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8/12/2019 In the Streets of Londonistan
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In the Streets of LondonistanJohn Upton
Perhaps it is the rain. The gaggle of BNP protesters standing behind the crowd-control barrier on TottenhamHigh Road are very subdued. They are almost to a man they are all men overweight, shaven-headed and in
their late thirties (think Private Eye s Yobs). They stand rather meekly, as if trying hard to prove their
reasonableness. One of them, the oldest, holds a soaking piece of paper in his left hand on which is written a
speech, and in his right a megaphone to berate his audience of passers-by and journalists on the other side of
the road. This is a sovereign nation. These people are committing treason. Why are they not being arrested?
The megaphone squeals with feedback. A man is talking about them on his mobile phone; he laughs openly.
The small group of policemen posted outside the industrial estate where al-Muhajiroun are holding a press
conference, laugh too. The rain begins to fall even harder; on the kebab shops, on the hairdressers, on the BNP.
Fucking Pakis, one of the Yobs says. It is 11 September 2003.
I cross the road and ask a policeman where to go for the press briefing. He points in the direction of a
checkpoint set up by al-Muhajiroun.
Al-Muhajiroun are holding a conference to commemorate the 19 mujahideen who gave their lives for the cause
of jihad. I am frisked thoroughly, quickly and professionally by a mountain of a man dressed in a jellaba. He
tells me to hurry up the stairs the briefing may already have started.
Upstairs is a large room with whitewashed walls and grey carpet tiles. On one of the walls a banner proclaims
that there is no God but God. A panel of young, bearded men are sitting under the banner, facing a semi-
circular swathe of TV cameras on tripods and photographers jostling for position. Behind the cameras are two
rows of seats, some are occupied by journalists, others by members of al-Muhajiroun. From time to time the
journalists take calls on their mobiles or ask whispered questions of the young men next to them who are
nodding sagely at the words of their representatives.
It is easy for you to forget our history. Our history did not begin at 11 September. The USA ploughs money into
Israel. In 1998 Sudan was bombed. Atrocities have been committed against Muslims in Chechnya and
Afghanistan. Do you have a minute s silence for them? No. You remember only non -Muslims. The spokesmans
voice is distorted by the cheap amplification system. The press do not know what to make of these outspoken,confident fanatics. They are articulate and intelligent. Should they be treated as spokesmen for al-Qaida or as
the Islamic equivalent of Monty Python s Peoples Front of Judea?
We are here for the official opening of a conference not a celebration, they are keen to stress to
commemorate the glorious memory of the 19 men who killed themselves in flying four planes into the Twin
Towers, the Pentagon and the ground.
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Police officers, he says. Does it worry him that they are under surveillance? I am not paranoid. Whate ver
happens is in Allahs hands.
The two men sitting at the back of that hall are as visible as the secret war against Islamist terrorism gets. What
they are doing is typical of the hundreds of intelligence-gathering operations taking place in this country today.
This is the reality behind Tony Blairs evangelical declaration that we . . . here in Britain stand shoulder to
shoulder with our American friends in this hour of tragedy, and we, like them, will not rest until this evil is
driven from our world.
Shoulder to shoulder is not the physical position that springs to mind when one thinks of the current relation
between the United Kingdom and the US. Even in some government circles our relationship to Uncle Sam is
seen as that of rent boy rather than special friend. Unthinkingly muscular in intelligence and security matters,
the Government fails to acknowledge any distinction in the source and intensity of potential threats, and
increasingly identifies any disagreement with its worldview as evidence of the existence of the enemy. This has
resulted in 529 people being arrested under the anti-terror legislation since 11 September 2001, only 81 of
whom have gone on to be charged.
A black cloud of Islamist terror is said to be hanging over the Western world; and specific causes of violence and
discontent have disappeared into it. Instead, we promote the idea that all acts of political violence involving
Arabs or Muslims, if seen from the correct (that is to say US-inspired) angle, will fit together like a jigsaw to
form an image of Osama bin Laden.
I meet Mr X in a pub in Whitehall. He works for a branch of government which plays a role in counter-
terrorism. He has agreed to speak to me about the way the authorities see the new threat. Its been galling for
us, he says, that the Americans have discovered terrorism, when of course its been going on here for years. He
sees al- Qaida as an irrational force that must be combated, unlike a typical European terrorist organisation, the
Baader Meinhof, for example , who always had one eye on their press coverage and popularity ratings.
If this is a war, as the neocons and Blairite hawks would have us believe, it is being fought as much in the realm
of ideology and words as in the realm of explosive shoes and ricin laboratories. It is a propaganda war of
shadowy unprovables, in which the absence of an attack is claimed as a victory by the police and intelligence
services. A war in the course of which the security services will gain and our civil liberties suffer. A war in which
the dilemmas of counterterrorist policing have begun to express some of the most sensitive cultural
irresolutions in British society.
The police and Government want us to believe that our law enforcement agencies are as embattled as the
Spartans at Thermopylae, but as members of the Metropolitan Police Special Branch the two men at the al-
Muhajiroun briefing are part of an immensely strong, long established and well-resourced structure. They have
the use of the most draconian legislation in Europe and a wealth of experience in counter-insurgency policing.
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They and the five hundred or so others like them at work in London represent a formal tradition of secret
political policing which is almost as old as the institution of organised policing itself in Britain.
Modern political policing began on Saint Patricks Day 1883, when four CID men and eight uniformed officers
were picked to form the Special Irish Branch, in response to a Fenian bombing campaign on the mainland. In
1888, the word Irish was dropped from the title, and the unit widened its net to include anarchists, left-wing
revolutionaries and Indian nationalist sympathisers. During the First World War, Special Branch was closely
involved in countering German espionage and formed a relationship with MI5 which remains crucial to the
domestic intelligence network, with Special Branch frequently acting as the muscle on security service
operations, as well as pursuing subversives in its own right.
In 1919, under the Bolshevik-hating Sir Basil Thomson, Special Branch adopted the practice of intimidatory
attendance at left-wing gatherings. It comes as no surprise to learn that it was slower off the mark in
monitoring right-wing groups. By the outbreak of World War Two, however, these to0 had come under its gaze.
Before the wars end, the focus had reverted to the Red threat, and from the 1950s until the end of the Cold
War, the Branch spent a huge proportion of its resources and surveillance time monitoring such well-known
left-wing subversives as Jack Straw and Peter Mandelson, as well as CND and Vietnam War protesters.
More important, from a counter- terrorist perspective, it was deeply involved in the British states confrontation
with modern Irish Republican terrorism. Until 1992, the Met Special Branch had sole responsibility for
mainland intelligence on Irish terror (the RUC had its own infamous Special Branch to take care of activity in
Northern Ireland), but as the Cold War came to an end, MI5 lobbied successfully to take over this function from
the police.
By the 1990s, then, Special Branch found itself at a loss. The growth of Islamism, it seemed, was of no interest,
despite the granting of asylum in the aftermath of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan to several Islamist
militants, which helped London acquire a reputation as a safe-haven for extremists and the nickname
Londonistan. Instead, Special Branch lived up to the caricature of the British security establishment,
demonstrating a committed hatred of Micks and Reds and an inability to take Rag Heads at all seriously.
Everything changed after 11 September; in a remarkably short time, a new orthodoxy on intelligence and law
enforcement would be established for an apparently new world.
The Centre for the Study of Terrorism is housed in a whitewashed terraced house in St Andrews, a few doors
down from the main university buildings. Magnus Ranstorp, a Swede, is the Centres director. He regularly
briefs senior government and security officials overseas and in the UK among them, Assistant Commissioner
David Veness, head of Specialist Operations for the Metropolitan Police, the officer in overall operational
charge of countering terror in the United Kingdom.
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Dr Ranstorp is an expert on Hizbollah, and books such as Palestinian Hamas , Defiant Patriot , The Kidnap
Business and the Hostage Rescue Manual cover three walls of his study. Resting on the mantelpiece above a
gas fire is an enlarged, slightly blurred photograph of a group of Indian or maybe Sri Lankan soldiers, handguns
to the ready, holding a leopard on a chain. It is a military-macho moment that looks entirely sinister. A
photograph of a group of American soldiers is propped against a bookshelf. Dressed in riot gear and bunchedtogether, they are hugging the wall of a mudbrick house ready to kick in the door. On the small coffee table next
to my seat is a draft of an article entitled: Should Hizbollah be next?
With something of the air of the matre- penseur, Dr Ranstorp pulls on a cigarette. Surveillance in the UK of
Islamists was at best patchy, he tells me. Pre 9/11, most requests for intelligence came from other governments
who wanted to monitor their own subversives and, like many governments, the UK doesnt give up its
intelligence easily. France made specific requests about a numbe r of Algerians in exile in London and was
refused help by UK law enforcement agencies. Ranstorp finds this especially disturbing, since he believes that
France and the UK, of all European countries, were and are at the highest risk of terrorist attack. Th is
reluctance to assist was combined with a disproportionate focus on problems relating to Northern Ireland and
an almost absolute failure to recruit individuals to tap into the Islamists inner node.
Dr Ranstorp provides an insight into the view of al-Qaida held by the police and the security services, and helps
to make sense of Special Branchs decision to arrest hundreds of Muslims around the country.
Al-Qaida is an organisation of some sort. The way recruitment generally works is that certain mosques are
exploited by "talent spotters who pick out potential recruits on the basis of two criteria: their perceived level of
commitment to the Islamist cause and their skill sets and psychological make-up. To acclimatise the recruits
they use propaganda material from the Algerian and Chechen struggles and invite veterans of various conflictsto speak about the necessity of jihad.
Dr Ranstorp goes on to explain the four-stage process by which al- Qaidas jihadists are formed. First, a recruit
undergoes spiritual preparation; then he is provided with basic military and survival skills. Following this, it is
his duty to place himself at the fault-lines between Islam and the West; the armed struggle comes last.
The security service seems to base its strategy on Dr Ranstorps analysis. As they see it, allegiance to al -Qaida is
tested at a low but apparently effective level by having a recruit do something as straightforward as attend early
morning prayers for a sustained period. A series of tests of increasing intensity storing documents, providing
accommodation, concealing or smuggling weaponry forge psychological commitment. With a view of terror
so closely bound up with the practice of Islam, it isnt difficult to see the potential for misinterpretation. Not
only is any Muslim who commits an ordinary crime inevitably a potential terrorist in the eyes of Special Branch,
but any devout Muslim may also come under suspicion.
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The authorities believe that there is an extremely close relationship between conventional crime and terrorism,
which is thought to depend on identity theft, and credit card and bank fraud. Dr Ranstorp confirms this: The
arrest of al-Qaida suspects has led to the discovery of multiple identities which are extremely difficult to trace. A
massive intelligence operation is involved in which ninety countries are co- operating. Dr Ranstorp and Mr X
agree: there is a definite connection between Blunketts identity -card scheme and counter-terrorism.
Like the US neocons, Dr Ranstorp emphasises the Manichean nature of the struggle, a point of view that has
many practical advantages, not least in giving Western law enforcement and military organisations a larger-
than-life enemy at which to tilt. Al-Qaida is now seen as a strategic innovator of Clausewitzian skill. According
to the security services, it is fighting fourth-generation warfare i.e. attempting to destroy the state from
within.
I ask Dr Ranstorp about the methods of attack that might be used. The danger is weapons not so much of mass
destructio n as of mass disruption, he replies. In the Governments eyes, the use of chemical weapons is a case
of when and not if. The authorities, it appears, are not unduly worried about high numbers of casualties in the
event of a suicide attack: what they fea r is the psychological ripple effect. If a plane were to be brought down
from outside, say, by a rocket-propelled grenade fired as the plane is taking off or landing, Dr Ranstorp believes
the psychological effects would be immense and, he adds, an attack of this type may well occur in Europe. In
contingency planning, therefore, addressing the nation immediately and effectively through television, radio
and the Internet is no less important than the mitigation of physical effects.
Magnus Ranstorp and others like him are well known beyond the law enforcement community. I meet Azzam
Tamimi at his office in Cricklewood. Dr Tamimi, a Palestinian, is the director of the Institute of Islamic Political
Thought, the author of several books on politics and Islam, and a commentator on Middle Eastern and Arabicaffairs. Something many Muslims believe, he tells me, is that politicians always want to make out that there is
something going on. (And not just Muslims: the former head of the Joint Intelligence Comm ittee, Sir Rodric
Braithwaite, has also spoken of overselling.) The threat of terror is extremely exaggerated, Tamimi continues.
The police have been trying hard to build bridges with the various communities in the light of 11 September but
the politicians make their job a lot more difficult. They put pressure on them because they want something and
the police find something else in reality. Take Jack Straw and Tony Blair. They have been very interested in
cracking down on Palestinian activism in this country. As far as the security services are concerned, there is
nothing wrong with the Palestinians here. The Charity Commissioners came under enormous pressure to close
down Interpal, a Palestinian charity, but after a full investigation, it was declared entirely above board.
I ask Dr Tamimi about the idea of al- Qaida held by the law enforcement agencies. Al -Qaida has become the
emblem for something which is so undefined: who is al-Qaida? And what does al-Qaida consist of? There is an
entire industry th ere. He is indignant. Such and such an operation has "the hallmarks of al -Qaida". They talk
of operations in Iraq, for instance. They know nothing about who is doing this, how it is conducted.
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Dr Tamimis view that the US and Israel are manipulating politicians in this country is shared by many of
the Muslims I speak to. He differs from most of them in believing that the police are to a large extent the
victims of a confidence trick, rather than being in on the whole thing from the start. Politician s and writers,
whether in academia or the media, contribute to the general state of confusion to which the police may be
victim.
Dr Tamimi is troubled, too, by the sensationalism that accompanies anti -terror policing. Details are leaked to
the media when individuals are detained but the same individuals are released without anybody knowing. His
invitation to a Foreign Office conference has been withdrawn: Tamimi understands that this was because he
has broadcast on al- Jazeera. They hate it that the Arab s have a TV station that is free, where you can express
yourself freely.
After I met Azzam Tamimi, Louise Ellman, the Labour MP for Liverpool Riverside, made a speech in
Parliament accusing him of anti-semitism, of links with Hamas and of being a supporter of terrorism in general.
I got in touch with Tamimi to ask him what he made of her remarks. He accepted that he has informal links
with Hamas while denying, predictably enough, the charge of anti-semitism, and saying that the actions of
people such as Ellman are attempts to silence anyone sympathetic to the Palestinian cause.
We are told that we face a complex, overwhelming threat, yet we are given the crudest means of deciphering our
predicament: caricatures of Saddam, of bin Laden, of suicide bombers and evil imams. These are the cartoon
ogres in whose shadows we are encouraged to unite. But the spirit of the Blitz engenders acquiescence in the
machinations of a manipulative state as well as the courage to stand up to ogres.
Tim Newburn, the director of the Mannheim Centre for the study of criminology at the London School ofEconomics, wonders how different the new threats are from those we faced before. I do think there is an issue
about the extent to which we assume the world has changed. Im not convi nced by the arguments that we now
face something that we might regard as super-terrorism with a reach and a power and a likelihood of inflicting
damage that is completely different from the things we faced before 11 September. Neither do I agree with the
even more dystopian picture of entire nation states now under threat from the new terrorist activities. One of
the reasons I feel sceptical about those arguments, apart from the lack of evidence, is the relatively recent
history of terrorism. What tends to happen is that we are presented with the idea that we face a new and terrible
threat, which necessitates the introduction of emergency powers and the expenditure of vast amounts of
money, and then in time we face a normalisation of those powers.
This process of normalisation, which concentrates power in the hands of law enforcement agencies, has several
distinct features. First, a law introduced as a temporary measure is transformed in due course into a permanent
piece of legislation. Second, a symbiotic relationship develops between the ordinary criminal law and emerging
legislation as elements of one are incorporated into the other and the effect is a general tightening up of the
statutory criminal law. Finally, emergency powers are used to deal with ordinary crime.
