Garda Commissioner Drew Harris criticises draconian Government plans to reform force
Government plans to reform the Garda and its oversight agencies have been dealt a blow by Garda Commissioner Drew Harris, who says he has âserious concernsâ about new legislation drafted to provide for the changes.
The Irish Times has learned Mr Harris sent forthright correspondence to the joint Oireachtas Committee on Justice, in which he said reforms planned by the Government were âdraconianâ and marked by an âabsence of clarityâ.
He welcomed the creation of a new Garda board but said the lack of clarity about how it would overlap with the new Policing and Community Safety Authority risked âencroaching on the operational independenceâ of the office of Garda Commissioner.
Mr Harris was critical of the âdisproportionateâ new powers being given to the Garda SÃochána Ombudsman Commission (Gsoc), which investigates allegations of wrongdoing against Garda members.
The powers would be legally challenged by Garda members placed under investigation. That litigation was likely to prove successful on the basis âthe very foundational principles of constitutional fairnessâ had been âtransgressedâ.
Mr Harris has critiqued the Governmentâs Policing, Security and Community Safety Bill, having been invited to make a submission by the Oireachtas committee as part of the pre-legislative scrutiny process.
âAs it is currently drafted, the scheme falls well short of our shared ambition for a transparent, accountable, trusted and effective policing service for the future,â he said of the Bill in his submission.
ChallengingIn reply to queries, the Department of Justice said âsignificant organisational reform, including institutional change, culture and work practices, is always challengingâ. Reforms in the Bill were part of the programme for government. Minister for Justice Heather Humphreys had âdiscussed it with the commissioner and will continue to do soâ.
Mr Harris also noted a new âindependent examiner of security legislationâ was being created as an oversight agency for State security services and legislation. But the Garda was âresolute in its positionâ that State security intelligence could never be shared âwithout the explicit permissionâ of those who provided the intelligence.
The critical appraisal by Mr Harris is problematic for Government as he was appointed three years ago to implement Garda reform recommended by the Commission on the Future of Policing in Ireland. The Bill is based on those recommendations.
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