Will the 21st Century be the Century of
naked barbarity?
The war on terrorism: a war on civil rights and
humanity
Maryam Namazie
10 February 2003
The 'war on terrorism' is a
war on civil rights and norms
Since the September 11 tragedy,
there have been alarming and far-reaching changes in civil and international
human rights standards and norms in Europe. While the 'war on terrorism' has
been the context for these changes, many of the laws passed have had nothing to
do with actually countering terrorism and raising people's security but are
rather concerned with redefining rights and norms, expanding controls and
restrictions, restricting asylum seekers, protests and protestors, and forming
USA-EU cooperation on border controls, immigration, extradition and other
matters.
Changing definition of terrorism
The expanded definition of
terrorism in the EU Framework Decision on Combating Terrorism which came into
effect on 23 June 2002 and is binding and must be incorporated into national
laws is evidence enough to corroborate this claim. According to this
definition, 'terrorist offences' include acts that compel 'a Government or
international organisation to perform or abstain from performing any act, or
(iii) seriously destabilising or destroying the fundamental political,
constitutional, economic or social structures of a country or an international
organisation'. Offences mentioned in the Decision include: 'causing extensive
destruction of a Government building or public facility, a transport system, an
infrastructure facility, including an information system, a fixed platform
located on a continental shelf, a public place or private property likely to
endanger human life or result in major economic loss'. While EU governments
have refused to explicitly remove any potential use of
the Decision against those exercising their democratic rights to protest, free
expression and assembly and to exclude liberation struggles fighting against
repressive and authoritarian regimes, it clearly stated that 'actions by the
armed forces of a State in the exercise of their official duties are not governed
by this Framework Decision.' This Decision has been complemented by other measures
that have further extended the definition of terrorism to include 'active or
passive' support for organisations deemed terrorist. Europol has also produced
a Situation and Trends report on terrorist activity in the European Union which
includes 'eco-terrorism', i.e. radical environmentalists and animal rights
movements and 'anarchist terrorism' which they say could be a symptom of the
possible 'resurrection of left wing terrorism'.
Indefinite Detention
Britain's Anti-terrorism, Crime
and Security Act 2001 adopted in December contravenes the European Convention
on Human Rights and allows for the detention of foreigners, including EU
citizens, without being charged or prosecuted and without access to appeal. The
European parliament recently criticised Britain for the erosion of civil
liberties after September 11. The USA has adopted similar legislation and can
indefinitely detain non-citizens.
European Arrest Warrant
The EU Framework Decision on the
European Arrest Warrant which came into effect on 13 June 2002 is another
alarming decision which does away with almost all precautions related to the
extradition process. The requesting state will simply now have to say that a person
is wanted for one of the 32 offences, after which this person can then be
arrested, their homes searched and property seized, and deported to stand
trial. There is no appeal and no rights for the suspect.
Exchanging 'Information'
A Recommendation proposed by the
Spanish Presidency, adopted without debate by EU Justice and Home Affairs
Ministers on 13 June 2002, for the 'introduction of a standard form for
exchanging information on terrorists' says that information on 'individuals
with a criminal record in connection with terrorism as defined in the Framework
Decision on combating terrorism' can be exchanged. Its purpose is to prevent
'activities carried out by terrorist organisations to achieve their criminal
aims at large international events' or 'organised groups run by terrorist
organisations for the purpose of achieving their own destabilisation and
propaganda aims'. The intent of this is clearly to counter protests and
protestors. The Recommendation did not have to be submitted for scrutiny to
national or European parliaments. The exchange of information adds to the
measures already in place to counter protests.
Telecommunications
Surveillance
On 20 September, the EU Justice
and Home Affairs Minister Council adopted a number of measures, including
access to telecommunications data by law enforcement agencies for the purpose
of 'criminal investigations' thus eliminating privacy protection rules that
traffic data had to be erased. While the new provisions are non-binding and it
is up to each member state to adopt laws at a national level, EU governments
are drafting a binding Framework Decision on the retention of data.
The US-EU Bush letter
A October 16, 2001 letter from
Bush to the EU raised 47 demands for EU-US cooperation against 'terrorism' of
which most dealt with crime and immigration, including the exchange of
telecommunications data, the direct exchange of personal data with Europol, the
establishment of common border control policies including data on asylum
seekers and a new category of "inadmissibles"
to be refused entry by the US and the EU. Since then there have been numerous
meetings between EU-US and US and Canadian officials are sitting in on many EU
working party meetings.
Refugees and asylum seekers
Many governments have publicly
equated the 'war against terrorism' with the 'fight against illegal
immigration'. After September 11, asylum legislation is being examined 'with
reference to the terrorist threat'. On 27 December, the Council of the European
Union adopted several Acts on 'terrorism'. The 'Council Common Position on
combating terrorism', Article 16 says: 'Appropriate measures shall be taken in
accordance with the relevant provisions of national and international law,
including international standards on human rights, before granting refugee
status, for the purpose of ensuring that the asylum seeker has not planned,
facilitated or participated in the commission of terrorist acts.' Under EU law
this Common Position is binding on all members and will mean that all asylum
seekers and refugees are subject to vetting by the police and security services
before their status can be granted. In effect a file will have to be created on
each person or family as to their political and trade union activity in their
country of origin or any other country they have stayed in. Article 4 of the EU
Common Position covers 'any form of support, active or passive' for terrorist
activities. Moreover, surveillance and intelligence-gathering to combat terrorism
and 'illegal immigration' can easily be combined. At the end of December, the
UK placed undercover MI6 operatives inside Sangatte in northern France to
monitor the activities of specific 'foreign' national or ethnic groups resident
in the UK.
Recently, Tony Blair has also
warned that Britain may withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights
because it prevents the UK from deporting asylum seekers who represented a
threat to national security to a situation where they may face torture and cruel
and inhuman punishment.
The list of repressive and
restrictive measures goes on and on and creates a disturbing picture of what is
in store for people living in Europe and the world. Repressive measures adopted
in the USA are even more far-reaching; people originally from the Middle
Eastern are being treated reminiscent of 'enemy aliens' during the first and
second world wars. Also, the distinction between terrorism and resistance to
oppression and political dissent, between resistance/liberation struggles
against authoritarian and undemocratic regimes and terrorist groups has become
blurred. Freedom of expression and assembly and the rights to privacy, due
process, the right not to be tortured, detained indefinitely and … have been
restricted and fundamentally changed.
Why now?
While the assault on rights and
norms has been stepped up since the September 11 tragedy, it began long before
that. In fact, it started at the end of the cold war; September 11 just gave
governments the justification to do what they had been planning to do all along
and to do it a lot quicker. These changes are also the result of a New World
Order as well, which is bringing with it naked barbarity. Every right can be
denied. Everything is permissible. 'Security' and 'combating terrorism'
precedes all rights and standards.
Combating terrorism needs
other measures
It is clear that most of the
measures taken have nothing to do with combating terrorism. In fact, while EU
and Western governments restrict civil and human rights and carry out their war
against the people of the Middle East and people originally from the Middle
East, they continue to wheel and deal with political Islam. While the Islamic
Republic of Iran is one of the most fundamental pillars of Islamic terrorism,
the European Union's action plan to combat terrorism includes strengthening
relations with Iran, 'in particular by consultations with a view to negotiation
of a Trade and Cooperation Agreement and by means of political dialogue.' From
Afghanistan to their plans for a post-Saddam Iraq, political Islam continues to
be maintained. Their policy in the Palestinian territories actually strengthens
and provides a recruiting ground for Islamic terrorism. Furthermore, the USA
and its allies are themselves one pole in the
escalating war of the terrorists. An end to the attack on Iraq and economic
sanctions, an end to all political support of the Islamic Republic of Iran and
other Islamic states and movements, the establishment of a Palestinian state,
support of asylum seekers fleeing political Islam and an end to Islamic schools
and veiling of girls under 16 are some of the important steps to end terrorism.
Restricting rights will not combat terrorism and raise security,
rather it will promote intimidation, terrorism and insecurity.
Is there any hope?
While the assault of people's rights and freedoms is becoming a norm in the New World Order, there is much that can be pushed back and changed with people's intervention. The tragedy of September 11 allowed the world to see the monstrous face of political Islam and feel some affinity with the people in the Middle East who daily live under Islamic terrorism and repression. In the USA's impending attack on Iraq too, protest against the attack is higher than has ever been against a war that has not yet even begun. But much work still needs to be done to strengthen these links, particularly in the face of efforts by the so-called left to defend political Islam to promote their one-sided anti-imperialism.
These are telling times. Often
when barbarity is as naked as Islamic terrorism and USA-led terrorism are, the
opposite - we who represent civilised humanity - can establish itself. In these times, when even the pretext of defending
rights and people is no longer feigned by governments and attacks are so overt,
people can more clearly see naked barbarity for what it is. Whether the 21st
century will be the century of naked barbarity or a world free of terrorism is
of course up to us.
Information gathered from Amnesty International, Statewatch,
EU Directives and media outlets.