EUROPOL
The Maastricht Treaty introduced little known aspects of EU integration
referred to as "co-operation between member states in justice
and home affairs". Under these provisions Europol,
a Europe wide police force is being created. It has very wide powers
but is not answerable to any elected body. It reports to a special
committee appointed by the Council of Ministers. It exists ostensibly
to fight crime, but it has a much wider function. Not only will
it collect and store information on known and suspected criminals,
but also on anyone's political and religious beliefs and activities.
The building up of large databases is specifically provided for
under the Maastricht Treaty.
SURVEILLANCE CAMERAS
The same co-operation provisions are also resulting in a massive
EU wide increase in the use of surveillance cameras in towns and
cities again supposedly to reduce crime. (Guardian 25/1/99
" Little known EU proposals could soon lead to massive
expansion of surveillance"). This is enthusiastically endorsed
by local councils and the public for protection against crime, but
for the authorities, these can also be used to identify anyone and
monitor their activities and movements. With the introduction of
driving licences with photographs and passport photographs which
are duplicated in central computer banks, it will be possible through
image comparison to identify anyone in seconds. Speed check cameras,
now common on many roads, by reading a number plate can also track
the movement of any vehicle across the country.
BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING...... AND LISTENING!
If you go on any sort of protest march or demonstration, you will
be filmed on video cameras by police or security personnel. Big
Brother is watching you more and more... and he can also listen
to you via the Echelon communications monitoring system run by the
American "National Security Agency" operating out of bases
at Morwenstow, Cornwall and Menwith Hills, North Yorkshire. This
system monitors telephone, fax and e-mail communications throughout
Europe and elsewhere. It is programmed to lock on to a particular
communication for analysis if certain "key" words are
used in that communication. If you carry a mobile phone, even when
switched off it emits a radio signal to the nearest base station.
With the co-operation of the mobile phone companies, your movements
can be tracked.
The Observer ( 6/12/98 "EU hatches plan to tap internet
and mobile phones" ) reported on Enfopol 98, a plan requiring
telecommunications companies to build tapping connections into every
kind of communications system including mobile phones , the internet,
fax machines, pagers and interactive cable TV services. No doubt
arising out of this, using a fast track bill and its huge
majority in parliament, last year the government rushed through
the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, which gives the police
and security services the power to monitor internet mailing lists.
They are also able to order internet service providers to give them
access to peoples private E-mail. All this is claimed to be
targeted at organised crime such as drug trafficking, paedophilia,
terrorism etc., but it takes little imagination to see how this
could be applied to any form of dissent or protest movement.
LEGISLATION SUPPRESSING HUMAN RIGHTS
We are now getting legislation that limits the right of people
to gather peaceably, (e.g. the Criminal Justice and Public Order
Act 1994) and intrudes into privacy with increased powers of bugging
and burgling for the security services, and even provides for detention
without trial. The first example of this in Britain are detention
provisions for those said to be "mentally disturbed" and
as a result "a danger to themselves or the public". Who
will decide what constitutes being mentally disturbed and a threat
to the public..? or perhaps those running the state especially
in view of the fact that Europol keeps files on peoples political
and religious activities. The new Terrorism Act widens the definition
of terrorism enormously to include the threat of "serious violence"
against any person or property. How will this definition be interpreted?
Ostensibly aimed at the likes of people who tear up genetically
modified crops, could these provisions ever be used against, for
example, protesting farmers where scuffles and damage to property
has occurred occasionally? The Act goes further - organisations
can be "outlawed" - addressing a meeting at which there
is a member of such an organisation will be an offence. There will
be additional stop and search powers for the police, and expressing
support can be treated as "incitement". All newly created
terrorist offences carry very severe penalties, as part of a process
which seems set to create a state in which no dissent of any description
will be tolerated. The provisions for co-operation in justice and
home affairs between member states introduced by the Maastricht
Treaty, and made mandatory by the Amsterdam Treaty, are designed
to ensure that the same sort of measures are brought into force
throughout the EU. Indeed the Home secretary openly talks of the
Act making UK law the same as in other countries.(Interview Radio
4 "Today " programme 20/2/01)
CORPUS JURIS
As well as this increase in repressive legislation, far reaching
changes are planned for our criminal justice system itself, which
is fundamentally different to that employed throughout the rest
of the EU (except Ireland). As part of the continuing emergence
of the single European state, the European Commission and the European
Parliament are pressing for the imposition of a uniform system throughout
the EU known as Corpus Juris. However, if Corpus Juris were to be
fully implemented in Britain, all criminal prosecutions would be
heard solely by judges or other professional paid officials appointed
by the state.
Trial by jury would have to be phased out, to be replaced by a
single judge sitting alone. Jack Straws recent attempts to
get legislation through Parliament reducing those cases where an
accused can demand trial by jury, should be seen as the start of
this process. In addition a Home Office report has recommended that
lay magistrates should be replaced by stipendiary (i.e. professional
paid) magistrates, another measure that clearly fits in with the
Corpus Juris plan. In both cases the government claims the measures
are simply in the interests of efficiency and cost effectiveness,
which is very misleading. The involvement of ordinary people in
the judicial process as magistrates and jurors is fundamental to
our system and goes back hundreds of years - it is designed to protect
the citizen against the risk of arbitrary or malicious prosecution,
and is a healthy feature in any democracy.
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