Tag: justified

  • ‘Justified anger’: Senators target executives, regulators in SVB collapse

    ‘Justified anger’: Senators target executives, regulators in SVB collapse

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    2023 0316 finance 10 francis 1

    Brown said the failure of SVB and Signature Bank earlier this month came down to “hubris, entitlement, greed.”

    “Once again, small businesses and workers feared they would pay the price for other people’s bad decisions,” Brown said. “And we’re left with many questions—and justified anger—toward bank executives and boards, toward venture capitalists, toward federal and state bank regulators, and toward policymakers.”

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    #Justified #anger #Senators #target #executives #regulators #SVB #collapse
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Excessive force by police can’t be justified: Delhi HC on CAA protests

    Excessive force by police can’t be justified: Delhi HC on CAA protests

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    New Delhi: Hearing petitions alleging police atrocities on students inside the Jamia Millia Islamia (JMI) University here following anti-CAA protests in December 2019, the Delhi High Court on Monday said excessive use of force cannot be justified and the authorities concerned are accountable for their conduct.

    Representing some of the petitioners in the matter, senior advocate Indira Jaising argued that the force used by police in the present instance was “wholly unproportional to alleged public good” and thus, urged the court to form a fact-finding committee comprising former judges to ascertain the “authentic” events for granting further relief.

    A bench headed by Justice Siddharth Mridul was, however, told by the Delhi Police’s counsel that the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has already prepared a report on this aspect.

    The bench, also comprising Justice Talwant Singh, directed that the NHRC report be given to the petitioners within four weeks and said there is “enough jurisprudence” on the issue of excessive use of force by police in the country.

    “Excessive use of force cannot be justified at all. They (police officials) are accountable. These authorities are accountable for the excessive use of force. That is why you (petitioners) are here,” the court said.

    Jaising said there was no last-mile implementation of the court’s decisions while clarifying that the NHRC report did not put an end to the relief sought in her plea.

    “Please take a look at that report,” the court told the senior lawyer.

    In her submissions, Jaising contended that there was “extreme form of violence” by police officials inside the Jamia campus, even after a threat to law and order was diluted when the protesting students returned to the university and the city police had no “backing of law” or permission from the vice-chancellor to enter the campus.

    The police personnel trespassed and can be seen beating up students brutally and since there is no authentic fact finding in relation to the incident, the court may appoint a committee for the purpose, she said.

    In another matter, the court granted time to the petitioner, represented by senior advocate Salman Khurshid, to file written submissions with respect to his prayer seeking guidelines on use of force and peaceful protests in universities.

    In relation to the December 2019 incident, several petitions are pending before the court, seeking directions for setting up a special investigation team (SIT), a commission of inquiry (CoI) or a fact-finding committee, medical treatment, compensation and interim protection from arrest for the students and registration of FIRs against the erring police officers.

    The petitioners are lawyers, Jamia students, residents of Okhla in south Delhi where the university is located and the imam of the Jama Masjid located opposite the Parliament House.

    During the course of the hearing, the court questioned if the petitioners can directly seek action and FIRs against the allegedly erring police officials, without first making a complaint.

    Senior advocate Colin Gonsalves, appearing in the matter for some of the petitioners, said the high court can decide the matter directly since it is public interest litigation (PIL) and the parties need not be “directly affected”.

    Another counsel argued that there is medical evidence to show the injuries sustained by the students and the court can interfere in cases of violation of fundamental rights.

    The petitioners had earlier said in the present case, there was a need for an SIT, which would be independent of police and the Centre, which by their conduct have shown that their investigation into the violence was “not independent”.

    They had said such a move would “reassure the public” and restore the people’s faith in the system.

    Some petitioners have also filed amendment applications for adding new prayers to the existing pleas, such as to set up an SIT and transfer the FIRs lodged against the students to an independent agency.

    The Delhi Police has opposed the petitions and said the reliefs sought by the petitioners cannot be granted as chargesheets have been filed in connection with the violence cases and they should have sought whatever relief they wanted before the subordinate court.

    It has opposed the setting up of an SIT to inquire into the alleged police atrocities as well as transferring the FIRs lodged against the students to an independent agency, and argued that a “stranger” cannot seek a judicial enquiry or investigation by a third-party agency.

    The city police has said PIL petitioners cannot be allowed to choose the members of an SIT for investigating and prosecuting any alleged offence.

    It has asserted that in the garb of student agitation, there was a well-planned and orchestrated attempt by some people with local support to intentionally perpetrate violence in the area and subsequently, comprehensive investigation was carried out by the Crime Branch of the Delhi Police in several FIRs.

    The matter would be heard next on May 8.

    On October 19, 2022, the Supreme Court had requested the high court to “hear out early” the petitions concerning the incidents of violence during the protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA), while noting that “these matters are pending before the high court for some time now”.

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    #Excessive #force #police #justified #Delhi #CAA #protests

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Trudeau’s ‘Freedom Convoy’ shutdown was justified, inquiry rules

    Trudeau’s ‘Freedom Convoy’ shutdown was justified, inquiry rules

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    The commissioner highlighted lapses in policing, intelligence and federalism, as well as “the failure to anticipate such a moment and to properly manage the legitimate protests that emerged, especially the protest in Ottawa.”

    Trudeau said his government didn’t want to invoke the Emergencies Act a year ago, but the longer the protests dragged on, concerns about violence, potentially spurred by ideologically motivated violent extremism, grew.

    “It was unfortunate, it was undesirable, we didn’t want to do it,” he told reporters Friday afternoon on Parliament Hill. “But we’d gotten to a place where there was no other choice.”

    Rouleau’s government-friendly conclusion wasn’t a slam dunk.

    “I do not come to this conclusion easily, as I do not consider the factual basis for it to be overwhelming and I acknowledge that there is significant strength to the arguments against reaching it,” he wrote.

    Still, Rouleau agreed with the federal government’s arguments on most points of contention that arose during six weeks of public hearings.

    The government shielded the legal opinion that guided Cabinet’s decision to invoke by citing solicitor-client privilege. Lawyers who represented civil rights groups at the commission insisted Cabinet should waive that privilege and reveal that key legal guidance.

    Rouleau sided with the government. “I do not need to see the legal advice itself in order to accept the evidence that [Cabinet] believed their conclusion to be justified in law.”

    Convoy organizers have always maintained that protests were largely peaceful. Rouleau accepted that reports of “serious, widespread violence” never materialized at protest sites, and acknowledged violent acts “might have been avoided” without a declaration of emergency.

    “That it might have been avoided does not, however, make the decision wrong,” Rouleau countered, writing that “substantial grounds” supported Cabinet’s concern based on “compelling and credible” information.

    Trudeau’s Cabinet also took heat for its interpretation of a national security threat.

    At the height of the protests, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service did not conclude the protests posed a threat to the security of Canada, according to the threshold set out in the CSIS Act that guides the agency.

    Cabinet came to a different conclusion, even though the same definition of a national security threat appears in the Emergencies Act. CSIS director David Vigneault testified at the hearings that he agreed with Cabinet’s invocation of emergency powers.

    In his own testimony, Trudeau insisted the same definition appears in two places — but what matters most is “who is doing the interpretation, what inputs come in, and what is the purpose of it?”

    Rouleau agreed with the prime minister’s view. “Two different decision makers, each interpreting the same words in the context of different statutes, can reasonably come to different conclusions as to whether the threshold is met,” he wrote.

    The commissioner also agreed that most of the powers invoked were appropriate and effective, including most of the controversial measures that allowed financial institutions to freeze protesters’ assets.

    Trudeau said his government would respond to Rouleau’s report, and its 56 recommendations, within six months.

    Here are six takeaways from Rouleau’s landmark report:

    There were communication failures

    In a televised address ahead of the convoy’s arrival, Trudeau referenced a “small fringe minority,” comments that energized protesters, Rouleau says.

    Opposition Conservatives have accused the prime minister of using the pandemic to divide Canadians.

    On Friday, Trudeau expressed rare contrition. “I wish I had phrased it differently,” he said, reflecting on how protesters were a “small subset of people who were just hurting and worried and wanting to be heard.”

    Government leaders at all levels should have worked harder to acknowledge that most protesters were exercising their democratic rights, the report concludes.

    “Messaging by politicians, public officials and, to some extent, the media, should have been more balanced, and drawn a clearer distinction between those who were protesting peacefully and those who were not.”

    Ottawa’s police chief was scapegoated

    Although the inquiry spotlight was on Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly, Rouleau says it would be inconsistent with evidence to blame him alone for policing failures.

    “Some errors on Chief Sloly’s part were unduly enlarged by others to a degree that suggests scapegoating,” the report concludes. “He was rarely given the benefit of the doubt as to his intentions.”

    Sloly’s decision to resign during the occupation did remove an obstacle to resolution, Rouleau notes.

    Ontario was missing in action

    Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his government did not fully engage during the crisis, the report concludes. “Many witnesses saw the province as trying to avoid responsibility for responding to a crisis within its borders,” Rouleau writes.

    The justice notes that it was the blockade of the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor — “the single most important commercial land crossing in Canada” — that spurred the province to action. Only after a Feb. 9 conversation between Trudeau and Ford did collaboration “become the name of the game,” he says.

    Ford and his solicitor general, Sylvia Jones, refused to be interviewed by the Commission counsel.

    Asset freezing had pros and cons

    Rouleau concludes the emergency measures that allowed the assets of protesters to be frozen was an effective measure that helped to shorten their stay in Ottawa.

    “The absence of a delisting mechanism is more troubling,” Rouleau writes, criticizing the absence of one for sowing confusion among the financial institutions tasked with freezing the assets.

    “If one of the objectives of the freezing regime was to convince people to leave protests sites, the regime should have had a mechanism to unfreeze accounts once people complied,” he wrote.

    Rouleau called one aspect of the asset-freezing regime — the suspension of vehicle insurance — “inappropriate in principle.” Though it wasn’t enforced, the report raised alarm over its safety implications if protesters had their insurance suspended and were to get in an accident after leaving Ottawa in an uninsured vehicle.

    Concerns about American involvement were “reasonable”

    The protests found an audience in the United States willing to donate to the Canadian cause.

    Roughly 59 percent of the donors who gave money to the Freedom Convoy’s campaign on GiveSendGo, a Christian fundraising site, came from the United States, with 35 percent of the donations originating from Canada.

    Americans also joined from afar with interference campaigns to jam essential services.

    “Calls originating from the United States had flooded emergency 911 call centres in Ottawa,” Rouleau writes in his report. The situation came up during calls between Trudeau and President Joe Biden.

    “It was reasonable to consider that individuals would come to Canada to physically join the protests, and it was appropriate to take measures to prevent this.”

    Misinformation and disinformation played a complicated role

    The report says social media played a critical role in shaping the Freedom Convoy.

    “False beliefs that Covid-19 vaccines manipulate DNA, social media feeds rife with homophobic or racist content, and inaccurate reporting of important events all features in the evidence before me,” Rouleau writes. “Some views were outright conspiratorial.”

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    #Trudeaus #Freedom #Convoy #shutdown #justified #inquiry #rules
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )