|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Oppose Blairs police-state measures
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party (Britain)
15 October 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
What Prime Minister Tony Blair called a watershed
in legal history is the governments laying down of the juridical
framework for a police state in Britain.
Spearheaded by the new draft Prevention of Terrorism Bill,
a raft of legislation is to be brought before parliament abrogating
the right to free speech, habeas corpusprotection from unlawful
detentionand the presumption of innocence upon which all
legal and democratic principles have hitherto rested.
Blair has declared that the rules of the game have changed
and that the police must be able to implement summary justice.
This statement is truly chilling, coming less than three months
after armed plainclothes police summarily executed an innocent
Brazilian immigrant worker, Jean Charles de Menezes, in a London
subway station.
Taken in aggregate, the governments forthcoming proposals
allow internment without trial, criminalise the mere expression
of opinion deemed to be unacceptable by the Home Secretary, allow
arbitrary arrest and sentencing by the police and allow people
to be evicted, denied benefits and thrown onto the streets. Moreover,
Blair has promised that the police will be given whatever additional
powers they demand, whether to supposedly combat terrorism or
deal with rising crime and anti-social behaviour.
The most high-profile change contained in the anti-terror bill
is an extension of the period in which a suspect may be held without
charge from 14 days to three months. It will also make illegal
the glorification of the preparation or commission of terrorist
actsan offence so vague that it effectively establishes
a category of thought crime under which the government will be
able to arbitrarily criminalise political dissent.
Just how much of a catch-all is being developed is indicated
by recent events. This week, 10 suspected terrorists of Iraqi
descent were arrested in dawn raids. Security forces said the
arrests were linked to a potential direct threat to the
UK, but that they did not know what the threat consisted
of, when it was planned for, or its supposed targets.
Even more revealing, during the Labour Party conference, 600
people were stopped and questioned under existing anti-terror
legislation. No one was charged with any offence, and there was
no reason cited by police to suspect them of being connected to
terrorism. Instead, people were detained and their names kept
on file for such things as wearing anti-Blair or anti-Iraq war
T-shirts. Under the new legislation, this could result in imprisonment.
Just as important as its impact on individual freedom of speech
is the terror bills implications for freedom of the press,
without which the possibility of developing an informed opinion,
let alone a political movement in opposition to the government,
is severely curtailed.
The legislation covers the dissemination of views by any medium.
These views do not have to glorify terrorism, or even
be intended to do so. It will be enough to argue that they have
contributed to encouraging others to commit terror offences.
On this basis, it would be entirely possible for the government
to make a case that anti-war reporting in a newspaper or on the
Internetincluding by the World Socialist Web Sitejustifies
and therefore gives succour to the Iraqi resistance. Even explicit
opposition to terrorism would not constitute an unarguable defence
against such a legally spurious charge.
Attack on constitutional provisions
The proposals on detention of terrorist suspects are in breech
of the 1950 European Convention on Human Rights, which requires
that a detained person be brought promptly before a judge
or other officer authorised by law to exercise judicial power.
More fundamental still, they contravene the essential provisions
of British law, enshrined in the Habeas Corpus Act of 1679, which
in turn ultimately rests upon the Magna Carta of 1215 that declared,
No freemen shall be taken or imprisoned...except by the
lawful judgement of his peers or by the law of the land.
Blair has rubbished these constitutionally enshrined freedoms
as outdated, complaining in his speech to the Labour Party conference,
The whole of our system starts from the proposition that
its duty is to protect the innocent from being wrongly convicted....
But surely our primary duty should be to allow law-abiding people
to live in safety. It means a complete change of thinking.
This change of thinking is not confined to the
treatment of terror suspects. On the day the legislation was proposed,
Blair declared that in future the police would be empowered to
impose on-the-spot fines for anti-social behaviour, and that a
trial would only take place if the alleged perpetrator demanded
one.
Announcing the measures, Blair said that he had told police
chiefs as regards their powers, you tell me what you need...and
I will deliver it for you.
Like some latter-day absolute monarch, the prime minister declared
that he sat in the decision-making seat concerning
the laws of the land, and that he had determined it was no longer
possible to abide by the rules of the game we have at the
moment.
These rules are too complicated, too laborious,
he continued, and meant that the police end up being completely
hide-bound by a whole series of restrictions and difficulties
including having to take an accused person all the way through
a long court process, where they were represented by defence
lawyers and all the rest of it.
This is the language of dictatorship.
Imperialist war and social inequality
Blair is setting out to establish a new legal principleguilty
on the say-so of the policeand a political and social order
in which the government has the power to dictate what can and
cannot be said. This has been accompanied by threats leveled against
the judiciary not to stand in the governments way.
So sweeping are the powers contained in the draft anti-terror
bill that it has provoked widespread criticism from civil rights
groups, opposition parties and sections of the judiciary, including
former law lords.
They have denounced the bill as an attack on civil liberties
and the product of an arrogant and authoritarian
prime minister driven by political expediency. Many commentators
have pointed out that the bills proposals can not be justified
by the actual terror threat, and will in fact have a negative
impact on national security and social cohesion by alienating
and criminalising broad sections of the Muslim population in particular.
These concerns and observations are entirely legitimate. But
what accounts for such a mixture of apparent panic and grandstanding
on the part of the government?
Proposals that have such a fundamental impact on legal and
democratic rights cannot be explained away as merely the product
of an illiberal and arrogant prime minister. Only by understanding
the broader impulses for this turn to authoritarian forms of rule
can the attack on essential freedoms be opposed and defeated.
If Blair behaves as a man under siege, then it is with good
reason. His government functions as the representative of a fabulously
wealthy corporate elite, whose interests are antithetical to those
of working people in Britain and internationally.
Experience testifies to the impossibility of securing a democratic
mandate for the governments policies. Rather, it has suffered
a continuous erosion of popular support, leaving it isolated and
dependent upon the suppression of growing political and social
dissent.
This found supreme expression in the launching of a war of
aggression against Iraq. Commissioned on the basis of lies and
in defiance of public opinion, the war had nothing to do with
establishing democracy in Iraq, but was motivated by the desire
to establish US and British hegemony over a region of strategic
geo-political significance.
Even now, rather than countenance a withdrawal from Iraq, the
government has kept British troops there in pitched battles against
a popular insurgency that is growing by the day, whilst making
increasingly bellicose threats against neighbouring Iran.
The policy of militarism and colonial conquest abroad is inextricably
linked to one of social and economic plunder at home. If in the
past British imperialism was able to use the fruits of empire
to secure social peace at home, this is no longer possible today.
Eight years after taking power, a government beginning its
third term in office has presided over a widening of the gap between
rich and poor beyond that existing after 18 years of Conservative
rule. It has made clear its intention to significantly expand
over the next period the inroads made by private capital into
all areas of the public sector, including health and education.
The governments aim is epitomised by Blairs declaration
that Britain must be able to compete with China and Indiacountries
with labour costs a fraction of ours. It is this agenda
that lies behind the resort to ever more repressive legislation.
A socialist programme to defend democratic
rights
No confidence should be placed in any of the official parties,
or in the judiciary, to defend democratic rights.
A cross-party coalition has been formed to oppose the terror
bill, Uniting Communities. Led by Labours London
Mayor Ken Livingstone, it encompasses a handful of Labour MPs,
the Liberal Democrats, Scottish National Party, Respect, the Green
Party, Liberty, some lawyers, trade union leaders and religious
groups.
But its differences with the government centre on the complaint
that in its present form the legislation will not command
the cross party and cross community consensus which is essential
for it to be successful. The coalition only asks for amendments
to the bill, on the plans for 90 days detention without
trial and on its wording, as a basis for maintaining support for
the fight against terror.
It is not possible, however, to support the Blair governments
war on terror as if this were somehow divorced from
its criminal actions in Iraq, which are directly responsible for
any increased terror threat.
Moreover, such appeals for national unity and all-party consensus
only serve to politically disarm working people as to the more
fundamental danger posed to their civil liberties and their livelihoods
emanating from the government and the police.
What is required is the development of a mass political movement
that links the defence of democratic rights to the demand for
the immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq and for the prosecution
of Blair and President George W. Bush as war criminals.
This must be conceived of as an essential part of a broader
offensive against the profit system that is the source of militarism,
war and social inequality, through the building of a new socialist
party of the working class.
See Also:
What is in Blairs anti-terror bill?
[15 October 2005]
Blair lays down framework
for police state in Britain
[10 August 2005]
Police gun down worker in
London subway: another tragic consequence of Blairs war
policy
[25 July 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |