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 Posted by Stuart McKears on 07/07/06 21:38 
On Fri, 7 Jul 2006 21:41:48 +0100, ":::Jerry::::" <me@privacy.INVALID> wrote: 
 
>It is technically UK law but is actually EU law that has been 
>incorporated, the UK parliament had no role in it's drafting IYSWIM. 
 
It's not an EU law. 
 
The European Convention for Human Rights was set up in 1950 and was based on the 
UN declaration of 1948. (AFAIK, Article 8 was one of the original articles from 
that 1950 declaration.) 
 
The UK ratified the convention in 1951 
 
The EEC came into existence in 1958  
 
The European Court of Human Rights came into existence in 1959 
 
The last protocol was added to the ECHR in 1966. 
 
UK government allowed UK citizens to take cases to the European Court of Human 
Rights in 1966 
 
The EU came into existence in 1993 with the Maastricht Treaty. 
 
UK incorporates convention into UK law in 1998.  
 
AFAIAW, there has been no significant changes to the ECHR since 1966, all that 
has changed is that UK citizens now have the right to take cases directly to the 
British courts rather than having to go through the lengthy and very expensive 
procedure of going to European Court at Strasbourg. This does mean that trivial 
and daft cases are started, much to the glee of the Daily Mail et al, but the 
vast majority fall at the first hurdle - which what they always did. 
 
regards 
 
Stuart 
 
www.mckears.com
 
  
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