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I do think that The Human Rights Act has been used in a very peculiar way.  As I understand it it has been used to permit a man who has raped several teenage girls to remain in this country as to deport him would breach his human rights.  What about the rights of teenage girls (even women in general) who might be at risk?  There have been loads of examples of this, notably to do with travellers' right to concrete over green belt areas over Bank Holiday Weekends.
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I do think that The Human Rights Act has been used in a very peculiar way
As has been demonstrated today with the alleged leader of a Al-Qaeda plot not being deported to Pakistan as he faced torture. See BBC article.
In the article it refers to the Human Rights Act and says:

BBC political correspondent Laura Kuenssberg said Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude has suggested the coalition government will, for now, retain the Human Rights Act. This is despite a promise in the Conservative manifesto to replace it with "a British Bill of Rights".

Which is similar to my earlier posting.

 

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El Loro
As far as I'm aware the Sun has a cover price of 30p against the Daily Mirror's 45p.  The Daily Star is 20p (I think).  I don't think the Sun could compete with the Mirror these days if it was priced at 45p.  I doubt many men buy the Sun for page 3 in the age of free internet porn.



Price and a mixture of inane celeb gossip, cheap holiday offers and popularist right wing politics seems to be the big appeal.
Carnelian

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