|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Britain: Police want children routinely put on DNA database
By Richard Tyler
27 March 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Britains police want to routinely put children as young
as five on the National DNA Database (NDNAD), even when no crime
has been committed.
Gary Pugh, the DNA spokesman for the Association of Chief Police
Officers (ACPO) and director of forensic sciences at Scotland
Yard, recently told the press, The number of unsolved crimes
says we are not sampling enough of the right people.
According to Pugh, who was interviewed by the Observer,
If we have a primary means of identifying people before
they offend, then in the long-term the benefits of targeting younger
people are extremely large.
Pughs words are a sinister echo of the film Minority
Report, in which a specialist pre-crime police
department routinely arrests people who have not committed any
offence.
Describing it as a step towards a police state,
National Primary Headteachers Association representative
Chris Davis said it was tantamount to condemning children at
a very young age for something they have not yet done. They may
have the potential to do something, but we all have the potential
to do things. To label children at that stage and put them on
a register is going too far.
Action on Rights for Children and GeneWatch, a not-for-profit
group that monitors developments in genetic technologies, have
produced evidence to show that by March 2009, some 1.5 million
children aged 10-17 will be recorded on the National DNA Database,
a figure they say is far higher than admitted by government.
The organisations estimate that at least 1.1 million children
have already had their DNA recorded between 1995 (when the NDNAD
was established) and April 2007, with more than half a million
being aged between 10 and 16.
Helen Wallace from GeneWatch said, Unless there are exceptional
circumstances, the police should not keep records of people, including
100,000 under 18s, who have been found not guilty or have had
the charges dropped.
Terri Dowty from Action on Rights for Children said, These
children will be on the database for the rest of their lives.
We are turning thousands of innocent children into lifelong suspects.
No other country in Europe criminalises children at such a young
age.
The Home Office has shown repeated reluctance to release
figures for children on the DNA database, presumably realising
how shocked the public would be, Dowty said.
Mass genetic surveillance
Pughs call for the routine sampling of DNA from children
as young as five is only the latest in a number of statements
by senior police officers and judges advocating the extension
of powers to take and keep DNA samples from wholly innocent individuals,
setting up a system of mass genetic surveillance.
Following two recent high-profile murder convictions where
the culprits had been implicated by DNA found at the scene, calls
were again made to establish a national DNA register containing
samples from everyone in the UK. Last year, one of Britains
most senior judges, Lord Justice Sedley, also called for DNA records
to be kept on all UK residents.
The government has not ruled out such a move, merely saying
that it would raise significant practical and ethical issues.
Last year, the Home Office launched a consultation to examine
the possible expansion of the DNA database to cover all those
arrested, even for such minor offences as begging or speeding.
According to the Observer, a Home Office document initiating
the consultation had promoted the merits of massively expanding
the database.
Home Office Minister Meg Hiller told the home affairs select
committee in February that information on the identity register,
which will underpin new biometric passports and the ID cards soon
to be routinely issued, would be shared with authorities in the
European Union and United States in specific cases.
And at a recent pan-European conference on serious organised
crime, Londons Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir Ian
Blair, said DNA records should be extended throughout the EU.
Roger Smith, director of human rights organisation Justice,
said granting police the power to compel samples without having
to show reasonable suspicion was a substantial and unwarranted
intrusion on the rights of personal privacy. He called for
a return to the position prior to 1995, when police were only
allowed to keep the samples of those convicted.
Under legislation introduced in 2001 and 2004, the Labour government
has considerably extended police powers to take and keep DNA samples
from anyone arrested on suspicion of having committed a
recordable offence. This includes any offence punishable
by imprisonment, but also extends to relatively minor offences
such as tampering with a motor vehicle, poaching and drunkenness.
Under the 2004 legislation, police can take a DNA sample from
any person arrested aged 10 or more, in the case of a child, without
the parents consent.
