Application to the European Court of Human Rights
Yesterday Declan sent his application to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) regarding the interception of our communications and directed surveillance, having introduced the case to the Court on 5 September. As Declan writes in paragraph 20, within two weeks of the dispatch of his complaint to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT), dated 10 August, I had my Facebook account disabled; our IP address was twice blocked by our web host; our live-in landlady, human rights activist Belinda McKenzie, served us with backdated notice to vacate what has been our home since July 2009; and our local housing authority, Haringey Council, left us with our first £77 shortfall in rent to pay. Nonetheless, the IPT came back to us on 1 September, stating that Declan's complaint was “obviously unsustainable”.
There is no appeal from a decision of the IPT, leaving us with the ECHR and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. This is Declan's application to the ECHR:
This morning our jobcentre, Highgate Jobcentre Plus, came at us again, despite that Declan has them before a High Court judge next month. First an officer was keen for us to agree to let the jobcentre send our CVs to any employer of their choosing! Then we were issued letters staing that we are now being placed with Reed in Partnership, a private-sector provider of the Department for Work and Pensions' Work Programme. Declan wrote in paragraph 17 of the application above that we are deeply concerned about what lies in wait for us with the next provider.
No sooner will we have completed our first interviews with Reed in Partnership than we will turn on our skeleton argument for the High Court hearing, given the nightmare we were put through for a year with Action for Employment (A4E) and the blasé attitude Highgate Jobcentre Plus had towards all four of the formal complaints Declan lodged with the jobcentre alleging serious breaches of contract by A4E.