SchNews on Indymedia

http://www.schnews.org.uk/archive/news469.htm

“Five Days after the seizures there is still an almost total information blackout from the authorities in the UK, US, Switzeland and Italy. Indymedia still has no confirmation of who ordered the seizures, who took the servers in London, why the seizures took place, where the servers are now located, and whether they will be returned.” – Indymedia UK.

Last week internet servers in the UK hosting 21 Indymedia (IMC) sites were seized by the FBI, following a request by Swiss and Italian authorities. Hang on a minute, the Swiss and Italians ask the Americans to seize computers based in the UK? What’s going on?

Welcome to the wonderful world of the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) which formalises cross border policing between the UK and USA. Here the Attorney General in the US makes a request to the UK Home Secretary who either grants it or refuses it if the request is “an offence of a political character.” Statewatch editor Tony Bunyan called on David Blunkett to explain himself: “Why did the Home Office agree? What grounds did the USA give for the seizure of the servers? Were these grounds of a ‘political’ nature?”

The FBI said that they are acting on behalf of requests by the Swiss and Italian authorities. Indymedia have been unable to get any more information as to what the exact reasons are, but this is a continuation of attacks on independent media by the US Government. In August the Secret Service tried to get records of internet addresses from an internet service provider in the US and the Netherlands before the Republican Party convention. Last month the Federal Communications Commission shut down community radio stations around the US. Two weeks ago the FBI requested that Indymedia remove a post on Nantes Indymedia with a photo of Swiss undercover police, while IMC volunteers in Seattle were visited by the FBI on the same issue.

French Nantes Indymedia, one of those affected by the raid, had pictures of the undercover cops at the 2003 Evian G8 summit on their site, and the Prosecutor in Geneva is investigating this. You can see the the incriminating photos at: www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/mtoups/nantes/copsinnantes.htm

The Italian state has had a campaign of harassment of alternative media since the G8 summit in Genoa. Last year the far right Aleanza Nazionale, who are in the Italian coalition government, called for the closure of Indymedia, and Paolo Valentino, the state secretary in the department of justice, also announced possible cooperation with the USA.

The federal prosecutor of Bologna Marina Plazzi said she is investigating Indymedia because of possible “support of terrorism” and has asked the FBI for assistance. Apparently this is about people on the newswire praising an attack on Italian soldiers in the Iraq last November.

Why didn’t the Swiss and Italian authorities approach the British police directly, instead of the FBI being involved? Indymedia commented: “We are concerned over the growing use of international co-operation frameworks by Governments and Law enforcement agencies which can be used to obscure clear legal process, and call for openness and clarity in international co-operation, to ensure due process and that civil liberties are protected.”

Protect and Server

The effect of the raids has been to shut down 21 (mostly European) Indymedia sites, six, including Indymedia UK, are now back on line. Indymedia UK had multiple back-ups of its files as they are all “paranoid” according to one Indymedia volunteer – and such paranoia has actually been justified as many other sites without backup have lost lots of data. There is a gaping hole on the internet where about one million Indymedia news articles, comments, photos, audio reports, and videos used to be.

The FBI has stolen an irreplaceable piece of our collective history. They’ve also made a direct attack on an important component of the movement against global capitalism, a part that carries messages around the globe without the corporate media telling us what to think.

Indymedia is working hard to restore sites, but about ten remain down. At least four – Uruguay, Italy, Western Massachusetts and Nantes – have lost data. “This FBI operation gives us even more reason to continue with what we have been doing,” says an activist from Italy Indymedia. “The interruption of Uruguay Indymedia comes at a bad time with the elections coming up,” Libertinus, an Indymedia volunteer says “Uruguay has a long history of media repression. We don’t have the money to pay for web hosting, so we rely on the solidarity of other countries. Actions like this make the whole world insecure for free media.”

Indymedia has called for solidarity actions and has received many statements of support. Aidan White, General Secretary for the International Federation of Journalists said “The way this has been done smacks more of intimidation of legitimate journalistic inquiry than crime-busting.” Tim Gopsill of the National Union of Journalists said: “If the security services of the UK or US can just walk in and take away a server, then there is no freedom of expression.”

Indymedia is consulting the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) on how to prevent further government attacks on free speech. “EFF is deeply concerned about the grave implications of this seizure for free speech and privacy, and we are exploring all avenues to hold the government accountable for this improper and unconstitutional silencing of independent media.” said EFF Staff Attorney Kurt Opsahl.

It’s ironic that the seizure of the servers comes just before the Communication Rights and Tactical Media Production conference – of which Indymedia is a part of (see www.efcr2004.net). As the conference blurb says “As Governments and corporations increasingly base their authority on the ownership and control of information – a closer look reveals these areas as the landscape in which crucial struggles are being played out. ‘Communication Rights’ is at the heart of these struggles.” The attacks by the US, UK, Italian and Swiss governments on Indymedia are a direct attack on these Communication Rights.

The servers have now been returned – but Indymedia still don’t know who took them in the first place and what action to take in the face of these illegal seizures!

For updates about this, as well as the ESF see www.indymedia.org.uk

http://www.schnews.org.uk/archive/news469.htm

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Indymedia Parliamentary Question: Richard Allan MP [Sheffield Hallam]

http://www.richardallan.org.uk/index.php?p=232

Indymedia Parliamentary Question: Richard Allan, Liberal Democrat MP for Sheffield Hallam

I have had a few emails over the last couple of days about the seizure of disks holding material published by Indymedia and hosted in London by Rackspace.

Details of this can be found at Indymedia itself and on The Register and the BBC.

Will comment further later, but just to say for now that this is worrying and I have tabled a Parliamentary question to the Home Office as a result. This is due to be answered on Friday 15th Oct and is worded as follows:

Mr Richard Allan (Sheffield, Hallam): To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what recent discussions he has had with US law enforcement agencies concerning the seizure of material from UK-based internet hosting providers; and if he will make a statement.

This is a round about form of wording but is necessary to fit the rules for Parliamentary questions. I will post the response when answered and try to follow up with other questions.

http://www.richardallan.org.uk/index.php?p=232

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Repression of Indymedia: largest attack to date on the alternative press on the Internet

This item, is reproduced from a Spanish Site. I think it gives a fair overview of the developments …..

http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/10/298975.html

Repression of Indymedia: largest attack to date on the alternative press on the Internet

by Roberto Delgado – La Haine – [11-oct-04] – http://www.lahaine.org/b2/articulo.php?p=4521&more=1&c=1 trans. http://canarias.indymedia.org/

On the basis of the sparse data that the FBI and the commercial media have been providng, is possible to make a brief analysis of what this repression means for Indymedia and for the objectives of Indymedia. The ball is in our court. An act of this type forces the anticapitalist movement to raise its guard, and the steps taken at this point will be very important for the future.

Official version of events:

The chief prosecutor of Geneva, Daniel Zappelli, opened a judicial investigation, following a complaint made by two police inspectors of that city concerning the “publication of photographs and the name and address of one of them on the French Indymedia site (Nantes).”

The two undercover policemen were part of the G8 cell, concerned with investigating incidents in Geneva during the protests surrounding the Group of Eight meeting in Geneva in 2003.

Consequences:

On Thursday morning the 7 of October the FBI seduces Rackspace (supplier of Indymedia, American company with offices also in London, www.rackspace.com) and carries off not only all the data pertaining to Indymedia Nantes, but also that of another twenty of the network’s websites in other countries.

