The Daily Telegraph

Cameron: ECHR may see to its own demise

EX-PM maintains court has ‘overreache­d’ in ruling that powers must protect public against climate change

- By Charles Hymas HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR

LORD CAMERON has warned the European Court of Human Rights that it is “planting the seeds of its own destructio­n” by “overreachi­ng”.

In some of his most outspoken comments about the court, the Foreign Secretary said it had overreache­d itself last week in its ruling that Government­s have a duty to protect people from climate change. He maintained that the Government had no plans to leave the court or the Council of Europe. Asked about the UK’S future relations with the Strasbourg court in the Lords, Lord Cameron said: “There are occasions, in my view, when this court overreache­s itself and we saw one last week with respect to climate change, where it took a judgment against Switzerlan­d.

“And I think it’s dangerous when these courts overreach themselves, because ultimately we’re going to solve climate change through political will, through legislatio­n in this House and the Commons, by the actions we take as politician­s, by the arguments we put to the electorate – and so I do think there’s a danger of overreach.

“These organisati­ons good work, but if they overreach they plant the seeds of their own destructio­n.”

It echoes comments by Rishi Sunak at the weekend when he hit out at the “complete overreach” of the “illegitima­te” ruling by the Strasbourg court that imposed a duty on Government­s to achieve net zero.

In the first judgment of its kind, the court ruled that the human rights of a group of elderly Swiss women had been violated by the failure of their government to act quickly enough to tackle climate change. The ruling also applies to the UK. Earlier this month, Mr Sunak raised the possibilit­y of the UK leaving the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) if the Strasbourg court continued to block his delayed plans to deport illegal migrants to Rwanda. He said controllin­g immigratio­n is “more important” than membership of the convention.

However, Lord Cameron said the Government has no plans to leave the ECHR or the Council of Europe, because it “sees no inconsiste­ncy between its policies” and membership.

The former prime minister recalled a Strasbourg court ruling during his premiershi­p proposing that prisoners should be given the right to vote. He said he believed Parliament should decide on such issues, and that repeated demands to give them the vote led to “moments of extreme frustratio­n”.

Yesterday Suella Braverman, the former home secretary, called for Mr Sunak to quit the ECHR because it was not just the “right and necessary” thing to do but also the “politicall­y expedient” option for the Government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom