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Britain
Britain to push EU to take tougher stance against terrorism
2005-09-08
Britain was set to urge the European Union to do more to fight terrorism after the London bombings, including a rethink of its human rights laws that prevent the deportation of security suspects. In a speech to Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) in Strasbourg, Home Secretary Charles Clarke will also call on the bloc's 25 member states to increase intelligence-sharing on terrorist activity. He will pursue the topic further at a two-day meeting of EU justice and interior ministers which starts Thursday in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, northern England.

Prime Minister Tony Blair's government -- which currently holds the six-month rotating presidency of the European Union -- has launched a crackdown on Islamic fundamentalism in the wake of the July 7 attacks on London transport that left 56 people dead, including four apparent suicide bombers. But some of the proposed measures, such as deporting so-called preachers of hate even to countries with a reputation for torture, have raised serious concerns from the human rights lobby and civil liberties campaigners. Clarke aims to promote a debate on the content of the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR), which prevents the deportation of a foreign terrorist suspect if it is thought the person will be put at risk of torture.

He is expected to say the convention was established half a century ago in response to different circumstances, The Daily Telegraph reported. It is now necessary "to balance these very important rights for individuals against the collective right for security against those who attack us through terrorist violence," Clarke will tell MEPs. He will add: "An important human right is the right to be protected from torture and ill-treatment. So too is the right to be protected from the death and destruction caused by indiscriminate terrorism, sometimes caused, sometimes instigated, or fomented by nationals from countries outside the EU. have concluded that the balance now is not right and that it needs to be closely examined in the heightened threat that we now face."
Posted by:Fred

#1  The problem is that not "all have concluded" in the Ministers words. Good luck however I don't hold out much hope.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom   2005-09-08 00:39  

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