Following the FBI’s action the sites remained inaccessible. Hours later some sites, having resorted to alternative servers shared in solidarity, were in operation again. Most of the sites have been closed for two or three days, although not all have yet recovered normality. The photos of the undercover policemen, that until now had been seen only in reduced circles, suddenly are known by leftist movements worldwide, since they continue to be accessible on the Internet in other pages, and accompany the glare of publicity this action has provoked.

Information on reasons is minimum. “I opened an investigation but I will say nothing else”, said the Geneva prosecutor. The FBI’s spokesperson Joe Parris asserted that the request to raid Indymedia’s ISP came from the Italian and Swiss governments”, without giving more details. “The people in charge of the Justice Ministry only fulfilled the legal obligations contained in our treaty of mutual support”, he insisted.

According to Geneva press, it was the police of that city who resorted to the North American FBI so as to pull the photos.

Trap and Fear:

At first sight, the two primary targets of this repressive activity are: 1. To divide the Network Indymedia; and 2. To create fear amongst alternative press activists.

1. With this action the Powerful impose a false debate in the internal Indymedia lists: Is it correct to publish photos and even data on secret police? This artificially provoked discussion would focus on the limits of journalistic ethics, the moral superiority that should characterize the militants of left and the necessity to avoid political-informative actions that provoke and could be used to justify repression. There are web sites (Indymedia Madrid, for example) that sometimes when they publish photos of demonstrations manipulate images to hide the faces of antiriot police [note, IMC Madrid denies this].

In this case, the System tries to remain on the sidelines. Its argument would go: “we ourseves have no desire to close down alternative media, but if someone fails to obey the law we have no choice but to accept judicial decisions.” If we accept this false debate, all we have left is to argue amongst ourselves, instead of being united in opposition to “this massive attack on freedom of expression.”

What is clear is that there are serious probabilities that numerous Indymedia activists wil fall in the trap of this debate, that can go on forever and would lead to a rupturing of the cohesion of the global Network.

2. Any activst is likely to feel threatened on reading the headline: “FBI closes Indymedia servers”. Although this repressive act represents the largest attack to date on the alternative press on the Internet, up to now it is not especially painful, but rather, symbolic. Most of the web sites were again accessible within a few days, and, more important, following this action they achieve, through sharing in solidarity alternative servers, a greater diffusion of the project and an increase of the number of visits. Obviously those in power take this into account, but such news does not stop being impressive.

The big shots are giving us a warning in an attempt to make us feel afraid: when they decide to attack the anticapitalist movement there will be no international law nor freedom of expression worth anything; the forces of repression will act with total impunity.

This is not to say that this attack could not be the embryo of an even larger scale operation against Indymedia that tries to completely destroy the the virtual network’s activity. We do not discard that within a few months other repressive acts take place such as arrests of activists.

All will depend on the response we make as a movement.

The true debate: the information monopoly sees itself in danger:

The discussion that all activists of the anticapitalist movement should face up to in relation to the repression of Indymedia is: How do we respond to this attack? How do we avoid this type of repressive activities in the future?

It is a matter of asking ourselves these questions. As for me I offer some reflections:

This action cannot go unpunished. We should activate mechanisms of social mobilization in the street to defend our alternative media, such as informative conversations, demonstrations, propaganda actions and complaints, etc. Scandal and social awareness are now the worst enemies of power. It is true that governments can deepen the repression of Indymedia and other alternative media with arrests and imprisonments, but we should not forget that that is its way of defending itself. If for our part we make the decision to not expose infiltrated police and if in general we moderate the policies developed in alternative media, we are falling into the trap they have laid for us, resigning ourselves to reporting only within limits established by those in power. In effect, accepting defeat. The authorities act when the information monopoly sees itself in danger.

http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/10/298975.html

* * * * * *

APC condemns “arbitrary” seizure of IndyMedia web servers by US and European law enforcers

APC condemns the actions by US and European law enforcement agencies to seize independent online news service Indymedia’s web servers, which has led to the closure of more than 21 of the more than 140 Indymedia web sites worldwide since October 7.

“We are disturbed by the apparently arbitrary and extreme measures taken to silence an independent internet-based source of information,” said Anriette Esterhuysen, APC’s Executive Director. “This is a violation of freedom of expression across international frontiers.”

None of the agencies involved has admitted or provided reasons for the seizure though Rackspace, the company which provided web hosting for the sites and handed the servers over to law enforcers, said in a statement that their action was “in compliance with a court order pursuant to a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT)”. MLAT establishes procedures for countries to assist each other in investigations regarding international terrorism, kidnapping and money laundering and so using it to remove an independent news source would appear to be an abuse.

APC is of the view that the provisions of Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which states that: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers” have been violated by the US and European governments.

APC opposes censorship on the internet and states in its Internet Rights Charter that “the internet is a medium for both public and private exchange of views and information. People must be able to express opinions and ideas, and share information freely when using the internet.”

APC is of the view that the right of freedom of expression and access to the internet of the citizens of Ambazonia, Andorra, Antwerpen, Belgrade, Brazil, East and West Vlaanderen, Euskal Herria, Galiza, Germany, Italy, Liege, Lilles, Marseille, Nantes, Nice, Poland, Portugal, Prague, Uruguay, Western Massachusetts, and the UK (where the affected IndyMedia Centres are) has been violated. As freedom is indivisible, a violation of one citizen’s rights is a violation of all global citizens’ rights.

APC understands the difficulties that server farms like Rackspace face when prosecutors come knocking at their door, flashing court orders and demanding the immediate hand-over of their equipment. APC urges that internet service provider (ISP) associations and other industry associations take precautions to protect their members from becoming unintentionally complicit in the violation of freedom of speech. There is a need for ISPs to have access to information about their rights to protect their clients.

APC demands that the US and European governments concerned provide reasons for their actions and explain their violation of Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and on what basis they made use of the MLAT to silence Indymedia, an independent source of information on the internet.

“European and North American governments which frequently point to human rights abuses in countries from the Global South need to explain their own apparently arbitrary abuse of Indymedia’s rights and those of its readers,” said Anriette Esterhuysen.

APC Internet Rights Charter: http://rights.apc.org/charter.shtml

* * * * * *

ABOUT APCThe Association for Progressive Communications (APC) is an international network of civil society organisations dedicated to empowering and supporting groups and individuals through the strategic use of information and communication technologies (ICTs), especially internet-related technologies. APC’s network of members and partners in Western, Central and Eastern Europe, Africa, Asia, Latin America and North America all support the use of internet and ICTs for social justice and sustainable development.

APC: http://www.apc.org

Email: info@apc.org

* * * * * *

The above, is a statement from my own Internet Service Provider :: Association for Progressive Communications (APC) / GreenNet

http://www.apc.org/english/news/index.shtml?x=26809

Posted in . | Leave a comment

More on the Indymedia Servers seizure.

Story has been running on my blog, since 8th October. Look back over, for more links about it all.

But, some of the fuss, was about the inclusion of these pictures, in an Indymedia article on Nantes Indymedia.

Being a regular contributor, I’ve been following the Indymedia story for a few days now. There is stuff about it, on Indymedia, the Register, International Journalists Fed, Znet etc etc. but I couldn’t find the pictures that it was all about. Now someone has sent me a link to check out.

