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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
No of course not, he would have far better things to be doing. His department do it and he only put his signature at the end.zuz wrote:do you think minister of justice himself is deciding about every case personally? where do you have this info from?
thanks,
zuza
ashimashi wrote:The main problem is that the decision is in absolute discretion of the minister but that doesn't mean it can take an unreasonably long time
Yep that was exactly my thoughts.ca.funke wrote:I guess you will be successful in forcing him into a decision (timewise)ashimashi wrote:The main problem is that the decision is in absolute discretion of the minister but that doesn't mean it can take an unreasonably long time
As it is at his (department's) discretion to decide depending on their mood, I guess their mood will not be in your favor after you just sued them...
that is exactly what Irish Govt. doesashimashi wrote:
Yep that was exactly my thoughts.
However, doesn't this sound like it's in direct contradiction to human rights and kind of holding your rights (of a fair trial) into ransom?
ashimashi wrote:A recent discussion in another thread made me think of the above. How possible it would be to take the case of ultra-long delay for naturalisation applications to court, and force them to make decision earlier? The main problem is that the decision is in absolute discretion of the minister but that doesn't mean it can take an unreasonably long time... would that argument hold in any court? This has been recently done in USA and they successfully forced INS into a settlement - some of those arguments may be borrowed...
http://www.nwirp.org/UDocuments/Announc ... eement.pdf
http://www.aila.org/RecentPosting/Recen ... px?Weeks=4 (look at 13/08/04 posts...)