
The government will enact parliament this week to impose instructions on how to punish the perpetrators of national minorities.
This comes after the Penal Council rejected a request from Justice Minister Shaban Mahmood to review the new guidelines to the judges.
instructions, which will be implemented on Tuesday.say judges must consolidate reports to criminals in some minority groups who look at their advances and circumstances before deciding on their sentences.
the owner Accusing a “two-story” judicial system, With Mahmood, who says it is “decision for different solutions” because the reports before the punishment were for some but not others were encouraged.
The legislature will be brought to justice this week, which government sources said “surgery” the special section of the new guidelines.
They hope to take it urgently in both parliamentary councils. But a Justice Ministry source (MOJ) acknowledged that “there is no world where these guidelines are not implemented” as planned on Tuesday.
The source said the new law “it will focus on special guidelines, especially the provisions we don’t like.
In a letter to the Penal Council, which is an independent public agency responsible for developing the guidelines, Mahmoud said it should be A “political issue” when it was said to have received a pre-punishment report.
“I think it is very important that the decisions made on this question be held accountable, both in parliament and in the vote,” he told the council.
“The view of different treatments before the law is especially evil,” he said.
The council says its new instruction is to treat “injustice in the consequences of sentences” among white and non-white criminals.
In a letter issued on Friday, Judge Davis said the council had decided its “not needed to be revised” and was taken positively during a four-month consultation under the former conservative government.
Moj sources say the ranks “raised questions about the Council of Penalty and Democrats’ Democrats.
They said that broader changes could be in a penalty bill by the end of this year after the former minister of justice. Continuous Review of David Gök It’s finished.
It is not clear what these changes will be.
“That needs to think more,” the source said. “We’re going and doing that.
One of the possibilities is a greater role for ministers or parliament in investigating the Penal Council – something that a figure is described as a “democratic lock” on his powers.
But Lord Falconner, an counterpart and former Justice Minister under Tony Blair’s time, warned of the “American Act” excluding the council.
He said the government should begin an advisor to the also to discuss why those who came from minorities have received tougher sanctions.
“I will not be with the emergency law before the consultation,” Radio 4 told the BBC.
“The reason I am against the law at this stage is that I take the view that the government puts itself in a very difficult situation if they disagree with the council’s opinions, they had an emergency law.
Robert Jenrick, the conservative shadow minister, said everything that the government had done now was “very small.
“Shabna Mahmood has lost control of the judicial system,” he said, claiming he would lead a judicial system that “supported white and Christian people – and that cost tens of millions of dollars.
“The confidence in the criminal judicial system has been separated from each other because of its inability,” he said.