Link to the photographs which is claimed, caused the FBI to issue an order to hosting provider, Rackspace for seizure of its 2 hard drives

http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/mtoups/nantes/copsinnantes.htm
Now I’m looking at them, blimey, how mundane! What is the fuss? I’ve taken so many of the plod, looking like this before. and published on various enviro sites. Was one of the chaps that exposed the work of the Forward Intelligence Units of the Metropolitan Police at Reclaim the Streets etc. and none of this stuff, happened to me, not no knocks on the door.

I guess, as some have said, it a pretext to do with other events coming round, like the ESF and elections etc…

When crying about the RIPA act, was pointing out that one of the provisions was that you couldn’t say, [under penalty of 5 years imprisonment,] that you had received one of these orders.

I go around saying ‘I told you so’, to anyone that will listen 🙂

Here is some of my own work on these isssues, I guess you’ll see what I mean …..

http://tash.gn.apc.org/surv_10.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/watched1.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/watched_doc.pdf

http://tash.gn.apc.org/intellig.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/rts_1.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/tech_pol.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/big_brother.htm

More on the story at links

http://indymedia.org.uk

http://www.apc.org/english/news/index.shtml?x=26809

http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=11579

http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/10/298975.html

http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1324419,00.html

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/3732718.stm

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/3742284.stm

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/10/08/fbi_indymedia_raids

http://www.statewatch.org/news/2004/oct/04uk-usa-indymedia.htm

http://www.eff.org/news/archives/2004_10.php#001989

http://www.indymedia.org/en/2004/10/112047.shtml
This is the treaty law, they seem to be relying on:

http://library.lp.findlaw.com/articles/file/00297/002460/title/Subject/topic/Criminal%20Justice_Extradition%20and%20Detainers/filename/criminaljustice_2_2251
I think folks should also read this: Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000

http://www.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/20000023.htm
Section 19 Offence for unauthorised disclosures.

19. – (1) Where an interception warrant has been issued or renewed, it shall be the duty of every person falling within subsection (2) to keep secret all the matters mentioned in subsection (3).

http://www.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023–b.htm#19

Posted in . | Leave a comment

US seizes webservers from independent media sites

Rachel Shabi, Monday October 11, 2004

The Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1324419,00.html

American authorities have shut down 20 independent media centres by seizing their British-based webservers.

On Thursday a court order was issued to Rackspace, an American-owned web hosting company in Uxbridge, Middlesex, forcing it to hand over two servers used by Indymedia, an international media network which covers of social justice issues and provides a “news-wire”, to which its users contribute.

The websites affected by the seizure span 17 countries.

It is unclear why, or to where, the servers have been taken. The FBI, speaking to the French AFP, acknowledged that a subpoena had been issued but said this was at the request of Italian and Swiss authorities.

“It is not an FBI operation,” said its spokesman, Joe Parris.

Rackspace told Indymedia that it had been served with a court order under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty, under which countries assist each other in investigations such as international terrorism, kidnapping and money laundering

It is unclear why such a treaty would apply in this context. A UK Indymedia journalist said: “The authorities may just be using this as a trawling exercise. We don’t know.”

It is also unclear if the Home Office was involved.

The Metropolitan police said it was not aware of the move.

The UK Indymedia site is now working, because it was backed up on another server, unlike others which are still shut down.

One of the servers was to be used to stream web radio coverage of the European Social Forum conference in London next week.

Aidan White, the general secretary of the International Federation of Journalists, condemned the “intolerable and intrusive” action .

Tim Gopsill of the NUJ said: “If the security services of the UK or US can just walk in and take away a server, then there is no freedom of expression.”

http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1324419,00.html

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Shooting of Danielle Beccan :: Nottinghamshire Police Press Conference

Just got back from a Nottinghamshire Police Press Conference, regarding the Shooting of Danielle Beccan in St Anns area of Nottingham, early on Saturday morning 00:35am.

An arrest has been made following the death of 14-year-old Danielle Beccan in an apparently random shooting. Danielle was hit when a number of rounds were shot from a moving car early on Saturday morning as she walked back from the Goose Fair with friends. The schoolgirl died yards from her home in the St Ann’s area of Nottingham.

Did you get that folks, a 14 year old girl, with no bad connections, out with friends, and coming back from the GOOSE FAIR, gets shot and killed. For Fucks Sake !!!!!

Nottinghamshire Police, who have up to 100 officers working on the case, said they are holding one person in connection with the crime.

Present there for statements were:

Assistant Chief Constable Susannah Fish & Superintendent David Colbeck

For pictures, see my PhotoBlog at: http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=233123

* * * * * *

BBC – One arrested over teen gun death

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/nottinghamshire/3731714.stm

Observer – Girl, 14, killed in drive-by shooting

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,1324016,00.html

Map of Rushford Close, St Ann’s

* * * * * *

Earlier, On my blog

Gun Crime and Police response – Collected Links http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2003_02_02_tash_lodge_archive.html#88756662

Operation ‘Real Estate’ – Nottinghamshire Police http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2003_02_02_tash_lodge_archive.html#88418849

Mothers Against Guns: Gun Crime, murder and shootings http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2003_01_26_tash_lodge_archive.html#88374768

Posted in . | Leave a comment

UK-USA: Was the seizure of Indymedia’s servers in London unlawful or did the UK government collude?

Tony Bunyan, Statewatch editor, comments:

“Rackspace may be a US company but Rackspace in London is subject to UK law not US law. If they took down and handed over Indymedia’s servers simply on the basis of a US subpoena communicated to them this would not be lawful in the UK.

However it seems more likely that the US subpoena was the subject of a request for mutual legal assistance from the US Attorney General to the UK Home Secretary under the MLA Treaty. It would for the Metropolitan Police, probably accompanied by the FBI, to enforce the request and take possession of the servers.

This begs the questions: Why did the Home Office agree? What grounds did the USA give for the seizure of the servers? Were these grounds of a “political” nature? Has the Home Office requested that the servers be returned? What does this action say about freedom of expression and freedom of the press?

A trail that started in Switzerland and Italy has now ended fairly and squarely in the lap of the UK Home Secretary to justify.”

* * * * * *

Full text with links here:

http://www.statewatch.org/news/2004/oct/04uk-usa-indymedia.htm

UK-USA

Was the seizure of Indymedia’s servers in London unlawful or did the UK government collude?

– “A trail that started in Switzerland and Italy has now ended fairly and squarely in the lap of the UK Home Secretary to justify”

On Thursday 7 October a US subpoena was issued ordering the London office of Rackspace (a US company) to take down and hand over Indymedia’s web servers which it hosted. An FBI spokesman, Joe Parris, told AFP (link) that: “It is not an FBI operation. Through a legal assistance treaty, the subpoena was on behalf of a third country”. The subpoena he confirmed had been issued at the request of Swiss and Italian authorities. He further said that there was no US investigation but that the agency had cooperated under the terms of an international treaty on law enforcement.

On Friday 8 October Rackspace put out the following statement:

“In the present matter regarding Indymedia, Rackspace Managed Hosting, a U.S. based company with offices in London, is acting in compliance with a court order pursuant to a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT), which establishes procedures for countries to assist each other in investigations such as international terrorism, kidnapping and money laundering. Rackspace responded to a Commissioner’s subpoena, duly issued under Title 28, United States Code, Section 1782 in an investigation that did not arise in the United States. Rackspace is acting as a good corporate citizen and is cooperating with international law enforcement authorities. The court prohibits Rackspace from commenting further on this matter.”

The third countries are Switzerland and Italy. In a statement Indymedia said it: “had been asked last month by the FBI to remove a story about Swiss undercover police from one of the websites hosted by Rackspace”. It is not known what grounds the Italian authorities used, though the government has been hostile to Indymedia ever since its coverage of Genoa in 2001. This follows attempts to shut down Indymedia sites in the USA as well, see: FBI Secret Service (link)

The list of affected 20 sites include Ambazonia, Uruguay, Andorra, Poland, Western Massachusetts, Nice, Nantes, Lilles, Marseille (all France), Euskal Herria (Basque Country), Liege, East and West Vlaanderen, Antwerpen (all Belgium), Belgrade, Portugal, Prague, Galiza, Italy, Brazil, UK, part of the Germany site, and the global Indymedia Radio site.

How could this happen in the UK?

Accepting the version presented by the FBI spokesman the trail seems to be that Swiss and Italian authorities sought the help of US authorities to shut down offending Indymedia sites. Rackspace then “responded” to a US subpoena – this response was to take off the air and hand Indymedia’s servers to the FBI or their representative. The effect of this was not only to take Indymedia off the air but would allow them access to all the files held.

The clue as to the legal basis for this action by the London-based Rackspace company is their statement that this was:

“in compliance with a court order pursuant to a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT)”

There are a number of legal bases under which this could have been undertaken in the UK. The most likely one is the “Treaty with the United Kingdom on Mutual Legal Assistance in criminal matters” between the UK and the USA which entered into force on 2 December 1996: Full-text of UK-USA MLA Treaty.

(pdf at http://www.statewatch.org/news/2004/oct/1995uk-usa.pdf)

The other possible relevant legislation is the UK’s Crime (International Cooperation) Act 2003 (link: http://www.legislation.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts2003/20030032.htm ).

The EU-US agreement on Mutual Assistance in judicial cooperation is not yet in force (and has yet to be ratified by the US Congress and Senate).

The most likely legal basis for the action is the 1996 UK-USA “Treaty between the Government of of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government of the United States of America on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters with exchange of Notes” (which entered into force on 2 December 1996 and was published in the UK as Cm 3546 – this version is not available but the USA version of the same Treaty is available, see above).

This UK-USA MLAT sets out specific legal procedures for putting into effect requests for mutual legal assistance. Article 1 covers requests for “executing requests for searches and seizures” and for providing documents and evidence. Article 2 sets out that each party (UK and USA) has to establish “Central authorities” – in the USA it is the Attorney General and in the UK it is the Home Secretary. All requests for mutual legal assistance or responses to them from the other party have to go through these channels. Indeed there is in the UK Home Office a Mutual Legal Assistance Unit through whom all requests are channelled. Article 3 says requests can be refused if the offence referred to is “of a political character”. Article 4 says that all requests must set out: the name of the authority making the request (eg: the US Attorney General), the subject matter, a description of the evidence requested, the identity of the person from who the evidence is sought (eg: in this case Rackspace), and a “precise description.. of the articles to be seized”.

Article 5 says that the Home Office will “take whatever steps it deems necessary to give effect to the request” and that: the “central authority” (the Home Office) shall: “facilitate the participation in the execution of the request of such persons as are specified in the request” (eg: the FBI accompanying the Metropolitan Police).

Article 7 means that the Home Office can bound not to admit that a request from the USA had been received. Article 7.1 says: “The Requested Party [the UK] shall, upon request, keep confidential any information which might indicate that a request has been made or responded to”.

Article 14 covers “Search and seizure”. Under this article the requested party (the UK Home Office) must execute the request for seizure of any article (eg: servers) “if the request includes information justifying such action under the laws of the Requested Party”(ie: UK law).

Article 15 says that any article seized has to be returned by the Requesting Party (ie: the USA) unless the Requested Party (the UK) “waives the return of the documents or articles” – it will be interesting to know what position the Home Office has taken.

Tony Bunyan, Statewatch editor, comments:

“Rackspace may be a US company but Rackspace in London is subject to UK law not US law. If they took down and handed over Indymedia’s servers simply on the basis of a US subpoena communicated to them this would not be lawful in the UK.

However it seems more likely that the US subpoena was the subject of a request for mutual legal assistance from the US Attorney General to the UK Home Secretary under the MLA Treaty. It would for the Metropolitan Police, probably accompanied by the FBI, to enforce the request and take possession of the servers.

This begs the questions: Why did the Home Office agree? What grounds did the USA give for the seizure of the servers? Where these grounds of a “political” nature? Has the Home Office requested that the servers be returned? What does this action say about freedom of expression and freedom of the press?

http://www.indymedia.org/en/2004/10/112047.shtml

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Servers in UK Containing Indymedia Websites Seized by Government:


Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is currently assisting Indymedia

http://www.eff.org/news/archives/2004_10.php#001989

United Kingdom – Acting under a court order, Texas-based web hosting company Rackspace Managed Hosting handed over two UK-based servers containing Indymedia websites to government agents yesterday morning. Indymedia is a collective of online journalists who maintain a network of independent news websites. The order was apparently issued by a US District Court and served by the FBI, on behalf of a foreign government. Rackspace has refused to comment on what information had been requested or why the servers were confiscated, citing the court order.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is currently assisting Indymedia investigate possible responses to the seizure of its information. More than 20 Indymedia-related websites, along with Indymedia’s online radio, were hosted on the servers, which were dedicated machines provided by Rackspace.

“This seizure has grave implications for free speech and privacy. The Constitution does not permit the government unilaterally to cut off the speech of an independent media outlet, especially without providing a reason or even allowing Indymedia the information necessary to contest the seizure,” said EFF Staff Attorney Kurt Opsahl.

Rackspace contends that a court order prevents them from providing a copy of the subpoena, confirming which court issued the order, or the government agency who served the subpoena.

Contacts:

Kurt Opsahl

Staff Attorney

Electronic Frontier Foundation

kurt@eff.org

Devin T. Theriot-Orr

Edwards Sieh Smith & Goodfriend

devin@essglaw.com

Mobile (206)498-9440

Posted in . | Leave a comment

UK: Police can keep DNA of innocent people indefinitely

the law lords have set a dangerous precedent by backing the demands of the state over individual privacy

http://www.statewatch.org/news/2004/sep/03uk-dna-database.htm

The highest court in the land, in the House of Lords, ruled on 22 July that DNA samples taken from people who are not charged with an offence or who are acquitted can still be held indefinitely by police.

The court was hearing two test cases. The first by a boy from Sheffield who was 11 years old when he was arrested for attempted burglary in 2001. His lawyers asked for his fingerprints and DNA samples to be destroyed after his acquittal. The second case involved a man from Sheffield who gave a DNA sample when he was charged with harassing his partner – the case never came to court as the couple came together again and the woman decided not to press charges.He asked the South Yorkshire police to destroy the sample and fingerprints.

Peter Mahy, the solicitor representing the two people, said he was surprised that four of the five law lords found no breach of privacy (under Article 8.1 of the European Convention on Human Rights). He said that his clients hope to challenge the judgement in the European Court of Human Rights.

In July the UK Forensic Science Service announced that the number of DNA profiles on the national database had reach two million.

A history of non-compliance by police leads to changes in law

* * * * * *

Before looking at the judgement in this case it is worth taking a look at the history of police powers to take and retain DNA samples.

Under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE) police could take body samples (DNA from mouth swabs) where people were suspected of having committed a “serious arrestable offence”. The same law stipulated, in PACE, Section 64, that DNA samples taken from a “person who is not suspected of having committed an offence or is not prosecuted or is acquitted of the of the offence, the sample must be destroyed” and “cannot be used in evidence against that person or for the purposes of any investigation of an offence”.

The first change to the law on DNA came in the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 which removed the test of “serious arrestable offence” for the taking of samples without consent. Instead samples could be taken from; i) those “in police detention or held in custody” if there were “reasonable grounds for suspecting involvement of that person in a recordable offence” (a much lower standard); ii) any person charged with a recordable offence; and iii) any person convicted of a recordable offence.

Although the scope of the law was widened in 1994 it was still based on the simple proposition that if a person was innocent – never charged or found not guilty of charges brought against them then fingerprints and DNA samples taken should be destroyed.

The next change came in 2001 when the Criminal Justice and Police Act amended Section 64 of PACE to allow fingerprints and DNA samples to be retained indefinitely where they “were taken from a person in connection with the investigation of an offence”.

This change was prompted because it transpired that many police forces were not complying with the law as it stood by failing to destroy the fingerprints and DNA samples of those not charged with any offence or who were acquitted.

In the run-up to the new Act the Prime Minister, Tony Blair said: “I believe the civil liberties argument is completely misplaced. This is using technology to catch criminals” (31.8.00).

However, according to a report prepared for Her Majesty’s Inspector of Constabulary (HMIC) published in July 2000, “Under the Microscope”, “urgent action” was needed to remove from the national database those who had been arrested but not charged and those who were subsequently acquitted. The report estimated that: “perhaps as many as 50,000 may be being held on the database when they should have been taken off”. This estimate was based on a 20% non-conviction rate but the report then admitted that in reality the figure “falling within ACPO’s CJ sampling guidelines” was “over 45% not convicted” and the overall figure for those charged but not convicted for all offences was 33%. The true figure for the number of DNA samples which should have been removed was therefore not 50,000 but somewhere between 82,500 and 112,500 (evidence presented to the appeal in this current case suggested that between 128,517 and 162,433 DNA profiles are now being held where the parent PNC record has been deleted).

Under Home Office Circular no 16/95 and the Data Protection Act 1998 police forces were required to notify the National DNA Database (NDNAD) of all acquittals and “discontinuances” (where no charge is made). The report concluded that in the short term forces should comply with the law – which they never did – and that:

“perhaps the time has come to revisit the legislation to consider whether all samples.. should be retained on the NDNAD to provide a useful source of intelligence to aid future investigations.”

The government acted to remove this embarrassing situation through the changes in Criminal Justice and Police Act 2001 by amending Section 64 of PACE. Where the scope for taking DNA was widened in 1994 the retention of all DNA samples from those innocent of any offence was made lawful in 2001.

The judgement by the “Lords of Appeal”

* * * * * *

The appeal heard in the House of Lords on 22 July was based on the contravention of Articles 8.1 and 14 (discrimination) of the European Convention on Human Rights by retaining fingerprints and DNA samples.

Article 8: Right to respect for private and family says:

“8.1: Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence

8.2: There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.”

The main reasons for dismissing the appeal were given by Lord Steyn who opened by saying that:

“It is of paramount importance that law enforcement agencies should take full advantage of the available techniques of modern technology and forensic science… It enables the guilty to be detected and the innocent to be rapidly eliminated from enquiries… Making due allowance for the possibility of threats to civil liberties, this phenomenon has had beneficial effects”

In the Court of Appeal prior to this judgement Liberty had argued that DNA samples “potentially contain very much greater, more personal and detailed information about an individual” such as latent genetic illness or behavioural tendencies. In Lord Steyn’s view this was not relevant as DNA was only used for criminal investigations with “rigorous safeguards” and that “the trial process ought to weed out such abuses” feared by Liberty.

Lord Steyn cites forensic expert Dr Bramley who gave evidence that the prevention and detection of crime is:

“not interpreted so widely as to allow general testing of the retained CJ scrapes (criminal justice) for medical conditions or susceptibilities and linking the results to a specific known individual”

While this is clearly the official police position on the use of forensics it might be asked in current climate of security fears whether in other circumstances the security and intelligence agencies have access to DNA profiles and whether they use them for different purposes?

Lord Steyn concludes that Article 8.1 of the ECHR is “not engaged” and:

“If I am wrong in this view, I would say any interference is very modest indeed”

When considering the legislation he concludes that:

“It is true that the taking of fingerprints and samples involves an interference with the individual’s private life within the meaning of article 8(1) of ECHR. On the other hand, such interference for the limited statutory purposes is plainly objectively justified under article 8(2)”

In the previous decision by the Court of Appeal Lord Justice Sedley argued that:

“The power of a Chief Constable to destroy data which he would ordinarily retain must in my judgement be exercised in every case, however rare such cases may be, whether he or she is satisfied on conscientious consideration that the individual is free from any taint of suspicion”

Lord Steyn rejected this idea of a case by case evaluation as it would counter:

“the benefits of a greatly extended database and would involve the police in interminable and invidious disputes (subject to judicial review of individuals decisions) about offences of which the individual has been acquitted”

and he cites the contrary opinion of Lord Justice Waller in the same Court of Appeal who said that for DNA to be retained in no way stigmatises the individual as it is:

“simply that samples lawfully obtained are retained as the norm, and it is in the public interest in its fight against crime for the police to have as large a database as possible”

The appeal against discrimination, under Article 14, was also dismissed by the law lords. Here Lord Steyn cites Lord Justice Sedley approvingly where he says that:

“The line between those unconvicted people who have faced charges and those who have not, while not a bright line, is not arbitrarily drawn. It does not tarnish the innocence of the unconvicted in the eye of the law. But it recognises that among them is an indeterminate number who are likelier than the rest of the unconvicted population to offend in the future or to be found to have offended in the past.”

The validity of this assertion is open to question, namely, that innocent people who come into contact with the criminal justice system are more likely to offend that the rest of the population and it is therefore legitimate to keep their DNA on file as a “suspect” group.

