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London bombings trigger massive assault on democratic rights
By Julie Hyland
4 August 2005
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The July 7 bombings in London and the failed bombing attempts
on July 21 have been seized upon by the Blair government to implement
an unprecedented assault on democratic rights.
The country that long prided itself on a tradition of unarmed
policing has become one in which armed police are empowered to
act with impunity.
London, in particular, has been placed under conditions resembling
a state of siege. The consequences were made horrifyingly apparent
on July 22 when police executed 27-year-old Brazilian Jean Charles
de Menezes with seven bullets to the head in a subway carriage,
without warning or cause.
A brief note of regret from police was followed by Metropolitan
Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blairs statement that more innocent
people could be killed.
Subsequently, armed raids have been conducted throughout the
capital and in parts of the South and the West Midlands in what
has been described as largest police operation since the Second
World War.
In total, 37 people have been arrested under the Prevention
of Terrorism Act, of whom 20 remain in custody. The rest have
been released without charge.
On July 29, police carried out a series of raids in the hunt
for the would-be suicide bombers deemed to be responsible
for the failed explosive attempts on July 21. In several areas
across the capital, buildings were evacuated and streets cordoned
off.
During the most high profile raid on a housing estate in West
London, residents reported hearing loud bangs and seeing armed
police, some in balaclavas, surround the area and fire CS gas
into a flat before taking two men into custody.
The Guardian reported that soldiers from the SAS were
present to offer technical assistance to the
police.
The squadron is ready for deployment at three hours
notice anywhere in the country if the police or MI5 suspect that
armed terrorists are in a building, and is understood to have
moved to a secret location in London, the newspaper continued.
A third man was arrested in a simultaneous raid, also in West
London. That evening, another was arrested in Rome.
On July 30, police announced that all four suspected of the
July 21 incidentsYasin Hassan Omar, Muktar Said Ibrahim,
Ramzi Mohammed and Osman Hussainwere in custody.
Even so, there has been no let-up in police operations. London
faces lockdown, the Times of London reported
approvingly August 1, as another week began with thousands of
police armed with machine guns patrolling the capitals streets
and subway network. Scotland Yard has said this is necessary to
test the resources and reassure a nervous public.
This huge police deployment has been accompanied by the revival
of the notorious stop and search (SUS) laws, targeted
at black and Asian males. Defending policing based on racial profiling,
British Transport Police Constable Ian Johnston demanded, We
should not bottle out over this. We should not waste time searching
old white ladies. Home Office Minister Hazel Blears said
it was absolutely the right thing for the police to do.
The unprecedented power now wielded by police has not been
questioned by any of the main political parties or by the media,
nor subjected to parliamentary scrutiny.
Even before Parliament went into recess on July 21, an unparalleled
degree of cross-party unity had been established. Praising Prime
Minister Tony Blair, Conservative leader Michael Howard and Liberal
Democrat leader Charles Kennedy made clear they were prepared
to drop their earlier objections to proposed new anti-terror laws,
which include the severe curtailment of freedom of speech.
Writing in the Independent, Steve Richards commented,
[T]he Prime Ministers style of leadership is formalised.
He leads a national coalition against terror.
Richards is indifferent to the implications of what amounts
to a de facto national government. In a subsequent comment, he
insisted that it is not illiberal for the state to curtail
free speech in protection of its citizens.
Moreover, it is wrong to assert that Tony Blair is an
authoritarian, Richards went on. He is only authoritarian
from time to time.
The very real threat posed to civil liberties by these developments
is underscored by the draconian powers already accrued to the
state over the last period under the guise of the war on
terror.
The role of the Civil Contingencies Committee in events of
the last month, for example, has only been noted in passing by
the media, and then in the most flattering light, almost as if
it were an emergency relief agency.
In fact, this shadowy body (nicknamed Cobra), has the power
to suspend civil liberties and impose military rule through the
Civil Contingencies Act that came into effect late last year.
Dubbed Britains version of the US Patriot Act, it enables
the government to declare a state of emergency without a parliamentary
vote and to introduce virtually unlimited emergency regulations
under the Royal Prerogative, again without recourse to Parliament.
It also enables the Defence Councila body comprised of ministers,
senior civil servants and military top brassto deploy the
armed services without prior parliamentary debate or approval.
Commenting at the time, the civil liberties organisation Statewatch
warned that the act would allow governments enormous discretion
and allow them to mix ongoing business in normal times with powers
that are intended to deal with peacetime emergencies.
