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Police gun down worker in London subway: another tragic consequence
of Blairs war policy
Statement of the WSWS Editorial Board
25 July 2005
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The public state execution of Jean Charles de Menezes in a
London subway carriage on July 22 marks a watershed.
England, the country of the Magna Carta, is now one in which
innocent civilians can be shot dead on the capitals streets
at the discretion of the police, without any explanation, much
less justification, and with the only outcome being a brief statement
of regret.
Eyewitnesses have provided horrific accounts of how the petrified
27-year-old Brazilian electrician looked like a cornered
rabbit as he was pursued by three plain-clothes officers
into the train carriage, before being pinned to the ground and
shot five times in the head at point blank range.
At a press conference afterwards, Metropolitan Police Commissioner
Sir Ian Blair claimed that the killing was directly linked
to the ongoing and expanding anti-terrorist operation following
the July 7 bombings of the capitals transport network which
killed 56 people, and an apparent failed attempt to detonate devices
on July 21.
Not only did Menezes have no connection with the terror attacks,
police had no grounds to suspect that he might be involved in
such crimes, or any others, for that matter. That he was seen
leaving a house that had been placed under police surveillance
wearing suspicious clothes was enough for police to
act as judge, jury and executioner.
Given suggestions that the shooting may not have been carried
out by police officers at all, but by members of the security
forces or the SAS, everyone has the right to ask just what type
of Orwellian dystopia has been created in Blairs Britain.
Menezes death is not a blameless consequence of the July
7 bombings, as is now being claimed. Over the past two weeks,
an officially sanctioned climate of hysteria and panic has been
consciously whipped up, in which the state has been given carte
blanche.
The government itself has a vested interest in generating such
an atmosphere in order to avoid having to answer damaging questions.
Whilst police have demanded new powers to detain people without
charge for up to three months, the government has made clear its
intention to rush through new legislation, including making it
a criminal offence to glorify or condone
terrorism, with major ramifications for free speech.
It is under these conditions that it has emerged that the rules
governing police use of firearms have been officially revised
and a de facto shoot-to-kill policy secretly adopted.
Even as Prime Minister Tony Blair insists that emergency measures
are not directed against any community in particular,
but solely against those bent on terror, the media is filled with
demands by so-called security analysts for all young
black and Asian males to be treated with suspicion, in much the
same way as Irish people in previous decades.
There is, however, one crucial difference. In March 1988, when
the SAS shot dead three suspected IRA terrorists in Gibraltar,
there were repeated denials that the British state had an assassination
policy.
Not so today. Writing in the Daily Mail, before the
police admission that they had killed an innocent man, Tom Bower
opined: In normal times, yesterdays state execution
of a suspect in a Tube train in the middle of the capital would
have evoked a tidal wave of revulsion and protest.
The terror threat, however, had changed all that, he wrote.
Britains Muslims, in particular, would have to accept that
many civil liberties will have to be infringed. Security
requirements would now involve the suspension of Habeas Corpus,
unexplained arrests, and even the more common
use of such police assassination.
Just where are the powers-that-be intending to take Britain
next? Already, the police have reaffirmed their policy of shoot-to-kill,
with Blairs backing. For good reason, many are querying
in the wake of Menezes shooting whether anyone can be considered
a legitimate target, just so much collateral damage
in the so-called war against terror.
All those who retain a commitment to democratic rights must
reject the argument, being hammered out by the political establishment
and the media, that to draw a connection between Iraq and the
July 7 bombings is to excuse terrorism.
This spurious charge has been the constant mantra not only
of Blair and Foreign Secretary Jack Straw. In the US, New York
Times columnist Thomas Friedman claimed that those who pointed
the finger of responsibility at the US and British governments
actions in the Middle East were just one notch less despicable
than the terrorists.
Writing in the Observer July 10, Nick Cohen declared,
under the headline, Face Up to the Truth, that we
all know what was to blame for Thursdays [July 7] murders...
and it wasnt Bush and Blair.
Just days after stating that Britains foreign policy
in the Middle East had played a role in creating the conditions
for the July 7 attacks, London Mayor Ken Livingstone effectively
absolved the government and the police for Menezes killing,
stating, This tragedy has added another victim to the toll
of deaths for which the terrorists bear responsibility.
