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London:
police and “terrorists”
By Mike Marqusee, originally
published in The Hindu, 25 June 2006
At 4 AM on June 2nd, another grim episode in the
war on terror was played out on a quiet residential street in east
London. In what the media initially hailed as a major anti-terrorist
triumph, 250 heavily armed police descended on a house where, it was
alleged, Muslim terrorists were manufacturing chemical weapons to
unleash on innocent Londoners.
In the course of the pre-dawn raid, 23-year old
Mohammed Abdul Kahar was shot. He and his brother, 20 year old Abul
Koyair, were arrested and subjected to seven days intensive
interrogation, after which both men were freed without charge. No
evidence of chemical weapons or indeed illegal or suspicious activity
of any kind had been found.
At a press conference after their release, the
brothers described their ordeal. They seemed patently sincere and
painfully bewildered. When Kahar heard the front door being smashed
down, he assumed it was a burglary and left his bedroom to come down
stairs, where, at a distance of “two or three
feet”, a policeman opened fire without issuing a warning or
identifying himself. “We had eye contact and he shot me
straight away,” recalled Kahar. The bullet entered his chest
and exited through his shoulder, sparing his life by inches.
“I was begging him, ‘Please, please, I
can’t breathe,’ and he just kicked me in my face.
He kept on saying, ‘Shut the fuck up’….
one of the officers slapped me on the face … I thought that
they’re going to either shoot me again, or they’re
going to start shooting my brother.”
Koyair, the brother, was also sworn at and beaten.
Their elderly mother was dragged out in handcuffs. Their sister, Humeya
Kalam, told the BBC, “I heard doors being smashed, windows
being broken. I woke up, opened my door and saw a person dressed all in
black, gun pointing towards me.” Meanwhile, the police raided
the house next door, where the residents received similar rough
treatment.
Compounding the error and terror of the raid has
been the police attempt to smear the victims. Newspapers reported,
first, that Kahar had been shot after he had struggled with officers,
then that he had actually been shot by his brother during a scuffle,
and then that a police officer had “accidentally”
discharged his gun as a result of wearing thick gloves. It was also
stated that the brothers had attended militant Islamist demonstrations
and that Kahar’s wound was superficial. It is now
acknowledged that there was not a shred of truth in any of these claims
- as the police officers who made them must have known.
It has emerged that this massive and aggressive
police operation was based on an uncorroborated tip-off from a single
informant, a young man serving a prison sentence with a purported IQ of
69. According to reports in the press, the government insisted the raid
go ahead despite warnings from Scotland Yard that there were
“serious reservations about the credibility” of the
source.
Given the feebleness of the intelligence, the
scale and timing of the raid, the publicity that accompanied it, and
the subsequent revelations, it’s hard to avoid the conclusion
that the government was over-eager to stage a high-profile action that
would vindicate the war on terror, which can only be sustained if the
fears of the public are regularly fanned.
The police have issued an ambiguous, half-hearted
apology for “any hurt that may have been caused”.
Even that is more than the politicians have offered. Tony
Blair’s response to the shooting was to assert: “I
don’t want them [the police] to be under any inhibition at
all in going after those people who are engaged in
terrorism.” Ken Livingstone, the London mayor, accused
critics of trying to “smear” the Metropolitan
Police Commissioner, who, along with the government, bears ultimate
responsibility for the raid.
Kahar works for the post office, Koyair for a
supermarket. Neither has any record of criminal activity. Indeed.
Koyair had recently sent off for an application to join the police.
They are hard-working, law-abiding British citizens who happen also to
be devout Muslims. As Kahar said at the press conference, “I
believe the only crime I had done was being Asian with a long
beard.”
The raid was an extreme example of a broader
policy. In the two months after the July 7th 2005 bombings, some 10,000
people were stopped and searched in the London streets under the
anti-terrorism law; 27% were Asians, who make up only 12% of
London’s population. Not one of the searches resulted in an
arrest or a charge related to terrorism. The statistics reflect more
than the racism of individual police officers. The Home
Office’s guidance states that: ‘It is appropriate
for officers to take account of a person’s ethnic background
when they decide who to stop in response to a specific terrorist threat
(for example, some international terrorist groups are associated with
particular ethnic groups, such as Muslims).’ In March 2005, a
senior government minister told Muslims that they should accept as a
“reality” that they will be stopped and searched
more often than others.
It has become commonplace for politicians
(including the Prime Minister) and columnists to suggest that
‘British tolerance’ has permitted terrorism to
flourish. We are told we are under threat not because of the backlash
against British involvement in brutal, unjust foreign wars but because
the ideology of multiculturalism and a concern for human rights have
blunted our willingness to defend ourselves against the Islamist
menace. The fact that an innocent, unarmed Londoner was shot by police,
at nearly point blank range, without warning, has done nothing to make
these people think again. Rather, they see in the complaints by Muslims
– remarkably restrained under the circumstances - an
unwillingness to collaborate with the war on terror. Some have
suggested that the bogus tip-off must have come from Al Qaeda.
The Observer, in bygone years a bastion of British
liberalism, headlined its editorial on the affair: “Better a
bungled raid than another terrorist outrage.” That lofty,
callous calculus never adds up. The raid has done nothing to deter
terrorism. It’s likely to make it even more difficult for the
police to gather meaningful information about real threats to public
safety. Formulations like The Observer’s merely sanctify
violent police racism, which poses a danger to Londoners as serious as
any terrorrist.
More than two hundred years ago, during a fiercer
period of repression (the putative menace in those days coming from the
French revolution and its English sympathisers), William Blake wandered
the streets of London and found evidence wherever he looked of
“mind-forg’d manacles” - the fears and
prejudices that keep people in thrall to an unjust social system. But
he also imagined another London, a meeting-place for all humanity:
In the Exchanges of London every Nation
walk’d,
And London walk’d in every Nation, mutual in love &
harmony
That democratic vision is profoundly at odds with
the ideology being preached and practiced in Britain these days. London
is often cited as the most harmoniously multi-ethnic city in the world,
and there’s some truth in the boast. But that’s no
thanks whatsoever to its police, its newspapers or its politicians.
www.mikemarqusee.com
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