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Statutory Instrument 1998 No. 2768The Judicial Pensions (European Court of Human Rights) Order 1998(The document as of February, 2008) STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS1998 No. 2768The Judicial Pensions (European Court of Human Rights) Order 1998
The Lord Chancellor and, in relation to any judicial office whose jurisdiction is exercisable exclusively in relation to Scotland, the Secretary of State, in exercise of the powers conferred on them by section 18 of, and Schedule 4 to, the Human Rights Act 1998[1], hereby make the following Order: Citation and commencement 1.This Order may be cited as the Judicial Pensions (European Court of Human Rights) Order 1998 and shall come into force on 7th December 1998. Interpretation 2.In this Order:
3.Nothing in this Order shall prevent the operation of any provisions of the 1981 Act or the 1993 Act whereby (whether by election or otherwise) a person becomes, or ceases to be, a member of one of the judicial pension schemes constituted under the 1981 Act, or becomes, or ceases to be, a person to whom Part I of the 1993 Act applies.
(b) articles 5, 6 and 8 of this Order apply to him, for the purposes of the 1993 Act, in respect of the period from the date on which he first becomes a person to whom Part I of the 1993 Act applies. 5.During the whole of his ECHR service, the ECHR judge's salary, for the purposes of the 1981 Act and the 1993 Act, shall be treated as being the salary which would be payable to him if he had not been appointed as an ECHR judge and had continued to perform the duties of his UK judicial office. (This note is not part of the Order) This Order is a pension order, as defined by Schedule 4 to the Human Rights Act 1998. It makes provision for a judge appointed to the European Court of Human Rights, who was a member, either of one of the judicial pension schemes constituted by the Judicial Pensions Act 1981, or of the judicial pension scheme constituted by Part I of the Judicial Pensions and Retirement Act 1993, to remain a member of that scheme on the terms that would have applied had he not been so appointed. Notes: [1] 1998 c. 42; by virtue of paragraph 1 of Schedule 4, the power to make this Order is vested in "the appropriate Minister". This expression is defined in paragraph 4 of that Schedule as the Secretary of State, in relation to any judicial office whose jurisdiction is exercisable exclusively in relation to Scotland, and, otherwise, as the Lord Chancellor.back [2] 1981 c. 20.back [3] 1993 c. 8.back [4] Section 14A was inserted by 1988/1417.back [5] Section 33A was inserted by section 82(1) of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 (c. 41).back ISBN 0 11 079796 5 -- Back --
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