Reblogged
from Vox Political:
Do any British readers remember what it was like to live in a country
where the government respected the law, and accepted facts without making up
silly little stories about them?
What an amazing place that must have been.
Sadly, we’re all trapped in Tory-Coalition purgatory for the next 19 months
at least, and have to endure the relentless procession of nonsense associated
with it.
Yesterday (Friday) we were provided with two glowing examples.
Firstly, the visit of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on adequate
housing, Raquel Rolnik, was treated with extreme prejudice by the Tories and
their poodles in the right-wing press, after she announced she would be filing
an unfavourable report after investigating the effect of the bedroom tax on the
British people.
Vox
Political covered these events in some detail, so there’s no need to
rehash them here.
Tory chairman and ‘Michael Green’ impersonator Grant Shapps then wrote to UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to complain about the Special Rapporteur’s
behaviour. A reply has now arrived and, rather than give it the due
consideration it deserves, Shapps seems to have handed it straight to The
Sun.
That newspaper reported that the UN had “slapped down” Ms Rolnik for her
behaviour. Shapps himself told the paper: “People expect the UN to be neutral,
yet on this occasion a former Workers Party politician came with a clear agenda”
- a bizarre claim, when the letter itself creates a completely different
view.
Guido
Fawkes’ blog provides the text of the UN letter – along with a bit more
right-wing spin which we’ll ignore as it is irrelevant.
It states: “Ms Raquel Rolnik is one of 72 independent experts appointed by
the United nations Human Rights Council – the lead UN body responsible for human
rights – on the basis of their expertise and independence, and following a
competitive selection process. As in the case of all mandate holders, Ms Rolnik
serves in an independent capacity and in accordance with a Code of Conduct
adopted by the Council. She is not a staff member of the United Nations, is
neither accountable to nor appointed by the Secretary-General, and does not
receive any compensation beyond a daily allowance when engaged in mandated
activities.
“Among other activities, Special Rapporteurs are mandated to undertake
country visits to assess human rights enjoyment on the ground. The United
Kingdom is one of 94 Member States which has extended a standing invitation to
mandate holders thus indicating that it is open to the visit of any Special
Rapporteur. Country visits are governed by rules and procedures set out in the
Code of Conduct referred to above and the Manual of Operations adopted by
Special Procedures. Ms Rolnik’s visit was planned and organised over many months
in consultation with the Government in compliance with these rules and
procedures.
“As in the case of all country visits, Ms Rolnik’s visit concluded with a
press conference and a press statement, provided to the Government in advance,
which indicate preliminary findings and recommendations. The final report on the
visit will be submitted to the Council’s twenty-fifth session which will take
place in March 2014 in Geneva.”
Reading between the lines, we can piece together the gist of Shapps’
correspondence – and it’s clear that he made a lot of mistaken
assumptions. Firstly, it seems likely he wrote to Ban Ki-moon demanding
that Ms Rolnik be fired from her position, in the belief that she is a hired
hand and that the Secretary-General can hire and fire her as he pleases, the way
Tories would like to run the UK. She’s just ‘the help’ in Shapps’s
eyes. He must also have made a claim about her remuneration – possibly
that she receives too much money from the UN or that, as a Socialist, she must
be pulling pennies out of the public purse like there’s no tomorrow. Both claims
get short shrift.
It seems Shapps then asserted that Ms Rolnik had not been invited to the UK
and had no reason to be there. Wrong again, as the UN letter
clarifies. A claim that she went beyond her remit is similarly batted
away by reference to the governing rules which, we may conclude, were
available to Mr Shapps before he wrote his letter. Oh yes, look, they’re
available from the introduction page to the United Nations’ Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights’ (OHCHR) website, here!
Next, Shapps is likely to have reasserted his claim that “It is completely
wrong and an abuse of the process for somebody to come over, to fail to meet
with government ministers, to fail to meet with the department responsible.” The
UN response is the same as Ms Rolnik’s own statement in her preliminary
report.
