The Scotsman

Principles of justice are at stake now

-

As groundhog day draws nigh for the “Salmond committee”, the stench of deceit grows stronger. The latest twist would deny Mr Salmond the right to give his full evidence and, if it cannot be given, it cannot be taken account of in the committee’s report. This Catch-22 has been determined by the chair, Ms Fabiani, and other SNP members.

This week, we had the kind of spin-doctoring exercise which heightens distrust. Private exchanges among complainan­ts in the Salmond court case were unanimousl­y judged irrelevant by the committee, having viewed them in private.

Well, of course they were. These were not sought by the committee who asked for material "relevant to its remit". The Crown Office offered them up while communicat­ions of legitimate interest remain unproduced.

Even before committee members had seen what the Crown Office gave it, Scottish government special advisers were briefing on the content and how, when the committee showed no interest, Mr Salmond’s case would be in ruins. Given the evidence released was solely for the committee’s use, one wonders how special advisers knew anything about the content.

The whole circus must now be in imminent danger of collapse, which, on balance, might be more honourable than dignifying a high-level fix and the ludicrous denial of a key witness’s right to be heard.

This is now long past being about Salmond versus Sturgeon, neither my cup of tea. It is about protecting basic principles of justice and shedding light on how Scotland is run.

 ??  ?? Will Alex Salmond be able to give his evidence in full to the Holyrood committee?
Will Alex Salmond be able to give his evidence in full to the Holyrood committee?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom