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8 Nov 2006 : Column WS37
Written Statements
Wednesday 8 November 2006
Aviation: Foreign-registered Aircraft
Lord Davies of Oldham: My honourable friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport (Ms Gillian Merron) has made the following Ministerial Statement.
On 1 August 2005 the department launched a consultation paper seeking views on the principle of whether foreign-registered aircraft based in the UK being used for non-commercial purposes should be required to be placed on the UK or another EU register. This would ensure that the safety of such aircraft was overseen by the Civil Aviation Authority or another EU aviation authority and that they were operated to European safety standards.
The Government have considered the responses to the consultation carefully and decided that it would not be appropriate at this time to introduce a requirement to place such aircraft on the UK register.
The Government response to the consultation has today been published and is available on the department's website, at www.dft.gov.uk. Copies have also been placed in the House Libraries.
The response explains that the Government's objective remains that aircraft based in the UK should be required to meet safety standards acceptable within Europe and be subject to checking by the UK and other European aviation authorities.
European proposals published in November 2005 to extend the scope of common European aviation safety rules may provide scope for a better means of achieving that objective in a proportionate way. Stakeholders have been consulted generally on the proposal to amend Regulation (EC) No 1592/2002 on common rules in the field of civil aviation and establishing a European Aviation Safety Agency. This proposal specifically amends the scope of the EASA regulation to include a category of aircraft registered in a third country and used into, within or out of the Community by an operator established or residing in the Community. Detailed implementing rules will be needed to give force to this amendment and we would expect the agency to consult stakeholders on the details of its proposals at the appropriate time.
Crime: Proceeds from Memoirs
The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Scotland of Asthal): My honourable friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department, Mr Gerry Sutcliffe, has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
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The Government are committed to rebalancing the criminal justice system in favour of victims and the law-abiding majority.
It is wrong for convicted criminals to profit from their crimes now or in the future, whether directly from the proceeds of the crime itself or indirectly through cashing in on the story of their crime. It is contrary to the principles of natural justice that they should be able to exploit for financial gain crimes which have devastated the lives of victims and their families.
Together with the Scottish Executive and my ministerial colleague at the Northern Ireland Office, the honourable Member for Delyn, we will be publishing on Friday 10 November a consultation paper setting out a range of possible options for tackling this problem.
I will be placing copies of the consultation in the House Libraries. We would welcome comments on the proposals it contains.
Crime: Sentences
The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Scotland of Asthal): My right honourable friend the Secretary of State for the Home Department, John Reid, has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
I am informing the House of my intention to publish shortly a consultation document entitled Making Sentencing Clearer. This document meets the commitment I made in July, in the review of the criminal justice system, to bring forward with the Lord Chancellor and the Attorney-General a consultation on a number of sentencing and related issues.
The consultation outlines proposals for building better public understanding and confidence in the way sentences are handed down by judges and magistrates. The consultation also makes proposals for providing sentencers with more flexibility in sentencing dangerous offenders and proposals designed to focus probation resources on the more serious offenders.
Copies of the consultation will be placed in the Library and on the Home Office website.
Sanctions
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Triesman): My honourable friend the Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Dr Kim Howells, has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
The Government have committed themselves to informing Parliament on an annual basis of the sanctions regimes being implemented by the United Kingdom. Currently the United Kingdom implements United Nations sanctions in relation to al-Qaeda and the Taliban, Côte dIvoire, the Democratic Republic
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