The Mail on Sunday

Labour law chief’s £2m human rights hypocrisy

LORD FALCONER REPRESENTS TORTURE STATE

- By Ian Gallagher

We stand by our human rights. No ifs, no buts

LORD TO FALCONER’STHE LABOUR SPEECH PARTY CONFERENCE 2015

A SHADOW Cabinet Minister has been accused of hypocrisy for accepting a lucrative offer to represent a country with an ‘appalling’ human rights record.

Lord Falconer spoke at his party’s conference last month about his pride that it was a Labour government that passed the Human Rights Act. ‘It’s protected the powerless,’ he told delegates in a passionate speech.

But last week at the High Court he was lead counsel for the Republic of Djibouti – which has been accused of ‘crimes against humanity’ – in a corruption case brought against a London-based businessma­n.

Gibson Dunn & Crutcher, the US law firm the Labour peer joined in 2008, a year after leaving office, is being paid an estimated £2million by the East African country.

Djibouti has been rebuked by Amnesty Internatio­nal, Human Rights Watch and the US State Department over its record, which includes false imprisonme­nt, torture, denial of fair public trial, arbitrary arrest and restrictio­ns on freedom of speech and discrimina­tion against women and people with disabiliti­es.

One campaign group, Djibouti Human Rights, said yesterday: ‘It is gross hypocrisy to say that you want to protect human rights in Britain, but to not act as though you want the same elsewhere. Our population still suffers daily at the hands of the government that gave Lord Falconer his fat pay cheque.’

Lord Falconer, a former flatmate of Tony Blair, was Lord Chancellor from 2003 to 2007. He surprised many when he accepted the position of Shadow Justice Secretary under Jeremy Corbyn last month.

At the Labour conference he drew extended praise when he pledged to ‘fight this nasty Tory Government’.

Lord Falconer said: ‘I am so proud that it was a Labour Government that passed the Human Rights Act. It’s protected the powerless – victims of crime, people in care and, yes, some- times also the unpopular – against the might of the strong and the dictates of the State.’ The audience rose in unison when he added: ‘We stand by our human rights, no ifs, not buts.’

An independen­t report by Sir Tony Baldry, who chaired the Conservati­ve Party’s Commission on Human Rights, described Djibouti’s ‘appalling human rights situation’. It concluded there was ‘sufficient evidence of crimes against humanity… for these matters to be properly investigat­ed by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court’.

The latest case is the second time Lord Falconer has appeared in court on behalf of Djibouti. In March, he was counsel for the country in an applicatio­n in the High Court for an asset-freezing injunction against businessma­n Abdourahma­n Boreh, claiming he had played a part in a grenade attack on a supermarke­t.

He later had to issue a grovelling apology after it was revealed that a partner at his firm had misled Mr Justice Flaux by failing to inform him that evidence had been falsified against a political rival of the country’s president, Ismail Guelleh.

Despite being ordered to pay Mr Boreh £850,000 in compensati­on, Lord Falconer’s firm is now back in court to make eight corruption claims against Mr Boreh. He denies all the claims, arguing that they are politicall­y motivated.

The case, which is expected to run for at least four weeks, continues.

Yesterday, Lord Falconer confirmed he was a barrister representi­ng the Republic of Djibouti, but said: ‘I cannot make any comment because barristers are not allowed to comment publicly on cases they are appearing in.’

 ??  ?? INFLUENCE: The Obamas with Djibouti’s Ismail Guelleh
INFLUENCE: The Obamas with Djibouti’s Ismail Guelleh

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