The other law lords sitting on the case gave their views too. Lord Rodger doubted whether there was a “greater cultural resistance in Britain than in other European countries to the collection and retention of data about individuals”. However, he observed that:

“it may well be that, with their bitter experience of life under totalitarian regimes, people in some other European countries would nowadays be more concerned than people here about official files on individuals”

However, it might be observed that the reason people in central and eastern European countries would be “concerned” is that:

“Privacy is one of the basic values of human life and personal data is the main gateway enabling entry into it. The citizens of countries that experienced a period of totalitarian regimes have that a hard experience – when privacy was not considered of value and was sacrificed to the interest of the state” (Hana Stepankova, Czech Office for Personal Data Protection, 11.12.03)

And as the Canadian Privacy Commissioner, cited by Baroness Hale (below), says:

“The measure of our privacy is the degree of control we exercise over what others know about us”

Baroness Hale dissented from Lord Steyn’s view arguing that the “retention and storage of fingerprints, DNA profiles and samples” was an interference with Article 8.1. However, she concludes that this is overridden by Article 8.2:

“The whole community, as well as the individual whose samples are collected, benefit from there being as large a database as it is possible to have”

While Lord Brown said that:

“I find it difficult why anyone should object to the retention of their profile (and sample) on the database once it has been lawfully placed there”

The objections to this he found “entirely chimerical” (meaning a “fanciful conception” according to the Oxford dictionary) for example, the:

“fear of an Orwellian future, in which retained samples will be re-analysed by a mischievous State in the light of scientific advances and the results improperly used against the person’s interest”

and he goes on to say:

“no such abuse is presently threatened and if and when it comes to be them will be the time to address it. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof”

and he goes on:

“it seems to me that the benefits of the larger database… are so manifest and the objections to it so threadbare that the cause of human rights generally… would inevitably be better served by the databases’s expansion than its proposed contraction. The more complete the database, the better chance of detecting criminals, both those guilty of crimes past and those whose crimes are yet to be committed. The better chance too of deterring from future crime those whose profiles are already on the database”

Slide into authoritarianism?

* * * * * *

Tony Bunyan, Statewatch editor, comments:

“This is a classic instance of the slide into authoritarianism where the privacy of the individual is subsumed, allegedly in the “interests of all”, to the demands of the state. When the privacy of the individual is weighed against the interests of the state all five law lords come down on the side of the latter. Thus all want as large a DNA database as possible which, by extension, would be best served by covering the whole population.

Their lordships do not address the implications of their decision on the planned, “blanket” and compulsory, collection of biometric data for ID cards, passports and driving licences.

This case demonstrates the fundamental shortcoming of the law in protecting liberties and privacy. Providing data is “lawfully” collected there can be no objection whatsoever – but what if the laws themselves are contrary to the standards of a democratic society? What if the cumulative collection of personal data is such that democracy slides into authoritarianism and authoritarianism into totalitarianism?”

Sources: Guardian, 1 & 2.9.00; Independent, 1.9.00; “Under the Microscope”, report for Her Majesty’s Inspector of Constabulary, July 2000; Lords of Appeal, 22.7.04; Forsensic Science Service, July 2004; Daily Telegraph, 23.7.04. This “Viewpoint” first appeared in Statewatch bulletin, vol 14 no 3/4. Filed 5.9.04.

See also: UK: “Sleepwalking into a surveillance society?” – Information Commissioner

ID Cards: Information Commissioner takes a blast at proposals

http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2004_08_15_tash_lodge_archive.html#109264894794420538

&

Information Commissioner on ID Cards, and Government Data, generally.

“Sleepwalking into a surveillance society?” – Information Commissioner

http://www.statewatch.org/news/2004/aug/08uk-info-commissioner.htm

Watching out: A need for balance as Whitehall seeks more information http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,542-1218045,00.html

Further, check out earlier entry on Monday, August 16, 2004 at:

http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2004_08_15_tash_lodge_archive.html#109264894794420538

and at:

http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2004_06_27_tash_lodge_archive.html#108854890794752745

when I’d volunteered for the ID card trial.

Posted in . | Leave a comment

US Authorities Seize IMC Servers in UK

http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/10/298741.html

On Thursday morning, US authorities issued a federal order to Rackspace ordering them to hand over Indymedia web servers to the requesting agency. Rackspace, which provides hosting services for more that 20 Indymedia sites at its London facility, complied and turned over the requested servers, effectively removing those sites from the internet.

Since the subpoena was issued to Rackspace and not to Indymedia, the reasons for this action are still unknown to Indymedia. Talking to Indymedia volunteers, Rackspace stated that “they cannot provide Indymedia with any information regarding the order.” ISPs have received gag orders in similar situations which prevent them from updating the concerned parties on what is happening.

It is unclear to Indymedia how and why a server that is outside the US jurisdiction can be seized by US authorities.

At the same time an additional server was taken down at Rackspace which provided streaming radio to several radio stations including one covering the European Social Forum in London, BLAG (linux distro), and a handful of miscellanous things.

The list of affected local media collectives includes Ambazonia, Uruguay, Andorra, Poland, Western Massachusetts, Nice, Nantes, Lilles, Marseille (all France), Euskal Herria (Basque Country), Liege, East and West Vlaanderen, Antwerpen (all Belgium), Belgrade, Portugal, Prague, Galiza, Italy, Brazil, UK, part of the Germany site, and the global Indymedia Radio site.

It is ironic that that this happens now, just days before Indymedia is due to participate in the European Forum on Communications Rights being held alongside the European Social Forum and several other days of discussions about electronic civil liberties and community media. For more information on these events see www.efcr2004.net

The last few months have seen numerous attacks on independent media by the US Federal Government. In August the Secret Service used a subpoena in an attempt to disrupt the NYC IMC before the RNC by trying to get IP logs from an ISP in the US and the Netherlands. Last month the FCC shut down community radio stations around the US. Two weeks ago the FBI requested that Indymedia takes down a post on the Nantes IMC that had a photo of some undercover Swiss police and IMC volunteers in Seattle were visited by the FBI on the same issue. On the other hand, Indymedia and other independent media organisations were successfull with their victories for example against Diebold and the Patroit Act. Today however, the US authorities shut down IMCs around the world.

* * * * * *

‘More Intimidation Than Crime-Busting’ Says IFJ As Police Target Independent Media Network

http://www.ifj.org/default.asp?Index=2734&Language=EN

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), the global organisation representing over 500,000 journalists worldwide, today called for an investigation into the action by police in Britain in co-operation with other agencies that led to the temporary closure

of 21 of the more than 140 Indymedia web sites worldwide.

“We have witnessed an intolerable and intrusive international police operation against a network specialising in independent journalism,” said Aidan White IFJ General Secretary. “The way this has been done smacks more of intimidation of legitimate journalistic inquiry than crime-busting.”

The IFJ believes that the authorities may have abused their powers in carrying out the action, which is said to have been carried out at the request of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the United States.

Yesterday police seized two web server computers in London used by the Indymedia network. The servers were located on the premises of the Rackspace company, which is now not giving out any information.

Initial reports suggested FBI officers themselves had seized the servers. The seizure follows visits by the FBI to Indymedia personnel in the US inquiring about the publication on the French site Indymedia Nantes of photographs of Swiss undercover police photographing protestors. The photographs remain available on other websites.

Indymedia sites, which provide challenging and independent reporting, particularly of political and social justice issues, are open forums where any member of the public can publish their comments.

The IFJ believes the seizure may be linked to a September 30 court case in San Jose California, in which Indymedia San Francisco and two students at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania successfully opposed an application by Diebold Election Systems Inc to remove documents claiming to reveal flaws in the design of electronic voting machines which are due to be used widely in the forthcoming US Presidential election.

Although Indymedia UK was back in operation within hours, several of the other 20 sites affected remain silenced today.

“The seizing of computers and the high profile nature of this incident suggests that someone wanted to stifle these independent voices in journalism,” said Aidan White. “We need a full investigation into why this action took place, who took part and who authorised it.”

