The danger of an unelected UN

UN says Janine Balding’s killers have been denied human rights

 

LIFE sentences given to two teenage boys convicted of the rape and murder of a Sydney woman is in breach of Australia’s human rights obligations, the United Nations says.

 

Sentences imposed on children must allow for review and the prospect of release, the UN Human Rights Committee found in response to a complaint made by Bronson Blessington and Matthew Elliott.

 

The pair were respectively 14 and 16 when they were sentenced to life in prison, never to be released, for the murder of 20-year-old bank teller Janine Balding in 1988.

 

Ms Balding, 20, was abducted at knifepoint near Sydney’s Sutherland train station in 1988 by a group including Blessington and Elliott, as she was on her way home from work at a credit union.

 

She was forced into her own car and repeatedly raped. She was gagged and hogtied and was drowned in the mud at a shallow dam at Minchinbury.

 

Legislative changes after Blessington and Elliott were convicted meant they would only be released if they were dying or incapacitated to the point they could not commit a crime.

 

The committee found that because the sentence allowed no genuine chance of release, even with full rehabilitation, it was in breach of the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

 

In its findings the committee said sentences imposed on children must allow for “the possibility of review and a prospect of release, notwithstanding the gravity of the crime and the circumstances around it”.

 

“This does not mean that release should necessarily be granted,” it found.

 

“It rather means that release should not be a mere theoretical possibility and that the review procedure should be a thorough one.”

Human Rights Law Centre senior lawyer Ruth Barson said the question raised was about the legality of a system that does not allow for consideration of rehabilitation.

 

“No one is questioning the terrible nature of the crimes committed, but an effective and lawful response to children committing such crimes requires more than simply locking them up and throwing away the key,” she said.

 

“We shouldn’t just give up on children offenders, we need progress reviews built into a system — not retrospective laws that specifically prohibit them.”

 

The Australian government has 180 days to respond.

 

http://www.news.com.au/national/un-says-janine-baldings-killers-have-been-denied-human-rights/story-...

 

Our only response should be no response. Our Constitution (1901) grants the commonwealth the power to make laws for peace, order and good government. Flowing from the Constitution are residual powers which remain the domain of the states. It would be a legal quagmire to sort it out but it would seem the states have protection and power to enact laws. The murder of Janine Balding was committed in NSW and that state seems to have the power to lock people away and toss the key down a well if it wants to.

 

The message must be if you don't like prison life try and avoid it at all costs.

Message 1 of 14
Latest reply
13 REPLIES 13

The danger of an unelected UN

I can see why they are saying this, the boys were 14 and 16 at the time and in the company of older men. I am certain they knew what they were doing at that age but perhaps it does need to be reviewed and decided on their current state of mind.

Message 2 of 14
Latest reply

The danger of an unelected UN

It's not about how terrible this crime was, it is about the law and legal precedents.  Once we accept that somebody can be imprisoned for ever without any recourse, then it can be misused.  

000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

Voltaire: “Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities, Can Make You Commit Atrocities” .
Message 3 of 14
Latest reply

The danger of an unelected UN

Leave them where they are. At the time, I had dealings with one of them and he was pure evil. I don't imagine for one moment that he has changed.

Message 4 of 14
Latest reply

The danger of an unelected UN

Their "civil rights" ended where the victim's began.....let them rot.........Or, conversely, configure their sentences to "life or 60 years, whichever comes first".........

Message 5 of 14
Latest reply

The danger of an unelected UN

Did Janine Balding have any protection from the Human Rights Committy?

I agree that if you take a human life, and take it conciously, premeditated and violently, you are going to be locked up for life and the key thrown away.

 

Human Rights fanatics should turn their interest to countries that still stone women to death for so called honour blemishes.

 

Erica Woman Frustrated

Message 6 of 14
Latest reply

The danger of an unelected UN


@jean2579 wrote:

Leave them where they are. At the time, I had dealings with one of them and he was pure evil. I don't imagine for one moment that he has changed.


Well, then there will be no chance that he will be released.  Just like Julian Knight. 

 

Hoevr, just because some other countries do not respect human rights does not mean we should follow them.

000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

Voltaire: “Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities, Can Make You Commit Atrocities” .
Message 7 of 14
Latest reply

The danger of an unelected UN


@***super_nova*** wrote:

@jean2579 wrote:

Leave them where they are. At the time, I had dealings with one of them and he was pure evil. I don't imagine for one moment that he has changed.


Well, then there will be no chance that he will be released.  Just like Julian Knight. 

 

Hoevr, just because some other countries do not respect human rights does not mean we should follow them.


On the contrary. Crimes like that should automatically incur the death penalty.

Message 8 of 14
Latest reply

The danger of an unelected UN

but...... we don't have the death penalty............... and what about those innocent people who have been released years after the crime?

Message 9 of 14
Latest reply

The danger of an unelected UN


@azureline** wrote:

but...... we don't have the death penalty............... and what about those innocent people who have been released years after the crime?


If the case is proven without a doubt, as in the Janine Balding and the Anita Cobby case, the death penalty should apply.

Message 10 of 14
Latest reply