No case for foxhunting

As Basil Fawlty said: "Cuddle one of these and you'll never play the guitar again"

I don’t subscribe to the view that while British soldiers were dying in Afghanistan, it was wrong to run a story about two young girls being mauled by a fox in their own home. Two little girls have been nastily injured and that would have been a story whatever else was going on.

But neither do I agree that this case furthers the argument to repeal the hunting ban. We have plenty of foxes around here and as soon as they see you, they scarper. None would dream of coming into the house and if they did – ban or no ban – they’d be lucky to make it out again. But truly urban foxes – those that live in London boroughs and inner city areas – are much more used to human presence and have learned that we are rarely a threat (at least intentionally) and they can outpace us in unenclosed spaces.

Foxes are highly evolved predators, which makes them efficient hunters but also rather unpleasant killers of domestic pets. There is a reason, after all, that hunting was initiated in the first instance ie to protect livestock. That reason still holds but the Hunting Act has been in force for five years now and livestock numbers have not dramatically fallen and foxes are still controlled in the countryside – often, it has to be said, by huntsmen.

The difference in behaviours between the urban and country fox means that trying to use an urban context to justify a country pursuit is just nonsense. I maintain that illiberal though the Hunting Act may have been, the country has moved on and there are more pressing things to attend to. As you can see in the Daily Mail comments, the nation is totally polarised on this issue – the anti-hunt lobby are prepared to libel the mother in the story by insinuating that foxes weren’t responsible for the attack and the pro-hunt viewpoint is that we should be able to kill these animals as necessary.

My heart instinctively wants hunting back – it was a spiteful, class-fuelled sop that has done little for animal welfare. I respect the traditions of the countryside and believe in supporting the people who live there. But my head says no – there is simply no justification for the coalition to split itself and everyone else into opposing camps for an issue that in overall terms matters little other than to quench the thirst for revenge.

There are better battles to fightConservatives should let this one go.

Horsell hit by burglaries

The Surrey Ad is carrying a story highlighting the fact that residents along Horsell Moor have been hit by a series of burglaries and thefts from vehicles. I met Josh Parish, the Horsell beat officer, at the May Fayre and his team is doing a great job to target offenders and get results in the courts.

But he can’t win them all and occasionally the law is stacked in the favour of the criminals. We had a similar thing in Grange Road last year and these people tend to work a patch, looking for soft targets like open windows and unlocked cars. Don’t let yourself become a victim – make it not worth their while by taking all the simple security measures.

You’ll not only thank youself but Josh will thank you too because it’s his job to keep the crime figures down and one spate of thefts can damage months of hard work.

Rogues’ gallery, allegedly

…Not that I am suggesting for an instant that they are guilty, of course, as it seems finally a court of law will get to decide on the MPs’ expenses scandal. While I remain sceptical about the moral posturing conducted about MPs by some of the equally morally dubious press, I have always said that cases where there was evidence of criminal behaviour should be dealt with.

Now we know four people will face criminal charges over misuse of public money. And each of their circumstances helps us paint a picture of what was going on with the Fees Office and MPs’ claims.

So as not to be biased, I’ll start with the Conservative member of the quartet, Lord Hanningfield. It is said that between March 2006 and May 2009, he submitted claims for overnight stays in London when he was actually driven home to Chelmsford. Earlier versions of the story in the media contained information that has subsequently been removed for Contempt of Court reasons. Suffice it to say that it appears from earlier quotes that Fees Office staff were informing those that they oversaw that charging for overnight stays and then sloping off back home – or staying the night with friends instead - was a perfectly acceptable thing to do.

Well it isn’t – and those alleged to have made such claims should clearly have known better. But it also serves to illustrate the catastrophic failure of the Fees Office to do its job – it has been seeking to run things for the benefit of MPs and peers rather than for the taxpayers that are its real masters.

Elliot Morley is charged with claiming mortage expenses during a three-year period on either a false basis or when the loan had already been paid off. He claims that he didn’t realise that mortgage had been paid off and he has repaid the money. It is also worth noting that the Fees Offices clearly didn’t see fit to check his claim over this long period of time. In my view, it is totally correct that these charges should be heard by a court. This is not the same as charging for a duck house or trouser press; the allegations – and they are only allegations – amount to something else entirely.

David Chaytor is charged with submitting false invoices and coming up with an ingenious scheme whereby a flat that he actually owned was “rented” from his daughter and mother in order to claim expenses on it. Again, these are only charges, but it seems to me that if MPs put half as much energy into lawmaking as they appear to have put into finding ways of maximising their expense claims, the country might not be in such a dire situation. And once again, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that somewhere along the line, the Fees Office knew of this arrangement and were happy to accommodate it. And if they didn’t, they should have.

Jim Devine took Robin Cook’s seat after the latter died in 2005 and is charged with using false invoices. His case is interesting because he became an MP only four years before the story broke. I refuse to believe that a man of previously good character - and who has been through a rigorous selection process – suddenly decides to come up with false invoices after only three years in the House of Commons.