For further information: +32 2 235 22 07

The IFJ represents over 500,000 journalists in more than 100 countries

* * * * * *

To follow, some of the correspondance, relating to all this, cheak out the blog engry at:

http://jebba.blagblagblag.org/index.php?p=107

[ from v interesting blog at: http://jebba.blagblagblag.org]

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Temporary Autonomous Art Events

Weds 13 – Sat 16 October 2004

inna London squat venue. phone on the day for info: 07050 614 804

http://www.randomartists.org

The whole event is open-access and you are invited to take part. Please get

in touch if you would like to contribute.

t: 07092 012 299

e: info@randomartists.org

This event is coinciding with the European Social Forum (ESF) which is being

held in London over the same week. Although we support the ESF our event is

being run in conjunction with several other autonomous spaces who do not

have, nor represent one single unified position on the ESF.

More Info on ESF and the autonomous spaces opening up during the week

www.altspaces.net

www.esf2004.net – unofficial ESF site

www.fse-esf.org – official ESF site

For contributers, check out:

http://www.randomartists.org/linkspage.htm

Posted in . | Leave a comment

SchNews and the Ten year Book

SchNEWS was born out of the movement against Michael Howard’s Criminal Justice Act of 1994, an act that sought to criminalise everyone from travellers to free partygoers to those doing direct action. It has become an internationally respected newsletter of the anti-capitalist movement providing information for action to activists across the world. It is free and is written entirely by volunteers, funded by donation.

SCHNEWS AT TEN – THE BOOK…

will cover ten years of direct action against capitalism. From the resistance to the CJA and the big anti-roads protest camps thru to Seattle and the anti-capitalism movement, and then the anti-war movement, SchNEWS was there. This book is information for action – it’s about inspiring further direct action with amazing stories from the past decade, as opposed to being some worthy new addition to yer bookshelf – it’s the story of these battles form the inside. Often funny, sometimes deeply moving, this is the story of a decade of struggles of ordinary people fighting to save our planet from capitalism’s desire to destroy it.

http://www.schnews.org.uk/at10/index.htm#book

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Extension of police powers affecting dissent and protest

The Government is proposing yet another extension of the law which will affect the right to dissent and protest – Modernising Police Powers to Meet Community Needs. As the Guardian article below says, the proposals ‘are extraordinary in (its) scope’. It is expected to be included in the Queen’s Speech in November and has a short consultation period with ends next Friday 8th October.

The proposals affecting dissent and protest include a ‘super warrant’ allowing the police to search any property associated with an individual, allowing police to arrest people for all offences, a new offence of harassment aimed at stopping protest outside people’s homes, banning or controlling protest outside Parliament, extending the use of DNA and other identification techniques.

The idea of banning/controlling all protest near parliament is a response to Brian Haw’s protest of over 3 years opposite Parliament. Various authorities have tried different ways of getting rid of him but

haven’t been able to do it legally in a way which he has not successfully challenged. While a number of MPs have spoken out in parliament against this kind of new legislation it may be that, on the back of the Countryside Alliance protests, the idea of banning or controlling protest outside Parliament will gain momentum and be seen as acceptable for security reasons.

To download the document from the Home Office website, see:

http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/docs3/modernising_powers.html

The closing date for responses to the consultation is 8 October 2004

Responses can be emailed to: Alan.Brown@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk

Or addressed in writing to:

Alan Brown

Police Leadership and Powers Unit

2nd Floor Allington Towers

19 Allington Street

London SW1E 5EB

* * * * * *

This is about politics, not policing

Crime is at a record low, so why does Labour talk of crackdowns?

John Kampfner

Friday August 13, 2004

The Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1282125,00.html

When a government floats changes to the criminal justice system, look for the context as much as the content. The political parties are using the summer to test-run ideas ahead of a frenetic election year. There can be no other reason why David Blunkett has, two days after a speech from Michael Howard, decided to unveil another pot-pourri of ideas in the never-ending “battle” against crime.

The consultation document, Modernising Police Powers to Meet Community Needs, is extraordinary in its scope. It ranges from allowing police to arrest people for all offences, extending the use of DNA, giving community support officers (CSOs) more powers, potentially banning all protest near parliament, making search warrants apply to every home of a suspect, and making it harder for animal rights protesters to harass scientists – all this in one bill coming our way in the Queen’s speech in November. Why else would ministers have set the consultation period at exactly eight weeks, if not to give them just enough time to frame the outlines of legislation for the next parliamentary session?

The issue for the government is to prove that these measures are needed, that as ever on this issue, the benefits – reduction in crime – outweigh the human rights ramifications. The issue for civil libertarians is the reverse. For the moment both sides have only broad principles to go on.

Ministers said yesterday that the idea of making all offences arrestable, including dropping litter, was nothing more than a tidying-up exercise. This might seem strange given that the police were not bothered by the situation as it stood. Until now, officers could arrest a suspect only if the offence was punishable by a prison term of five years or more, if it had been listed as an exception to that rule (such as kerb crawling), or if the officer believed a breach of the peace had been committed. Offences that do not fall into this category include impersonation of a police officer, failure to heed an order to hand in a passport, unauthorised access to obscene computer material, or the sale of a weapon.

Hazel Blears, Blunkett’s deputy, suggested that officers would have to prove a “necessity test” before making arrests. She also claimed the reforms were not designed to increase the number of arrests, but merely to make the process simpler. Maybe she is right. Everyone knows that if a policeman wants to arrest you, he will find a reason, and breach of the peace has always done the job. But is that enough reason to legislate again?

As for the other proposals, CSOs are beginning to perform a useful function as a cheap substitute for police, so giving them more powers might be helpful. But should they be allowed to operate in plain clothes? Surely the whole idea was to reassure the public of an official presence on the streets. Then there is the “super warrant”, allowing police to search any property a suspect is deemed to be associated with. Perhaps that is needed in limited cases, but does the home of the mother-in-law where the suspect kipped for a few nights fall into that category? In the case of drug dealers, should the refusal to submit to a strip search be admissible in court?

Perhaps the most worrying item is the idea of banning all demonstrations outside the Palace of Westminster. We know why the government wants to do it. Labour MPs have complained about the ever-present protest against the Iraq war opposite the Commons, where their cars sweep in. These people do not pose a security threat. The police have checked them enough times to know.

The detail of the changes will emerge only after the two-month consultation. But the record of the Home Office is a rush to legislate imprecisely. For example, one of the effects of the 2000 Terrorism Act was to give police powers to detain people across London they suspect of endangering national security. This led to a number of instances of random detentions of peaceful protesters, most famously outside an arms fair in Docklands. When blank cheques replace carefully proscribed powers, the problem is not so much the badly trained officer, but the badly framed legislation.

Over the past decade this government and its Tory predecessor have introduced more than 30 criminal justice acts. This is about politics, not policing. On Tuesday Howard teamed up with “Robocop” Ray Mallon, the mayor of Middlesbrough and importer into the UK of “zero tolerance” policing in the mid-90s, to pledge another crackdown on crime. Talk, and legislation, is cheap. The Labour government is trying to have it both ways. It says on the one hand that crime has reached record low levels; on the other it competes with the Conservatives in the language of “crackdowns”. If the news is as good as ministers say, they should proclaim it and leave it at that. They should ensure the country has enough police officers to deal with crime, and just for once leave them to get on with the job.

