and woe betide you if you're brown.