|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
British Muslims threatened with treason charges
By Julie Hyland
10 November 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The death of at least three young British Muslim men, allegedly
whilst they were fighting on the side of the Taliban regime in
Afghanistan, has ignited a dispute over whether they are guilty
of treason.
According to unconfirmed reports Aftab Manzoor and Afzal Munir,
both 23, and Muhamad Omar, 25all from Lutonwere killed
by a US bomb in Kabul. Yasir Khan, 27, of West Sussex is also
reported to have been killed whilst fighting in Afghanistan.
Family and friends of the missing men have denied any connection
to the Taliban, stating either that they were visiting relations
or involved in humanitarian work when they were killed. Khan had
been in Afghanistan only for a few days before his death. Friends
state that he had gone to help deliver humanitarian aid after
he was sacked by his former employer, Airline caterers LSG Sky
Chefs at Gatwick Airport. The company said that Khan was dismissed
after he refused a job transfer at the airport following the September
11 attacks. Friends said that Khan was to be moved because, as
a Muslim, he was regarded as a security threat, but the caterers
said that checks had revealed nothing worrying about
him.
Islamic fundamentalist groups in England, however, claim that
the three other men were amongst hundreds of young
British Muslim men that have gone to Afghanistan to wage jihad
(holy war) against the US led coalition against terror.
Hasan Butt, leader of the al-Muhajiroun in Lahore, Pakistan, said
he could confirm that 60 UK citizens were fighting on behalf of
the Taliban.
The Muslim Parliament of Great Britain has dismissed these
claims. Whatever the truth of the allegations, the very possibility
that the first Britons to be killed in Afghanistan could be Muslims
fighting against the US-led attack has caused uproar in ruling
circles.
Only days after the mens deaths were first reported,
Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon warned British Muslims suspected
of fighting for the Taliban that they would face jail on their
return to the UK.
This threat was considered too vague by the opposition Conservative
Party, who demanded the government go further. The former shadow
home secretary under William Hague, Ann Widdecombe, called in
parliament for British volunteers for the Taliban to be tried
for treason. Any British citizen who fights against British
forces, in my view, has committed treason and, certainly, if they
come back to this country, they shouldnt imagine that they
can then just enjoy the democratic freedoms and rights of a free
society, when they have fought against it, she stated.
Lord Norman Tebbit, a former minister in the Thatcher government,
said he would raise the same demand in the House of Lords. The
government must decide, whether it is a treasonable act
for British subjects to take up arms against the forces of the
global alliance against terrorism in general or the Anglo-American
forces in particular. Tebbit argued that pro-Nazi broadcaster
William Joyce, known as Lord Haw Haw, had been hanged after the
Second World War merely for offering comfort to the Germans.
The bulk of UK treason legislation dates back 750 years to
the reign of Edward III. An act of treason was defined as being,
When a Man doth compass or imagine the Death of our Lord
the King, or of our Lady his Queen, or of their eldest Son and
Heir; or if a man do violate the Kings companion or the
Kings eldest Daughter unmarried or if a Man do levy War
against the King they ought to be judged Treason. The treason
laws were last debated in 1998, when the death sentence the charge
carried was commuted to life imprisonment.
The suggested use of treason legislation immediately threw
the legal fraternity into a quandary. Their problems arose not
so much from the archaic character of the law itself, or the fact
that it has not been used for more than 50 years. Most lawyers
agree with Edward Garnier, QC, that those who are natural
born British subjects, irrespective of their ethnic origin or
creed, owe an allegiance at all times and in all places to the
Crown.
Rather the demand that the charge be brought has exposed the
lack of a firm legal basis for the current action against Afghanistan.
Professor Michael Gunn, head of the department of academic legal
studies at Nottingham Trent University, said, The crucial
question is whether or not we are at war and, if we are not, whether
we are engaged in actual hostilities.
Whilst Prime Minister Blair has spoken of Britain being at
war, there has been no formal declaration of hostilities.
And there are clear indications that this ambiguity is deliberate.
The bombing of a country and its people for harbouring
terrorists is questionable in international law. James Woods,
QC said there might be other problems. It may be an issue
as to whether, in effect, Afghanistan or the Taliban are at war
with the UK, adding that it is unclear whether a war
against terrorism amounts to conventional war against a
state. Mindful of this, Blair had said in parliament that the
UK supported the US-led attack as an action of self-defence
against those that perpetrated the terrorist attacks and those
who harbour and sustain them.
