Monday, September 21, 2009

Will Baroness Scotland be 'cleared' because there will be no trial?


Dear All

Baroness Scotland is the Attorney-General for England and Wales and Northern Ireland.

But she has a problem.

She employed an illegal worker for six months at her £2 million pound Chiswick home.

Now the scandal has broken into the open even a Labour Party MP in the shape of Graham Stringer is calling for her to resign with immediate effect.

Graham Stringer has also launched an outspoken attack on Gordon Brown’s extraordinary failure in not sacking her.

The row centres round a woman called Tongan Loloahi Tapui who Baroness Scotland illegal employed; Tapui has over stayed on her student visa by five years so clearly had no intention of going home.

Lady Scotland now faces prospect of a £10,000 fine for breaking immigration rules she helped to draw up.

But since she is in the Labour Party and a Government minister, as usual, it will be swept under the carpet and she will be 'cleared'.

If the Tories take up the matter then possibly she could be forced to resign, after all, if she is found to be above the law then how can justice function properly?

It will also highlight my theme of a corrupt Britain if she walks.

The immigration service has already smashed in the door of Tongan Loloahi Tapui but as yet they haven’t dealt out the same treatment at Baroness Scotland’s residence, which technically is the ‘scene of the crime’.

Why not?

Could it be that her status precludes such treatment?

I would say yes!

In a country like Britain, the authorities only go after the little fish, people like Baroness Scotland operate above the law and are untouchable.

As for her resigning I think we can safely say that will not happen.

In other words, I suspect something to done to rig the process so that there will be no trial.

Yours sincerely

George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University

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