Untitled Document
Sometimes, you wonder whether the police have taken leave of their senses.
First, they arrest a woman for reciting the names of British troops killed
in Iraq in an otherwise peaceful protest near the Cenotaph. Maya
Evans, who had fallen foul of a clause in the Serious and Organised Crime
and Police Act, was duly convicted last week, given a conditional discharge
and left with a criminal record.
Then, an author taking part in a broadcast discussion about gay adoptions was
telephoned by a policewoman and informed that her name had been noted following
a complaint that she had made a "homophobic" remark on air. Lynette
Burrows had offered her opinion that two homosexual men should not be allowed
to adopt a boy, which is a view with which you may agree or disagree, but does
not warrant a call from the local constabulary.
She was told that, although a crime had not been committed, it was policy to
record details of such complaints, so Mrs Burrows is now, presumably, on some
sinister register of people who express views that are not considered acceptable.
Needless to say, she was flabbergasted to receive such a call. "This is
a free country and we are entitled to express opinions on matters of public
interest," she said.
But this is no longer true, though it is not the fault of the police. It is
the fault of the Government for promoting laws that criminalise opinions judged
unfashionable or objectionable, and of Parliament for passing them.
The police are often merely upholding an asinine measure that should never
have been introduced in the first place. Ludicrously, they are - as in the case
of the restrictions on demonstrations in the vicinity of Parliament - left to
interpret the law as they see fit.
The measure under which Miss Evans was prosecuted (and there are another 20
or so cases pending) was inserted in a Bill whose main purpose was to establish
a new FBI-style agency to tackle Mr Big criminals. The Government decided to
use this legislation to create a security cordon around Westminster and framed
the law in such a way that it would apply to individuals, and not just gatherings
of people.
This was done to gag Brian Haw, the man whose long-standing vigil in Parliament
Square has so irritated MPs. It soon transpired, however, that Mr Haw is the
only person in the land immune from its impact, since the courts ruled it
could not be made retrospective and, therefore, his protest continues.
However, because of the way the clause was drafted, anyone else who takes part
in an unauthorised demonstration within one kilometre of the Palace of Westminster
can now be prosecuted, even if they are simply standing on their own, neither
posing a threat nor inconveniencing anybody else.
The justification given for this extraordinary measure is to protect MPs from
possible threats to their security and to ensure they are able to go, unhindered,
about their daily business of passing increasingly outlandish legislation.
Yet the area covered by these restrictions is so extensive that a nurse protesting
against pay and conditions outside St Thomas Hospital on the other bank of the
Thames would be breaking the law unless authority had been obtained in advance
from the police.
The Act deliberately does not define what is meant by a demonstration - so
a judgment of whether one is taking place is left entirely to a constable.
In the case of Miss Evans, an officer decided that ringing a bell and reciting
a list of names constituted a protest for which an arrest could be made because
prior authority had not been sought.
How could Parliament pass such a law, when it is so patently inimical to the
freedom of speech that this country once considered fundamental? Why did MPs,
who are meant to be the custodians of our values, let it happen?
Although the general principle behind the new law was contained in the Serious
and Organised Crime and Police Act, the actual order that put it into effect
was passed using delegated powers by a special standing committee, which is
stacked in the Government's favour so that it can get its legislation through.
When the committee debated the measure in October, serious concerns were voiced
on all sides, but Paul Goggins, the Home Office minister, saw nothing wrong.
He said: "We value the importance of demonstrations. In a democracy, we
have a right to be able to demonstrate our opinions and our views… I therefore
make it absolutely plain that that is my belief and that is the view of the
Government, and nothing in the order changes any of that."
But it quite clearly does; and it is absurd that the police have been left
to define what is meant by a demonstration, a worrying trend that is to continue
when the Government gives the police the power to dispense summary justice in
certain circumstances.
Mr Goggins said constables would exercise their good sense and only acts that
a "reasonable person" would regard as a demonstration would fall foul
of the law. So, what definition could Mr Goggins offer? "The whole point
of a demonstration is to convey a point of view," he said. "Someone
demonstrates their point of view; that is a demonstration. It can be an individual
person who so arranges their demonstration that they make their point."
By this measure, any expression of an opinion close to the Houses of Parliament
- including, presumably, one laudatory of Tony Blair, not just critical - is
to be considered a demonstration and, therefore, an arrestable offence if prior
authority has not been obtained from the police.
Had Mrs Burrows made her remark in Parliament Square, rather than in a radio
studio, she might have received more than just an offensive ticking-off from
the local thought police.
Let us give the Government the benefit of the doubt and assume that the way
this law is being applied was not its intention. In which case, we look forward
to its immediate repeal.