I think that somewhere in all of this there were people assuring MPs that it was fine to claim for bathplugs, fine to claim for overnight stays and then go home, okay to put through a “replacement” invoice for one that was lost and no problem to use a variety of tricks to keep the expense payments as high as possible.

That doesn’t excuse the MPs, all of whom are guilty of poor judgement and avarice. But it does ask questions about the officials involved in this discredited process and whose names are not plastered all over the papers at the moment.

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Cadbury cremed by bad law

I’ve always been partial to Cadbury’s Creme Eggs and for the past two weeks, I’ve been buying boxes and bringing them into the office, exhorting my colleagues to “eat them while they are still British”. Alas, no more. At 1pm today, the iconic British company became the plaything of an American conglomerate whose trademark cheese products are, astonishingly, even less related to actual cheese than Creme Eggs are to eggs.

PM has been busy lately, launching a attempted decapitation strategy on DC yesterday in a speech filled with more chutzpah than a New York second-hand car dealership. Now he’s been to meet the Kraft CEO, who’s not averse to audacity herself on the evidence of this takeover, he is sagely warning that he’ll be looking for more detailed assurances in the coming months. I don’t think that’s going to worry Irene Rosenfeld much – she’s only 4% short of the shares she needs to take Cadburyoff the stock exchange altogether.

And what PM is less keen to let you know is that it was Labour, through the Companies Act 2006 that effectively removed the right of government to protect our long-established businesses from takeover. The act implemented the EU’s Takeover and Transparency Obligations Directives, which harmonise takeover law throughout the EU and prevent company boards from doing anything to frustrate takeover bids. But surprisingly, it’s not the EU’s fault.

Despite the obvious agenda of EU member states to fix takeover legislation to favour their own subsidised corporate environment (ever wondered why so many German, French and Spanish firms can afford to buy British companies and infrastructure?) the directive did leave EU governments free to restrict takeoever law in their states. Labour didn’t take that opportunity and so the government is now in a very weak position to do anything about Kraft or dictate terms to it once Cadbury is bought.

There’s nothing intrisically bad about large British companies getting taken over. It puts money into shareholders’ pockets and since many shareholders are pension schemes, it helps to boost flagging pension values. Certainly Kraft has chosen to pay well over the odds for Cadbury. But it is important that we have British companies continuing to develop and emerge on the global market as players.

And with little or no protection from foreign predators, that is less, not more, likely to happen.

Lack of Myleene-iency was Klass-ic plod

 

Myleene Klass

Former-popstar-turned-crossover-pianist Myleene Klass is hardly an unlikely cause de celebre for the Daily Mail but rather than because of a minimal swimsuit, she is making headlines after waving a kitchen knife at a group of ne’er-do-wells who thought it was perfectly okay to go sneaking around her Hertfordshire garden.

They of course got away and even though the police probably know who they are, nothing will happen to them. By contrast, the face of Marks and Spencer got a visit from the local beat telling her that if she threatened people with a knife again, she’d be the one down the nick giving over her DNA and fingerprints to the national database and fending off the inquiries of the county’s finest.

Interestingly, Hertfordshire Police first categorically denied telling her off. It said:

“For clarification, at no point were any official warnings or words of advice given to the home owner in relation to the use of a knife or offensive weapon in their home.”

They then changed their story to:

“Words of advice were given to the owner of the property.”

The point is this – that if some thugs enter your home or trespass on your property, you ought to be able to let them know in the strongest possible terms that they are not welcome. I don’t necessarily think that waving a knife at them is the best idea – not least because they may be armed themselves. Nor do I agree with some right-wingers that people committing crime should not enjoy the protection of the law – it’s a poetic concept but we’re not animals, for goodness’ sake.

The law needs clarifying - what is “reasonable force” and where is your “home” and what counts as “self-defence” and where do the boundaries begin and end? At the moment the courts are left to decide everything on the basis that no one instance is like another – not true – and as a result many defendants are dragged unecessarily through the legal process in a way that undermines confidence in the law, respect for the police and leaves victims feeling as though they are no better off than criminals.

And the police appear to be every bit as confused as the public given their completely disproportionate and legally dubious reaction to Ms Klass.

PS Sorry about the dreadful tabloid headline, her name is a gift to sub-editors everywhere. And also apologies for the “pretty girl” picture – but come on, one in six months is allowed.

A chance at life

The Moors murders are a grisly subject for any blog and I’m not going to recount the details. Since he was jailed for his part in orchestrating these terrible killings, Ian Brady has spent 43 years inside. Just one year before he started his stretch, the death penalty had been abolished for murder – and there were plenty of people at the time who would have happily made an exception for Brady and Myra Hindley from such clemency.

I have always been and will always be a staunch opponent of the death penalty. People kill other people in all sorts of circumstances; I have never felt that the state should stoop to their level and Ian Brady’s pathetic letter to a news agency decrying his treatment in Ashworth Hospital shows why.

For the past 10 years, he has been on a hunger strike of sorts, consuming only nicotine and caffeine in protest at being denied the right to die. He says that he should never be released and has nothing to live for. In short, he wants a choice.

