Public Interest Lawyers is an extraordinary firm of solicitors, who must be – certainly should be – the pride of the legal profession. Through their tenacity, quality and sheer hard work – often from unpromising beginnings and in dark times for public funding – they have single-handedly been responsible for shining the torchlight of legal accountability in a range of new areas. The work continues unabated. No barrister or judge, here or in Strasbourg, could have come to deal with the sorts of human rights issues which PIL continues to raise, but for their principled and brave pursuit of justice.

 

PIL demonstrates three further important things. First, how positive and constructive can be the use of public funding in public law cases, in the public interest. It has been hard. But PIL and the LSC have forged a partnership which is second to none, as to the importance of the cases that are brought, their success and their wider impact. Secondly, PIL demonstrates that London does not always lead, and a London-centric focus is neither helpful nor fair. This firm, from what are still sometimes thought of as “the provinces”, is the nation’s leader for human rights application in challenging cases. That PIL is looking, as a Birmingham-based firm. How refreshing for it to be that way.Thirdly, let it not be forgotten that PIL was set up as a new firm of solicitors. This is not the further and continued work of an established firm, set up long ago when times were different. This was an innovation; a leap of faith in the rule of law. It was a boat launched in a sea of uncertainty, which has turned out to be the flagship for public law accountability under the rule of law.

 

Michael Fordham QC
Michael Fordham QC
 
 

PIL: Uganda’s Inaction to End Child Sacrifice Violates International Human Rights

19 October 2011
The BBC’s undercover report exposing examples of the terrifying practice of child sacrifice in Uganda is a severe reminder that human rights violation at its worst continues to exist.   

Child sacrifice is the murder or injury of a child in order to obtain blood, organs and/or limbs for the purposes of a ritual witchcraft ceremony.  The practise commonly involves genital mutilation, scarring and often results in death.  The survivors will undoubtedly suffer from psychological problems.  For more information, see the UK based Jubilee Campaign’s report at http://www.jubileecampaign.co.uk/documents/end-child-sacrifice-report.pdf.

The practise is reported to be on the rise in Uganda with figures increasing since 2006. See http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-15255357. The Jubilee Campaign’s report indicates that there are more than 900 cases to be investigated.  It also expresses grave concern regarding corruption amongst the task force established to deal with human sacrifice and failure to deal specifically with child sacrifice in the 1999 Children Statute of the Republic of Uganda.

Uganda ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child on 17 August 1970.  If Uganda doesn’t take adequate action to manage corruption and legislative failings, it will enable the practice of child sacrifice, thus failing to protect its children and honour the international human rights standards to which it agreed.

 


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