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Breaking curfew: yobs beat labour.


WHEN BRITAIN'S Labour Party was re-elected in May with a majority large enough to conduct the business of government without bothering to consult the opposition, Prime Minister Tony Blair Noun 1. Tony Blair - British statesman who became prime minister in 1997 (born in 1953)
Anthony Charles Lynton Blair, Blair
 had little reason to expect any obstacles to expanding his crackdown on "yobbish antisocial antisocial /an·ti·so·cial/ (-so´sh'l)
1. denoting behavior that violates the rights of others, societal mores, or the law.

2. denoting the specific personality traits seen in antisocial personality disorder.
 behaviour." (Yob means a rude or thuggish young male, for those of you who don't speak British.) But only two months into Blair's third term, a 15-year-old boy, known only as W, managed to do what Britain's feeble Tories have not been able to accomplish since Labour came to power in 1997: overturn a Blair policy.

At issue are the U.K.'s child curfew laws, which permit police to forcibly forc·i·ble  
adj.
1. Effected against resistance through the use of force: The police used forcible restraint in order to subdue the assailant.

2. Characterized by force; powerful.
 send home anyone under the age of 16, whether behaving socially or anti-socially, who is caught outside after 9 p.m. without an adult. Citing the European Convention on Human Rights “ECHR” redirects here. For the court, see European Court of Human Rights.

The Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, also known as the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR
, W brought suit against the London suburb of Richmond and the Metropolitan Police, and convinced Lord Justice Brooke that he has the right to "walk the streets without interference from police."

The boy stated his reasons with childlike simplicity: "Of course I have no problem with being stopped by the police if I've done something wrong.... But they shouldn't be allowed to treat me like a criminal just because I'm under 16." Unconvinced, the Home office plans to appeal the ruling. "Instilling in·still also in·stil  
tr.v. in·stilled, in·still·ing, in·stills also in·stils
1. To introduce by gradual, persistent efforts; implant: "Morality . . .
 more respect in the youth" was one of Labour's campaign planks, and being bested by, a teenager apparently, isn't enough to instill in·still
v.
To pour in drop by drop.



instil·lation n.
 humility in the British government.
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Title Annotation:child curfew rule
Author:Koffler, Daniel
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:254
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