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The Terrorism Act - embracing tyranny By Frances Webber, human rights lawyer
On Tuesday 8 May, a crowd of thousands ruptured
the quiet of the street in St James' where the Home Office has its
headquarters. With drumming, dancing and chanting, with banners
and placards, T-shirts, stickers and traditional Kurdish or Kashmiri
dress, the demonstrators proclaimed their defiance of the ban on
the twenty-one organisations, support for which became illegal on
29 March 2001 under the first Order made under the Terrorism Act.
The aim was to show the breadth of the Act's provisions and the
danger it poses to democracy and, more specifically, to the right
of asylum.
The Act, passed last year, allows organisations
to be proscribed if the Home Secretary believes they are involved
in terrorism, or promoting or encouraging it. Terrorism is defined
as the use or threat of any action involving violence to people
or property or serious risks to health and safety, designed to influence
any government or intimidate members of the public anywhere in the
world for political, religious or ideological causes. Under the
Act, it is an offence to belong or profess to belong to a proscribed
organisation, to invite support for one, to arrange a meeting which
is to be addressed by a member of one, or to address a meeting to
encourage support for one - even a meeting is in someone's house,
with only three people attending. The penalty is up to ten years
imprisonment. It is also an offence to wear any clothes or any other
article which might arouse ®reasonable suspicion' that the wearer
is a member or supporter of a proscribed organisation. The penalty
is up to six months imprisonment and a fine of up to £5,000.
Harshest law
Wearing Kurdish national dress demonstrates
support for the PKK (because the PKK works for Kurdish self-determination)
and thus risks a six-month sentence. So does wearing a T-shirt proclaiming
support for Tamil or Kashmiri liberation. Hence all the colourful
clothes, T-shirts and stickers on the demo. On that occasion, no-one
was arrested. But everyone attending was liable to arrest, as were
the organisers, since the rally both supported proscribed organisations
and was addressed by their members. Writing an article or speaking
in support of Kashmiri, Tamil or Kurdish self-determination could
be construed as inviting support for a proscribed organisation.
A rally or meeting in support of asylum rights which is addressed
by a member of one of the organisations could land the organisers
in prison.
The Act's provisions are drawn so widely as
to give police and prosecutors freedom to arrest most people who
are involved in any way in refugee communities' activities or in
solidarity work. No wonder Gareth Peirce, the civil rights lawyer
who has fought anti-terrorist legislation and defended those accused
of terrorism for over three decades, describes the 2000 Act as the
worst ever.
Restoring the divine right of kings
Previous anti-terror laws have been used against refugees, and police
have tapped phones, threatened prosecution of those collecting money,
targeted cultural and community events and centres, warned against
the selling of newspapers, and have offered bribes and, on occasion,
even refugee status in exchange for information. In 1998, the Criminal
Justice (Terrorism and Conspiracy) Act foreshadowed the Terrorism
Act in criminalising conspiracy to commit offences abroad. Labour
back-bencher Donald Anderson commented that it was ®trying to restore
the divine right of kings', in supporting any regime, however tyrannical.
He asked: ®Are we to say that someone who has fled to this country
from that tyranny is estopped thereby from seeking to overthrow
by word or action that tyrannical government?'
Controlling refugees
The answer, in the provisions of the 2000 Act
and the Proscribed Organisations Order, seems to be an unequivocal
yes. The battery of new powers, new offences and proscribed organisations
allows refugee communities to be even more closely controlled and
monitored, and the criminalisation of the refugee communities has
been formalised. The definition of ®terrorism' is the broadest ever,
as is the number and range of organisations proscribed, the range
of criminal offences created and the scope of the new, draconian
police powers of arrest, search and seizure. The Act will allow
the government to extradite political offenders to their home state
- something which was not permitted a century ago, when it was accepted
that those fighting oppression abroad should be allowed a safe haven
in Britain. Anyone convicted of an offence under the Act is likely
to be excluded from refugee status in Britain as a terrorist supporter,
and could face deportation on national security grounds, since last
year the Court of Appeal accepted the Home Secretary's argument
that a threat to a friendly government abroad was a threat to Britain's
national security.
Friends with repressive regimes
The government's economic, diplomatic and political priorities dictate
friendly relations with the repressive regimes which produce refugees.
The Turkish, Sri Lankan, Algerian, Israeli and Saudi governments
(among others) have long complained that Britain did nothing to
stop refugees conspiring against them from London. Other European
governments have acted against the PKK and the Algerian groups.
The government wants British firms to win more business in Turkey,
Iran, Algeria etc, as is evidenced by its plan to extend export
credits to Balfour Beatty to build the Ilisu Dam in Turkey, which
will destroy the 10,000-year-old Kurdish city of Hasankeyf and leave
thousands of Kurds homeless. There is no room for ethics. The Turkish
government showed its disapproval in January of the recent French
law recognising the Ottoman killings of Armenians between 1915 and
1923 as genocide, by cancellation of defence contracts with two
French firms worth over a billion dollars. The UK's huge armaments
industry wants the trade, and NATO wants Turkey's co-operation.
Similar considerations apply to many of the other countries from
which the banned organisations come.
Effect on asylum claims
The impact that the Act, and the proscription of several mainstream
liberation organisations, will have on the right to asylum, will
be vast. If it is a criminal offence to belong, or to profess support
for, the PKK or the LTTE or the Mujahideen, what can an asylum-seeker
say, who fears persecution at home for his or her support for one
of these organisations? Support for the liberation struggle is the
foundation for most asylum claims by Tamils, Turkish Kurds, Kashmiris
and others. Someone who supports the Kurdish liberation movement
will almost invariably support the PKK - and if he doesn't, he'll
certainly be suspected of it. Assertion of an asylum claim could
thus lead to criminal charges. The Home Office has, according to
immigration lawyers, told its civil servants who present immigration
and asylum appeals to notify it of anyone who claims on appeal to
be a member or supporter of any of the listed organisations. It
is likely that the information will be passed on to police. It's
a case of ®damned if you do; damned if you don't' - an asylum-seeker
who claims support or membership of a listed group risks arrest,
and one who disavows support for the group will have the claim rejected
on the ground that he or she is not persectured at home. Many people,
faced with this dilemma, are likely not to claim asylum at all,
although they deserve to be granted refugee status. The measures
are likely to result in the growth of the undocumented, invisible
underclass vulnerable to exploitation by sweatshop employers in
agriculture and in the service, retail and garment trades. These
consequences are a price the government is willing to pay for a
reduction in the numbers claiming asylum - an increasingly pressing
priority during an election campaign fought on the terrain of xenophobia.
Link to racism in immigration
In this connection, the banning orders are
of a piece with the provisions allowing immigration officers to
discriminate against members of particular ethnic groups who are
perceived as a threat to ®the immigration control'. The groups who
can be discriminated against under the new provisions, announced
in May, include Tamils and Kurds as well as Roma, Somalis, Afghans,
Albanians, ethnic Chinese and (bizarrely) Pontic Greeks. The authorisation
allows immigration officers to delay members of these groups at
immigration control for longer and subject them to more rigorous
checks than others.
But the groups deemed a threat to ®the immigration
control' are precisely the groups who make up the majority of asylum
seekers (excepting the Pontic Greeks). They're the groups who are
forced to arrive in the UK clandestinely or using false documents
because they can't get to safety in the UK any other way. It is
the same government which forces them to travel illegally and then
justifies institutional racism against them because of their illegal
travel.
Bogus threat?
Thus, Kurds, Tamils and others are hit from
both sides, treated as a threat both to immigration controls and
to national security (with its peculiarly broad definition). But
so far as the Kurds are concerned, the timing of the terrorist ban
is strange, since the PKK has held a ceasefire for two years. This
suggests that the government's motivation has more to do with showing
the electorate that Labour can be ®tough on asylum' than by any
real terrorist threat.
New rejection strategy
The other recent development pointing the same
way is the U-turn in the way Iraqi Kurds and Iranians are dealt
with. Until recently, 90 percent of Iraqi Kurds were allowed to
stay, either as refugees or with exceptional leave to remain. Now,
despite the Home Office accepting that no one can be returned to
areas controlled by Saddam Hussein, the number rejected is almost
90 percent. They are told they can live in the ®safe havens' - despite
the US, the UK and Turkey bombing of Iraq, and the threat of aggression
from Iran.
And in the last few months, the rate of rejection
for Iranians has shot up, despite Home Office acceptance that torture,
unfair trials and secret executions are routine; those claiming
to fear execution for political activity are told they can live
in Turkey. Iranians, Iraqi and Turkish Kurds, Tamils, Algerians,
Kashmiris and others are among the victims of the government's drive
against the right to asylum.
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