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London Olympics terror threat used to vastly increase surveillance
powers
By Marcus Morgan
3 May 2008
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The threat of terrorism at the 2012 London Olympics is being
hyped up in order to justify a vast increase in the surveillance
powers of the British state.
According to a memo leaked to the Daily Telegraph, Home
Office officials are planning to expand the police DNA database
to identify suspects and use greater powers to track individuals
through advanced closed circuit television (CCTV) technology and
the Oyster card used by millions of people on Londons bus
and rail network.
The memo discusses different means the government could use
to persuade the British public to accept these measures. It asks,
To what extent should the expectation of liberty be eroded
by legitimate intrusions in the interests of security of the wider
public? and concludes, Increasing [public] support
could be possible through the piloting of certain approaches in
high-profile ways such as the London Olympics.
To that end, ministers, police chiefs and officials have stepped
up their demands for more security measures, utilising the Games.
Last month, Lord Dear, the former Scotland Yard head of operations,
made a public announcement expressing his doubts over present
police capabilities to deal with the event. He said that the police
force is too short of manpower to deal with the extra security
needed and likened it to a Sixties car in the 21st century,
adding, If the model is flawed now, it will certainly be
flawed in four years time.
Its fairly obvious to anyone that major terrorist
groups will not be particularly interested in attacking the Beijing
Olympics, Dear said. But in four years time
they will have the London Olympics as a target and we need to
be best positioned to counter that well in time.
Dears announcement was made despite the fact that there
are a record 140,000 police officers in service and the Olympics
security budget has risen sharply by £238 million in the
last few months. At the end of last year, Olympics Minister Tessa
Jowell released figures that showed that the initial security
budget of £200 million in 2005 had spiralled to more than
£1 billion.
Dears comments reflect those of the most senior officers
in the police. The head of the Metropolitan Police, Sir Ian Blair,
has also expressed concern over existing security arrangements
and outlined a plan for them to be beefed up in readiness for
the games. He has also said that special security and training
will be required for athletes and the 200 heads of state expected
for the opening ceremony. These proposals will inevitably involve
extending the budget still further.
As well as increasing the number of police, the proposed scheme
involves an elaborate and sophisticated security system spanning
the whole of London. According to a BBC report last month, the
Metropolitan Police Service wants to pool its 10,000 existing
cameras with the thousands of traffic and congestion cameras already
in operation across the city.
This would give the police control over a vast network of up
to half a million CCTV cameras, making it the largest of its kind
in the world. The network would then be controlled by a central
£100 million bomb-proof command bunker operated jointly
by the military, police and intelligence services brought together
under the umbrella of the Olympic Security Directorate.
The Olympic security coordinator, Assistant Police Commissioner
Tarique Ghaffur, has made several statements over the last few
weeks that indicate just how huge the increase in surveillance
will be. Speaking at an international security conference in Abu
Dhabi, Ghaffur outlined new ticketing technology to be used on
the London transport system to track the movements of every individual,
as well as second-generation computer technology that
can track individuals through face recognition. The computers
can use identity-recognition techniques to compare video against
a database of digital faces.
A pilot scheme involving 750,000 mugshots has already been
completed. Using the facial-mapping software connected to the
CCTV cameras, an alert will flash up as soon as a known person
appears on the screen. He added, We will have the most secure
and transparent ticketing system. Tracking technology is being
developeda spectator will be tracked from the venue to his
or her home with these tickets.
Other measures outlined by Ghaffur include dividing London
into three security zones, three extra helicopters to carry out
close surveillance, an increase in the automatic vehicle number
plate recognition system, and checks using biometric fingerprints
on the 50,000 workforce being used to build the venues.
Currently, the police can only check fingerprints and photographs
from suspects after they have been arrested. Under these new powers,
the police will be able to carry out these checks instantly with
hand-held devices that are connected to the security database.
Peter Neyroud, the chief executive of the National Policing Improvement
Agency, said, We are trying to get a really disciplined
understanding of how to use these tools before the Olympics. That
is a really important time scale for us.
As well as increasing the size of the British police force
to 9,000 for the major Olympic events, there are also proposals
to draft in extra manpower from private security firms and foreign
armed police. Scotland Yard has called for these measures on the
basis that too few British police have firearms training to cope
with the events, and the costs of training them are prohibitive.
The contracted armed police will be used to guard dignitaries,
athletes, the main Olympic Park and other sports venues.
Ian Blair told a meeting of the Metropolitan Police Authority,
The principle must be that we dont want armed foreign
police, but theres a butand the but
is twofold. One, you may not be able to get any foreign police
unless they are armed, because they wont feel easy being
unarmed in public scenarios like that. Two, do we actually have,
in this case, sufficient capacity to have enough armed officers
to do the job?
All of these extra resources will mean that the security budget
for the games will mushroom in the next four years. Denis Oswald,
the chairman of the International Olympic Committees London
2012 coordination commission, has admitted that it is impossible
to predict how much money will need to be spent when the
games are still four years away. He said, Its a very
difficult area but if we want to have occasions like the Olympic
Games, where hundreds of thousands of people meet, then you have
to make sure they are safe, otherwise you just give up and the
terrorists will win.
This refusal to draw up a fixed budget on the basis of a terrorist
threat that is impossible to measure amounts to a
blank cheque that Londoners and the British people will ultimately
have to pay. More importantly, the machinery is being created
that is necessary to impose a highly integrated police/military
apparatus in Britains capital city, under the pretext of
keeping the country safe from terrorism.
See Also:
Britain: Police want children
routinely put on DNA database
[27 March 2008]
British government widens
police stop-and-search powers
[13 February 2008]
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