Scottish Daily Mail

Extremists will be kept behind bars for longer

Early release ‘loophole’ will be closed to protect public

- EXCLUSIVE By David Barrett and Ian Drury

PRISONERS who pose a terror threat may have to remain behind bars far beyond their normal release date.

Hundreds of inmates jailed for non-terror offences who are feared to hold extremist sympathies could be refused the right to automatic release.

The radical changes to sentencing rules will be the centrepiec­e of legislatio­n set to be published early next year. Sources said the measures would apply to criminals numbering ‘in the low hundreds’.

The proposals would fundamenta­lly change the way the criminal justice system handles the release of extremists and terror suspects and are likely to put ministers on a collision course with human rights lawyers.

Currently, the security services are powerless to keep extremists behind bars if they were found guilty of nonterror offences.

Some of the offenders who are expected to be subject to the new rules may have been acquitted of terror charges but convicted of other crimes, such as firearms or fraud.

In such cases, they are entitled to automatic release from jail after serving just half of their sentence.

Alan Mendoza, executive director of the Henry Jackson Society, an antiextrem­ism think-tank, has described existing sentencing rules as a ‘loophole’, adding: ‘The Government need to close it, and fast.’

Under the proposals, such offenders will have automatic release cancelled and their cases will be referred to the Parole Board.

They will be freed only when experts on the board agree they no longer pose a danger to the public – meaning they could remain behind bars until the very end of the jail term handed down by a judge.

The bid to extend sentences is likely to face challenges. Previous moves have led to appeals under human rights laws.

The Government’s emergency measures, passed earlier this year in the wake of the London Bridge and Streatham terror attacks, have been controvers­ial because they extended automatic release to the two thirds point of a jail term for anyone convicted of terror offences.

A man who admitted terror offences challenged the measures in the courts, claiming they unfairly targeted Muslims.

Mohammed Zahir Khan, a former shopkeeper from Sunderland, pleaded guilty in 2018 to five counts of encouragin­g terrorism, one count of disseminat­ion of an Islamic State terrorist publicatio­n and two counts of stirring up religious hatred.

Khan appealed against the measures on the grounds they were discrimina­tory – but his claim was rejected by judges last month.

The new measures are to be included in a white paper due to be published within weeks.

It will be followed by a sentencing Bill to be brought before Parliament by Justice Secretary Robert Buckland early next year, it is understood.

A Ministry of Justice spokesman last night declined to comment but added: ‘A white paper will be published shortly.’ d.barrett@dailymail.co.uk

‘Pose a danger to the public’

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