Illegal immigrant fines on lorry drivers ruled unlawful
00:00, 06 December 2001
THE government’s policy of imposing £2,000 penalties on lorry drivers for each illegal immigrant brought into the country has today been ruled unlawful by the High Court.
The penalty system was introduced in 1999 and has cost freight firms thousands of pounds. Mr Justice Sullivan, in London, said that the regime introduced by the 1999 mmigration and Asylum Act was not compatible with the right to a fair trial under Article Six of the European Convention on Human Rights.
Allowing the claim of 50 lorry drivers and hauliers, the judge also ruled that the power to detain vehicles under the Act was not compatible with the protection of property under Article One in the First Protocol to the Convention.
The Home Office, which was given permission to appeal, was ordered to pay the costs of the hearing.
Latest news
Features
Most popular
- 1
Terrorists who planned to bomb Bluewater are freed from prison
38 - 2
‘A pub, diner or restaurant? Either way, the carpets were minging’
8 - 3
Large chunk of M20 shut due to ‘police incident’
1 - 4
‘Big dog’ brings motorway traffic to a halt
- 5
‘This rat-run bridge isn’t wide enough - someone will be killed soon’