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UK Public Law weekly: Supreme Court upholds Russia sanctions; unlawful Public Order Act regulations; key JR and FOI/EIR rulings; UK-France migration treaty; AI regulation; HMCTS evidence system failures

Published on: 14 August 2025

Published by a LexisNexis Public Law expert
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Equality and human rights

Supreme Court rules on first Russia sanctions challenge (Shvidler v Foreign Secretary)

The Supreme Court concluded, by a 4–1 majority, that the sanctions applied by the Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs to Mr Shvidler, and, unanimously, that the actions taken by the Secretary of State for Transport against the yacht M/Y Phi owned by Dalston Projects, introduced immediately after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, were proportionate and lawful notwithstanding the recognised impact on the appellants’ rights under the European Convention on Human Rights. In a robust dissent, Lord Leggatt criticised the majority’s stance in Mr Shvidler’s appeal, holding that the measures against him, as a UK national, were disproportionate and thus unlawful. With wider significance for public law, the court departed from the Court of Appeal regarding the proper approach an appellate court should take to proportionality issues. Authored by Kerri McGuigan, senior associate and...

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