IN AN EARLIER POST, I discussed
Britain’s new “Online Safety Act” and how critics complained it came with
excessive powers for monitoring and censorship on the internet. I noted how Big
Tech is used as an instrument of government policy, how it colludes with
government in some cases and is coerced by government in others to de-platform
and censor dissenting voices and alternative news providers, as was evident during
the Covid years. The Twitter Files exposed
instances of such government overreach and abuse of free speech rights in
America, which underscored the growing number of similar censorship laws in
other countries. I need only cite the “Canadian truckers” demonstrations in
Ottawa last year to recall gross instances of government overreach in limiting people’s
legitimate right to protest. In February 2022, the Trudeau Liberals invoked the
federal “Emergencies Act”, (which had replaced
the War Measures Act in 1985) and used it—for the first time—against truckers
peacefully protesting the federal government's overly restrictive Covid-19 policies. This
heavy-handed use of legislative authority was used to remove demonstrator’s
vehicles and digitally freeze their bank accounts, thus effectively ending the
protests. And the growing trends to digitalize our public and private spaces, and enact restrictive and censorious laws, come with great risks, as a recent Pew research paper suggests:
“…that digital
systems will continue to be driven by profit and power incentives in economics
and politics. [And] this is likely to lead to advanced surveillance and data
collection aimed at controlling people rather than empowering them to act
freely, share ideas and protest injuries and injustices. [There is a] worry
that ethical design will continue to be an afterthought…” (Pew)
Canadian terrorists |
👉AND ACROSS THE POND in England,
it’s the “Terrorism Act”*, which was presumably
to be used against terrorists, and is now used to terrorize journalists and inconvenient
voices of dissent. The recent harassment of Craig Murray is a case in point. Earlier this month, Craig Murray, author, human rights activist, Scottish
nationalist, and former British Ambassador to Uzbekistan, was detained and questioned by authorities as he landed at Glasgow
airport from a trip to Iceland. Murray, an outspoken supporter of Julian
Assange, who writes, advocates, and attends rallies in support of the
Wikileaks’ publisher, attended an event for Assange in Iceland, and later found
himself detained at the airport and questioned by three police officers. He had
his cell phone and laptop confiscated and was questioned
under “Schedule
7 of the Terrorism Act.
THANK GOD the Scottish police
were on the job and alert to incoming terrorists like 65-year-old Murray! No
telling what harm his.. words might do to national security. MURRAY relates what happened:
“They
seated me in the room and told me:
I
was detained under Section 7 of the Terrorism Act
I
was not arrested but detained, and therefore had no right to a lawyer.
I
had no right to remain silent. I had to give full and accurate information in
response to questions. It was a criminal offense to withhold any relevant
information.
I
had to give up any passwords to my devices. It was a criminal offense not to do
this.
They
searched my baggage and my coat, going through my documents and taking my phone
and laptop…”
Murray was detained for just
under an hour. He answered a variety of questions about his finances, whether
he was in the paid employ of any Julian Assange support groups (No), why he
attended the Assange rally in Iceland (He was invited there by a friend), who
was at a pro-Palestinian rally he also attended while there (He didn’t know
anyone), what the speakers said (He didn’t know, they spoke in Icelandic😆). His
interrogators asked him if he would be attending pro-Palestinian rallies in the
future (He said probably). They asked him questions about his blog and twitter
posts. They copied his banking information, his credit card numbers, and confiscated
his phone and laptop “until the investigation was over”. He answered their questions
for “fifty-nine” minutes, when the interview was terminated. Note: Under
Britain’s “Terrorism Act”, you can be questioned without an attorney present
for up to 1 hour. After that you can request legal representation.
That law is
Star Chamber material, boyo!
IT IS UNCLEAR if Murray will be charged with any offense under the Terrorism Act, but his legal team is preparing a defense, just in
case. His lawyers have also made a submission to the United Nations Human
Rights Committee, and they may ask for judicial review in the UK of this
bizarre and disturbing incident.
“This is an
enormous abuse of human rights. The abuse of process in refusing both a lawyer
and the right to remain silent, the inquiry into perfectly legal campaigning
which is in no way terrorism-associated, the political questioning, the
financial snooping and the seizure of material related to my private life, were
all based on an utterly fake claim that I am associated with terrorism.” (Murray)
Murray wasn’t informed why
he was detained and questioned, and what ‘crime’ he may have committed. He wonders if the investigation against him may have been launched because of a heated post he made on X (formally Twitter) when Israel began its bombing of Gaza, a post he admits could have been more "nuanced". He wonders whether he might have inadvertently stood next to someone who was on the security service's radar at that pro-Palestinian rally he attended in Iceland. He's in the dark over why he was detained and questioned. Was it his support for Julian Assange? Who knows?
“…[I]t is an essential part of the justice dispensed here that you should be condemned not only in innocence but also in ignorance.” ― Franz Kafka, The Trial
THINK ABOUT THAT for a minute: A British citizen is stopped and questioned by police under a law meant to investigate and arrest terrorists. His only 'crime' may be an angry tweet, standing in a crowd at a rally, or supporting a journalist jailed for doing journalism. That's some terrorist you've got there! Craig Murray may yet
pay the price for his political activism and for his writings, however, he will
not waver in his support for Julian Assange, for the rights of Palestinians,
for press freedom, and freedom of assembly and speech.
EARLIER this year, a British parliamentary
“terror watchdog" committee reported on the detention and interrogation by police
of French journalist, Ernest Moret, under circumstances similar to Murray.
The committee concluded the officers who questioned Moret had made “exaggerated
and overbearing” threats about future penalties
and restrictions the journalist might incur if he failed to cooperate. They even used information
gleaned from privileged correspondence between Moret and his lawyer. On the use
of the “Terrorism Law”, the committee report said: Schedule 7 is “powerful” and “must
therefore be exercised with due care.” The report concluded that using
Schedule 7 to interrogate Moret was like “using a sledgehammer to crack a
nut.” (Grayzone) Increasingly, it seems, nutcrackers are in short supply in Britain.
LET'S HOPE there is such a review in Murray's case and that it arrives at a similar conclusion.
👉My point for writing about all
this is show how ubiquitous such laws and regulations are becoming across more
and more countries—laws against certain kinds of speech, laws limiting the right
to gather and protest, harsher penalties and procedures, expanded surveillance regimes, the
militarization of police services, etc.—it’s as if governments around the world
see the growing unrest among their populations and are
taking steps to clamp down. Instead of adopting authoritarian measures to maintain the status quo, politicians should be asking why such unrest
is growing and what can be done about it. Tightening the noose
(on people, ideas, etc.), in the end, has only one outcome.
Cheers, Jake.____________________________
* Terrorism law
in Great Britain consists of a constellation of four pieces of legislation that
are currently on the books: the “Terrorism Act 2000”, the
“Anti-Terrorism Crime and Security Act 2001”, the “Prevention of Terrorism Act
2005”, and the “Terrorism Act 2006”. As a group, the combined surveillance and
detention powers of these Acts gives authorities powerful tools in surveilling,
monitoring, as well as arresting and detaining, of British citizens.
“Surveillance tends to be long-term, involving continuous or periodic data collection over extended periods. Monitoring, on the other hand, can be short-term or ongoing, depending on the specific objective and context. It may involve real-time observation or periodic checks."
Pew Research Article: https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2023/06/21/themes-the-most-harmful-or-menacing-changes-in-digital-life-that-are-likely-by-2035/
👉THE LINK BELOW discusses how Australia's
Albanese government makes nice mouth noises around the need to free Julian (an
Australian citizen) from Belmarsh prison in London, and have charges of “Espionage”,
that the American State Department cites in its effort to extradite the
publisher to the United States, immediately voided. While the Australian
government makes public statements in support of Assange, government bureaucracy,
and the Foreign Affairs Ministry in particular, do very little behind the
scenes to move the needle. It’s all talk and hot air down
under. I guess "Five-Eyes" info dumps and "AUKUS" military muscle give Aussie
politicians free rein to swing their dicks around instead of acting like
compassionate public servants.👇
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