Glenn Greenwald speaks to reporters in Hong Kong where he interviewed the
NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. (photo: Vincent Yu/AP)
By Simon Jenkins, Guardian UK
19 August 13
David
Miranda's detention shows that being the partner of the man who interviewed the
NSA whistleblower is enough to see you treated like a terrorist.
he detention at Heathrow on Sunday of the Brazilian
David Miranda is the sort of treatment western politicians love to deplore in
Putin's Russia or Ahmadinejad's Iran. His "offence" under the 2000
Terrorism Act was apparently to be the partner of a journalist, Glenn
Greenwald, who had reported for the Guardian on material released by the American
whistleblower, Edward Snowden. We must assume the Americans asked the British
government to nab him, shake him down and take his personal effects.
Miranda's phone and laptop were confiscated and he was
held incommunicado, without access to friends or lawyer, for the maximum nine
hours allowed under law. It is the airport equivalent of smashing into
someone's flat, rifling through their drawers and stealing papers and
documents. It is simple harassment and intimidation.
Greenwald himself is not known to have committed any
offence, unless journalism is now a "terrorist" occupation in the
eyes of British and American politicians. As for Miranda, his only offence
seems to have been to be part of his family. Harassing the family of those who
have upset authority is the most obscene form of state terrorism.
Last month, the British foreign secretary, William
Hague, airily excused the apparently illegal hoovering of internet traffic by
British and American spies on the grounds that "the innocent have nothing
to fear," the motto of police states down the ages. Hague's apologists
explained that he was a nice chap really, but that relations with America
trumped every libertarian card.
The hysteria of the "war on terror" is now
corrupting every area of democratic government. It extends from the arbitrary
selection of drone targets to the quasi-torture of suspects, the intrusion on
personal data and the harassing of journalists' families. The disregard of
statutory oversight - in Britain's case pathetically inadequate - is giving
western governments many of the characteristics of the enemies they profess to
oppose. How Putin must be rubbing his hands with glee.
The innocent have nothing to fear? They do if they
embarrass America and happen to visit British soil. The only land of the free
today in this matter is Brazil.
No comments:
Post a Comment