Declan's claim for Judicial Review against Haringey Council
Within two weeks of Declan's dispatch last August of his application to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) concerning the interception of our communications and directed surveillance, human rights activist Belinda McKenzie served us with notice to vacate our flat by the end of January and Haringey Council left us with our first £77 shortfall in rent to pay, among other things. This afternoon Declan lodged his case against the Council with the High Court of Justice Administrative Court, an independent tribunal having ruled how local authorities pay housing benefit outside its jurisdiction:
In October 2007 Declan wrote a petition to the United Nations regarding therapeutic cloning, known technically as 'somatic cell nuclear transfer' (or SCNT). We were living rough on the streets of London at that time - we were forced to live rough in central London for more than 2 1/2 years (see our About statement in the N4CM website) - but nonetheless 28 Nobel laureates and hundreds of scientists and scholars have signed the petition. It would have been signed by thousands if our emails were not getting lost in cyberspace or delivered to spam boxes (see paragraph 8 of Declan's application to the IPT). We believe the petition is more important than ever following the announcement last week that scientists in New York have used SCNT to create personalised embryonic stem cells in humans for the first time.
Prof Robin Lovell-Badge from the UK National Institute for Medical Research, who signed Declan's petition, said of the research published in the journal Nature: "This paper will be seen as significant both by those who are trying to use somatic cell nuclear transfer to produce human patient-specific embryonic stem cell lines and by those who oppose human 'cloning' experiments."