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Unlike Tamimi, Newburn believes that the police services themselves fuel the process. They are a significant
player in what we always see under these kinds of circumstance, which is the emergence of a campaign for new
legislative powers and new resources. However, I would have to say that they are usually pushing at a fairly
open door. What is worrying is the absence of any effective opposition to these forms of legislation, even,
spectacularly, in the case of New Labour. There are any number of politicians who before 1997 would have beenamong the most vocal critics of emergency legislation had it been introduced by a Tory Government, but who
saw no dangers in the terrorist legislation introduced post 11 September.
The passage of the Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 marks a new low for repressive legislation. The
bill was published on 12 November 2001 and the Act was made law with great haste on 14 December 2001,
prompting a number of observers to wonder whether at least some of its provisions were not simply lifted pre-
prepared from the shelf where they had been waiting for some time.
The notion of anti-terrorism legislation is founded on a distortion of the criminal law. It makes a distinction
between motives Peter Sutcliffe, the killer of at least 13 people, is not a terrorist; a member of the IRA who
kills two is when the motive for a crime normally should not make any difference to the way its dealt with. A
murder is no less heinous if committed for sexual gratification than for political ends. Nevertheless, the state
has for a long time sought to separate politically motivated crimes from ordinary offences, through the
establishment of a body of anti-terror laws.
This Government has added a further dimension to the UKs ant i-terror legislation. Instead of using the
criminal law as its basis, it has arrived at the solution of grafting anti-terrorist provisions onto immigration law.
This means that there is no duty of disclosure, no legal aid available to the accused and none of the safeguards
provided by the Police and Criminal Evidence Act apply. The checks to the power of the state in the form of dueprocess, available in the criminal justice system, weakened though they might be in the case of terrorist
legislation, do not exist at all under immigration law.
The Immigration Act of 1971 allowed for the deportation of foreign nationals if they were suspected of
endangering national security or committing serious criminal offences. During the 1980s, judges became less
deferential to the executive thanks to the new process of Judicial Review which allowed challenges to a
Secretary of States decisions. This applied to immigration cases as to other areas of public law. The exceptions
were cases which involved issues of national security. If these dreaded words were cited as a reason for
deportation, the courts invariably deferred to the wishes of the Home Secretary.
In response to criticism that there was no check on executive power in the majority of immigration cases,
tribunals were set up in the late 1970s and early 1980s. In national security cases, however, an immigrant could
still be deported solely on the basis of a Home Secretarys certificate. There was no right of appeal: the single
check to the Home Secretarys actions were the deliberations of the three wise men, a panel who merely
examined the papers in a particular case without hearing any testimony from witnesses.
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Then in 1996 came the Chahal case, a particularly worrying one for immigrants who had resided in the UK for a
long period of time without having citizenship. Karamjit Singh Chahal was a Sikh separatist suspected of
involvement in a conspiracy to assassinate Rhajiv Gandhi during an official visit to the UK and threatened with
deportation. His application to remain in this country failed at every stage because of judicial deference to the
will of the executive. Chahal was detained for about a year as his case worked its way through the JudicialReview procedures. Eventually, it was heard in the European Court of Human Rights, where the argument was
made on his behalf that there was a real risk of his suffering inhumane and degrading treatment were he to
return to India. In these circumstances, deportation by the UK would have been in contravention of Article 3 of
the European Convention on Human Rights. It was also argued that the British Government was in breach of
Article 5 regarding his continued detention. The Court found in favour of Chahal.
The Special Immigration Appeals Commission Act (1997) was introduced in response. Initiated under the
Tories but enacted under New Labour, it purported to strike a balance between national security and natural
justice in cases such as Chahals, and a procedural compromise was reached which involved the setting up of
special commissions that sat partly in secret and partly in open session. The in camera sessions were intended
as an opportunity for the intelligence services and Special Branch to put their case. Not only are the subject of
the case and his lawyers not allow ed access to the information held about him, they arent allowed to test the
evidence or match its claims against his own experience. Instead, special advocates are appointed by the
Attorney General. A special advocate can test the secret evidence to a limited extent but he cannot cross-
examine intelligence officers in any meaningful way and he has no instructions from a client or any
communication with him. But then the procedure has only one goal: deportation.
When the system was being designed, it was considered important that liberal lawyers be included as special
advocates. This has led to two problems. First, the lawyers have been seduced by the glamour of the intelligence world, and then, more important, because they have been privy to the closed workings of that world, they are no
longer allowed to act for clients. So, in a double whammy, the best barristers have cosied up to the
establishment and are not available to represent the individual against the state.
It is a matter of perennial embarrassment to the Foreign Office that people from Arab countries cant be booted
out, Shami Chakrabarti, the director of Liberty, says. This is because of Article 3. These countries Egypt,
Saudi Arabia lobby the Foreign Office for the return of their nationals. Instead of protesting about the
countries human rights records, the Foreign Office has responded with weasel words because these are
countries they are trying to do business with often arms business. If these foreign nationals were sent back totheir country they would face torture and death. This conundrum for the Home Office and Foreign Office came
to be known as the Chahal problem.
Then came 11 September and the Governments immediate legislative response. There were scare stories about
Britain withdrawing from its commitments under the Human Rights Act. This didnt happen. Instead, 11
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A cross-party committee of Privy Counsellors has produced a report which heavily criticises this part of the Act.
Bizarrely, the measures they suggest as alternatives would strengthen the repressive power of the state. In place
of indefinite detention, the report agrees with the need for a separate body of counter-terrorist legislation
which would inevitably lead to the creation of specialist terror tribunals and the development of a second strand
of quasi-criminal law, again without the protections afforded to the ordinary criminal defendant.
The committee has also recommended that the ban on the use of intercepted communications as evidence in
court be lifted, to make it possible to prosecute more terrorists, and called on the Government to examine
whether there is scope for more intensive surveillance to prevent and disrupt terrorism. What the Government
would gain from having access to yet more intrusive powers is far from clear apart of course from the chance
of exercising them over the whole population, suspected terrorists or not.
The Governments response to the committees criticism has merely been to repeat that the internment of
foreign nationals is still the best available solution to our predicament, that we are indeed in a state of
emergency and that Parliament will debate the renewal of the powers in March. Revealingly, one of the
Governments private motives for wishing to retain the power of detention is that it doesnt want to be seen by
the Americans as going soft on terror by releasing Islamists back into the community.
Mr X is sanguine about the Pri vy Counsellors disapproval. You probably think, he tells me, that this is all a
great conspiracy to imprison all the Governments enemies, but you are wrong. This Government couldnt be
more sensitive about how it is perceived. It is very conscious tha t it cant allow terror to change our way of life
too much. He isnt very convincing. A senior security adviser to the Government sums up the situation more
plausibly: These suspects are disappearing into a black hole with no way of proving their innocence.
With this Act, the Civil Contingencies Bill and the Criminal Justice Bill, the Home Office has, in a very short
space of time, produced a compendium of legislation to keep the whole population well and truly in order.
The new Civil Contingencies Bill, which would give a government authority to act in the face of terrorist threat
or action, replaces powers contained in the Emergency Powers Act 1920, the 1948 Civil Defence Act and the
Civil Protection in Peacetime Act 1986. It defines an emergency as an event or situation which threatens
serious damage to human welfare, the environment or the security of the UK or a part or region. The state of
emergency is to be announced, without initial reference to Parliament, by the Queen making an Order in
Council or by declaration of a senior minister.
The regulations set down by the Bill contain an awesomely wide range of activities which it would be in the
states power to control. By Clause 21, a government may provide for or enable the requisition or destruc tion of
property (with or without compensation); the prohibition or requirement of movement to or from a specified
place; the prohibition of assemblies of specified kinds at specified places or at specified times; the prohibition of
travel at specified tim es; and last but not least, the prohibition of other specified activities.
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Every British Government since the late 1960s has insisted that policing in Northern Ireland was more or less
the same as anywhere else with certain adjustments. Among the adjustments were internment without trial,
the abolition of trial by jury, the progressive elimination of common law safeguards, the use of brutal methods
of interrogation, and the abuse of powers of arrest, and of stop and search.
Behind the attempt to reposition the police in Northern Ireland in the post conflict market (the RUC having
been given a George Cross before being dragged kicking and screaming to the Orange Lodge retirement home)
lies a British law enforcement agencys atrocious record of human rights abuses, subversion of the law and even
murder.
Arani & Co, Solicitors occupies three or four rooms on the first floor above some shops on South Road in
Southall, a main street lined with Indian restaurants, travel shops, supermarkets and the first pub in England to
accept rupees in payment for beer. Muddassar Arani, a woman in her thirties, is the sole proprietor. Her clients
include a number of people who have been detained or arrested under the new Terrorism Acts. We sit either
side of a huge wooden desk covered in files and Dictaphone tapes. The office is dingy and lit by fluorescent
strips. Behind the desk hangs Aranis practising certificate from the Law Society. Further along the wall hangs
an inscription from the Koran. From outside comes the noise of cars splashing through puddles. Arani talks
quickly, anxious not to miss details, concerned to get her points across.
Mr A, arrested under the Terrorism Act, asked to speak to Arani, in order to instruct her as his solicitor. She
didnt hear from him but news that he had been arrested got out and someone els e contacted Arani asking her
to represent him. Arani phoned the police station repeatedly and was told Mr A did not want her to represent
him. At the end she was told that he had instructed another lawyer. When Mr A was released without charge, he
told her that he had not only given her card to the Special Branch officer interviewing him but had insisted thathe wanted her to represent him. Special Branch ordered him to select one of the duty solicitors.
Mr B was in a car which was pulled over by the police. He had committed a traffic offence and arrangements
had to be made for his car to be collected while he was taken to the police station. A group of young Muslim
men, friends and relatives of his, came to drive it away. During the short journey, they were stopped by armed
police officers who held guns to their heads. Fucking Pakis, if you look at me, Ill blow your heads off, one of
the officers said. The group were taken to the police station, detained for 36 hours, then released without
charge. None of them was interviewed. The following day a member of the group was taking his child to the
shops in the car. Once again, he was surrounded by armed police officers and once again subjected to racial
abuse. It turned out thered been a mistake. The police h ad forgotten to remove the vehicle registration from a
database of suspect cars.
Mr C was one of four men making their way to the mosque for Friday prayers. They were surrounded by armed
police and ordered not to move. Police dogs brought the men to the floor. Mr C was bitten on the leg. Eventually
the dogs were ordered off and the men were taken to the police station. No immediate medical attention was
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given to Mr C and he had to ask for an antiseptic to clean his own wound. Later a police doctor examined him
and he was taken to hospital, where his wound was stitched. Then he was taken back to the station, detained in
police custody with the others for 36 hours and released without charge.
Mr D, who is involved in charity work with orphaned children, was arrested and accused of assisting in the
financing of terrorism. After six days in custody, he was released without charge. Police officers then called
round to his home on the pretext of returning his passport. They told him they knew he was innocent and asked
him to become an informant.
Arani herself has been accused of passing on to terrorists material disclosed to her in the course of her work. On
one occasion, Special Branch officers requested a meeting to obtain information from her on her clients. Arani
refused to discuss their cases: Nothing came of the meeting. It seemed more as if it was an assessment of me.
She is aware that Special Branch has been asking questions about her. I think the fact that MI5 officers have
actually gone into the community and asked about me indicates they have opened a file, which means God
knows why they regard me as a threat. If my phones are bugged and Im being watched, theyre going to have
a very sad time.
Her most depressing recollection is of her client Sulayman Zain-ul-Abidin, a Muslim convert. Formerly
involved in radical black politics, he became a committed follower of Islam and a strong supporter of the
Palestinian cause. He had been working as a chef for many years but by the 1990s he had also set up a security
firm, with a website offering the chance to go on the ultimate jihad challenge, a self -defence training course in
America. The offer was only ever taken up by one person, a security guard from Sainsburys. Sulayman
attracted the attention of Special Branch and MI5, who made several attempts to recruit him as an agent. After
11 September the Evening Standard ran a story about the website claiming that Sulayman was sendingMuslims to train in Afghanistan. The Labour MP for Hendon, Andrew Dismore, raised the matter in
Parliament. Ten days after the newspaper article was published, Sulayman became the first Muslim to be
arrested and detained under the Terrorism Act 2000. He was charged with inviting another to receive weapons
training and possessing a firearm without a firearm certificate. On 9 August 2002, after a five-week trial at the
Old Bailey, Sulayman was acquitted. Arani found that in the early stages of the proceedings, the media had
more details about the case than she had.
The story has a ble ak postscript. Sulayman lost the council house where hed been living with his wife for 15
years and ended up in bed and breakfast accommodation, the publicity surrounding his trial ensuring that he
couldnt find a job. In November, he was admitted to hosp ital for treatment to an ulcer on the knee. In hospital
he caught an infection, and on 22 December 2002 he died.
When Sulayman was acquitted, Arani says, I asked him whether he wanted to make a statement, but he
blamed the press for putting him inside a nd wouldnt speak to them. Id like a curry, he said. Treat me to a
curry.
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From what Arani tells me it seems that many people are approached by Special Branch and MI5 to work as
agents and informers in the Muslim community. In one case, a man had to resort to the threat of an injunction
to thwart an intelligence officers zealous attempts to woo him.
Informants are the life-blood of secret police work. The unique selling point of the Branch is its knowledge of
local communities and its ability to infilt rate them in a way that MI5 cant, using its closeness to conventional
policing as cover. But identifying potential recruits is one thing: they still have to be persuaded to take on the
role, and in the Muslim community the old ways have backfired.
Anas Al tikriti, spokesman for the Muslim Association of Britain, has witnessed the effects of Special Branchs
clumsy approaches. By the end of the 1990s our Islamic centres and mosques had matured enough to come out
of their ghetto-like neighbourhoods. But then, all of a sudden, the community was targeted by sections of the
security services and now again there is a feeling that you have to stick together. If you tell on a member of the
community, you are joining forces with the intelligence services, with the BNP even. Since 11 September Special
Branch have been quite open about wanting people to talk to them there have even been concerted attempts
to recruit people who are leaders of prayers. But they disregarded a very important cultural notion. To spy is to
commit a serious breach of the fundamentals of Islam. Spying is condemned by the Koran and there is no room
for interpretation.
When it was discovered that Richard Reid, the shoe bomber, was a British Muslim, more than a hundred
mosques and Islamic centr es were visited by the police. Do you have any relations with the Taliban? was one
opening gambit used to win over law-abiding Muslims to the cause of the secret state. Another was to assert
that the interviewees name had been found in the caves of Tora Bora. This drive for information, Altikriti
continues, has been confined to Muslims, adding to the feeling that we mustnt co -operate. To a large extentthe police were left none the wiser because very few people if any came forward with information. Maybe in the
meantime we have destroyed something essential to our security, and that is confidence between the police and
the community. Unless the Government is brave and says this is silly, these people have been living among us
for donkeys years, they are well behaved, they look after themselves, they live in strong family units he
breaks off. Something that happened in America ought not to change that perception. Unless the Government
does something, I can see the potential for a clash of some sort and that frightens me because it will not be in
anyones best interests.
Its hard to imagine white citizens of the UK mainland being treated in this way. One sometimes gets the sense
that the police are experiencing a liberation. For the first time in a long while, they are spearheading a cause
behind which their core constituency of conservative whites can unite without shame and which requires the
robust policing methods that rank and file coppers long to employ. Weve got the powers, a WPC tells me.
Maybe we will be allowed to use them this time. Another constable echoes her remarks: Ive been trained to
use a shield. Ive been trained to enter houses. We should be using our powers.
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The danger is not only that resentment will be created where none existed before but that intelligence will cease
to flow even when there is a genuine threat. Mr X agrees. The real difficulty in all of this, he says, is a lack of
bright coppers. Those we have got are stretched far too thinly. Special Branch and MI5 have realised that they
have no chance of successfully inserting agents into the close-knit Muslim community and instead have
concentrated on attempting to turn some of its members.