This has still left the question as to who is specifically
considered to be the enemythe Taliban, as the
government of Afghanistan, or Osama bin Ladens al-Qaeda
network. Here again, the argument becomes circular. Blair claims
that Afghanistan is not the object of the US bombing, but bin
Ladens terror network. If so, those supposedly
fighting on behalf of the Taliban can not be guilty of treason,
as they are not fighting for a state officially at war with the
UK.
On the other hand, if the definition of treason were expanded
to include Britons involved in an organisation deemed to be terrorist,
this would mark a significant legal and political shift. Lawyers
points out that all case law concerning treason over the past
100 years has dealt only with British subjects serving in the
armed forces, or working voluntarily for a foreign power formally
at war with the UK (Germany in 1914-18 and 1939-45 for example).
This is one reason why treason charges were never brought against
those British Jews who took up arms against the British army in
1947 as part of their fight to establish the state of Israel.
More strikingly, despite some 25 years of conflict, which included
numerous terror attacks against UK cities, those Britons fighting
for the removal of British rule from northern Ireland were never
charged with treason, unlike the leading republican supporter
Roger Casement, who was hung for High Treason in 1916. The rationalisation
used by the ruling elite for his conviction was that he was formally
a British citizen and had unsuccessfully sought German financial
and military backing for the Easter Uprising.
Responding to Tebbits question, Home Office Minister
Lord Rooker, said airily that treason was like an elephant
on the doorstepyou recognise it when you see it. Speaking
in the House of Lords, Rooker warned UK citizens or residents,
It is totally unacceptable to take up arms against British
soldiers and allies. He pledged that legal authorities,
the police and security services were already combining on
the streets of Britain to deal with UK Muslims seeking to
fight for the Taliban. They will be rooted out, he
promised.
Amongst all the argument over legal definitions, virtually
nothing has been said about the implications of the measures now
being proposed.
From a security standpoint, there is no basis for introducing
charges of treason against volunteers for the Taliban. The government
already has extensive powers to charge such individuals with either
murder or terrorism.
The Terrorism Act 2001, introduced in February, was supposedly
specifically directed against combating the threat of terrorism,
and included actions taken or incited outside the
UK. Its measures were both draconian and had far-reaching implications.
For the first time, the definition of terrorism was extended to
cover threats against property, which in the past were treated
as criminal damage. Clause one of the Act defines
terrorism as, the use or threat for the purpose of advancing
a political, religious or ideological cause, of action which:
Involves serious violence against person or property; Endangers
the life of any person or; Creates a serious risk to the health
or safety of the public or a section of the public.
Opponents of the Terrorism Act said at the time that such a
remit was alarming. It could mean that anyone advocating direct
actionsuch as anti-globalisation protesters for examplecould
face charges of terrorism. Those parts of the Act that prohibit
any action that interferes with essential services also threaten
workers right to strike.
The government defended its legislation on the grounds that,
once in place, it would protect the lives and security of British
people. Immediately after the September 11 terror attacks, however,
Labour claimed that these measures were still not enough and announced
plans to rush through new emergency legislation. Under the provisions
of an Emergency Anti-Terrorist Bill and Extradition Bill, applications
for asylum for those suspected of being members of a terrorist
organisation can be rejected without any recourse to appeal or
judicial review. Once labelled a terroristand current legislation
provides for Tamils opposing the Sri Lankan governments
racist war to be classified as such, for examplethe applicant
can be detained and summarily deported.
Such were the implications of these measures for civil liberties
that the government argued for the derogation of Article
five of the European convention on Human Rights, outlawing arbitrary
detention and imprisonment, which was only incorporated into British
law last year.
The British state now has the power to arbitrarily arrest and
hold anyone on suspicion of terrorist activity (irrespective of
whether it has been carried out), and to deport them from the
country, as well as powers to access and seize personal materials
which they believe may be related to terrorism.
Armed with all this draconian legislation, however, the government
is still not satisfied. The discussion over treason would add
another dimension to a battery of laws that are aimed not at combating
terror, but at suppressing social and political protest. Ominously,
some lawyers have argued that treason legislation does not depend
on a formal declaration of war against another state, as it covers
domestic upheaval intended to displace the Crown (or the monarchs
government) independently of a foreign dimension.
On this basis, they have said, Anthony Blunt was considered to
have committed treason by spying for the Soviet Union during the
Cold War.
See Also:
Why we oppose the war in Afghanistan
Statement of the WSWS Editorial Board
[9 October 2001]
Tony Blairs bin Laden
dossier: a pretext instead of proof
[6 October 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |