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Dear Prime
Minister
I have recently
written to the Ministry of Justice claiming that members of the electorate
who have a case against a government department deserve to have their cases
heard in 'open courts' - thereby escaping the appalling behaviour by public
servants within the fraudulent complaint procedures. Where having been
abused by public sector staff, complainants can be further abused by the
ensuing cover-up culture.
This is a 'systematic
problem'only curable by honest parliamentary action.
Self-regulation by
governmental complaints procedures do not work, they are in too many cases,
fraudulent. It is becoming obvious, because of ever increasing bad
publicity, that public sector 'self-regulation'has become a No, No amongst
an ever sceptical public.
The public are sick
of the continual meaningless public sector statements of 'putting things
right' etc without anyone even contemplating cleaning up the sickening,
undemocratic governmental complaint procedures.
We have recently
written to the MoJ 26/4/08 (enclosed) re 'open courts' for the electorate in
such cases. The Ministry of Justice has sent our request for 'open courts' on to the Treasury who has no interest in
'open courts'. One is reminded of
contemptuous public sector Musical chairs?
Over the last 5 years
we have learned of the empty ritual of such complaint procedures where
numerous democratic protective powers, once exercised by the electorate,
have been lost to governmental organised self-protective quangos.
Such quangos normally
have more than their fair share of party hacks, which often hold a rigid
doctrine of honouring their master's wishes, where their traditional
pastime is to overlook severe public sector irregularities. Too often those
of us who complain are punished by contemptuous acts, such as ombudsman's
Orwellian evening phone calls and/or various cover-up deceits etc. It can
indeed be described as a fractured society upheld by squalid public sector
complaint procedures.
A severe cleansing of
the public sector complaint procedures is much needed. (First written to
Tony Blair some 5 years ago).
As a member of the
electorate it seems worthwhile pointing out that the parliamentary system of
acquiescence to the fraudulent/incompetence of public sector staff, is
killing off respect for parliament and politics.
Yours sincerely
AW&I Tanner
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