Of course were also employing electronic signals and visual intelligence. Its just that at the present time, we
dont have the software to cope with the amount of hits were receiving from intercepted cellphone calls. Were
having to resort to cruder methods. Mr X says that colleagues of his in the field have been surprise d at how
quickly suspected members of al-Qaida have talked, once separated from their comrades. Mr X does not say
what the cruder methods are.
Past the Arsenal stadium, which seems to rise from out of the gardens of the terraced houses that surround it,
past the Christian bookshop, past the Jewish charity headquarters and the shop selling magic African charms.
On into Little Algiers, that section of the Blackstock Road around which the first generation of Algerian
immigrants in London have congregated. It is late afternoon in November 2003, during Ramadan, and the
salons de th and patisseries are beginning to lift their shutters and pull out their awnings, ready for their
customers to come when it is time to break fast.
The police are scared of the Algerians, and since 11 September they have been more heedful of French warnings.
Given the size of the community under ten thousand a disproportionate number have been questioned or
arrested in relation to terrorist offences. And it isnt only the police: o ther Muslim groups I have talked to speak
of them as hot -headed or radicalised in their Islamic belief.
Im to meet M. in one of the cafs along the main street. Its interior is painted in the fiery reds and sun -burst
oranges of Oran and the Algiers they have left behind. The man behind the counter points M. out, one in a long
row of well-groomed young men with short, dark hair slicked back and a penchant for leather jackets and duffle
coats. Ra plays from a tape recorder. We take a walk along the Blackstock Road, which, as the day darkens,
increasingly takes on the atmosphere of the kasbah.
Our community, M. says, is very grateful to the British. British men shake hands with us. Not like the French.
We are a first-generation community and we have not had time to learn the ways like the Pakistanis and
Indians have. But in time we will lay down our own roots here. M. talks of his children attending London
schools and the efforts of the Algerians to participate in the life of the wider community. We are greeted by
some of the men standing in the doorways as we pass. I ask M. about the impact on the Algerian community of
11 September.
Of course we are visited by Special Branch, many of us. They come along with long lists of names, asking who
we know, to identify people. A young boy comes roaring past and bursts into song:
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Je vais, je vais, je vais la guerre
Je vais, je vais, je vais la guerre
O vas-tu, Nicole, avec le grand chien?
There is a ripple of applause and laughter as he ducks into one of the shops.
Things are not so good, M. continues, when the police raid the tea -shops and the cafs. They perform
searches. Sometimes they are armed. Its not necessary to do this. We want to be here. And then M. shows me a
curious sight.
In a residential side-street, dark except for the pools of light cast by street lamps, clusters of men loiter on the
pavement and in the driveways of the houses. Some wander up and down with their arms linked, turning silver
as they pass under a street light, others smoke. These are Algerians who do not want to be monitored by theCCTV cameras that have been installed on the main road.
They have been told by the police that it is for their protection. Its not like in Algeria where the police are
different. I and others have tried to explain this. M. believes in British fair play, but his compatriots,
promenading much to the annoyance of several of the streets residents, may have a point. In securing the
conviction of seven men for plots to bomb electricity sub-stations in London in 1997, the police had 20,000
hours of CCTV footage to provide as evidence tens of thousands of surveillance hours had also been logged.
There are some of course who cause trouble, M. says, and he gesticulates down the street. They are to be
found. But if you listen to the Turkish shopkeepers, as the media do, then we are responsible for everything.
We have walked to the outer limits of Little Algiers, and we part in front of a tiny fish and chip shop whose
fluorescent light projects a dirty yellow stain onto the pavement at our feet. Two men watch us idly through the
window of the shop, elbows propped on the counter, nighthawks of Finsbury Park.
Lack of co-ordination between the French and the British, highlighted by the British refusal to provide
information about Algerians in the 1990s, has persuaded the police that one of the main difficulties they have in
their dealings with Islamist- inspired super -terror is that, as never before, international issues are to be played
out on the beat of British bobbies rather than in far-flung corners of the globe. Think of the difficulties
constabularies have in talking to one another across county boundaries on relatively minor matters, goes theargument. What hope have they of successfully linking up with Interpol or the FBI?
Special Branch has the matter in hand, as befits an organisation that has just appointed its first woman chief
and has a higher proportion of graduates and foreign-language speakers than any other section of the police. A
review of the organisation carried out by Her Majestys Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) gives a rare
insight into the Branchs workings and structure, recognises certain failings in the present regime and provides
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a solution, one with which Special Branch concurs: to make our secret police more autonomous and more
powerful than ever before.
The report, entitled A Need to Know , begins by stressing the vital importance of extending the reach of the
national security agencies by further utilising the close links between the local police and the communities in
which they work . . . This two-way linkage, or "golden thread", is notably absent from the national security
structures of some countries, the reports writer adds, unable to resist a measure of jingoism what self-
respecting copper could? The rosy glow doesnt bode well. It was therefore pleasing, the report continues, to
find that much of the mystique surrounding the work of Special Branch is already dissipating in a climate of
greater openness genera ted by the intelligence and security agencies themselves. On the contrary, Id say: the
Branchs stonewalling of my inquiries was surpassed only by that of Gareth Peirce, the defence solicitor for
several terrorist suspects.
The reports underlying message is that, to a large extent, Special Branch is already a national police force. The
Metropolitan Police has the largest Special Branch under the direction of a commander . . . The size of the
Branch permits a high degree of autonomy and specialisation and a full range of dedicated operational
resources; it also reflects MPSBs major commitment to full -time VIP protection. In other words, the Met
Special Branch has the capacity to function independently and, some would say, has many of the characteristics
of a self- governing institution. In addition to the more traditional territorially based roles of Special Branch,
the report continues, the MPSB also carries a unique range of national responsibilities which includes the
training, alongside its sister organisation MI5, of all the other Special Branches.
These are the first clear indications of the reports ultimate aim. HMIC, we are told, identified a pressing need
to rationalise Special Branch resources on a basis that provides greater evenness within each region andperhaps also nationally. To reinforce the message, a number of criticisms are made of the way things are
currently organised: provincial Special Branches lack a clear sense of their role, have excessively complex
structures and receive arbitrary levels of funding. Some Special Branches have inadequate resources to carry
out their national duties and Special Branch as a whole lacks a nationwide, co-ordinated IT system.
HMIC explicitly considered the creation of a national secret police. Operationally, this was thought to be the
optimum solution, but the report doesnt recommend it on the grounds that the country, and the rest of the
police, would not yet find it acceptable. Instead, HMIC essentially recommends the creation of a national
organisation by stealth. Regional Special Branches would be set up under regional directors with command
being taken away from individual constabularies. This reorganisation would be combined with the formal
establishment of a post of national co-ordinator of Special Branch at deputy chief constable level.
Last year, in a special feature in the Guardian , Nick Davies, writing on the UKs response to terror, drew
attention to the faults listed in the report and proposed the creation of an overarching national security agency.
The article seemed to accept at face value all the complaints the police make about the uselessness of other
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agencies Customs, the National Criminal Intelligence Service and the National Crime Squad involved in
fighting terror and ente rtained without demur the officers continual pleas for more power, more money. Davies
doesnt consider the possibility that more centralised powers in the hands of a monolithic, national secret police
force might be a bad thing. The questions he asks are those that Special Branch wants asked. Why do we divide
the investigation of serious crime from counter-terrorism; how can we create powerful national agencies . . . who is going to devise a central strategy; and who will enforce it? We might have expect ed a measure of
scepticism: instead, we find meek acceptance. To create a vast secret organisation combining the functions of
Special Branch and MI5 at the very least makes hostages to fortune of our civil liberties.
In reality, Special Branch is well on the way to becoming a national police force even without the
implementation of the reports recommendations. The events of 11 September have spawned a number of
committees whose exact remit, lines of command and influence are impossible to discern from the outside: how
many people have heard of the National Counter-Terrorism and Security Office (NaCTSO) or the even more
obscure PICTU (Police International Counter-Terrorist Unit), which contains members of the security services,
and which operates through Special Branch and its allied anti-terrorist branch? These organisations, with a
distinct deficit in accountability, are in charge of the countrys law enforcement response to the perceived
terrorist threat.
