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Police State

Paul Darigan | 26.11.2007 18:04 | Analysis | Palestine | Social Struggles | London

A look at how increased security might effect day to day life in London

As talk continues in Britain about security at tube stations and public buildings, I can’t help but recall an eventful few weeks I once spent in Israel.
In order to protect British civilians, and in particular Londoners from the risk of suicide bombers surely there could be no better example to follow than that of a nation that has been dealing at first hand with suicide bombings against civilians for decades. The only question is how far are Londoners prepared to allow their civil liberties to be eroded in order to decrease the questionable risk of further suicide bombings?
In Israel, a passport is not something that is used to cross borders; it is an entry card to just about every office building in the nation. When you enter an office building in Israel, you are greeted by a security desk with a well armed security officer that demands you present your passport for inspection; you may or may not be subject to a metal screening and bag search.
Outside every shopping centre, train station, bus station, hotel, and the vast majority of bars, cafes and bistros and even some small newsagents there are further well armed security guards that run a handheld metal detector over your body, and ask you to open your bags (SLOWLY!!!) and let them look inside. They also may ask you for you passport details. If they see something that they do not like in your bag, the very least of your worries is that you are refused entry to whatever building it was you wanted to enter.
When you are asked for your passport, your passport details are recorded. The effect of this is that at any given time, it is likely that your whereabouts are on file. Your movements are being tracked by the security guards that pass the information to the security services. Your movements play a part in determining how the security services judge your risk to the population. I spent a day in a refugee camp near Bethlehem and in Bethlehem itself. My details were taken before I entered and when I came out, along with the obligatory searches. When the time came for me to fly back to London, I was singled out at the airport in Tel-Aviv and subjected to severely over the top searches, questioning and re-questioning. Clearly, my trip into the Palestinian territories had marked me as a more dangerous individual than any of my fellow passengers.
The best way to describe the security precautions is as a police state, and the best comparison in Britain today is the routine that you go through at any of the major airports. The question for the Londoner is do you want to go through airport like security when trying to get a pint in at your local, or to do your weekly shopping, or each morning as you board the tube to get to work? My answer is no, I’d sooner take my chances.

Paul Darigan
- e-mail: pdiddy212pauld@yahoo.com
- Homepage: http://www.pd-theeastlondonlocal.blogspot.com

Comments

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worst Nightmare

28.11.2007 00:04

Why imc haven't covered this seemingly final explosive attack on civil liberties in the UK is anyones guess?

Have a stiff one and read  http://www.magnacartaplus.org/news/index.php/?page_id=155

Should "the left" really be keeping this under the carpet?

The tories and lib dems of course said fuck all to challenge the nodding through of the serious crime act because they're both power grubbing scum but I thought I'd see this itemised on IMC.

The serious crime act 2007 will criminalise ALL EFFECTIVE CAMPAIGNS!!!!!!!!!

fern


A job

28.11.2007 18:44

In Holland there is already a special study next to theology, technology and so on, called 'public order and safety', having become more popular since the war on terror. Strategically more Arab men seem to sign in, so a lot of people are scared even more, at least annoyed, and political parties sprout warning against Islam.
The system makes a job of paranoia. And that is exactly the quality of a Police State. (People are becoming so kind everywhere. This is again an element of fascism.)
I used to be writing in an Internet cafe for a while where the police were frequently checking. Also the State was trying to control Internet traffic there, so I heard. This was in the Easy Internet cafe in Amsterdam, which was later closed.
I was writing some poetry at the time, and was confronted by the police every time, looking like a sensitive and not too dangerous, I guess. Later I proved to have sat next to the shoe bomb terrorist there who was caught on a plane in the USA. He had frequently sat next to me with a number of his friends but was never bothered. He was recognised on a video although. The police don't discriminate. They also have no psychological discrimination to sense who is a criminal or not, I can testify, or are playing and pretending to be in a movie.
I was there because at home I sensed a negative form of control from the neighbours.
It was there in a speculative mentality that goes through the wall.
If people are so cowardly stupid don't they attract an attack?

Mahatma KH