The law, introduced last year to offer immunity from prosecution
for those who cooperate fully with a new investigative body,
sparked more than 20 legal challenges in Northern Ireland,
mostly from victims' families, who said it contravenes the ECHR
and a 1998 peace deal that ended the three decades of bloodshed.
"I am satisfied that immunity from prosecution provisions under
Section 19 of the Act are in breach of the lead applicant's
rights pursuant to Article 2 of the ECHR. I am also satisfied
that they are in beach of Article 3 of the ECHR," Judge Adrian
Colton told the court in a 200-page judgment.
"There is no evidence that the granting of immunity under the
Act will in any way contribute to reconciliation in Northern
Ireland. Indeed, the evidence is to the contrary."
The ruling can be challenged in Northern Ireland's Court of
Appeal and should that fail, the UK Supreme Court. The more than
20 challenges were condensed down to lead cases that were ruled
on on Wednesday.
Victims' families, human rights organisations and all major
political parties in Northern Ireland - both British unionist
and Irish nationalist - oppose the law. The Irish government is
mounting a separate legal challenge against Britain over it.
Lawyers for the applicants told the court in November that
victims' families who had been seeking justice for decades had
suffered "a form of secondary trauma."
Britain has defended the law, saying prosecutions linked to the
events of up to 55 years ago are increasingly unlikely. A lawyer
for the government argued that the law was a "logical
outworking" of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement and could draw a
line under the conflict.
Around 3,600 people died in three decades of confrontation
between Irish nationalist militants seeking a united Ireland,
pro-British "loyalist" paramilitaries and the British military.
(Reporting by Amanda Ferguson, writing by Padraic Halpin;
Editing by Kate Holton)
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