INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Army deployed in London |
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by Paul Donovan newshound.com Entered into the database on Sunday, September 04th, 2005 @ 12:14:07 MST |
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A little discussed element of the shooting of Brazilian Jean Charles de Menezes
at Stockwell tube station has been the role played by the British army. It must
have come as a shock to many to learn that soldiers from the Special Reconnaisance
Regiment were involved in the operation. This unit was set up in April to combat
terrorism and it was the first time that it has been engaged actively. The regiment was formed from 14th Intelligence Company known as "14 Int"
of the Det (Detachment), a unit set up to gather intelligence covertly on terrorist
suspects in Northern Ireland. Its recruits are trained by the SAS. The level of involvement of the soldiers is unclear with it first being reported
they were working purely in a surveillance role and then that they may have
been on the bus following Mr De Menezes to the tube station. To date the MOD has said the soldiers will be co-operating with the Independent
Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) investigation but it will be interesting
to see how long this continues. If the IPCC probe into areas that the army do
not want exposed then they could withdraw co-operation as has happened on occasion
in Northern Ireland. The direct deployment of soldiers on the ground in Britain is further
evidence of the anti-terror tactics first deployed in Northern Ireland coming
home. Army units like 14 Int have a murky past going back to the 1970s.
Former army and MI6 operative Fred Holdroyd has told how surveillance units
transformed into killer units operating beyond the law. These operations later
led on to the collusive network built up with Loyalist paramilitaries to target
leading Republicans for execution. The army unit responsible for much of the collusion structure was the Force
Research Unit. Belfast solicitor Pat Finucane was one of the victims of these
completely lawless actions. As noted here before it is one of the enduring ironies
that former Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir John Stevens, who was sent
to investigate the Finucane murder, finished up bringing shoot to kill back
to the streets of London. The very brief history of what happened as a result of these SAS assisted
surveillance units being deployed in Northern Ireland offers a salutary lesson
for Britain. Once the army become involved in policing matters – under
the guise of preventing terrorism – the whole terrain changes. Maybe this
was what Tony Blair meant when he glibly referred to the rules of the game changing
regarding combatting terrorism. The deployment of the SRR on the streets of London is a matter of real
concern. The Northern Ireland experience shows what can happen if such operations
are not properly controlled and monitored. It is vital now that the IPCC inquiry unveils exactly what the soldiers were
doing on the day that Mr de Menezes died. Beyond that there needs to be a debate
in Parliament as to the extent and terms of engagement of the British army on
the streets of London and other cities. End military impunity from the law It seems a good time with the British army being deployed on the streets of
London to look at the laws under which they operate. The Article 7 – End Impunity Campaign has just such a goal. The campaign
has come out of the refusal of the Ministry of Defence to remove from the army
the two soldiers who were convicted of the murder of Belfast teenager Peter
McBride in 1992. After completing their sentences the two Scots guardsmen Mark
Wright and James Fisher resumed their army careers going on to serve in Iraq
and other parts of the world. The campaign is based on Article 7 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
that states that "All are equal before the law and are entitled without
any discrimination to equal protection of the law." The campaigners argue
that the victims of serious crimes such as murder, rape, and torture are not
afforded equal protection of the law if the perpetrator is allowed to return
to a position where they are responsible for protecting the public. Given recent developments the Article 7 campaign would seem like one that it
is in all of our interests to support. |