By Bill Heaney
Ministers in Sturgeon’s Secret Scotland tried to withhold information relating to an investigation into Nicola Sturgeon over the Alex Salmond sex scandal.
The Commission had told the Government that information relating to an investigation into Nicola Sturgeon by former Northern Ireland counsel James Hamilton should be considered when responding to freedom of information (FOI) requests.
Counsel James Hamilton, Court of Session and former First Minister Nicola Sturgeon.
Hamilton was investigating whether Sturgeon broke the ministerial code when her predecessor Alex Salmond was being investigated for sexual harassment. Both Sturgeon and Salmond were cleared of their respective investigations.
Fergus Ewing MSP, who is a solicitor, called for accountability regarding ‘hounding’ of Alex Salmond, who is taking legal action against the Scottish Government.
That decision by the SIC was sent to the Court of Session after the Scottish Government appealed it, although the watchdog won.
Following the verdict, an FOI request was sent to the Government asking that the legal advice relating to the appeal be published.
The Scottish Government refused the request, citing a FOI Act clause on confidential legal information.
That refusal was later appealed to the commissioner and in his latest decision, he found that while the FOI Act’s confidentiality exemption applies to the advice sought from the Scottish Government, the public interest favoured disclosure.
He has now asked for that information to be published but with personal information redacted.
Announcing the news, the watchdog said: “The circumstances of this case are particularly unusual in that, on this occasion, the Scottish Government exercised a rarely-used right to withhold information from the Commissioner when he considered the appeal.
“While relevant information must normally be provided to the commissioner, the FOI Act allows legal advice to be withheld where the advice relates to an organisation’s obligations under FOI law.
“The commissioner’s ruling was therefore made without direct sight of the legal advice.”
The commissioner said that while he recognises the strong public interest in maintaining the confidentiality of communications between a legal adviser and their client, the case involved “significant expenditure of public funds”.
The decision concludes by noting that: “The commissioner expects to be enabled to carry out a full investigation of the public authority’s handling of the request…where he is only given the information to perform a more superficial examination, the actions of even an apparently reasonable authority are unlikely to prevail”.
The commissioner’s decision requires the information to be disclosed by October 26.
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: “The Scottish Government has received the Scottish Information Commissioner’s decision. It would not be appropriate for us to comment further on a live appeal case.”
Nicola Sturgeon had been accused of misleading parliament and failing to record meetings connected to harassment allegations levelled at her predecessor Alex Salmond (pictured). She was cleared of wrongdoing.
Alex Salmond was a political giant and against all he ran the 2014 referendum closer than many would dare think.
The Westminster government only granted the referendum because they thought it wouldn’t be won. But it nearly, indeed maybe it was won. And for that Salmond had to be destroyed, just like Jeremy Corbyn was destroyed.
But now the truth is starting to come out. Salmond was set up by malicious actors and the arms of the state.
And people, journalists who have tried to comment, have been brutally persecuted, jailed even.
Ireland before 1916 had a Home Rule Party. Hollowed out by the state, and with its leader Panel destroyed by an unjustified sex scandal, for which years later he got financial damages, the paralells with Scotland are uncanny.
But of course an Indian independence leader fighting for Indians’ exit from British control also became besmirched through a sex scandal. Just another uncanny coincidence.
Or more recently. Julian Assange. He was initially arrested on wait for it, allegations of sexual impropriety in Sweden. Ultimately the allegations were dropped but Assange was caught. The allegations had got the man. Just another uncanny coincidence.
Too many uncanny coincidences with a common theme. And if it can happen to all of these individuals, who else can it happen too?
The truth about Alex Salmond needs to come out and it looks like it is.
Good informative article Editor. If we fail to guard our freedoms we have nothing.