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U.K. plans tougher security measures
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, OCT. 1. Shrugging off opposition from civil rights
groups, the Blair Government has decided on a series of
``emergency'' measures to rid Britain of its image as a haven for
terrorists. These are in addition to the action it has already
taken specifically to target Osama bin Laden's network, and the
Taliban regime whose U.K. assets amounting to £60 million
have been frozen, it was announced today.
The Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair, who has emerged as the most
hawkish of European leaders in the U.S.-led international
coalition against terrorism, overrode fears that the proposed
measures might be used to curtail individual freedom and said
``Our first duty must be to protect our citizens''. Asylum-
seekers, already a target of suspicion and abuse, would be
affected most by a clutch of tough laws expected to be passed by
Parliament over the next few weeks. Notwithstanding the official
line that genuine refugees have nothing to fear, there is
considerable anxiety that the new powers which the Government
proposes to acquire to detain, deport or extradite suspects may
end up as a source of harassment.
``Thousands of Britons are going to disappear for long periods of
time because it is easier to issue a warrant than to make sure
you have decent evidence...the civil liberties implications of
that are appalling,'' according to Mr. Stephen Jakobi of the Fair
Trials Abroad. Civil rights activists also expressed concern over
reports that the Human Rights Act might have to be diluted in the
larger fight against terrorism.
The proposals, being considered by the Government, include
speeding up extradition, tightening asylum rules with provision
for indefinite detention of illegal immigrants, monitoring bank
accounts of suspects and introduction of identity cards. For the
first time, bureaux de change, described as a major source of
money laundering, are to be targeted. One newspaper quoted
government sources as saying that nearly £4 billion left
Britain every year through these private foreign currency
exchanges with 65 per cent coming from illegal sources. The
squeeze on money changers is intended to smash what The Times
called the ``soft underbelly of organised crime financing''.
The proposal, which has evoked widespread criticism, relates to
identity cards and some of the most strident voices have come
from within the ruling party. A former Home Office Minister, Mr.
Mike O'Brien, who is supporting a cross-party campaign against ID
cards, said their introduction would mean a ``victory for
terrorism''.
Mr. Blair has defended his Government's plans saying: ``We cannot
have a situation in which people come in and abuse our asylum
procedures and are then allowed to remain, claiming asylum. And
we cannot have a sit uation where, if we know, someone is a
suspected terrorist, we do not have the legal power to detain
them indefinitely until we find a country to deport them.'' On ID
cards, he admitted that it was a ``very big step'' and stressed,
while speaking on BBC's ``Breakfast with Frost'' programme that
``we must get it right''.
Meanwhile, the Labour Party's annual conference began Brighton on
Sunday amid a large but peaceful protest by anti- globalisation
activists. In his first formal speech to the party tomorrow since
the September 11 crisis, Mr. Blair is expected to explain why it
is necessary to stand ``shoulder to shoulder'' with the U.S. in
its ``war'' against terrorism.
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