This legislation currently only applies to those arrested in
England and Wales. In Scotland, which has a different judicial
system, most samples are destroyed if the person is not charged
or is later acquitted. However, senior Scottish police officers
are lobbying hard for similar powers.
The UK now has the worlds largest DNA database, containing
information on at least 4.5 million individuals, equivalent to
some 7 percent of the population. According to the Parliamentary
Office of Science and Technology, only 1.13 percent of the population
in the EU have their DNA documented, with records being held on
just 0.5 percent in the US.
In what constitutes a major breach of civil libertiesoverturning
the fundamental legal norm of the presumption of innocencerecords
can be kept indefinitely on NDNAD even if a person is never formally
charged, or is later acquitted of the offence for which he or
she was arrested.
The call for DNA samples to be routinely taken from those below
the age of 18 continues a major escalation in the process of criminalising
children ongoing since Labour came to power in 1997.
Labours 1998 Crime and Disorder Act reduced the age of
criminal responsibility from 14 to 10. The act also introduced
so-called ASBOsAnti Social Behaviour Ordersa measure
that has been largely aimed against young people. It means that
once an ASBO has been granted, which can be for relatively minor
misdemeanours or behaviour that is causing a nuisance, breaching
the ASBO can result in a criminal record.
There is also strong evidence to show that such routine recording
of DNA samples unfairly discriminates against individuals from
ethnic minorities. According to Black Mental Health UK, black
people are three time more likely to have their DNA recorded than
white people.
The organisation says government figures show that 77 percent
of young black men will soon have their details held on NDNAD,
despite evidence that black people are no more likely to
have committed a crime than white people.
Shami Chakrabarti, director of civil liberties group Liberty
said establishing a DNA database for everyone in the UK ignores
the extremely intimate nature of DNA and the massive scope for
error and abuse one report has revealed that serious
flaws have been found in the data, with up to 14 percent of the
entries being duplicates, stored under different names.
Such concerns are well founded in light of recent scandals
in which government computer disks have been lost containing millions
of sensitive personal recordsin one case affecting 25 million
people, covering 7.25 million families overallincluding
names, dates of birth, and bank and address details.
Legal Challenge
The European Court of Human Rights heard a case at the end
of February in which two innocent people are seeking to have their
records removed from the National DNA Database.
Legal representatives for the two40-year-old Michael
Marper and a youth named only as Sargue that
retention of such records for innocent people is a breach of Articles
8 (respect for the privacy of the individual) and 14 (prohibiting
discrimination) of the European Convention on Human Rights.
In both cases, the police have refused to destroy fingerprints
and DNA records taken when the two individuals, one only a teenager,
were originally arrested. The police subsequently dropped the
case against Marper, while the youth S was acquitted.
It is thought that NDNAD could hold the records of up to 1
million innocent people, with GeneWatch estimating that up to
10 percent of these could be from childrenrecords that would
have to be destroyed should the legal challenge succeed.
In February, the Economist magazine reported a Home
Office spokesperson saying that innocent people have nothing
to fear from providing a sample, since retaining such evidence
was no different from recording other forms of information
such as photographs and witness statements.
However, DNA provides a wide range of other information about
an individual, such as their parentage, or a susceptibility to
particular diseases or disabilities. Some insurance companies
have already raised the possibility of introducing genetic
screening as a means of lowering premium charges since the
information could be used to deny cover for individuals with certain
genetic markers.
The body operating the NDNAD, the Forensic Science Service,
a government-owned company, is a prime candidate for privatisation,
which could open up the use of the database for purely commercial
purposes.
It also allows an almost unlimited possibility of police frame-ups.
The thread-bare argument that if people have nothing
to hide, they have nothing to fear is clearly not borne
out by the record of Labour. The governments of Tony Blair and
Gordon Brown have trampled on long-standing democratic and legal
norms, constantly eroding the rights of the individual in favour
of the right of the state to monitor and control its citizens.
See Also:
Brown government promotes patriotism
and militarism
[26 March 2008]
British government widens
police stop-and-search powers
[13 February 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |