Armed Forces Act 2006

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The Armed Forces Act 2006 (c.52) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

It received royal assent in the United Kingdom on 8 November 2006 and came into force over the next two years. It replaces the three separate Service Discipline Acts (the Army Act 1955, the Air Force Act 1955 and the Naval Discipline Act 1957) as the system of military law under which the British Armed Forces operate. The Armed Forces Act harmonises service law between the three armed services. One motivating factor behind the changes in the legislation combining discipline acts across the armed forces is the trend towards tri-service operations and defence organisations.

Key areas of change included:

  • Summary Discipline Summary hearing and the role of the Commanding Officer is retained at the heart of Service discipline and is the mechanism by which most offences are dealt. Summary offences and powers are harmonised across the Services. There is a reduction in the number of offences and sentencing powers available to Commanding Officers of the Royal Navy and an increase in those available to British Army and Royal Air Force Commanding Officers as powers of punishment are harmonised.
  • Service Prosecuting Authority A single Service Prosecuting Authority, staffed by lawyers from all three Services, has been created. The role of the SPA is unchanged in that it will determine whether to prosecute an accused under Service law and will conduct the prosecution case at most Courts Martial.
  • The Court Martial Courts Martial remain the means of dealing with the most serious offences. A standing Court Martial has been introduced comprising a Judge Advocate and a minimum of 3 or 5 Service members depending on the seriousness of the offence. In order to harmonise with the other Services, the Royal Navy introduced the unqualified right for all personnel to elect for trial by Court Martial regardless of the seriousness of the offence.
  • Service Offences Service offences are those offences in the act that are unique to Service law – serving to enforce the discipline essential to maintaining operational effectiveness of the Armed Forces.

The Act also granted a symbolic pardon to soldiers controversially executed for cowardice and other offences during the First World War.

[edit] Offences in the Act

The Act provides for the prosecution of various offences, under ten main headings. These are

  • Assisting an enemy, misconduct on operations, etc.
  • Mutiny In the Act, mutiny is defined as being if a person subject to service law agrees with at least one other person subject to service law to overthrow or resist authority; or he agrees with at least one other person subject to service law to disobey authority, and the agreed disobedience would be such as to subvert discipline. Failure to suppress mutiny is also an offence. The maximum punishment provided by the Act is life imprisonment.
  • Desertion and absence without leave
  • Insubordination etc Includes misconduct towards a superior officer and disobedience to lawful commands.
  • Neglect of duty and misconduct Includes failure to attend for or perform duty, malingering, disclosure of information useful to an enemy, ill-treatment of subordinates, conduct prejudicial to good order and discipline, unfitness or misconduct through alcohol or drugs, among others. Malingering is defined to include any self inflicted injuries that has the effect of rendering the person unable to attend their duties.
  • Property offences
  • Offences against service justice
  • Ships and aircraft Includes hazarding ships, giving false air signals, dangerous or low flying and annoyance by flying. Also describes the taking of prizes as an offence.
  • Attempts, incitement, and aiding and abetting
  • General criminal Describes any act that is punishable by the law of England and Wales (or if done in England or Wales, would be so punishable) as an offence in the Act.

[edit] Pardon

The mass pardon of 306 British Empire soldiers executed during the Great War was enacted in section 359 of the Act, which came into effect on royal assent. This number included three from New Zealand, twenty three from Canada, two from the West Indies, two from Ghana and one each from Sierra Leone, Egypt and Nigeria. [1] However section 359(4) states that the pardon "does not affect any conviction or sentence." Since the nature of a pardon is normally to commute a sentence, Gerald Howarth MP asked during parliamentary debate: "we are entitled to ask what it does do." [2] It would appear to be a symbolic pardon only, and some members of Parliament had called for the convictions to be quashed, although the pardon has still been welcomed by relatives of executed soldiers.

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.nzherald.co.nz/search/story.cfm?storyid=000448CE-829B-1551-BCBF83027AF100AD
  2. ^ Hansard, House of Commons, 7 November 2006, col. 772


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