GUARDIAN ARTICLE COVERING THE HATE CRIME AND PUBLIC ORDER ACT
Note: Anon is going to post this, but be careful of the narrative and agenda pushing by this deep state tabloid.
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Scotland’s new hate crime law: what does it cover and why is it controversial?
The government insists the law, coming into force on Monday, is needed to protect victims but critics say it limits freedom of expression
Libby Brooks Scotland correspondent
Sun 31 Mar 2024 14.00 BST
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A new law to tackle hate crime in Scotland will be implemented on 1 April, and in the past few weeks there have been escalating concerns about how it will be policed and how it might affect freedom of speech. Scotland’s first minister, Humza Yousaf, has hit back at “disinformation and inaccuracy” being spread about its implementation.
What are the aims of the new hate crime law?
The Scottish government says that Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act will provide greater protection for victims and communities. It is intended to consolidate existing hate crime laws, but also creates a new offence of “threatening or abusive behaviour which is intended to stir up hatred” on the grounds of age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, transgender identity and variations in sex characteristics. These additional provisions add to longstanding offences relating to stirring up racial hatred, which have been in place across the UK since 1986.
The law, which was passed in 2021 and has taken an unusually long time to come into force, had a rocky passage though Holyrood, with MSPs voting to strengthen freedom of speech provisions after earlier iterations provoked an outcry from religious and arts groups.
Yousaf, who was justice secretary at the time and helped bring the bill through parliament, assured MSPs that it balanced protections for victims of hate crime with safeguarding freedom of expression.
Why does the new law not include misogyny?
There was anger at the time that the bill excluded hatred of women. Even before it was passed, an independent working group, led by Helena Kennedy KC, was established to consider whether adding sex to the list of other protected characteristics or creating a standalone offence would better tackle misogynist abuse.
The group later recommended that the Scottish government introduce a misogyny act to crack down on street harassment and organised online hate. It was included in Yousaf’s programme for government last September but has yet to be published and there is no further information available about its timetabling.
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