Senior police officers’ judgment questioned as revelations emerge about the behaviour of undercover agents It was shortly after 10am, in a corner at a primary school near Nottingham, that a police agent using the codename UCO 133 began whispering into a microphone hidden in his watch. Mark Kennedy was a long-haired, tattoo-covered undercover police officer who had been living for six years as an environmental activist. But the covert agent with a long-term activist girlfriend was about to set in train a chain of events that would result in one of the most intriguing scandals in policing history. “I’m an authorised police officer engaged in Operation Pegasus,” Kennedy hissed into his £7,000 Casio G-Shock watch, equipped with a hidden microchip. “This weekend, Easter weekend, I am together with a group of activists that are planning to disrupt Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station. Shortly gonna go … and record briefings that subsequently take place throughout the day. So I shall now switch this device off.” He snatched a look at his wrist and read out the time. At that point – 10.06am on 12 April 2009 – one of the British constabulary’s most closely guarded secrets remained intact; Kennedy, perhaps the most successful in a fleet of agents sent to live deep undercover among political activists, had maintained his cover. More importantly, virtually nothing was known about the secretive police units which, for four decades, had been surreptitiously disrupting the activities of political campaign groups. But now a series of revelations concerning a network of undercover agents has become a growing crisis for police. At the centre of the latest controversy is a set of documents, obtained by the Guardian and the BBC’s Newsnight, indicating that another police spy, Jim Boyling, who lived undercover among the environmental group Reclaim the Streets, concealed his identity in a criminal trial, giving false evidence under oath about his real name. The accusation that police deliberately subverted the judicial process, and at worst sanctioned perjury, prompted outrage among lawyers and parts of the judiciary and led to the last-minute postponement of a major report into undercover policing of protests by the newly appointed commissioner of the Metropolitan police, Bernard Hogan-Howe. Now questions are being asked about the judgment of Britain’s most senior police officer, whose report – conducted in his prior role with the policing inspectorate – is being reviewed. Lord Macdonald, the former director of public prosecutions, described the court deception as a monumental misjudgment, saying police had “crossed the line”. There are mounting calls for a full public inquiry. The truth behind the police spies began to unravel late last year when activist former friends of Kennedy revealed his police background on the website Indymedia. Two months later – in January this year – the Guardian published the first revelation in its long-running investigation into the undercover policing of protests, revealing how Kennedy, after leaving the Met, returned to his activist friends, expressed sympathy with their cause and attempted to continue living under his fictional identity, Mark Stone. In the last 10 months, the Guardian has detailed the covert deployments of six undercover police officers. In addition to Kennedy and Boyling, police officers using the fake identities Mark Jacobs, Lynn Watson and Pete Black have been exposed. This week Bob Lambert, a well-known academic, was unmasked as a former spymaster who spent years deep undercover. Writing in the Guardian , Lambert acknowledges police should learn from mistakes, but defends the work of undercover police officers in “countering political violence and intimidation”. Lambert, who later ran special branch’s Muslim contact group, which was tasked with building relations with London’s Muslim organisations, said he was not involved in any surveillance at that stage of his career. Boyling also went on to work for the same unit. “I did not recruit one Muslim Londoner as an informant, nor did I spy on them,” Lambert said. “They were partners of police and many acted bravely in support of public safety and protection of fellow citizens.” A seventh undercover officer, Simon Wellings, was exposed by Newsnight in March. All seven spies shared similar modi operandi: they appeared out of nowhere, often had access to vehicles and showed an unflinching willingness to help run the logistics of protest organisation. Unlike undercover officers who penetrate serious criminal gangs, typically for no more than a few weeks or months, agents deployed in protest organisations are authorised to spend years living double lives as campaigners. Only rarely have they been asked to gather evidence for prosecutions; usually, their mandate is to gather intelligence on activists while quietly disrupting their campaigns. Most of the undercover police officers identified by the Guardian and Newsnight have also had sexual relationships with their targets, in some cases developing long-term relationships. Some activists argue this has been the most disturbing element of the controversy, equating the operation to state-sanctioned sex abuse. They point to the anger, betrayal and psychological trauma suffered by some of the women who have spoken out about their relationships with men who later turned out to be police spies. Senior officers have claimed sexual relations were never condoned or known about by the top ranks – a finding Hogan-Howe was expected to endorse in his report. However, the mounting evidence suggests otherwise. Kennedy said he could not “sneeze” without his handlers knowing about his activities, and gave every indication they knew about the methods he used to gain the trust of activists, including his sexual liaisons. Black has said it was “part of the job” for fellow agents to use “the tool of sex” to maintain their cover and glean intelligence. Together, these seven agents, and dozens more, have infiltrated a series of groups from across the political spectrum, including groups such as Stop the War, Youth Against Racism, Earth First, and Climate Camp. They have been regularly spying on activists at major demonstrations surrounding summits such as the G8 and G20, as well as local protests such as a campaign to protect Titnore Woods in West Sussex. However, it was Kennedy’s operation to prevent 112 activists from breaking into the Nottinghamshire power station in 2009 that placed the long-running operation under the spotlight. Late last year, prosecutors refused to admit that the environmental campaigners had been infiltrated by an undercover police officer. The secret recordings made on Kennedy’s Casio watch – which would have exonerated the activists if disclosed during their trials – were suppressed. An inquiry by Sir Christopher Rose, the former surveillance commissioner, is investigating claims made by police that their colleagues in the Crown Prosecution Service suppressed the recordings. Transcripts of those recordings have now been obtained by the Guardian, along with other police materials relating to Kennedy’s deployment marked “restricted” and “confidential”. They shed light on the extent of surveillance undertaken to keep tabs on a group of environmental campaigners. They reveal the minute details about the activities of campaigners being relayed by Kennedy, from discussions about football teams to types of biscuits eaten at a planning meeting. In one document, marked “secret”, police chiefs lay out what they believed to be the legal justification for Kennedy’s surveillance operation, stating that the environmental campaigners could cause “severe economic loss to the United Kingdom” and an “adverse effect on the public’s feeling of safety and security”. Those police claims, along with the broader suggestion that environmental activists threaten the national infrastructure of the UK, have been repeatedly challenged in court. All 26 activists police wanted to prosecute for conspiring to trespass at the Nottinghamshire power station either had their trials abandoned or their convictions quashed following the Kennedy controversy. Sentencing 20 of the activists in January, a judge at Nottingham crown court said he accepted they had intended a peaceful protest and had the “highest possible motives”, describing the group as “honest, sincere, conscientious, intelligent, committed, dedicated, caring”. When their convictions were quashed in July, three court of appeal judges, who included the lord chief justice, said “elementary principles” of the fair trial process were ignored when prosecutors did not disclose the secret recordings to activists’ lawyers. In a damning ruling, the judges said they shared the “great deal of justifiable public disquiet”, found that Kennedy’s operation had been partly unlawful, and even proffered the suggestion he had arguably been acting as an agent provocateur. What the judges did not mention – but is increasingly becoming clear – was that Kennedy was not a lone operator, but the latest in a long line of undercover police officers who have been spying on activists as part of a classified operation dating back four decades. Previously known as the special demonstration squad, which operated under the command of the Metropolitan police’s special branch, the undercover unit was first conceived as a tool to combat the anti-Vietnam protests at Grosvenor Square in 1968. The infrastructure of long-term police surveillance of leftwing and far-right campaign groups has remained in place ever since – and continues today. What was previously conceived as a secret plan to disrupt the activities of “subversives” was, more than a decade ago, reinvented under the leadership of the Association of Chief Police Officers as part of a new drive to combat “domestic extremists”. The secretive body that controls the spies, the National Public Order Intelligence Unit, was recently returned to the command of the Met. It now falls to Hogan-Howe to grapple with the fallout of the latest controversy over Boyling, who has been placed on restricted duties and subject to a disciplinary inquiry since January, when it emerged he married an activist he met while undercover and fathered two children with her. That inquiry, which is investigating claims by Boyling’s ex-wife that he encouraged her to change her name by deed poll to conceal their relationship from his superiors, has yet to conclude. It is now likely to be overshadowed by the accusation that he lied about his real identity under oath. Details of his false evidence were revealed on Wednesday. Besides prompting outrage among lawyers, the accusation that police subverted the judicial process appears to have shaken senior police officers. Within hours, Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) cancelled