So, Special Branch has never been in such healthy shape. It has staged a remarkable recovery from its
immediate post Cold War days. Statewatch, the European human rights organisation, has compiled its own
report, which shows that over the UK as a whole, the Branch is twice the size it was in the early 1990s. In an
atmosphere of unquantifiable threat Special Branch prospers.
The long-term project of creating an overarching security framework advances quietly, despite the fact that inthe one crucial task they have recently been given the penetration of the Muslim community Special Branch
and the intelligence services have failed adequately to deliver. This has led to the opening of a second front: an
invitation to moderate Muslims to enlist in the multicultural cause a favourite New Labour theme. To some
Muslims, this tactic carrot to the stick of armed raids and internment is infinitely more dangerous than the
more obvious threat of Heckler and Koch-toting policemen.
Superficially concerned with persuading the Muslim community that no one system of thought has primacy in
the UK, this is a deliberate attempt to promote the values of the Western liberal state. But at this level of law
enforcement as social policy, the UK is at a disadvantage. In France, where the separation of religion and the
state is a constitutional principle, a ban against the wearing of the hijab in schools is being enforced with
vigour. In the UK, a monarch who is head of both church and state and Anglican bishops sitting in the House of
Lords stand in the way of an appeal to secularism.
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These conceptual confusions are echoed in the implementation of the policy. The chief bearers of the good news
of multicultural relativism to Muslim communities are, incredibly, the police. They have been given the task of
treading softly in this highly sensitive area, while at the same time kicking in doors and searching for ricin.
As I stand in the reception area of New Scotland Yard, waiting to be collected by a press officer, I look round the
foyer. It is full of visitors reading the Mets in -house magazine and studying the Roll of Honour, a list of police
officers who have died in the course of duty. Wandering round, I notice among the various plaques and
memorabilia a framed NYPD badge, given to the Met as an expression of solidarity after 11 September by the
widow of the policeman who wore it.
Superintendent David Tucker is head of the Mets Diversity Directorate, the public face of the alternative
strategy for countering terror. I am led along a grey Civil Service corridor to his office on one of the buildings
higher floors. Superintendent Tucker is used to dealing with press and he adopts a practised tone of
informality: We put in a huge amount of effort because we recognise that the Muslim community is such a
significant minority community in Britain. We have established within London the Muslim Safety Forum, a
national group chaired by the assistant commissioner. The idea is that he should be in charge to indicate very
clearly how important we think community contacts are.
That the Forum is seen by some as a useful route to intelligence-gathering when other, traditional methods of
recruitment have failed is something Superintendent Tucker would no doubt reject, but he doesnt deny that
there are close links between more direct anti-terroris t policing and the Diversity Directorate. All officers
dealing with terrorism receive training around the need for cultural sensitivity and every officer has a guide to
policing diversity. One of the officers from Special Branch was promoted into the role from here so we do get a
crossover of skills. Not only that but the diversity unit goes to major meetings about security.
Might a lack of cultural understanding on the part of the police be hampering the detection of terrorism?
This goes beyond terroris m. What you have here is a broadly secular society trying to cope with Islam. Secular
society finds it difficult to cope with that level of devotion to a faith because even those people who would call
themselves Christians probably dont follow Christianit y in the way and to the extent the Muslim community
do. The superintendent is conscious of the need to show that he has attended to the technicalities of political
correctness, but that does not stop him betraying an anxiety about Muslim sensitivities whi ch doesnt seem to
extend to other faiths. I think it is a question of understanding that we shouldnt assume other peoples values
are the same as our own. And faith is very important to the Muslim community in this country. You have to be
really careful about using words, so one of the things we have now is a press protocol that says you do not use
words from faiths unless you really have to.
Yet for all that, he delivers the uncompromising message of the liberal-authoritarian New Labour Government
with zeal: Our job is to ensure that we give people the opportunity to engage in the democratic process. I think
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we are doing that much better with Muslim communities than we have done in the past. And that the more they
are able to get their views across through the ordinary democratic processes, the more they believe that is the
right way and that it is effective, the less likely you are to have extremists. I think weve been very successful.
Weve just got to keep moving on that and keep working and explain ing to people that this is really why we are
doing things, striking a balance and saying: well if you are in the process then you can affect us, if youre notthen you cant.
There are, however, Muslims who believe that the police are using Superintenden t Tuckers policy of
rapprochement to strike at their religion. Dr Abdullah Robin is one of these. He is a spokesperson for Hizb ut-
Tahrir, an Islamist organisation that calls for the re-establishment of the caliphate and wants to bring this
about through argument and intellectual engagement.
The night before we meet, Dr Robin attended an emergency meeting in a South London mosque after a terrorist
suspect had allegedly been forced to kneel in an attitude of submission in front of several officers. Where i s
your God now? one of them asked. The suspect was then punched and kicked, and ended up in hospital with
internal bleeding, a black eye and severe bruising. The incident has united the Muslim community, who have
formed an organisation called Stop Police Terror. Dr Robin sees the strategic softly softly approach of the
Diversity Directorate and the direct, colonial style of anti-terror policing as aspects of the same policy.
Supporters of Western liberal values may talk a good game about tolerance, free speech and the rule of law, Dr
Robin says, but the introduction of draconian anti -terror legislation, mass surveillance, bugging and
monitoring campaigns and the waves of arrests reveal the true nature of Western values. Dr Robin believes that
Western liberal societies are as militant and fundamentalist as any projected Islamist state of the sort that Bush
and Blair warn against. This problem should be put in perspective. The main issue in the grand scheme ofthings is not the activities of a few young men in Gloucester and Dudley but the tens of thousands of young men
in Western armies.
Dr Robin and others like him are adamant that Western societies have failed to integrate Muslims through
appeals to multicultural values and now seek to do so by force . Connected to this is Blunketts recent
announcement of the need for Britain to train its own imams, a crude proposition, even by Blunketts
standards, another try at creating a caste of informants. Beyond this the proposal demonstrates to Muslims
that, for the Home Secretary, terrorism is intimately connected to their religion.
The challenge for us all is to ensure that the latest attempts at cultural imperialism do not succeed. We must
ensure that the imams are able to relate to youth but not at the expense of producing a Western-diluted Islam,
the type of Islam which would prevent support for the Palestinians against Israel, the type of Islam which
allows Iraq to be occupied, the type of Islam which condemns jihad but supports Western colonialism, the type
of Islam that believes women are oppressed if they wear Islamic clothing but liberated if they wear bikinis. The
type of Islam that involves the passing on, in contravention of the basic tenets of our belief, of clandestine
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information about people who regularly visit the mosque, promote Islam and who may give their zakat to
people in Palestine and Iraq.
For others, like Abdul Ullah, the world of Muslim Safety Forums and borough liaison officers is a comfortable
environment. The fields of ecumenism and integration are his natural habitat. Ullah is an aspiring politician, a
sharp-suited member of the Metropolitan Police Authority, the watchdog for the police in London. For him,
there is no obvious difficulty in reconciling the demands of the secular state with those of his religion. He meets
me, halfway through the month of Ramadan, after a busy morning showing a German TV crew and a delegation
from the Foreign Office around the East London Mosque. Ullah begins by showing me the 10 million London
Muslim Centre which is being built next to the mosque and across the road from a sy nagogue. This project is
being built in partnership with the community, he says. When its completed, as a gesture of goodwill to the
synagogue their walls will be face- lifted also. But this type of news never gets reported.
A reception for the new police borough liaison officer was held at the mosque by the East London Muslim
community. Ullah mentions, too, that a local Roman Catholic church has lent the mosque its hall for night
prayer. After 11 September, there were police officers outside the mosqu e. I was asked why they were there,
because, you know, people see me as the link between the Met and the public. I said: "They are here to protect
you while you perform your prayers. It was a fairly elderly bloke who asked. He had been in this country for 40
years and he was amazed that the police were doing that sort of thing. So that was a positive sign of the police
trying to serve the community.
