26 July 2002
Fight
the future for human rights
Marc
Glendening tells the liberal Left that it must choose between defending
civil liberties and its support for the European Union.
How
do you think Tony Blair, Peter Hain, Denis McShane and other leading
New Labour figures would have responded had the last Tory government
announced they were planning to introduce the following measures?
- Granting immunity
from prosecution to police officers;
- Giving state
agencies the right to intercept our emails, phone calls and faxes,
and to find out what we are accessing on the internet;
- Effectively
ending Habeas Corpus and ending trial by jury for some citizens;
- Introducing
a definition of terrorism so broad that virtually anybody engaging
in civil disobedience could be so charged;
- Making it an
offence for elected representatives to try and influence economic
policy.
It
is a fair bet that New Labour would have denounced these proposals as
outrageously authoritarian and would have rightly claimed that they
were violations of the European Convention on Human Rights.
However, the measures cited above are not, of course, hypothetical.
They are supported with enthusiasm by the current administration, and
all either emanate from decisions taken by the European Union or stem
from treaty obligations that we have entered into. The last example
would be relevant to the United Kingdom were we to enter the single
currency. Article 108 of the new Nice treaty forbids elected governments
and MEPs from lobbying members of the European Central Bank.
What
is becoming ever more apparent is that the rhetorical enthusiasm most
on the Blairite Left express for the human rights agenda cannot be squared
with that faction's enthusiasm for ever greater European political union.
The EU represents a major threat to basic civil liberties and democracy.
However, as is the case whenever inconvenient contradictions within
the Third Way agenda are identified, Blairites tend to go one of two
ways. Either they go all passive-aggressive and simply refuse to address
the issue being raised, or, alternatively, they go on the attack, and
question the sanity of those pointing out inconvenient truths.
Two years ago I attended a public meeting Keith Vaz was addressing in
his then capacity of Europe Minister. He was asked to comment on press
reports that the EU, the Home Office and the FBI were jointly working
on how to increase state surveillance. His typically mischievous and
humorous response was to say that the questioner had "obviously
been watching too many episodes of the X-Files" and was in no doubt
the sort of conspiracy theorist who sent anonymous letters in green
ink to prominent people.
If
Vaz ever emerges from his own personal twilight zone, it would be interesting
to know how he explains away the fact that the European Parliament voted
on May 30th - with the full support of all but one Labour MEP, Arlene
McCarthy - to overturn existing data protection law. The new legislation
will enable national law enforcement agencies to compel internet service
providers and telephone companies to hand over logs relating to their
customers' communications. Without this intervention, the Regulation
of Investigatory Powers Act, the instrument through which British authorities
can carry out their snooping, could have resulted in Tony Blair's government
being taken to the European Court of Justice. No doubt, however, it
will now find itself challenged under Article 8, the right to privacy,
of the (non-EU) European Convention on Human Rights.
Tony
Bunyan of Statewatch, the human rights group that monitors Brussels,
said in the run-up to the vote that it would constitute a "defining
moment for the future of democracy in the EU. If all telecommunications
are placed under surveillance, not only will data protection be fatally
undermined but so too will be the very freedoms that distinguish democracies
from authoritarian regimes".
John Wadham, director of Liberty, has also attacked the change in EU
policy. And as revealed by The Observer on June 9th, the EU's
own embryonic FBI, Europol, brought together state bodies from the member
states last April. Plans for a common and more potent EU surveillance
strategy were drawn up and included in a strategy paper, Expert Meeting
on Cyber Crime: Data Retention. Europol's intervention in this matter
disproves the claim it is only intended to be a "clearing house"
for useful information. In fact, EU police officers will soon become
operational in the member states and, for reasons that have never been
justified, they enjoy immunity from prosecution.
Another
aspect of Europol's work that should concern human rights activists
is that, as confirmed by Charles Clarke, when a Home Office minister,
in a response to Tory MP Jacqui Lait in July 2000, Europol can hold
information concerning a person's "sexual orientation, religion,
or politics". It doesn't take too much imagination to envisage
how such information could be used for illegitimate ends. There have
been allegations by whistle-blowers within Europol that officers have
sold supposedly confidential information on EU citizens to criminal
elements.
Europol,
together with national law enforcement agencies, was charged by the
Council Of Ministers in August of last year with drawing up a list of
"troublemakers". The individuals on this list were to be "tracked
and identified" and prevented from leaving their home countries
and travelling to where EU summits were taking place. This database,
which comes under the auspices of the Schengen Information System, is
initially targeting environmentalists. This issue is closely related
to the new common definition of terrorism drawn up in Brussels that
defines the concept in the following way: "intentional acts destabilising
the fundamental political, constitutional, economic or social structures".
In
1997, the Commission published Corpus Juris which was designed to initiate
the idea of a "unified legal space". This document envisaged
a harmonised criminal justice system in which trial by jury, habeas
corpus, and double jeopardy would be removed. The introduction of
the EU arrest warrant, that will enable fast track extradition within
the Union, without the provision of prima facie evidence against
the accused, is a first step towards this destination.
The
issue of civil liberties is a dimension to the European debate that
is destined to become more prominent. While many will, quite fairly,
point to the increasingly appalling record of successive British governments
on this issue, the fact is that within a still essentially liberal,
representative democracy bad legislation can be reversed.
As history has shown, once the EU gets its hands on a competence and
then legislates, it is virtually impossible to reverse the trend. The
hard reality is that the liberal Left is now going to have to choose
between its commitment to human rights and its hitherto axiomatic support
for a more powerful EU.
by
Marc Glendening - Campaign Director, Democracy Movement
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