its planned publication of the report on Hogan-Howe’s review. The Hogan-Howe report had been expected to ignore advice from other senior police officers, who argued that the unfolding scandal in undercover policing revealed the need for a more robust system of independent oversight. HMIC said it would now seek further details about Boyling’s alleged false evidence under oath before reviewing its report. However, what is unclear is how much information – if any – the Met disclosed to the inspectorate about Boyling, his marriage to an activist and his evidence under oath. A draft of the HMIC report circulated over the summer, as Hogan-Howe believed he was nearing his conclusions, is not believed to have contained any reference to Boyling at all. Jenny Jones, a Green party member of the London assembly who sits on the Metropolitan police authority, will be questioning Hogan-Howe at an MPA meeting next week. She said: “I will be pressing him to explain how we can stop such mistakes being made again and how we can bring some accountability to a police service which has been given almost carte blanche to spy on its own citizens.” Metropolitan police Police Bernard Hogan-Howe Protest London Crime Activism Mark Kennedy Paul Lewis Rob Evans guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Thailand’s worst floods in half a century are seeping into the outer districts of the capital Thailand’s prime minister has urged Bangkok residents to get ready to move their belongings to higher ground as the country’s worst floods in half a century begin seeping into the capital’s outer districts. The warning came one day after the government opened several floodgates in a risky bid to let built-up water flow through the city’s canals toward the sea. Authorities had said the canals could overflow but it was not known to what extent. Water has entered homes in Bangkok’s northern Lak Si district, which is located along the capital’s main Prapa canal. The water rose to knee height in some places but damage was minor and had not yet affected Bangkok’s main business district. Yingluck Shinawatra, the prime minister, told reporters the Prapa canal was a big concern as the water had risen significantly overnight. “I would like to ask people in all districts of Bangkok to get ready to move their belongings to higher ground as a precaution,” Yingluck said, adding that people should not panic. Sukhumbhand Paribatra, the Bangkok governor, said managing the Prapa canal was a “top priority”. Vast runoff from the north is expected to swell its level. Authorities have said immense networks of sandbagged barriers could deteriorate under pressure from the water, since they were not designed as dams. Yingluck has said there are no other options to slow down the approaching water. Prolonged rain and storms have killed 745 people – a quarter of them children – in Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos and the Philippines this year, according to the United Nations. At least 342 of them were Thais, according to their government. The floods have submerged land in about one-third of the country, leaving some towns under water more than two metres high. The threat of floodwaters swamping downtown Bangkok and ruining treasured ancient palaces has loomed for weeks. No major damage has occurred yet and life remains mostly normal, but inhabitants are preparing for the worst. “The water is coming. It’s inevitable,” said Oraphin Jungkasemsuk, a 40-year-old employee of Bangkok Bank’s headquarters, where sandbags have been stacked two metres high. “They are fighting a massive pool of water. They cannot control it any more,” Oraphin said. “There are barriers but it can come into the city from any direction, even up through the drains.” Economic analysts say the floods have already cut Thailand’s 2011 GDP projections by as much as 2%. Damages could run as high as $6bn (£3.8bn) – an amount that could double if Bangkok floods. Thailand Flooding Natural disasters and extreme weather Rivers guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Tory MPs likely to defy No 10 as prime minister abandons attempt at compromise ahead of Commons debate David Cameron is bracing himself for the biggest rebellion since he took office, with possible frontbench resignations, when Tory MPs defy No 10 to vote in favour of a referendum on Britain’s EU membership on Monday. As ministers and their aides lined up to tell the chief whip, Patrick McLoughlin, that Downing Street had badly mishandled the debate, No 10 sources indicated that Cameron has abandoned attempts to agree a compromise. Downing Street threw in the towel when George Eustice, the prime minister’s former spokesman who was being lined up by the government to table a “helpful” amendment, defied his former boss. Eustice tabled an amendment calling on the coalition to publish a white paper in the next two years setting out which powers ministers would repatriate from Brussels. The government would then renegotiate the UK’s relationship with the EU and hold a referendum on the outcome. One No 10 source said the prime minister agrees with the Eustice amendment, but cannot support it – and would whip his MPs to vote against it – because it would be unacceptable to the Liberal Democrats. “If the prime minister supported George Eustice’s amendment that would mean the end of the coalition and we would not be holding a