Scotland’s hate crime law may be well
intentioned, but the police should not stymie public debate
Simon
Jenkins
The Scottish government’s legislation is frankly
unworkable. I worry it may stifle honestly expressed, contentious views
Mon 1 Apr
2024 14.53 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/apr/01/scotland-hate-crime-law-public-debate
It is right
that expressions of hatred against groups based on race and ethnicity are
illegal. Whether these laws have ended hatred or merely driven it underground –
a not unwelcome outcome – is a matter of opinion. But Scotland’s law against
hate crime, implemented this week, extends state intervention to the “stirring
of hatred” against a range of groups defined by age, disability, faith, sexual
orientation, transgender identity or being intersex. Controversially, it does
not extend to women – the Scottish government says a separate misogyny law is
in the works.
The
pitfalls in the new law have led to three years of heated debate in the
Scottish parliament. The prosecution need only prove that a remark was “likely”
rather than “intended” to offend. A crime could be committed if “a reasonable
person would consider it threatening, abusive or insulting”.
The
extension of hatred to include “insulting” conduct is radical. It is one thing
for Scotland’s first minister, Humza Yousaf, to accuse objectors of
overreacting. He will not be the law’s interpreter. It will be for the police
in the first instance and then the courts to judge the extent of the insult.
The victim of a Scottish insult will be at liberty to report it to a police
station for possible prosecution – with a maximum of seven years in jail –
merely on the grounds that they feel their group to be insulted.
Even if the
police decide to take no action, they may register the report as a “hate
incident”, not considered a crime. This has already occurred to an MSP, Murdo
Fraser, who stated on social media that: “Choosing to identify as ‘non-binary’
is as valid as choosing to identify as a cat. I’m not sure governments should
be spending time on action plans for either.” The police have defended the
recording of hate incidents, saying it helps them “monitor tensions within
communities, enabling appropriate police responses”. But is that their job?
Reactions
to the law have focused on the difficulty of coherently defining the crime. The
Scottish Police Federation has already warned of a lack of training for what is
expected to be a “huge uplift” in complaints requiring investigation. A Glasgow
law professor, Adam Tomkins, points out that there is nothing to stop
allegations of hate speech made in the privacy of the family. This has echoes
of Mao’s Cultural Revolution. Nor is there protection for schools, clubs or
private institutions. In effect, the law proposes a potentially massive
extension of police discretion into the private and social life of Scotland.
A different
concern is where the law leaves free speech north of the border. The land of
Reformation and the Enlightenment appears set on becoming the seedbed of state
censorship. Elon Musk of X (formerly Twitter) has already made this claim,
though it is hard to see how the Scottish police are going to monitor the
digital universe. The Edinburgh festival has reportedly been assured of its
safety as the police have promised not to censure actors or satirists, but they
will presumably feel obliged to record any “non-crime hate incidents”.
The
Scottish government is eager to stress its commitment to open debate. It argues
that it is merely extending the clampdown on causing racial offence to other
potentially harmed minorities. The act explicitly mentions adherence to the
European convention on human rights and its protection for “ideas that offend,
shock or disturb”. Quite how that marries with the remainder of the act is a
mystery, one that legislators have left to the forces of law and order to
resolve.
Britain’s
race laws have not eliminated discussion of racial issues, so it is possible
that Scotland’s messy attempt at state censorship will not be unduly
restrictive. It may reduce some of the toxicity of today’s “culture wars”,
which would be welcome. The risk is that it will weaken the informal
disciplines by which we conduct public conversation. For tolerance, courtesy,
understanding and community reprimand, it will substitute the long arm of the
law. Institutions, universities, churches and clubs will not be trusted as fit
places to conduct debate. They must fear the police. That is a sign not of
social advance, but of social failure.
Simon
Jenkins is a Guardian columnist
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário