Jill Stephenson at Loch Duich
Quintin Jardine in Elie
Iain Macmillan in Gleneagles
Douglas Marr on Skye
Andrew McFadyen in Kilmarnock

R D Kernohan on Arran
David Torrance on Iona
Catherine Czerkawska at Loch Ken
Chris Holligan in Elie

Rose Galt in Girvan
Alex Wood on Arran
Andrew Hook in Glasgow
Alasdair McKillop in St Andrews

Sheila Hetherington on Arran
Anthony Seaton on Ben Nevis
Paul Cockburn at Loch Ness
Jackie Kemp in a taxi
Angus Skinner on Skye

Life of George
Edinburgh by night: part 1
Cowgate, midnight
Acres of flesh sashay here and there in a blonde parade. Fat blokes in football strips shout abuse at obese girls in tight clothing. Tourists smile at a chorus of Welshmen serenading inflatable sheep. A rustle of cowgirls soothe a friend being violently sick into her stetson. Two of them argue loudly about cause and effect. In the time taken to circle them they decide she’d had too much cider and not enough speed.
There was an era when bank holidays meant nothing more than dressing in Sunday-best and travelling to a quiet resort to exchange punches with rockers. Youth culture expressed itself within well-defined parameters. Nowadays, everybody arrives by limo (or rickshaw) ready-dipped in crude. A severe lack of decorum stalks the capital city. A short walk from the Cowgate to what some call the ‘Hairy Triangle’ goes some way to proving the point.
The Burke and Hare: 12.40am
Hordes of young men, shirts hanging out over their trousers, jostle for space in an ever shifting queue. Unnaturally large bouncers stand a few steps above the crowd picking winners and losers.
A youth leans near the door, hands in pockets, swaying from side to side. People spill out, starting a push forward, and the youth gets knocked over into the recovery position. Music pulsates from the bar. Fit-inducing strobe lights flash red and blue. Sound builds to a crescendo.
A minor scuffle breaks out. The youth gets stepped on a couple of times. Rousing himself, he staggers down High Riggs. At the Benefits Agency he stops to place his face against a window. The men in black nod to a selected few.
Across the street, at the Western Bar, a similar scene is being played out. If anything it’s more primitive. This is the place where the average Edinburgh rude-boy goes before moving on to clubs in Lothian Road.
George Chalmers
Continued tomorrow…
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A modern democracy
cannot be established
from this thinking
John McGovern
The excerpt from Lord Hope’s speech presented in SR (1 June) defines a model of probity. Its articulation of why Scotland should embrace the UK Supreme Court (‘the UKSC’) should serve as a lesson to those who seek to be educated on the rudimentary basis of our court structure. Moreover, to those who seek to offer a political and constitutional settlement based on the independence of one country from another, then his speech offers a reminder of the high-level principle required for that achievement to be fulfilled.
Lord Hope cites ‘The Rights of Man’, the philosophical cornerstone of the United States, which was written by Englishman Thomas Paine, one of the greatest political advocates in history. Paine’s classic was published 15 years after his ‘Common Sense’ pamphlet, which, at the time, was the best-selling publication in American history: a remarkable fact considering it was published during the American Revolution. But then when it comes to citizens’ rights and the safeguards that the state provides to protect those rights, we will always seek to be reassured. That is, as Paine suggests, ‘common sense’.
It surely must dismay even the most ardent nationalist to read of the SNP’s attacks on not just the UKSC, but on the judges who lend their expertise to its bench. It is difficult to reason that a modern, wealthy, independent democracy can be established from such thinking. As Paine said, ‘Laws ought to be designed for no other end ultimately, but the good of the people’. The European convention on human rights, the 20th-century version of ‘The Rights of Man’, is eloquent of those very sentiments. In the recent robust criticism of the UKSC by the Scottish Government, the ‘good of the people’ has been overlooked. Not a criticism that can be directed at the Supreme Court itself or its Scottish judges.
As a signatory to the convention, the UK established the Supreme Court to specifically address ‘legal points’ arising in cases where the articles of the convention had been invoked as having been breached by a public authority, that is to say the state.
The UKSC is only concerned with ensuring minimum rights under the convention are secured throughout all jurisdictions of the UK. By signing up to the convention the UK government agreed to allow restrictions on our laws and jurisdiction in order to comply with the convention. Minimum rights in domestic law and procedures must be secured to safeguard the rights of individuals under state control. In short, the convention allows member states to legislate, or develop common law as they see fit.
So long as the United Kingdom remains a signatory to the European convention on human rights, then the SNP government’s strategy
remains seriously flawed. No democratic nation can be established on
such political opportunism.
However, there are certain minimum rights that have to be maintained by the state within its own systems. If those rights are breached (as in the Fraser case where the appellant’s article six right to a fair trial was breached because of a failure by the prosecution to disclose exculpatory information to the defence, the omission of which helped the Crown form the ‘cornerstone’ of its case), then the UKSC will refer the case back to Scotland and allow the authorities to proceed at their own discretion. The UKSC will not quash convictions and will not order that convicted criminals be released. Nat Fraser is still behind bars. Peter Cadder is still being prosecuted at the court where it all began: Glasgow Sheriff Court.
The best Scottish judges are appointed to the UKSC. Currently both are former lord justice generals (the highest criminal law judge in Scotland) and one is also a former lord advocate. It is therefore inappropriate to suggest they are unable to properly consider Scots cases. The suggestion that ‘Scottish’ judges need to determine ‘Scottish’ appeals, is open to question when it is considered that if Scottish appeals were to be referred to Strasbourg, then Scottish judges would be outnumbered to a much greater extent.
The truth is that Scottish courts have repeatedly refused to engage in, and apply, convention rights in criminal cases. There is a host of reasons for this, but it is in part because of a very narrow, recent tradition of failing to consider international approaches. It is not because of the eminent jurisprudence emerging from the Supreme Court.
Indeed, neither Messrs Salmond nor MacAskill is suggesting that the UKSC got it wrong in the infamous Cadder case. That is to say, they accept that a suspect should have a right to legal advice before being interviewed by the police. Some impartial observers may have thought that such a right was as old as Paine’s 18th-century declarations themselves. But in Scotland, it took until last year for this right to be afforded to our citizens – by the Supreme Court. But the SNP government appears to be saying that the UKSC should never have had the right to make such an obviously fair and correct decision in the first place. ‘They were right, but they shouldn’t have been allowed to decide that they were right’ is the size of it.
The belief that the UKSC should have no jurisdiction in Scotland is not born of a desire to enhance the rights of the Scottish citizen, it is not born of a desire to advance the common ‘good of the people’, but it is born of a desire of this nationalist government, with an unprecedented majority, to reason for its country’s independence. But so long as the United Kingdom remains a signatory to the European convention on human rights, then the SNP government’s strategy remains seriously flawed. No democratic nation can be established on such political opportunism.
For those, like me, who subscribe to the rule of law, and yet read of our cabinet secretary for justice threatening to close a court because it doesn’t reflect his ideology, then the words of Thomas Paine seem succinct:
‘Government, in its worst state, is intolerable’.