On SIAC: the Special Immigration Appeals Commission
Brian Barder, 18 March 2004
“When I was asked, in November 1997, whether I would allow my name to be submitted to the Lord Chancellor for appointment as a lay member of the new Special Immigration Appeals Commission, I readily agreed . . . because I accepted that special procedures for appeals against deportation in national security cases were justified. I believed that SIAC, though imperfect, was probably the best way of giving maximum protection both to those appealing against deportation and to the sources of information essential to the effective functioning of the security services . . . But subsequent developments forced me to conclude that I could not in all conscience play any further part in SIAC, and in January this year I resigned.”