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Britain: Labour government plans to introduce internment
By Richard Tyler
19 October 2001
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Last October, the Labour government incorporated the European
Convention on Human Rights into British law. Its passage was supposed
to enshrine certain fundamental civil liberties in Britains
statue books.
Just one year later, Home Secretary David Blunkett has told
parliament he would be seeking the derogation of the
Conventions Article 5 outlawing arbitrary detention and
imprisonment. This would effectively enable the British authorities
to introduce internmentdetention without trial for foreign
nationals who are considered a threat to national security.
The Home Secretary said that the emergency anti-terrorist legislation
was needed for specific and targeted measures. However,
the new laws will be cast so broadly that they could be used not
just against alleged terrorists but anyone engaged in acts of
civil disobedience or protest.
Labour is seeking to rush through legislation for the war
against terrorism with a minimum of debate or scrutiny.
Speaking in the Commons on Monday, Blunkett announced a swathe
of new measures that overturn basic democratic and legal norms.
This includes an Emergency Anti-Terrorist Bill and Extradition
Bill, expected to be presented to parliament over the next days,
as well as a series of non-legislative regulations stepping up
state powers.
Significantly, the Anti-Terrorist Bill will include an enabling
power, allowing measures to be implemented by affirmative
order, i.e. without extensive parliamentary scrutiny.
Blunketts speech was a concoction of hypocrisy and barely
concealed threats. None of those measures is intended to
stifle free speech, dialogue, or debate, the Home Secretary
claimed, but There is a compelling need for more effective
powers to exclude and remove suspected terrorists from our country.
In the name of defending democracy and safeguarding freedoms,
the Labour government proposes to turn back the clock to a time
when mere suspicion of committing a crime, or an accusation from
those in authority, was sufficient to justify incarceration. Detention
could be based on membership of the 21 organisations outlawed
in the Terrorism Act 2000, which includes the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), as well
as a host of Islamic groups such as Hamas.
The Labour government is using the September 11 events to introduce
far harsher asylum and immigration provisions. Under the emergency
legislation, claims for asylum from those suspected of terrorist
associations can be rejected without any recourse to appeal
or judicial review. The state, and its various agencies will become
judge, jury and executioner for those seeking to claim asylum.
Once a refugee is labelled a terrorist they can be
locked up without the need for a court appearance, or be deported
without any recourse to legal redress.
Blunkett also announced that he would be undertaking a review
of Britains extradition procedures, with a view to enabling
a suspects rapid expulsion to a third state. This forms
part of moves initiated at European Union level to scrap existing
national extradition laws and replace them with an EU arrest warrant
that would be recognised in all 15 member states. It has been
mooted that such warrants might also be extended to enable the
authorities in one EU state to order a search or seizure of goods
in another.
Other non-legislative measures include forcing communication
service providers, such as telecoms firms and Internet Service
Providers, to retain data from their customers for up to twelve
months, which the police and secret services can then trawl
though to extract information. This would include all emails sent
or received over an ISPs network, logs recording an individuals
visits to websites, as well as details of phone and fax calls.
Stressing the need for good intelligence, Blunkett
said police would be given access to passenger lists and freight
manifests, with customs and revenue departments also being able
to share data with the police and other agencies. In addition
to strengthening airport security, wider powers would be granted
to British Transport Police, as well as Ministry of Defence and
Atomic Energy Authority police, enabling them to operate outside
their normal jurisdictions.
One insidious proposal is the introduction of a new offence
of incitement to religious hatred, punishable by up
to seven years imprisonment. This has been justified by claims
it will be used against those expressing anti-Muslim sentiments.
While it is far more likely to be turned against more militant
Islamic groups, it also has the potential to stifle any public
criticism of religion.
Given the seriousness of the planned legislation, the response
from the liberal media and human rights groups has been generally
limited to the most obvious areas of potential abuse, such as
internment. In the only editorial comment it has published so
far, the Guardian praised parliament for its thoughtful,
constructive but far from complacent response to Blunketts
announcement. However, aside from a handful of backbench Labour
MPs, who recently tabled the mildest criticism of the war (and
were rounded on by the government for doing so), parliament is
united behind the Blair administration in pursuit of the war against
Afghanistan. Only a political naïf should expect Westminster
to champion democratic rights at home while it is loudly cheering
the most brutal acts of war abroad.
It was left to comedians and satirists to make outspoken criticism
of the proposals to introduce incitement to religious hatred
legislation. Rowan Atkinson, famous for his Mr Bean
character, wrote to the Times this week, Having spent
a substantial part of my career parodying religious figures from
my own Christian background, I am aghast at the notion that it
could, in effect, be made illegal to imply ridicule of a religion
or to lampoon religious figures. Atkinson goes on to say
that whereas supporters of the legislation would argue neither
he nor the comedy world were its intended targets,
laws governing highly subjective or moral issues tend to
drag a very fine net, and some of the most basic freedoms of speech
and expression can get caught up in it.
In contrast prominent human rights lawyer Geoffrey Bindman,
who was involved in the case to deport General Pinochet to face
trial in Spain, dismissed such concerns for democratic freedoms,
with the assertion, There will still be room for humour
and rational debate. In this he was merely echoing comments
by a Home Office spokesman that there was no intention to
stifle fair comment and debate, whether satirical or otherwise.
Blunkett told parliament he would be examining wider
powers in relation to incitement and conspiracy,
two areas of the law that have produced the most miscarriages
of justice. In future, the powers the state is now seeking to
arrogate to itself with the minimum of democratic debate or scrutiny
can be directed against all manner of opponents of the government.
The last time emergency anti-terrorist legislation
was introduced in Britainthe 1974 Prevention of Terrorism
Act (Temporary Provisions)it remained on the statue book
for years, being renewed annually under both Conservative and
Labour governments. It was finally incorporated permanently in
the 2000 Terrorism Act.
The PTA, as the law was known, allowed suspects to be detained
for up to five days without recourse to a lawyer, and included
a form of internal exile, in which people from Northern Ireland
could be excluded from visiting Britain. The British
governments pursuit of alleged Irish terrorists
gave rise to some of the most infamous miscarriages of justice.
Completely innocent people such as the Birmingham Six or Guildford
Four, falsely accused of having committed bombings, were kept
locked up for over a decade and a half. Labours new version
of the PTA has all the potential for more such legal travesties.
See Also:
The US
war in Afghanistan
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