Metropolitan
police detained David Miranda for promoting 'political' causes
Justification
for airport detention of partner of Guardian journalist Glenn
Greenwald alarms human rights groups and Tory MP
2
November, 2013
The
detention of the partner of a former Guardian journalist has
triggered fresh concerns after it emerged that a key reason cited by
police for holding him under terrorism powers was the belief that he
was promoting a "political or ideological cause".
The
revelation has alarmed leading human rights groups and a Tory MP, who
said the justification appeared to be without foundation and
threatened to have damaging consequences for investigative
journalism.
David
Miranda is the partner of Glenn Greenwald, the journalist who –
often in collaboration with the Guardian – has broken many stories
about the extent and scope of spying by the US National Security
Agency. Miranda was stopped at Heathrow airport in August and held by
the Metropolitan police for nine hours while on his way home to
Brazil.
Miranda,
it has been claimed, was carrying some 58,000 encrypted UK
intelligence documents. He had spent a week in Berlin visiting a
journalist, Laura Poitras, who has worked with Greenwald on many of
his stories, which have been based on information leaked by the
former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.
Now
documents referred to in court last week before a judicial review of
Miranda's detention shine new light on the Metropolitan police's
explanation for invoking terrorism powers – a decision critics have
called draconian.
It
became apparent during the court hearing that there were several
drafts of the Port Circular Notice – the document used to request
Miranda's detention under schedule 7 to the 2000 Terrorism Act –
before the final version was submitted.
The
draft that was finally used states: "Intelligence indicates that
Miranda is likely to be involved in espionage activity which has the
potential to act against the interests of UK national security. We
therefore wish to establish the nature of Miranda's activity, assess
the risk that Miranda poses to national security and mitigate as
appropriate."
The
notice then went on to explain why police officers believed that the
terrorism act was appropriate.
"We
assess that Miranda is knowingly carrying material, the release of
which would endanger people's lives. Additionally the disclosure or
threat of disclosure is designed to influence a government, and is
made for the purpose of promoting a political or ideological cause.
This therefore falls within the definition of terrorism and as such
we request that the subject is examined under schedule 7."
Shami
Chakrabarti, director of Liberty, said the police assessment
represented a "chilling" threat to democracy. "More
and more we are shocked but not surprised," she said.
"Breathtakingly broad anti-terror powers passed under the last
government continue to be abused under the coalition that once
trumpeted civil liberties.
"The
express admission that politics motivated the detention of David
Miranda should shame police and legislators alike. It's not just the
schedule 7 detention power that needs urgent overhaul, but a
definition of terrorism that should chill the blood of any democrat."
Padraig
Reidy of Index on Censorship, which campaigns for free speech, said
that the police's justification for Miranda's detention was "very
dangerous" for investigative journalism. "The whole point
of such journalism is to find stuff the government doesn't want
raised," he said. "The message this gives off is 'don't
find this sort of stuff, or you will be treated as a terrorist'."
Greenwald
was equally scathing, tweeting: "UK govt beats its mighty chest,
now explicitly equates journalism with 'terrorism' and 'espionage'."
The
home secretary, Theresa May, has criticised the Guardian's decision
to publish the Snowden leaks. May has said she agrees with the
assessment of Andrew Parker, the head of MI5, that the newspaper had
damaged Britain's national security. But Conservative MP Dominic Raab
said: "The assertion that national security has been undermined
has been bandied around wildly and not explained in any cogent way."
And
he questioned the police's handling of the Miranda affair. "If
he was behaving in such a nefarious way why wasn't he arrested,
charged and bailed?" Raab said. "If he was guilty of
putting national security at risk, then why did they let him go?"
Gwendolen
Morgan of Bindmans, Miranda's solicitors, said this week's judicial
review will focus on whether the use of schedule 7 was
disproportionate and whether it was incompatible with the inalienable
right to freedom of expression.
"We
will argue that draconian counter-terrorism powers were used in our
client's case for an improper purpose," Morgan said. "Not
to determine whether our client could in any sense be considered a
'terrorist', but rather to retrieve potentially embarrassing
journalistic material in his possession."
The
impact of Snowden's leaks on national security is expected to be
addressed this week when parliament's intelligence and security
committee will question the heads of MI6, MI5 and GCHQ in public for
the first time.
Snowden ‘may meet whoever he wants’ over Merkel phone hack – Kremlin
2
October, 2013
The
Kremlin, which granted the Edward Snowden asylum in Russia, does not
see the whistleblower's contacts with the German parliamentary probe
into the alleged NSA surveillance of Chancellor Merkel as a violation
of the pledge not to hurt America.
Snowden,
who got stranded in a Moscow airport after the US revoked his
American passport, was allowed entry to Russia in August. He was
given political asylum there on the condition that he would not
further damage the US.
But
his latest contacts with German investigators, who are looking into
the alleged
wiretapping
of Angela Merkel’s phones, are “clearly
damaging US national interests,”
a senior White House official told the Russian Kommersant daily on
Friday.
Snowden
has given assurances many times that he has handed over the entire
cache of classified documents to the press, which he took from the US
National Security Agency’s networks, while he was in Hong Kong.
Washington suspects this may not be true. US officials believe that
while staying in Russia, Snowden keeps in touch with journalists
around the world and provides them with more material, exposing
secret surveillance practices.
The
accusations have been dismissed by presidential spokesman, Dmitry
Peskov, who assured the newspaper that “nobody
allows”
Snowden to violate his pledge.
“But
he is in Russia after legally obtaining temporary asylum and he is
free to meet whoever he wants to – it’s not up to us to obstruct
this,”
he added in a reference to Snowden’s meeting with German Greens
lawmaker, Hans-Christian Stroebele, in Moscow on Thursday.
The
Germans are investigating the alleged wiretapping of its leader by
American secret services, which was reported by Der Spiegel and Die
Welt last week. The reports caused outcry in the country, with many
critics branding the NSA’s actions as those worthy of the Stazi,
the notorious secret police of Eastern Germany during the Cold War.
Snowden
may serve as key
witness
in the investigation, and may testify in person, if Berlin guarantees
that he would be safe from arrest and deportation to the US. Several
top German officials, including Interior Minister Hans-Peter
Friedrich, said they thought that bringing the whistleblower to the
country would greatly benefit the investigation.
This,
however, is likely to require a lot of judicial consideration, since
his temporary status as refugee in Russia does not allow him to leave
the country, his Russian lawyer Anatoly Kucherena said.
Snowden,
a former NSA contractor, leaked top secret materials to a select
number of journalists, to expose what he believes as unlawful actions
of the US government and its allies. The documents, which have been
the basis of many scandalous reports in the past few months, detail
dragnet gathering of phone and internet data, spying on world
leaders, alleged cases of economic espionage by the US and other
issues
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