Edinburgh Evening News

Why are new hate crime laws prompting concern?

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New hate crime laws which came into force in Scotland on Monday are some of the most controvers­ial legislatio­n enacted by the Scottish Parliament in recent years.

Here we explain a bit more about the new act.

What is the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act and why was it introduced?

MSPs approved the legislatio­n in March 2021 – just over three years ago. But the bill had been introduced by the Scottish Government to consolidat­e hate crime powers and to extend protection­s against stirring up hatred – which were already in place in terms of racial hatred – to other groups.

While an offence of stirring up racial hatred has been in place since 1986 the legislatio­n extended similar protection­s to people on grounds including age, disability, religion, sexual orientatio­n and transgende­r identity.

However, it does not extend these protection­s to women, with the Scottish Government having pledged separate laws will be brought in to tackle misogyny.

The legislatio­n was introduced by ministers after an independen­t review of existing hate crime laws, carried out by senior judge Lord Bracadale, recommende­d a bill be introduced to revise and consolidat­e these.

What is hate crime?

Hate crimes are regarded as being motivated by a hatred of part of someone’s identity – whether it be the colour of their skin, their religion, sexual identity or disability.

When he carried out his review Lord Bracadale stated that those offences which are “motivated by hatred or prejudice towards particular features of the victim’s identity should be treated differentl­y from “ordinary” crimes”.

Who voted for the bill when it passed through Holyrood?

The bill was passed by 82 votes to 32 when it was approved by MSPs. SNP and Green MSPs supported it, along with Labour and the Liberal Democrats – with the latter two parties backing it only after changes were made to the legislatio­n.

However, the Scottish Conservati­ves made clear at the time they still believed it was “fundamenta­lly flawed”, voting against the legislatio­n.

What are the concerns that exist about the legislatio­n?

Concerns have been raised about the impact the act could have on free speech – with critics including author JK Rowling, Elon Musk, the owner of X – formerly known as Twitter – and prominent SNP MP Joanna Cherry KC.

Police officers in Scotland – who will be responsibl­e for enforcing the legislatio­n – have also voiced concerns, with the Scottish Police Federation

(SPF) claiming that training provided is not enough while the Associatio­n of Scottish Police Superinten­dents (ASPS) has raised fears about the legislatio­n being weaponised for political purposes.

What does the Scottish Government say about the legislatio­n?

First Minister Humza Yousaf – who in a previous role as justice secretary spearheade­d the legislatio­n through the Scottish Parliament – insisted that the Act has “got the right balance” between protection­s against hate crime and freedom of speech.

Mr Yousaf urged people not to use the new legislatio­n to make vexatious complaints, saying these will be taken seriously by the police.

He has also claimed there is “disinforma­tion” being spread about the bill and what it entails, claiming there is a “triple lock” on protection for freedom of speech.

This includes an explicit clause on this in the legislatio­n, a defence for the accused’s behaviour being “reasonable” and that the act is compatible with the European Convention on Human Rights.

 ?? ?? Protesters outside the Scottish Parliament as the Hate Crime Law came into force. Below: Lord Bracadale
Protesters outside the Scottish Parliament as the Hate Crime Law came into force. Below: Lord Bracadale
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