WAR ON LIBERTIES
By Eva Lawrence, Just Focus Coordinator
The world, since September 11 is a different place. The media permanently talks about the latest ‘terrorist threat’ and we have a whole new vocabulary: ‘war on terrorism’ and WMD. There is a lot of fear, and in this state of fear we are quietly allowing our freedoms to slip away.
We are being scared with potential terrorist threats and this is being used as justification to strip us of some of our most precious and hard won rights including our freedom of expression, movement and association. Historically tyrants have always stamped out free speech before anything else. These are part of our human rights that are sanctioned in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and our so integral to our way of life we often take them for granted.
However changes to laws worldwide are threatening our rights. The changes have tended to be gradual and quiet, presumably so we do not notice or become quickly alarmed. They are happening now.
Liberties under threat overseas
In December 2005 a 25 year old woman in the UK was convicted for reading out the names of the 97 British soldiers killed in Iraq, under the new Serious Organised Crime and Police Act. In another case in the UK last September, An 80 year old WWII veteran was arrested, under the Terrorism Act, for wearing a T-shirt that said that Bush and Blair should be tried for war crimes (Pilger). Both these examples impinge on our freedom of opinion and expression.
The US Patriot Act has allowed for the arrest and imprisonment of ‘suspected terrorists’. They have been denied access to US legal process; most still held without charge or trial in Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere. A recent United Nations report has also found that prisoners have been tortured. Where is their right to be free of arbitrary arrest and exile?
What about here in Aotearoa?
According to human rights lawyer Rodney Harrison, despite the fact that the threat of ‘terrorist’ attack is virtually non existent in Aotearoa New Zealand, a number of laws (eg. The Citizenship and Travel Documents Bill ) have been created and altered in the name of security and ‘the war on terror’ that have reduced our freedoms. Also, with the exception of the Terrorism Suppression Act, they have no ‘sunset clause’ which means the restrictions to our freedoms are not until the supposed ‘threat’ has past, but permanently.
Ahmed Zaoui, an Algerian was imprisoned on the justification that he was a security threat but there was no expression of what he actually was accused of doing, as it was called ‘classified security information’. Still now, he is under curfew in his home and awaiting the review of the security risk certificate issued against him.
What is a terrorist threat?
The word ‘terrorist’ conjures up images of crazed fanatics killing indiscriminately. However there is no one ‘terrorist’ group and the term is often used by those in power to describe those that they oppose. We need to understand what each of the separate groups is about and why they take the actions that they do. To understand the causes does not mean that you think the actions are acceptable or justified.
Also, think about how some of the actions of political leaders and media impacts on the risk of terror attacks. Creating a climate of intolerance and hyper-fear around religious difference or systems of government can exacerbate or create a threat where there was little or none to begin with.
It is understandable to have laws in place to be able to monitor and intercept possible threats to people. However, many of the definitions of threat are so vague that they could be used to justify interfering with people or groups, with no intent for violent acts, from expressing their opinion or taking part in groups.
For example, in February, British police cited the Prevention of Terrorism Act when they arrested and interrogated three actors from of a recent film based on the true story of three men imprisoned and finally released from Guantanamo Bay. The actors and the three men the story was based on were arresting when returning from the Berlin Film Festival where the film was screened. They were questioned about their travel, who they had met with and the political convictions of the film’s director. The actors had no specific political connections and seemed to only be singled out due to their Asian ethnicity.
Protect Your Rights
While it is important to feel safe from danger, what ever that may be, it is also equally important for people’s civil and political rights to be protected. We don’t need to give up our freedoms to do this. In the words of the United Nations Secretary General: “Our responses to terrorism as well as our efforts to thwart it and prevent it should uphold the human rights that terrorists aim to destroy. Human rights, fundamental freedoms and the rule of law are essential tools in the effort to combat terrorism – not privileges to be sacrificed at a time of tension.”
It is our responsibility to know our rights and continue to exercise them. As Madonna once said: Express Yourself!
Some of the Articles in the Declaration of Human Rights
Article 9: “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.”
Article 19: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”
Article 20: “Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association.”
Article 5: “No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment”
Article 12 “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence…”
Article 13 “Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country’
Article 14 “Everyone has the right to seek and enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution”
TAKE ACTION!
Read the media critically, don’t buy into the fear
Understand your rights and use them
Find Out More:
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Amnesty International
Sources:
UK police arrest stars of award-winning film “The Road to Guantanamo” under the Prevention of Terrorism Act
This article was originally published in Jet magazine in the Focus column.











