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Britain: government proposes house arrest of terror suspects
By Richard Tyler
28 January 2005
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On Wednesday January 25, the Blair government announced its
most draconian attack on civil liberties to date.
Speaking in the House of Commons, Home Secretary Charles Clarke
announced a series of control orders, under which
anyone suspected of terrorism could face house arrest, curfews
or electronic tagging. Other prohibitions might include bans on
meeting with other people, using telephones or the Internet.
The new laws would confer the powers upon the Home Secretary,
a politician, and not the courts. It will mean that the Home Secretary
can order the house arrest of an individual based on alleged intelligence
provided by the security services. Clarke told parliament that
the orders would be used against those who cannot be prosecuted
or deported. Judges would provide independent scrutiny
of the orders, but hearings could be held in secret.
Clarke said the measures would only be used in serious
cases, claiming, There remains a public emergency
threatening the life of the nation.
Clive Stafford-Smith, the lawyer representing two of the British
detainees recently released from the US prison camp in Guantánamo
Bay, denounced the measures as a further abuse of human
rights in Britain.
The announcement by Clarke had an air of panic about it. In
December, the Law Lords ruled that the indefinite detention of
supposed foreign terror suspects without trial was discriminatory.
The case involved some 11 foreign men detained in Belmarsh under
the 2001 anti-terrorism act based on secret evidence.
Those detained in this way were denied access to the courts to
defend themselves against the allegations against them. Indeed,
even the specific allegations were a secret.
The detentions have been heavily criticised by human rights
groups and legal experts. Law Society president Edward Nally called
indefinite detention without charge or trial totally unacceptable.
His colleague, Law Society chief executive Janet Paraskeva said,
Its not a question of guilt or innocence, its
a question of due process.
However, Clarke said that these detainees being held in Belmarsh,
dubbed Britains Guantánamo, would not to be released
until new the measures were in place.
In order to avoid future charges of discrimination, the new
powers will cover both British citizens and foreigners. They could
then be used to impose house arrest upon those such as the four
British subjects recently released from Guantánamo and
returned to the UK. The four menMoazzam Begg, Martin Mubanga,
Feroz Abbasi and Richard Belmarhad been arrested immediately
upon their return to the UK under anti-terrorism laws but were
released without charge after 26 hours.
Moreover, from the governments standpoint, the existing
anti-terrorism laws have proved ineffective: of 544 people arrested
between 2001 and 2004 under this legislation, only 98 eventually
faced charges, with just six being convicted.
With the new measures proposed by Home Secretary Clarke, the
British state will enjoy draconian powers to detain its subjects
without recourse to due process. Such wide-ranging and oppressive
measures have not existed in Britain since World War II.
The governments so-called anti-terrorism legislation,
rushed through in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, is thoroughly
undemocratic and discriminatory. Its rejection by the Law Lords
unleashed a constitutional crisis that the government is now seeking
to redress by resorting to measures that are even more repressive.
The governments latest proposals underscore the old maxim
of the workers movement that an injury to one is an injury
to all. The abuse and denial of basic democratic rights to foreigners
and immigrants now heralds the extension of these attacks to all
citizens.
See Also:
Britain: Law Lords
terror ruling provokes constitutional crisis
[22 December 2004]
Britains Guantanamo:
indefinite detention has severe adverse impact on
mental health
[1 November 2004]
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