http://www.whale.to/m/greaves.html
THE EUROPEAN UNION...A TOTALITARIAN POLICE STATE IN THE MAKING….?
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) Europol is now
empowered to form its own anti-terrorist squad with access to
information held by MI5 and
MI6. Europol personnel have immunity from prosecution.
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.
Arising out of
this, 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 2000 Terrorism Act widened the definition of terrorism enormously
to include the
threat of "serious violence" against any person or property. How will
this
definition be interpreted? It could clearly be used against people who
tear up genetically
modified crops, but might 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 is an offence. There are 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 measures are brought into force
throughout the EU. A
new even wider EU definition of terrorism is now proposed – any act
of
intimidation by an individual or group with the intention of seriously
altering…
political economic or social structures. This could cover almost
any public order
situation. Additionally, there is to be the freezing of assets not just
for drug
trafficking, money laundering and EU budget fraud, but now also for
"terrorism"
as defined above. It will be possible for orders to be made on
suspicion only and it will
be for the individual to prove he acquired his assets lawfully, not for
the state to prove
he didn't.
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 Straw's 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.
Corpus Juris would also introduce
detention without trial, since under this continental
system, a person suspected of an offence can be arrested and held in
custody for a period
of six months or more, pending such further investigations and
enquiries as the public
prosecutor sees fit, before being brought before a court. This is
radically different from
our own system of Habeas Corpus (which has its origins as far back as
Magna Carta of
1215), whereby an accused person must be brought before a court within
a very short period
of arrest, and evidence against the arrested person produced.
Furthermore, our current
system incorporates the rule against double jeopardy, whereby an
accused person once
acquitted cannot be brought before a court again for the same offence.
The government has
proposed that this shall be removed – perhaps reasonable in certain
very carefully
defined instances, but the proposal must be seen as a further part of
the introduction of
Corpus Juris. The new Anti-terrorism Crime and Security bill presently
before parliament,
if passed, will give the right to the Home Secretary to make changes
like these to our
court system by regulation, rather than by a bill requiring full
parliamentary debate.
A European public prosecutor has
been appointed and will have authority in Britain and
throughout the EU, initially only in respect of cases involving fraud
against the EU
budget (e.g. people who make dishonest claims for EU grants and
subsidies etc.) This is
now being extended via Eurojust an agency which will have powers of
investigation in all
member states of the EU.
EUROPEAN UNION ARMY
Under provisions in the new Nice
Treaty signed at the heads of governments conference
at the end of last year, an old European defence pact known as Western
European Union is
to be incorporated into the European Union itself. Previously, at the
Helsinki summit in
December 1999, agreement was reached for an army of 60,000 soldiers to
be set up along
with command, planning and intelligence bases. This is claimed to be a
"rapid
reaction force", but clearly these measures lays the foundation for an
EU Army,
hailed by German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer as another pillar in
the process of
European unification. Commission President Romano Prodi has confirmed
as much. However,
significantly, French PM Lionel Jospin has stated that "by pooling
its armies,
Europe will be able to maintain internal security as well as
prevent conflicts
throughout the world..". Indeed, Foreign Office sources indicate
that the setting
up of a 5000 strong internal emergency reaction force was approved at
the EU summit at
Feira, Portugal in June last year. In many parts of the EU, riot police
with tear gas and
water cannon are used as a matter of course to confront even peaceful
protests. Will we
see the use of such measures here?
BAN ON POLITICAL PARTIES?
On 13/4/00 the European
Parliament approved the Dimitrakopoulos-Leinen Report, article
6 of which provides for the setting up of EU wide political parties.
However, this is
subject to the proviso that "parties that do not respect human
rights and
democratic principles as set out in the Treaty of Rome shall be
the subject of
suspension proceedings in the European Court of Justice". Despite
the rhetoric in
its preamble, the Treaty of Rome is not in based on democratic
principles, but
rather on European integration. Could these new provisions therefore be
used to
"suspend" (i.e. effectively ban) any political party opposed to the EU?
The
banning of political parties is a dangerous road to go down in a
democracy - it is worth
noting that the Soviet Union never abolished elections- the ruling
Communist party simply
outlawed all other parties as "fascist" or "counter revolutionary" and
maintained itself in power that way!
FINAL REMARKS
We would never accept the sudden
imposition of a totalitarian police state, so if it is
to be done, it has to be done gradually by stealth, one step at a time.
These various
measures should not be seen in isolation. Many people quite close to
the top positions of
power may not be aware of the full picture – MPs and others do not have
time to
become familiar with the whole range of bills and proposals that are
put before
parliament. The security and intelligence services are not answerable
to Parliament and
their activities remain hidden from view in the interests of so called
"national
security". You might think … it could never happen here, we live in a
democracy,
our leaders are good upstanding people fighting for freedom and justice
in the world, or
so they and the media would have us believe… History shows that all
power tends to
corrupt, but absolute power corrupts absolutely. Our freedoms are being
gradually
eroded… what will come next? With real power vested in unelected and
unaccountable
commissioners, bankers and bureaucrats, democratic principles are
already alien to the EU.
Are the building blocks being put into place whereby soon we could find
ourselves living
in a dictatorship in which protest will become increasingly difficult
and ultimately will
not be tolerated? The horrors of 11/9/01are being used as the excuse to
introduce the
latest proposals, but it seems clear the measures are designed much
more to increase
control, surveillance and curtail personal liberties throughout the EU,
rather than to
protect us all from genuine terrorism. The European Commission Forward
Planning Unit said
in 1996 "It will be difficult to achieve political union without
there being the
perception of an external political threat – a terrorist outrage would
contribute to
a perception of an external threat…"
Richard Greaves "The Old Stables",
Cusop, Herefordshire, HR3 5RQ Tel: 01497 821406.
E-mail: rgreaves@supanet.com
Updated: November 2001
YOU MAY COPY & CIRCULATE
THIS INFORMATION SHEET