Yes fred, I quite agree. Neither our signature on the ECHR nor our own Human Rights Act bestowed any additional rights to anybody in the UK which were missing and necessary. Nobody as far as I know, certainly since those pieces of legislation were introduced, has suffered any injustices which could not have been remedied by other legislation, either statutory or common law. We have statutory law which prevents torture, slavery, religious persecution and almost everything else the HR legislation covers. What the HR legislation has introduced is particularly broad and nebulous “catch all” clauses which trump the domestic law to which we are subject. Domestic law is being usurped by these clauses and the UK government is prevented from introducing legislation which may fall foul of HR. These interferences have nothing to do with genuine “Human Rights”.
The UK needs to get back to managing its own affairs by enacting and enforcing its own legislation and ignoring interference from elsewhere. Only then will Parliament be able to run the country in accordance with the wishes of the majority of the electorate - which is, after all, what it was elected to do.