Such cowardice and opportunism are what one has come to expect
from Livingstone. But it is a matter of fact that both the July
7 bombings and Menezes killing tragically vindicate the
many millions of people in the UK and internationally who marched
in February 2003 to oppose the war against Iraq.
Those who continue to claim otherwise are arguing an absurdity.
In the aftermath of the Second World War, the use of war as a
means of achieving strategic policy objectives was deemed Nazi
Germanys ultimate crime, from which all othersincluding
fascist genocideinexorably flowed. On these grounds, and
with British backing, leaders of the Third Reich were hung by
their necks until they were dead.
Blair is no less guilty of war crimes and is morally and politically
culpable for the events in London.
The overwhelming majority of British people opposed the war
against Iraq precisely because its catastrophic implications could
be foreseen. There was no end of warnings that the resulting destabilisation
of the Middle East would increase the likelihood of terrorist
attacks in major metropolitan areas and the imposition of greater
security measures, with dangerous implications for civil liberties.
Blair dismissed such concerns, famously proclaiming that the
essence of democracy was the refusal of governments to do what
the people demanded. In his slavish subservience to US imperialism
and the financial interests of British capital, the prime minister
was determined that no obstacles be placed in the way of what
he believed would be a triumphant joyride to Iraqs oilfields
on the coat-tails of the Bush administration.
The reality is that the population of the UK is being made
to reap the whirlwindboth with their lives and the abrogation
of their democratic rightsof Blairs criminal negligence.
As Shakespeare knew only too well, from foul deeds endless
tragedy arises. As the Bard might have said of July 7 and the
day the Brazilian worker was killed: This days black
fate on more days doth depend. (Romeo and Juliet,
Act III). And what foul deeds this government is responsible
for.
It is a matter of record that the war against Iraq was prepared
and commissioned on the basis of lies. There was no link between
Saddam Husseins regime and the 9/11 attacks on the US, nor
did Iraq possess weapons of mass destruction as was claimed.
Neither the truth nor international law, however, was allowed
to stand in the way. Documents were plagiarised and intelligence
manipulated as the government sought to concoct facts
to justify its predetermined war aims.
When these lies were exposed, Blair resorted to new lies: that
the war and subsequent occupation had made the world a safer place
and had created the basis for democratic renewal not only in Iraq
but throughout the Middle East.
Instead, Iraq is a bloody quagmire. Not only has the countrys
infrastructure been devastated, but tens of thousands of civilians
have been killed70 percent of them having died after the
war was officially deemed to be over. From Abu Ghraib to Guantánamo
Bay, the world has witnessed the sickening reality of Blair and
Bushs democratic vision.
At the same time, Britain and the US are being turned into
virtual police dictatorships, in which civilians can be snatched
from the streets and held without charge, and death squads can
roam the streets in broad daylight, killing with apparent impunity.
In the weeks to come, Blair and his apologists will continue
to utilise the threat of terrorism to avoid any accounting for
his war policy and justify its continuation, along with ever more
massive attacks on democratic rights.
We reject this entirely. The fight against imperialist war
and the defence of democratic rights are one and the same.
There is a means through which terror attacks can be brought
to an endby ending the policies that have created the climate
for them in the first place. That requires a struggle against
the capitalist ruling elites which launched an imperialist war
on Iraq in order to seize control of the countrys oil resources.
The mass opposition to militarism and war must be revived and
carried forward in the convening of protests, demonstrations and
conferences across the UK, Europe and internationally to demand
an end to the occupation of Iraq, the immediate withdrawal of
all foreign troops, and that all those responsible for commissioning
the war be held legally and politically accountable for its consequences.
See Also:
Attack on civil liberties intensifies
after London bombing
[18 July 2005]
The London bombings: Why did it happen
here?
[15 July 2005]
London bombings: Why does Blair oppose
an inquiry into intelligence failures?
[13 July 2005]
Unanswered questions in London bombings
[11 July 2005]
London terror bombings: a political crime
[8 July 2005]
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