Brady is clearly a very disturbed and deluded individual but the choice about death that he seeks now is precisely that he denied to his victims – all children aged between 10 and 17. And in my view it is right that he should be kept alive whatever the cost so that he has as much time as possible to think about his actions all those years ago. Five youngsters, who would now be in their fifties and have families of their own, gone; five families and sets of parents (few of whom are left) devastated and destroyed; a whole community rocked by fear and shock and a nation’s innocence shattered.

The long drop would indeed have been a quick and easy solution for both Hindley and Brady. It wasn’t until 1985 that they both finally confessed to their crimes and the body of Keith Bennett has never been – and may never be – found on Saddleworth Moor. But they were given something that they denied their victims - a chance at life.

Brady has refused to engage with the prison service, showed himself incompetent to undergo treatment and has spent the entire 43 years in an isolation that has been as arrogant as it is self-loathing. He doesn’t want to confront relinquishing the control he so enjoyed while killing.

A chance at life is worth everything and the ultimate act of power. We, nor anyone else, owe him anything more.

Brown doesn't get tough on Scotland

Further to this, this, from Tim Dodds‘s excellent blog. I don’t think I can put it any better.

It’s quite shocking and goes to the heart of just what the Labour government has become. There is no law without justiceBaroness Scotland of all people should know that.

Scotland gets tough on migrant

Baroness ScotlandThe best story of the day has to be the news that Baroness Scotland, who worked on leglisation to crack down on the employment of illegal immigrants, has fallen foul of the very law she helped introduce.

I can’t remember the last time a minister was caught by their own legislation. Her draconian drafting to fine those hoodwinked by illegal immigrants with seemingly all the right paperwork up to £10,000apparently discarding the old adage that it’s not a crime to be deceived – has rebounded brilliantly.

So will she be fined? Or is their some unwritten rule that the law shouldn’t apply to ministers? Would a member of the public in the same position escape application of the law in a similar way?

Her spokesman said she had “never knowingly employed an illegal immigrant”. Doesn’t matter. And that “She hired Ms Tapui in good faith and saw documents which led her to believe that Ms Tapui was entitled to work in this country.” Whatever. In addition:

“At no stage prior to the matter being raised did Baroness Scotland believe there was any question over Ms Tapui’s entitlement to work. Ms Tapui has now been dismissed with immediate effect.”

Yeah, yeah, we’ve heard that one before. Now, where do we serve the papers? Oh, you’re the minister, are you…?

Another fine mess…

Yes, they’ve done it again. The Home Office, or whatever components it has now been split into, has managed to make another decision that will play badly with voters.

First they tell the Gurkhas to shove off back to Nepal in the belief that getting tough on immigrants will be popular. Wrong – not the kind of immigrants who have stood ready to shed blood for the nation.

Now they’ve decided to employ the touchy-feely approach that they should have used on the Gorkhali to a member of a 15-strong gang that brutally robbed a mail train and broke out of jail to escape British justice – and his stretch – in favour of living it up in Rio.

Wrong again. When Ronnie Biggs did return to Britain it wasn’t because of the call of his conscience or remorse – it was because he fancied leeching off the NHS rather than staying in Brazil for his medical treatment. That was in 2001 and I’m sorry, his original 30-year sentence should stand as well as a further sentence for jail-breaking out of Wandsworth.

He might be ill, but eight years isn’t enough for his crimes – that he still doesn’t show full remorse for – and I don’t think the public will feel kindly towards a man, however old or ill, who has robbed the nation before fleeing its justice only to return when it suited him.

Ronnie Biggs has only ever cared about one person – Ronnie Biggs. Whatever the government may think, I believe people will find it difficult to share the joy of a violent, self-serving gangster.

Bittersweet Sugar

Guido has news that Lord S’ralan Sugar, he of the “pissin’ my bladdy money up the wall” decorum, is sending threatening letters to political commentator Quentin Letts, who made some more than usually ascerbic observations on a radio programme.

Threatening libel against journos is really only a last resort – Guildford Tory councillor Cllr Tony Rooth once hinted strongly that he would sue me if I printed a story about him at the Surrey Advertiser. I knew the story was true (and he can’t sue for my saying that because I haven’t made the allegation on here) but I couldn’t prove it, so I had to drop it. I never liked him much after that.

And that’s the thing with libel – once you show that you don’t have a thick skin, whatever follows on from that point will always be viewed in a lesser light. Mr Letts’s assertion was that Sugar only got his job through being a TV celebrity and that he wasn’t of great intellectual capacity.

To my mind, that’s fair comment, even if it would be difficult to secure a justification defence here. But on the second point, I think there’s a tacit agreement defence too – Sugar has readily said on the Apprentice that he values street smarts over book smarts and that he’s survived and prospered on shrewdness rather than intellect.

I always quite liked Sugar because of his connection with Spurs and his entertaining persona on the TV. With all the success, profile and money he could want, his threatening to sue seems churlish, bullying and self-important. I’m not sure I like him much now, either.