Recommendations on the UK’s human rights record have not been
implemented since 2012, a new report from the British Institute of Human
Rights (BIHR) has said.
The BIHR’s analysis shows that the UK government has failed to fully
meet 81 out of 85 recommendations made by the United Nations (UN) in
2012 to improve domestic human rights protections.
Areas covered include poverty, welfare and adequate standard of
living, about which the BIHR warned: “Recent policy and legislative
changes have seen a regression in standards of living
and the welfare system’s ability to tackle poverty, homelessness and
worklessness. This is having a negative impact on vulnerable social
groups.”
The report said that the Welfare Reform Act 2012 will have a negative
effect on vulnerable groups, including 100,000 disabled children losing
up to £28 a week and up to 20% of families affected by the ‘bedroom tax’ being unable to pay the higher rate of rent.
Other welfare reforms which the report highlights include the household benefit cap, which the Supreme Court has ruled violates the UN Human Rights Convention, and the increased use of benefit sanctions, which it says have been linked to destitution and not proven to encourage people back into work.
It warned that new measures introduced by the government also fall short of helping the most vulnerable.
The national living wage, for example, does not apply to under-25s and is not set in accordance with recommendations from the Living Wage Foundation.
The Welfare Reform and Work Act 2016 raises concerns for freezing working-age benefits for four years from April 2017, removing child tax credit entitlement
for families of more than three children, and abolishing the Child
Poverty Act 2010, which mandates statutory targets on child poverty.
The report also highlighted the housing crisis and rising homelessness rates as a human rights concern.
By 2031, England will have 2.5 million fewer homes than needed.
Almost 30% of private sector tenants are in substandard housing, and
there has been a 30% increase in homelessness in the past year.
Major recommendations
The BIHR said the UK government should monitor and review the impact
of welfare reforms on living standards, pause and review its sanctioning
policy, abolish the bedroom tax, and adjust the rate of the living
wage.
In addition, the report said it was “vital” that the government
abandons plans to replace the Human Rights Act with a British Bill of
Rights and instead strengthens existing human rights protections.
It called on the government to ensure the UK’s exit from the European
Union does not have a negative effect on human rights, and to allow
devolved administrations to report on how they are dealing with human
rights issues.
Other areas of concern raised by the report include violence against
women and girls, with funding for women’s shelters facing 31% cuts,
dangerous conditions in prisons and increasing hate crime reports.
Stephen Bowen, chief executive of BIHR, said: “The UK Government
needs to listen, not just to the United Nations but to the voices of the
huge range of organisations closer to home that have shared their
serious concerns with the British Institute of Human Rights.
“They are troubled the Government is taking the UK towards further
isolationism and disregarding the United Nations, worsening the
situation with welfare and legal aid cuts, and wanting to scrap the
Human Rights Act, weakening its accountability for our rights at home as
well as internationally.”
The report is based on evidence from 175 civil society organisations,
including Age UK, Unison and the End Violence Against Women Coalition.
But a government spokesperson said: “The UK is a confident, strong
and dependable partner internationally – true to the universal values
shared by the United Nations.
“As a nation we continue to fully comply to our international human
rights obligations and we continue to take action to tackle any abuse of
these rights. This includes working together with the UN to adapt a
global response to mass migration and reducing the threat from
international terrorism, stamping out modern slavery, championing the
rights of women and girls and abhorring sexual violence in conflict.”
Note from Samuel: Please read My Disability Studies Blackboard: The UNCRPD is legally unenforceable; Iain Duncan Smith will be let off the hook by the UN http://mydisabilitystudiesblackboard.blogspot.ca/2015/09/the-uncrpd-is-legally-unenforceable.html; in particular, the last paragraph:
A verdict of guilty would
embarrass the British government on the world stage, but the UN treaty
repercussions would be relatively minor. I am therefore recommending
that a human rights lawsuit be filed against the DWP in conjunction with
a UN CRPD "grave and systematic" violations finding.
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