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14th September 2005
ASBOs
wont cure the pain
Here are a few examples
of Anti Social Behaviour Orders (ASBO) from Britain cited by the National
Youth Council of Ireland in their campaign against the introduction of
ASBOs to Ireland.
A 13 year
old was banned from using the word grass
A 16 year old was banned from showing his tattoos.
A profoundly deaf girl was served an order for spitting in public.
An 87 year old was forbidden from being sarcastic to his neighbours.
A 17 year old was banned from travelling on the top deck of buses
A football fan was banned from playing ball games in the street
An Eminem and Dido fan was banned from owning a stereo, radio or
TV.
A 17 year old was ordered not to enter or leave his home except
by a back alley.
A 21 year old was banned from wearing a woolly hat, baseball cap
or hooded top.
A 23 year old who repeatedly tried to kill herself was ordered
not to go near railway lines, rivers, bridges and multistory car parks.
A 27 year old was banned from answering the front door in her underwear.
The purpose of publishing this list is, presumably, to make us all shudder
in horror at the pettiness and painlessness of these restrictions.
But hold on! Some of them seem pretty reasonable to me.
Take the one about the deaf girl spitting. Are they trying to say that
just because shes deaf she shouldnt be held accountable for
her behaviour?
Then theres the 17 year-old being banned from the top deck of a
bus. Well, everyone in this city has met someone who has made bus passengers
lives miserable. Dont passengers have rights too?
I suspect that lots of people would only be too glad to see many of the
ASBO heads thrown to the wolves. But they are missing the point.
There are actually three main problems with ASBOs. Firstly, no one
is sure if they work. Secondly, they drive a cart and horses through the
concept of due process. And thirdly the avoid the main problem, which
is the decline of community.
A young person may be saddled with an ASBO on the word of a senior garda.
A judge wont have to operate under the principle of reasonable
doubt. If the young person then breaks the ASBO, they will be committing
a criminal offence.
So long as the young person is cowed by the ASBO, were winning.
If they break the ASBO, then were going to have to jail them for
littering or whatever.
And if you send someone to jail, you better keep them there, because theres
no better way of producing career criminals.
Such heavy-handedness could cause huge resentment and weaken the reputation
of the gardai, the housing authorities and the local authorities who will
be called on to collect evidence for ASBOs.
Michael McDowell says they are a last resort. Maybe. But it looks like
a defeat to me, as if the State is throwing in the towel on community
development.
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