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Britain: Government threatens to change law to enable continued
detention without trial
By Ann Talbot
29 April 2004
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The release of two men from prison has once again drawn attention
to the British governments policy of detaining terrorist
suspects without trial. There are currently 13 foreign nationals
being held in British prisons without due process. They have not
been charged with any offence, they have not heard the evidence
against them, nor have they been sentenced by any court. They
are being held on the basis of mere suspicion. Eight of them are
being held in Belmarsh high security prison, which has been called
Britains Guantanamo Bay.
In total, 548 people were arrested under anti-terror laws between
September 11, 2001, and the beginning of April this year, according
to Home Office figures. Only 91 of them have subsequently been
charged and only 15 convicted of any terrorist offence.
One of the 13 detainees, who has been named only as M,
was released after the Special Immigration Appeals Commission
(SIAC) decided that the evidence against him was wholly
unreliable and should not have been used to justify detention.
SIAC is a court composed of three high court judges that meets
in secret and does not allow the accused person the right to scrutinise
the evidence against them. That a court of this kind should dismiss
the government case against M gives some indication of how bogus
the case was. Three appeal court judges then upheld the ruling
when the government contested it.
The man had been detained for 16 months under the Anti-Terrorism
Crime and Security Act, which was rushed through parliament in
2001. This legislation allows the government to detain foreign
nationals without charge or trial on the basis of suspicion that
they may have been involved in international terrorism.
Interviewed after his release M told reporters that the conditions
inside Belmarsh were designed to humiliate the detainees and destroy
their dignity. Some of them, he said, are on hunger strike because
they were being denied a diet appropriate to their religious needs.
He said, As a friend, I knew some of them outside of
the prison. Their behaviour and how they were when I saw them
inside was completely different. They had lost weight and three
or four of them had gone crazy.
Confirmation of his statement was immediately forthcoming.
In a second case a man identified as G was released
on bail by SIAC because his mental health had deteriorated so
badly in the course of 18 months imprisonment that he was suicidal.
In what purported to be a humane judgement, SIAC ruled that
the man should be confined under house arrest. He must wear an
electronic tag, phone the tagging company five times a day, and
have no communication with anyone except his immediate family,
doctor and lawyer.
The conditions that drove G to a mental breakdown are all too
plain from Ms account of his experiences in Belmarsh. When
he arrived at the prison he had no idea what he had been arrested
for or the terms on which he was to be held. Only when he spoke
to other Muslim prisoners did he realise that he was to be held
indefinitely.
This meant for me my grave, he told the Guardian.
I really thought I would die in prison because I understand
at the time the global situation which indicated to me this sort
of thinking, because they are now going to have this war on terror.
He described Gs mental condition in graphic terms. Sometimes
he is crying, sometimes he said, I would like to kill myself,
I cant stay alone in my cell. He is just thinking,
When am I going to die?
Despite the evidence of the mans ill health, Home Secretary
David Blunkett condemned the decision to release G on bail as
extraordinary. He announced that he would be seeking
to change the law to enable him to overrule judges in such cases.
Courting the tabloid headlines as usual, Blunkett said, I
have not called it bonkers, but no doubt other people will.
Blunketts remarks came in for immediate criticism from
the judiciary. Former Master of the Rolls Lord Donaldson stressed
the importance of politicians accepting judicial rulings. In an
interview on the Today programme he said, You
have somebody who occupies so senior and influential a position
as the home secretary simply being rude to the referee.... If
you expect the people of this country to abide by court decisions
then you should get a lead from very senior politicians and that
regrettably we are not getting.
Blunketts outburst and Lord Donaldsons response
reflect the fact that there has never been a British government
that has shown such contempt for the rule of law and the conventions
of legal procedure as the present one. As a result there are growing
tensions between the Home Office and the judiciary. In the M case
three appeal court judges, chaired by Lord Chief Justice Woolf,
ruled that the home secretary had acted inappropriately
and unlawfully. They denied Blunkett leave to appeal
against their decision.
Aided and abetted by the press the Blair government is forcing
through dramatic changes under cover of the war against terrorism.
Just how far the government has already gone was highlighted by
comments made recently by civil rights lawyer Gareth Peirce. As
a lawyer for the Birmingham Six, framed up and imprisoned for
IRA bombings in Britain in 1974, she is well used to dealing with
miscarriages of justice. But the scale of what is happening now
has clearly disturbed her.
She said, I have never known such venom and such hatred
and such constant unchecked fascistic expression of daily appalling,
often fabricated, always imagined, always exaggerated verbiage
as there has been against the Muslim community. We have lost our
way in this country. We have entered a new dark age of injustice
and it is frightening that we are overwhelmed by it.
See Also:
Britain: Blunkett to legislate for thought
crimes and guilt by association
[24 April 2004]
Britain: home secretary proposes
pre-emptive justice
[10 February 2004]
Britain: Senior politicians
condemn internment of foreign terrorist suspects
[27 December 2003]
Britain: Anti-terror
legislation opens up broad attack on civil liberties
[8 November 2003]
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