And the final paragraph seems to be a response to his further claim that it
was out of line “to produce a press release two weeks after coming, even though
the report is not due out until next spring.”
Taken at face value, then, this is a letter that entirely supports Ms
Rolnik, both in her position within the United Nations and the way she
carried out her role in the UK.
But that wasn’t enough for the United Nations, whose higher echelons clearly
wanted to ensure there can be no doubt about the way this – let’s face it
- international incident is being
viewed.
Rupert Colville, a spokesman for the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, told
the Huffington Post: “The Sun‘s take on it – that ‘The
United Nations has slapped down’ Ms Rolnik – is pure spin. There was no such
intention whatsoever.
“In the face of a blizzard of misinformation and personal abuse of Ms
Rolnik, published in one or two other UK tabloids during and
immediately after her visit, the letter to Mr Shapps simply corrects the factual
errors that have been asserted about her status and her role as an independent
UN expert, or ‘Special Rapporteur.’
“Ms Rolnik’s visit was planned and organized over many months in consultation
with the UK Government in compliance with these rules and procedures.
“As in the case of all country visits, Ms Rolnik’s visit concluded with a
press conference and a press statement, provided to the Government in advance,
which indicate preliminary findings and recommendations.
“The final report on the visit will be submitted to the Human Rights
Council’s session next March in Geneva.
“In short, there was nothing unusual or untoward about Ms Rolnik’s
visit – apart from some of the reactions to it.”
No doubt Mr Colville will have drawn his own conclusions about the current UK
administration from that Sun article – conclusions that, one hopes,
will be included in that final report next March.
The
New Statesman reckons the Tories have an “antipathy for evidence”
and presents a theory regarding why this should be so: “If all the facts
are against you, your best tactic is to make stuff up and hope you can shout the
other person down (changing your mind obviously not being an
option).”
Alternatively, we return to V for Vendetta territory. The graphic
novel’s writer, Alan Moore, referenced Enid Blyton’s novel The Magic Faraway
Tree several times. For an anarchist like the story’s protagonist, the Land
of Do-as-you-please would be very attractive – but here in reality, it
seems the Tories think they’ve taken the ladder to that land and can do and say
whatever they want – and facts don’t matter.
For more evidence of this, let’s turn to our second example: The Department
for Work and Pensions and its reaction to a benefit tribunal in Scotland, who
ruled against Fife Council, saying that a room of less than 70 square feet
should not be considered a bedroom for the purpose of the bedroom tax. This led
the council to call the tax “unworkable” and demand its reversal. Since then, a
disabled gentleman has won a ruling against Westminster Council, after he
claimed that a room used to store equipment that helps him manage his disability
was not, and never has been, a bedroom.
In his decision notice, the judge wrote: “The term ‘bedroom’ is
nowhere defined [in the relevant regulations]. I apply the ordinary English
meaning. The room in question cannot be so defined.”
In response to the first ruling, the
DWP has issued an ‘Urgent Bulletin’ in which an attempt is made to
retroactively define a bedroom, for the purposes of administering the tax.
Perhaps we are to assume Iain Returned-To-Unit Smith believes that, having
achieved one retrospective law via the normal legislative route, he can now
ordain such rulings willy-nilly. He’s wrong.
His Department’s demand that “when applying the size criteria and determining
whether or not a property is under-occupied, the only consideration should be
the composition of the household and the number of bedrooms as designated by the
landlord, but not by measuring rooms” is worthless.
If he wanted that to be the case, he should have written it into his silly
little Bedroom Tax Bill (or whatever it was called).
For the moment, Shapps and RTU can get away with their bizarre pronouncements
– although they can’t expect to be believed – because the Conservatives are in
office.
But they won’t be in office forever.
In the meantime, let’s all keep supporting the opposers, wherever they turn
up. If you are being subjected to the Bedroom Tax – appeal. And write to the UN,
supporting Ms Rolnik and her findings against the tax.
You have a chance to prove that the Land of Do-as-you-please is a very small
place.
And, as in the book, the return to normality involves a very, very
long descent.