A Lord Ordinary has refused a petition by a father seeking the return of two children to Poland after their mother took them back to Scotland, where they had lived the majority of their lives, on the basis that they would be at risk of harm if returned. Petitioner MP sought the return of his childre
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Lord Ordinary reduces codicil to will after finding that deceased’s second wife forged his signature
Two siblings who alleged that their stepmother forged the signature of their late father in a codicil altering the manner in which his property was to be distributed have succeeded in an action for reduction in the Outer House of the Court of Session. David Niven and Carole Melaisi, the children of
A round-up of human rights stories from around the world. House where Hitler was born to become police station and human rights training centre, Austria says
China is "dismantling" the principle of 'one country, two systems' and eroding Hong Kong's autonomy, democratic principles and fundamental freedoms, the EU has said in a new report. The European Commission and the high representative have adopted the 25th annual report to the European Parliament and
A Lord Ordinary has ordered a tribunal to rehear the application of a 50-year-old man whose claim for criminal injuries compensation in respect of sexual assaults committed against him in the 1980s was refused. Petitioner DM argued that the First-tier Tribunal’s Social Entitlement Chamber had
Property listings for sale in Scotland have risen substantially across several cities, according to DJ Alexander. The most noteworthy increases from August 2022 to August 2023 were in Inverness with an 83 per cent rise, followed by Dundee at 81 per cent. Edinburgh saw a 45 per cent increase, Perth r
An Edinburgh doctor who was given an interim suspension by the General Medical Council after being detained regarding allegations of terrorist activity in Northern Ireland has had his suspension extended following a successful petition by the GMC to the Outer House of the Court of Session. The respo
Campaigners have backed proposals for a new ecocide law in Scotland. Such a law would establish a specific crime for causing mass environmental damage. The move would fulfil the decade-long campaign of the Scottish barrister Polly Higgins, who passed away in 2019.
A final-year dental student at a Scottish university whose studies were terminated due to what the university saw as ongoing professionalism issues has had a petition for judicial review of the decision to uphold his terminated refused. Petitioner SM sought reduction of the decision of the universit
Slovakia might be a distant land, and Covid a distant memory. But a significant case brought to the European Court of Human Rights could bring closure to some of the legal questions posed during the pandemic – much-needed closure that many European nations have not yet received, writes Lo
A Glasgow teenager who stabbed a 14-year-old schoolboy and left him dying on a railway platform has been jailed for a minimum of 16 years. Daniel Haig, from Glasgow, murdered 14-year-old Justin McLaughlin with a single knife blow which penetrated the boy’s heart. Haig was 16 at the time. At th
There were no prosecutions relating to individuals who failed to participate in Scotland's census last year, BBC News reports. Seven people were reported to the Crown Office on charges of ignoring the survey. The National Records of Scotland (NRS), which oversees the census, had cautioned that defau
A Note of Objection by a pursuer who settled a personal injury action against a decision of the Auditor of Court to disallow fees for junior counsel instructed halfway through the claim has been refused by a Lord Ordinary of the Court of Session. Samantha Maguire settled her claim against Black Isle
UK government schemes to relocate Afghans to Britain are failing, according to a new report from JUSTICE. The publication of Reforming the Afghanistan Resettlement Schemes: the way forward for ARAP and ACRS marks the two-year anniversary of the fall of Kabul and the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.
In the almost 30 years since the introduction of protocols for personal injury claims, voluntary then compulsory, pursuers and defenders alike have often accused each other of failing to act “within the spirit” of the applicable protocol. The well-worn issue was raised again in two recen