Would you like to stay for prayers? Ullah asks. He directs me to a gallery above the foyer of the mosque from
which I can see into the prayer hall. The building is now filling with hundreds of males of all ages. They throw
their shoes down by the entrance and soon pyramids spring up where trainers and slip-ons and boots have beendiscarded. The latecomers hav e to get upstairs to the gallery in order to find some space. Are you praying?
several ask me politely, and I say that Im not, taking a step backwards each time as row upon row is formed
with guardsman-like precision until I am pressed up against the back wall of the gallery, with several ranks of
the faithful in front.
The prayers begin, carried to us by loudspeaker, and the Muslims prostrate themselves. There is no self-
consciousness, no embarrassed laughter. For those few minutes, the congregation of the East London Mosque
show a unity of purpose and concentration, at least in their outward submission to Allah. The precise actions of
the body in prayer, down to the positioning of the left foot, heel slightly off the floor, toes turned inwards, seem
to speak of a profound discipline. It is a demonstration of popular devotion of a type not seen in Christian
churches for decades, and its intensity is incomprehensible to the secular Western mind. It frightens us and it
contributes to the creation of an image of the Muslim as a fanatic with ambiguous loyalties which leads
Superintendent Tucker, for all his efforts to be diverse, value-free and culturally sensitive, to speak of the
Muslim community as if it were a hornets nest which, fingers crossed, will not be stirred up.
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After prayers, there are handshakes and smiles all round and it takes me several minutes to push my way
against the good-humoured tide to rejoin my host. As I leave the mosque, I am introduced to the imam. He
cannot speak English but Ullah translates his words of welcome and I wonder whether even here, in this model
of moderate Islam, Blunketts words penetrate, and with what effect.
Just up the road from the London Muslim Centre, in the no mans land where Whitechapel becomes the Square
Mile and where City wide boys and their mini-skirted peroxide girlfriends pass burka-clad women pushing
prams, there is a piece of graffiti on a shop wall: Bin Laden lives in E1. It is impossible to know whether this is
a bigots attempt to label the entire Muslim population of Whitechapel or an expression of solidarity. Either
way, it is clear that one side of the partnership is not yet on message.
An illustration of the confusion of policing methods in the war against terror, and of the type of imam the
Government wants rid of, is provided by Abu Hamza al-Masri, imam of Finsbury Park Mosque. The mullah the
tabloids love to hate, Hamza is known for his bombastic sentiments and fierce Algerian following, but he is a
draw for radicalised young men of all nationalities. In January 2003 the Finsbury Park Mosque was raided by
police in a military-style operation involving helicopters and abseiling through skylights. Now the Met closes off
the road in front of the mosque so that Hamza can preach and his followers can pray outside the building which
they have prevented him from using.
It is the time for Friday prayers, and I am waiting for Hamza to arrive, and for prayers to begin. A Danish film
crew are trying to interview the few Muslims who have turned up early to say their prayers in this side-street
just off the Blackstock Road. An Englishman dressed in salwar kameez, with a ginger curling beard and wild
frizzing hair which give him an agricultural aspect, like a tenant farmer in a Hardy novel, has set up a trestle
table to sell books just behind the police van blocking entry to the street from the main road. At the far end ofthe road, another police van performs the same function. On sale are various leaflets: reprints of articles by
John Pilger and Robert Fisk, discourses on the evils of Christianity and what to do if arrested by the security
services. A well-thumbed copy of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion is going for a tenner.
Further down the street, past the steel crowd-control barriers which line the pavement on both sides outside
the mosque, I spot two young men. One is wrapping a kaffiyeh around his head so that only his eyes can be
seen. This is one of Abu Hamzas bodyguards. I approach him and he begins to back away: No comment no
comment no comment no comment, he chants, at the same time panicking that his disguise is going to become
untied. He retreats into the entrance hall of a block of flats. The other bodyguard, already in full disguise,
stands his ground and stares at me, silently.
Back up the road, a few more of the brothers have gathered by the bookstall. They greet each other, thumping a
right hand to their chest before offering it to be grasped in a clasp of welcome. The Danish TV crew swoop on a
young man who stands smiling, inviting approach. He has turned up here today for the first time, an Abu
Hamza groupie.
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A man in his twenties, with a long, bearded face and aquiline nose, wearing a white turban and long white robe,
comes over to speak to me. He is a Syrian, in London to learn English. He has been worshipping at Finsbury
Park Mosque for two years. I ask him about the presence of the police. It makes me feel safe, he says. It is
good to have these cameras here he points to the CCTV camera mounted on a tall pole outside the mosque
which pans around the gathering, recording all the time and the policemen so we can pray in peace. By now,the TV crew are interviewing a man who is well over six feet tall, barrel-chested and with a full beard. He has a
commanding presence. The Syrian points to him.
He is a Cypriot, I think. He likes to compare the Koran and the Bible to show the truth, that Jesus is no more
than a prophet. The big Cypriot is holding court to a growing number of Muslims, all male of course, all in their
late teens and twenties. A pale, unshaven blond-haired man in a filthy leather jacket and faded jeans hobbles up
to the group, walking painfully. At first I think he is a tramp who is hoping to beg from the brothers, but he is
greeted with much heart-thumping and handshaking. The man is from Chechnya. Though he speaks very little
English, he is willing to be interviewed by the film crew who have zeroed in on him, as long as they dont film
his face. An Arab has begun to berate the Chechnyan.
Brother, dont speak to th em. Only tell the Kufr that you are happy to worship here. Your English is not good
enough.
An argument breaks out between the Arab and a black man. He can do what he wants. Let him speak. Its his
right.
Dont be angry with me, brother, the Arab says .
Im a Jamaican, this is how we speak, the Jamaican responds, angrily.
The Cypriot turns to the Danish cameraman. Dont film this. Immediately, the cameraman retreats. I get the
sense that on this side-street, at this moment, another type of law prevails.
A middle-aged police sergeant approaches the Cypriot deferentially and speaks quietly to him. In the road in
front of the mosque, people are laying down large squares of blue plastic sheeting, which are then weighed
down by bricks and stones. The number of Muslims has increased to about forty. Combat chic is all the rage,
with some of the young men wearing camouflage body-warmers, some military-style trousers. A man goes up to
the Syrian. He is squat and strong, his long hair falling past his shoulders. He, too, is dressed in a combat jacketand jeans. The two greet each other, and the squat man, another Syrian, begins to organise the laying out of the
tarpaulins. The atmosphere is like that of a boxing gym. The men seem to enjoy being able to demonstrate
affection and respect without impugning their masculinity. The handful of older men the Cypriot, the Syrian,
a couple of others direct them through their tasks. The police sergeant stands to one side with the other
officers a woman and a man who will patrol the service.
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Suddenly, Abu Hamza appears at the far end of the tarpaulin near an armchair which has been placed in the
middle of the road. A surprisingly ethereal figure against the bright winter sunlight, he stands on his own, his
white robe billowing in the wind, as one of the henchmen sets up a rickety PA system. A microphone is clipped
onto the sheikh, as they call him, and a Dictaphone is placed round his neck.
The Muslims take off their shoes and form rows on the tarpaulin. There are now more than a hundred of them.
Just as the show is about to get going, a woman comes out of one of the houses in the street and gets in her car:
a helper is deputed to move the piles of shoes which have formed a drift around the vehicle. This is the first act
of defiance I have witnessed, but it is matched by several more, as residents make a show of carrying on their
normal business, bumping the brothers out of the way with their shopping and baby buggies. These intrusions
agitate the policeman. He positions himself next to me, halfway up the prayer area, behind the crowd-control
barriers. The WPC stands nearest to the sheikh and a PC sits on the bonnet of a car a little way behind his
colleague.
After introductory prayers, led by the Arab involved in the argument with the Jamaican, Abu Hamza preaches
for around an hour about the political situation in Saudi Arabia. He speaks in Arabic and then in English. The
Cypriot does not pray. He stands apart from those who do, surveying them and the crowd, taking notes. The
other lieutenants do not join in the prayers either, but patrol the area, watching, checking the crowd. The
Cypriot approaches the policeman and they speak in low voices, their heads together. It is clear who is running
the operation. The policeman th anks the Cypriot for letting him know and immediately walks around the
tarpaulin, behind Abu Hamza, to the WPC. She begins to smile, as if reacting to a joke, but realising that
whatever it is has been said in all seriousness, shakes her head incredulously. Her smile vanishes. She retreats
to a distance deemed suitable by the Cypriot. The sergeant returns to his place next to me.
Thanks, boss, the Cypriot says to him, and walks off.
Later, a photographer tries to get past us to take a photograph.
Oh no, you cant go further than that with the camera, the sergeant says and once again, the look of disbelief.
Why not?
Well, it would upset them. They would n0t like it. Theyll tell you when they want photos taken. The
photographer shakes her head and retreats. The sergeant makes a note in his pocketbook. Later still, when hehas moved to a different position, a bystander gets out a small digital camera and is about to take some pictures
when one of Hamzas lieutenants intervenes, putting his hand across the mans arm to make sure he gets the
message.
After Abu Hamza has finished preaching and the concluding prayers have been sung, his chair is moved onto
the pavement outside a block of flats. He sits, an emir flanked by his two bodyguards. A couple of teenagers
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bring out copies of Intifadah magazine to sell and the TV crew eagerly seizes on the image. I approach the
Syrian in the combat jacket and ask whether he would be prepared to speak to me about his experience of the
police.
No. He stares the intimidatory stare I had seen earlier.
Would anyone?
No, and he stands up close, bouncer -style, to let me know that Im not welcome.
Does he have any comments at all?
No. He doesnt move and I have to step round him in order to walk towards the spot wh ere the sheikh is
holding his audience.
Terrorism drugs and crime, thats true terrorism, someone says. A group of boys debate, as boys do, the
merits of the rocket-propelled grenade as a method of taking out Chinook helicopters. By the time I reach the
huddle around the sheikh, news has travelled and I am not welcome. A teenager making a documentary is
pushed forward to say his piece. He sets up his video camera.
Salaam aleikum.
Aleikum as -salaam, the whole of the huddle responds as one.
Sheikh, what do you think of the bias of the media against you? There are approving nods from the huddle.
I expect it of the Kufr media, he replies. And then, as its sole representative to hand, I am unceremoniously
shoved out by the mass of believers.
From a distance, I watch the sergeant kicking his heels as Abu Hamza greets the last of his followers on this
bright, cold November day. After a while he walks over to them.
Im sorry, I think youre going to have to move now, he says. For an instant, I wonder whether hes decided
that now is the time to reassert his authority. Its just that the roads open and I wouldnt want you to get
knocked over. Mustafa Kemal, the one -eyed former nightclub bouncer, now known as Abu Hamza, looks at him
with a smile on his face. I look above the sheikh, to the flats opposite the mosque, up to the name-plate above
the entrance: Vaudeville Court.
O
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Our view is that most Muslims couldnt give a fuck about al -Qaida. Like Christians, they just want to get on
with their lives. As Ramadan draws to a close, I meet Mr X in a pub in Whitehall for the last time. We are here
to talk about the Governments explicit fears of attack.
The Government is extremely concerned about the use of chemical or biological weapons. Two incidents are
uppermost in its mind because they are low tech and highly effective. One is the Aum Shinrikyo attack on the
Tokyo subway, in which the cult used sarin gas 12 people died, five thousand were injured. Fatalities would
have been far higher had a more effective method of dispersal been used. The other occurred in Oregon in 1984,
when followers of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh poisoned salad bars in ten restaurants in an attempt to take control
of a county at local election time, giving 751 people salmonella poisoning in the process.
The threat of weapons of mass destruction is a lot smaller than you would think, because Islamists are lacking
in technical expertise. Mr X says it is a possibility that a rogue scientist in Eastern Europe would be prepared to
do some kind of deal with them, but he is confident that attempts to construct a complex weapon will come to
the attention of the intelligence services. The problem for the intelligence services arises when there is a state
sponsor. Then we cant tell when or what an organisation is doing. This, he says, is one of the reasons
Afghanistan was bombed so quickly after 11 September.
Mr X warms to his subject. September 11 is regarded as a brilliant attack because of its simplicity. The difficulty
with weapons of mass destruction is that it becomes obvious to intelligence services what people are up to.
From a WMD standpoint, 11 September was interesting too because traces of 70 chemicals that could be
classified in this way, a product of aircraft fuel and buildin g debris, were found at Ground Zero. In fact, Mr X
says, around 10 per cent of the New York Fire Department have had to take early retirement because of the
effects of those chemicals.
Mr X knows that public hysteria will be one of the main obstacles to be overcome. Like Magnus Ranstorp, he
knows minimal terrorist action can cause maximum disruption. The discovery of only two envelopes containing
traces of anthrax spores brought the entire US postal system to a halt. Thats truly a weapon of mass
disrupti on.
Mr X explains that law enforcement agencies take the opportunity to train whenever there is a tanker spillage or
a chemical leak at a plant. But the reality is that, for the first 48 hours after an attack, the targeted location
must fend for itself because the Government will have to allow for the possibility of other incidents elsewhere.
Do we move all our experts up to, say, Newcastle and then face another attack in Leeds or Birmingham or
Cardiff or Edinburgh? He leaves me to finish my drink and co nsider this map of destruction.
The uncomfortable fact remains that since 11 September no reliable evidence of the reality of al-Qaida super-
terror has been presented to us. What has become clear is that a drive to create an overpowering body of law
enforcement agencies and techniques is well underway. With ATCSA 2001, Britain mirrored the US response to
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the events of 11 September the Patriot Act and the setting up of the Department for Homeland Security but
with much less cause and in its own diminutive fashion. In its more subtle, British way, the state has
strengthened its powers of surveillance and constraint.
The provisions concerning the indefinite detention of foreign nationals in ATCSA 2001 make it plain that the
notion of terror has become synonymous in the Government mind with that of asylum. It is hard not to believe
that at least some of David Blunketts anti -terror strategy is as much concerned with controlling the immigrant
population as it is with the war against al-Qaida. Immigrant equals Muslim equals terrorist: a formula which
finds its justification and sustenance in the US response to terror. The United Kingdoms refusal to
acknowledge that, as a mid-sized post-industrial nation, it cannot match the grand imperial gesture of a
superpowe r, and the Governments fetishising of military prowess as an indication of Blairs virility on the
world stage (never mind the heart, feel the missiles), have led us into an array of morally dubious projects.
The Governments authoritarian instinct clashe s with Blairite multicultural tenets. In normal circumstances,
these values are irreconcilable. But at moments of great social and cultural pressure, they are forced into direct
opposition, breaching the deeper workings of state co-ordination and the foundations of legitimacy. In such
crises, coherent institutions with a strong sense of mission prosper. Police forces may not only act as
instruments of state policy but also, given the right circumstances, begin to influence and sometimes formulate
it. In any event, it is astonishing that we have reached a pass where a government, on the basis of secret
intelligence, will countenance indefinitely imprisoning individuals without trial. There is a real danger that the
claim of the secret state that it is losing the never-ending, unprovable war with extremism and terror will result
in its winning a far greater prize.
It is early evening, the end of December. New Year is coming and the stakes are being raised. The City ofLondon has extended its checkpoints westwards, the Commissioner of the Met has warned of more unspecified
yet imminent attacks, and flights to Washington and Riyadh are being cancelled. As I walk around Regents
Park, past the American Ambassadors residence, I notice, slightly further ahead, on th e other side of the Outer
Circle, the London Central Mosque, its chandelier glistening in the gloom. An armed policeman idly crosses to
my side of the pavement.
Good evening, he says, and smiling, slows to my pace, his finger looped through the trigger g uard of his
submachine-gun. A disembodied voice from his police radio spits out facts, location reports, questions. The
radio crackles with bursts of information, lapses into silence, then flares up again.
All quiet? a voice inquires across the waves of static.
All quiet, boss, the radio says. The policeman continues around the curve of the railings, disappearing into the
blue-grey dusk.
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