This new normality could see parts of cities
or whole towns subject to exceptional laws and controls in the
same way that emergency laws have been in place in Northern Ireland
for more than thirty years.
At a press conference immediately following the July 7 bombings,
Blairs official spokesman said he was unaware of any
proposals at this stage to impose emergency powers under
the Act.
The Observer reported that initial discussions between
police and Cobra on July 7 covered whether to summon the
7,000-strong Civil Contingencies Reaction Force, made up of reservists,
to the streets of London. Despite the chaos in central London,
it was not deemed essential and control fell to the police.
Blair reportedly chaired the last Cobra meeting on July 21,
involving senior ministers and police and intelligence chiefs,
immediately following the failed bomb attempts. It is not known
whether the meeting agreed to invoke the act at this point, as
no details of its discussions have been made publicly available.
Whatever the technicalities, there is no doubting that parts
of the country have been made subject to exceptional laws
and controls.
In its leader July 30, the Times opined, Living
with terror Britain must accept that the abnormal will become
normal.
The Times complacent justification for the sweeping
abrogation of civil liberties does not withstand scrutiny.
None of the measures now being implemented in Britain were
deemed necessary during The Troubles in Northern Ireland.
This was despite the 1979 assassinations of former Chief of the
Defence Staff Lord Mountbatten and shadow Northern Ireland Secretary
Airey Neave at the House of Commons, and the attempt to kill almost
the entire Conservative cabinet in the 1984 Brighton bombing.
Just last December, Britains law lords rejected the governments
argument for imprisoning foreign nationals accused of terrorist
involvement without trial.
Explaining their decision, Lord Hoffman stated, Freedom
from arbitrary arrest and detention is a quintessential British
liberty, enjoyed by the inhabitants of this country when most
of the population of Europe could be thrown into prison at the
whim of their rulers.
Terrorist crime, serious as it is, does not threaten
our institutions of government or our existence as a civil community.
The real threat to the life of the nation, in the sense
of a people living in accordance with its traditional laws and
political values, comes not from terrorism but from laws such
as these.
Blair has made clear he will use the July bombings to try and
overturn that ruling.
The fact that the police and government have been able to implement
their security measures so quickly underscores that most of these
measures had been made ready some time ago, and were just awaiting
the appropriate pretext. Scotland Yard has admitted that its policy
of shoot-to-kill, for example, was put into place two years ago.
The resort to emergency government and the militarisation
of society have far more to do with the buildup of social and
political tensions within the UK than with any terrorist threat.
Britain is sharply polarised along class lines. In recent decades,
successive governments have carried out a major redistribution
of wealth from working people to a tiny, privileged elite.
Welfare, health care and other essential services which millions
of workers and their families depend upon have been systematically
gutted in order to provide tax breaks for the rich and the major
corporations, and decent paying jobs replaced by low-wage, sweated
labour.
This has been accompanied by a law-and-order offensive targeted
at the poorest and most vulnerable sections of society.
Ethnic minorities have been particularly adversely affected
by these conditionstheir situation made all the more precarious
by the anti-immigrant diatribes of the official parties and the
media as they seek a scapegoat for the unfolding social catastrophe.
The putrefaction of the official workers movement, which has
reached its apogee in Blairs Labour government, has left
millions politically disenfranchised.
Whether or not any of those involved in Julys incidents
had links to foreign organisations, it is clear that the profound
sense of alienation engendered by these conditions, combined with
anger and outrage at the Blair governments participation
in Washingtons illegal war against Iraqunder conditions
where there is no mass-based progressive alternative through which
to challenge the existing set-uphas created the climate
for terrorist outrages.
The emergency measures now being imposed will do nothing to
change this situation, much less protect the British people. This
can only be achieved by ending the policies that have given rise
to terror attacks.
Opposition to imperialist war must be linked to the defence
of all the social gains and democratic rights of working people.
Alongside the demand for the immediate withdrawal of all foreign
troops from Iraq must be the call for an end to police state measures
and the convening of a genuinely independent inquiry into the
events of the last weeks. Such an inquiry would focus on the political
responsibility of the Blair government, the media and the entire
political establishment for the criminal aggression in Iraq, which
was launched on the basis of lies and constitutes a conspiracy
against the people of the Middle East and the working class of
Britain itself.
See Also:
Blair defends Iraq war, vows
new attacks on civil liberties and social conditions
[29 July 2005]
Britain: media defend state
killing, police chief warns more to come
[27 July 2005]
Police gun down worker in
London subway: another tragic consequence of Blairs war
policy
[25 July 2005]
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