JUSTICE submits a briefing to the Lords on the Overseas Operations (Service Personnel and Veterans) Bill for Second Reading

This briefing addresses JUSTICE’s concerns with the Overseas Operations (Service Personnel and Veterans) Bill. JUSTICE recognises the unique role and status of the UK’s armed forces, and the difficulties faced by service personnel. However, this Bill is deficient in two important respects, as it both fails to support current and former service personnel whilst also depriving victims of serious crime access to appropriate remedies. In particular, the Bill would:

  1. damage the standing of the armed forces by acting contrary to established legal norms – both domestic and international. It would do so by introducing a threshold which would be near-impossible to meet where claims for torture and other serious crimes are made after five years. By affording effective impunity for UK overseas military operations, the Bill signals that, rather than adhering to a strict human rights framework in the rules of engagement, the UK is prepared to relax, or worse, disregard, protection from torture and inhuman and degrading treatment. The Bill risks contravening the UK’s obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights and other international legal instruments, many of which the UK helped to create; and
  2. restrict the ability of service people to bring claims for personal injury and death during the course of overseas actions. Rather than protecting and enhancing the rights of service personnel, it would weaken their key avenue for proper compensation. The Bill would serve only to shield the Government.

JUSTICE also notes the context in which this Bill arises. The Government’s introduction of the Covert Human Intelligence Sources (Criminal Conduct) Bill, and its expressed intention to create a mechanism by which covert operatives, who can be members of the public, seasoned criminals, or even children, could benefit from a broad immunity, signals a worrying disregard for the UK’s commitment to human rights standards. This risk was equally present with respect to the Internal Markets Bill, which would have allowed the Government to derogate from the UK’s obligations under international law. In sum, this Bill actively deepens these anxieties, especially at a time of great political and constitutional uncertainty.

For these reasons, as expanded in the briefing, JUSTICE strongly resists the passage of the Bill and urges parliamentarians to vote against this proposal.


Read our full briefing here.