John Kampfner is political editor of the New Statesman

Posted in . | Leave a comment

UK Censorship in the Name of Security :: Keep power and sewage plants secret, media told

Richard Norton-Taylor

Saturday September 25, 2004

The Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/terrorism/story/0,12780,1312489,00.html

Newspaper editors and television producers are to be asked to avoid referring to such visible installations as sewage works and power stations on the grounds they are potential targets for terrorists.

The request has been prompted by growing anxiety in parts of Whitehall, notably the Home Office, concerned not least by a spate of drama documentaries about terrorist attacks.

After intense argument about whether the media should disclose the whereabouts of conspicuous locations – and their vulnerability – new media guidelines are being drawn up by the defence, press and broadcasting advisory committee which operates a system of voluntary self-censorship.

The committee will soon extend the reach of D notice number 4 which now concentrates on nuclear weapons and intelligence facilities, according to emergency planning officers.

It will be amended to cover a much wider range of “sensitive sites”, including what Whitehall calls Britain’s “critical national infrastructure”, or CNI. It covers telecommunications, energy, transport and water.

Two years ago MI5 drew up a list of more than 300 possible terrorist targets, including oil refineries, the country’s 15 nuclear power stations, the main National Grid sites, petrochemical facilities, and the atomic weapons establishment at Aldermaston in Berkshire as well as such obvious high-profile targets as the House of Commons.

This summer MI5 warned businesses that terrorists were increasingly looking at “soft” targets such as social and retail venues, tourist sites and transport networks.

It offered sensible practical advice about precautions that public authorities and private companies should take in light of an increased terrorist threat.

Telling the media what to report – or rather not report – about buildings and locations whose functions are visible to the naked eye or described on maps is quite another matter, some senior officials concede.

One issue raised behind the scenes in Whitehall was whether the media should be dissuaded, not only from describing the locations of sensitive sites but from reporting any vulnerability in their defences.

The Home Office suggested that the media should not be allowed to report security lapses as a series of programmes and articles have recently done.

The argument appears to be that this would only help terrorists. The contrary argu ment is that such stories alert the authorities to gaps in security precisely so that they can make locations less vulnerable.

Those in the latter camp seem to have won the battle, on the grounds that if the media are going to pay any attention to D notice guidelines, then they may as well be as reasonable as possible.

It begs the question whether the D notice system is viable in the first place.

Few would want to put lives at risk, whether or not this was the subject of one of the committee’s guidelines.

However, even the existing D notice No 4 refers to the need to seek official advice before disclosing, for example, “sites associated with the nuclear weapons programme”, or “high security MoD and military sites associated with intelligence and other sensitive activities”.

Such sites are well known and many have been photographed, frequently.

Recently the D notice committee – which consists of senior Whitehall figures and media representatives – agreed that the government would say more about the activities of Britain’s special forces. The agreement has been ignored by the MoD.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/terrorism/story/0,12780,1312489,00.html

* * * * * *

For more background on what a D notice is all about, check out the pages at:

DA-Notice Home Page – The official site of the Defence, Press and Broadcasting Advisory Committee

http://www.dnotice.org.uk

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Kinder Scout: Peak District, Derbyshire {Again}

I was here last week, but ran out of daylight, before I got to this area.

Again, starting out from Upper Booth Farm, only this time, heading west, then north along the beginning of the Pennine Way. With a great deal of puff, climbed up the established route of Jacobs Ladder. This got me to the top of the Kinder Scout plateau. Then, all is at about the same height. There is a trig point on the western edge though, cemented on top of a fairly random rock. [included in these piccys].

The reason I’m back here again though, is to navigate to the ‘woolpacks’. This is an area of huge weathered rocks, millions of years of wind an rain, making some very unusual forms. So many of them, remind me of Henry Moore sculptures. { I wonder if he ever came up here, a plagerised some of God’s work 🙂 }

More piccys from this set of Kinder Scout at:http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=221259

Piccys from last week of Kinder Scout http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=217120

Map of the area: http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=408500&y=386500&z=3&sv=408500,386500&st=4&ar=N&mapp=newmap.srf&searchp=newsearch.srf&dn=639

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Mam Tor: Peak District, Derbyshire

More piccys at:http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=221272

Map of the area: http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=412745&y=383635&z=3&sv=412500,383500&st=4&ar=Y&mapp=newmap.srf&searchp=newsearch.srf&dn=639

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Access Land :: The Countryside and Rights of Way Act

Oh, at last!! Whatever you think of the present Labour Government, Mr Meacher and department have done this. I can now walk on a mountain, BY RIGHT, NOT PERMISSION. I think this important. and I say thank you to them. This is all effective in this area of the country from yesterday the 19th.

The Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 gives a new right to walk over areas of open countryside and registered common land. Walkers have been campaigning for decades for the opportunity to roam across wide-open spaces.

The Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 will give people a new right to walk, responsibly and subject to some common sense restrictions, over areas of open countryside and registered common land in England and Wales.

The Government is introducing these new access rights on a regional basis in England, starting with the South East and Lower North West on the 19 September 2004. In Wales , access becomes a reality in the summer of 2005.

It has not been easy to get this access from the land-owning classes. I attendended the 70th anniversary celebrations of the ‘Kinder Scout Mass Trespass’. In 1932, many were beaten and locked up for walking on mountain and moor, at Kinder Scout. There was a public outcry at the treatment of these young working class lads from Sheffield and Manchester, that eventually, Parliament ‘bought up the rear’ and in 1951, passed an act that created The Peak District’, the first National Park in England.

These guys were heros of mine. Direct Action in 1932, to make my life better now. Thanks guys!

Here are some more piccys I took of the day to celebrate this.

http://tash.dns2go.com/xtra/kinder_scout_vert1/index.htm

http://tash.dns2go.com/WVX640x480/Kinder_Trespass_Capstick640x480.wvx

Years later, I can now walk on a mountain, BY RIGHT, NOT PERMISSION. I think this important.

Countryside Agency http://www.countryside.gov.uk

Countryside Access http://www.countrysideaccess.gov.uk

Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 http://www.legislation.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/20000037.htm

Peak and Northern Footpaths Society http://www.peakandnorthern.org.uk

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Kinder Scout: Peak District, Derbyshire

Starting out from Upper Booth heading north up Crowden Clough, and after a great deal of ‘puff’ end up on to Kinder Scout plataeu. This is the highest point [well area really,] of the Peak District. Splendid views in all directions, reviewing the Vale of Edale.

I started out quite late, so again ran out of daylight before descent. Otherwise, I would have dithered a bit, to photograph the fantastic ‘stone sculptures’ that the wind has cut out of the millions of years there. Will go back again stortly to do these, before the autumn mists mean i can’t find them again ….

http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=409500&y=387500&z=3&sv=409500,387500&st=4&ar=N&mapp=newmap.srf&searchp=newsearch.srf&dn=634

More piccys at: http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=217120

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Snowdonia: Me, Boots, Maps and Compass


More piccys at: http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=216607

Posted in . | Leave a comment

Llanberis, Capel Curig, Pen-Y-Pass, and the Ogwen Valley, in the rain

Weather has been splendid up to yesterday. Today, being Wales, it’s started to rain, lots.

Still, rain and low cloud does makes for some atmospheric shots.

http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=262315&y=355120&z=5&sv=262315,355120&st=4&ar=Y&mapp=newmap.srf&searchp=newsearch.srf&dn=633

More Piccys at: http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=216544

Posted in . | Leave a comment