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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    EU must accept some erosion of civil rights-Britain

    because history shows you get massive amounts of liberty when you give up your freedom. we love you, but we just want to keep you safe, give us total control. oh my! all because of al-qaeda...al cia-da and al mi6-a are going to get you if you don't give up more rights.

    EU must accept some erosion of civil rights-Britain
    Aine Gallagher/Reuters | September 7 2005

    European Union states may have to accept an erosion of some civil liberties if their citizens are to be protected from organised crime and terrorism, EU president Britain told the European Parliament on Wednesday.

    Interior Minister Charles Clarke told EU lawmakers the right to life outweighed concerns over invasion of privacy and warned judges in European courts that if they failed to recognise this, the European Convention of Human Rights may need to be changed.

    "It seems to me we have to give the same rights to those humans who want to travel without being blown up on an underground train," Clarke earlier told reporters in London.

    "If the judges don't understand that message and don't take decisions which reflect where the people of the continent want to be, then the conclusion will be that politicians ... will be saying we have got to have a change in this regime."

    Clarke hosts a two-day meeting of justice and home affairs ministers from the 25 EU states on Thursday. They will discuss proposals to log and keep records of telephone calls, email and Internet use to help police track down terrorists.

    Ministers will also meet telecommunications industry and law enforcement officials to find a way to reconcile concerns about the cost of the proposed measures, which industry sources in Germany say could run into hundreds of millions of euro.

    Since al Qaeda militants attacked the United States in 2001, bombers have hit transport systems in two European capitals, killing 191 commuters in Madrid last year and 52 in London in July.

    "THE RIGHT NOT TO BE BLOWN UP"

    Clarke's tough stance on human rights drew criticism from the EU assembly's Liberal Democrats and Greens.

    "We do not agree ... that the human rights of the victims are more important than the human rights of the terrorists," said Graham Watson, British leader of the Liberal Democrats.

    "Human rights are indivisible. Freedom and security are not alternatives, they go hand-in-hand ... Much as the public may dislike it, suspected terrorists have rights."

    Watson qouted criticism by human rights lawyer Cherie Booth -- wife of British Prime Minister Tony Blair -- of Britain's hardline anti-terror measures.

    "To ... invoke a form of summary justice would in the words of the lawyer Cherie Booth cheapen our right to call ourselves a civilised society," he said.

    EU lawmakers, sticklers for civil rights, have strongly criticised Britain's drive for a quick deal among EU governments on the data retention plans because it would deprive them of a say on the measures, with some threatening a legal challenge.

    Earlier, Clarke told reporters in London there was an impression the EU was not doing enough to tackle some of its citizens' main concerns over serious organised crime, illegal immigration and terrorism.

    He said Britain's presidency would seek to redress the balance between an individual's rights and national security by giving authorities more access to information for intelligence.

    Law-enforcement agencies needed surveillance cameras, passports and visas should include internationally consistent biometric data, and phone companies should retain details of all calls made for a year, including unanswered ones.

    "I say the doubts about civil liberties of a person who's being photographed on a CCTV camera ... or a person who has made a phone call to another person are small civil liberties in comparison with the overall civil liberty of the right not to be blown up," he said.

    Clarke's comments reflect a frustration felt by the British government that the rights of suspects and defendants, backed by UK courts, were hindering the fight against terrorism and were taking precedence over the rights of ordinary citizens.

    "The judges both in my country and in the European Court need to understand that the people of Europe ... will not for a long time accept that action cannot be taken against people who are offering a real threat to our way of life because of human rights considerations," he said.
    pisshead Reviewed by pisshead on . EU must accept some erosion of civil rights-Britain because history shows you get massive amounts of liberty when you give up your freedom. we love you, but we just want to keep you safe, give us total control. oh my! all because of al-qaeda...al cia-da and al mi6-a are going to get you if you don't give up more rights. EU must accept some erosion of civil rights-Britain Aine Gallagher/Reuters | September 7 2005 European Union states may have to accept an erosion of some civil liberties if their citizens are to be protected from Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    EU must accept some erosion of civil rights-Britain

    britains no better than the u.s.a.


    american elite are just kissing cousins to the british elite.

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    EU must accept some erosion of civil rights-Britain

    Yeah, it kinda makes you wonder what that whole American Revolution thing was for. Instead of America being part of the British Empire, now Britain is part of the American Empire. No real big difference, really. Just looks like a bunch of slave-owning aristocrats didn't feel like paying their taxes.

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    EU must accept some erosion of civil rights-Britain

    [align=center]Clarke: Europe must trade civil liberties for security[/align]

    By Lucy Sherriff | Published Wednesday 7th September 2005 15:55 GMT British Home Secretary Charles Clarke has warned that European citizens will have to accept that civil liberties may have to be bartered away in exchange for protection from terrorists and organised criminals.

    Speaking at the European Parliament, he said that the European Convention on Human Rights might need to be changed if judges in European courts did not recognise that the right to life was more important that concerns about privacy.

    "If the judges don't understand that message and don't take decisions which reflect where the people of the continent want to be, then the conclusion will be that politicians...will be saying we have got to have a change in this regime," Clarke told reporters.

    Clarke will be hosting a two-day meeting with home affairs and justice ministers from across the EU.

    Proposed new data retention laws that would require communications providers to retain communications data are top of the agenda for the meeting, despite that fact that the proposals have been declared illegal by lawyers at the European Council and Commission.

    Clarke went on to say that Britain would use its presidency of the EU to give authorities more access to information. This, he said, would redress the balance between individual rights and national security.

    However, Clarke has acknowledged that the government has failed to make a case for the necessity of the proposals.

    Critics argue that the proposed laws would not solve any existing problems. They point out that not having the powers proposed in the data retention bill did not seem to hamper the investigation into the Madrid bombings, nor did it stop the police in the UK from tracking down and arresting in short order the four suspects in the 21 July attacks.

    The Home Secretary has also come under heavy fire from European politicians, particularly the Greens and Liberal Democrats.

    Graham Watson, leader of the Liberal Democrats told Reuters that the human rights of terrorists and victims of terrorist attacks should not be ranked differently: "Human rights are indivisible. Freedom and security are not alternatives, they go hand-in-hand. Much as the public may dislike it, suspected terrorists have rights." ®

  6.     
    #5
    Member

    EU must accept some erosion of civil rights-Britain

    I hope for more attacks in the UK: Backers of authoritarian regimes deserve to live in fear and suffering.

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    EU must accept some erosion of civil rights-Britain

    But the backers of the authoritarian régimes are not the ones who are being punished in these attacks. It's innocent civilians who are dying and who must live in fear and suffering, while the authoritarians live it up in their mansions with their bodyguards and armies to protect them. And they get stronger every time an attack occurs, since they can prey off the resulting fear to enact even more violations of human rights and civil liberties.

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