Terrorism (Protection
of Premises)
Bill
“Legislation will be introduced to protect public premises
from terrorism in light of the Manchester Arena attack.”
- In 2017, 22 victims lost their lives to a senseless terror
attack at the Manchester Arena.
- The Terrorism (Protection of Premises Bill) – known as
Martyn’s Law – will deliver on the manifesto commitment to
“improve the safety and security of public venues” and keep the
British public safe from terrorism.
- Through Martyn’s Law, premises will be better prepared and
ready to respond in the event of a terrorist attack. Simple steps
save lives.
What does the
Bill do?
- The Bill improves protective security and organisational
preparedness across the UK by mandating, for the first time,
those responsible for certain premises and events to consider the
terrorist risk and how they would respond to an attack.
- The Bill will require
certain venues
to fulfil
necessary but
proportionate steps according to their
capacity to mitigate the impact of a terrorist attack and reduce
harm. The duties that premises will have will depend on
the size of the venue. Premises and events with a capacity of 800
or above will be in the enhanced tier, while premises with a
capacity of 100 to 799 will be in the standard tier.
- Enhanced tier: premises and events in the enhanced tier will
be required to take steps to ensure preparedness for, and
protection from, terrorist attacks.
- Those responsible for an enhanced duty premises or qualifying
public events must:
-