referendum. We would be holding a general election.” Eustice indicated on Thursday night that he was “minded” to support the original motion which calls simply for a referendum on Britain’s membership of the EU. Senior Tories said that Downing Street ran into trouble when it imposed a three-line whip on Tory MPs requiring them to vote against a motion, tabled by the Commons backbench business committee, which calls for a referendum to be held on Britain’s membership of the EU. MPs were given the message at a meeting of the 1922 committee at 5pm on Wednesday by a whip who said that the debate would go ahead, as planned, on Thursday next week. Within 30 minutes, a nervous No 10 brought forward the vote by three days, to Monday, to ensure that Cameron and William Hague could be present. By next Thursday, the prime minister and the foreign secretary are due to be in Australia for the Commonwealth heads of government meeting. In a sign of the panic in Downing Street, aides failed to brief key government supporters who had been trying to shore up support for Cameron. One senior figure, who was not told until 7pm on Wednesday, was telling MPs to calm down as he denied reports that the date of the debate had been changed. With increasing numbers of Tory MPs signing up to the motion, one parliamentary aide said he was prepared to resign so he could support the
Continue reading …California schools and teachers are rushing to update their social studies classes by January in order to comply with a new state law that requires all students–from kindergarteners to high school seniors–be taught about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans. Due to the state’s budget crunch, updated textbooks with the new LGBT curriculum won’t be
Continue reading …Times are tough for just about everyone right now. But for returning veterans, they’re even tougher. The unemployment rate for veterans who left military service in the last decade is 11.7 percent — far higher than the already-high overall jobless rate of 9.1 percent — the Washington Post reports, based on newly released Census Bureau
Continue reading …Two-year-old Yueyue, who was run over by two vans in southern China and ignored by several passers-by, has died A severely injured Chinese toddler has died one week after she was run over by two vans. The plight of the two year old girl, nicknamed Yueyue, was ignored by passers-by only to grab the attention of millions around the world. She was hit twice by vehicles on a market street, but around a dozen people walked or rode past before a woman stopped to help. The chilling footage of the incident in Foshan, southern China, sparked a national outpouring of grief and concern. Some argued it could have happened anywhere in the world, while others saw it as a peculiarly Chinese phenomenon or argued it epitomised moral decline and increasing selfishness in a fast-developing society. Doctors said at the time that Yueyue’s injuries were severe and warned that she was unlikely to survive. On Friday morning the Guangzhou military district general hospital announced she had died shortly after midnight due to brain and organ failure. “Her injuries were too severe and the treatment had no effect,” intensive care unit director Su Lei told a press conference. Microblogs were flooded with messages of sadness and sympathy, with some users hoping that her death might prove a turning point for society. “Yueyue has left at last. Besides the sadness, can one life get society’s ‘non-indifference’ back in return?” asked one. “If Yueyue’s unfortunateness can reflect anything, I think we shall not blame the others, but examine ourselves. Maybe we walk too fast and some precious things are left on the road.” Police have detained the drivers of both the vehicles that hit Yueyue on suspicion of causing a traffic collision but have not said what charges they will face. Some of those who passed by the injured girl have said they did not see her, while others said they were too frightened to help. Many in China have suggested that fear of extortion, rather than indifference, was to blame for people ignoring her. The country has seen several high-profile cases where people have successfully sued passers by who helped them – claiming they caused the injuries. Some citizens and scholars have called for a Good Samaritan law, but others have argued that the issue is a moral and social one rather than a legal problem. Yueyue’s rescuer has been lauded as a heroine for stopping to assist her, but has gone home to the countryside after being overwhelmed by the public attention. China Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Two-year-old Yueyue, who was run over by two vans in southern China and ignored by several passers-by, has died A severely injured Chinese toddler has died one week after she was run over by two vans. The plight of the two year old girl, nicknamed Yueyue, was ignored by passers-by only to grab the attention of millions around the world. She was hit twice by vehicles on a market street, but around a dozen people walked or rode past before a woman stopped to help. The chilling footage of the incident in Foshan, southern China, sparked a national outpouring of grief and concern. Some argued it could have happened anywhere in the world, while others saw it as a peculiarly Chinese phenomenon or argued it epitomised moral decline and increasing selfishness in a fast-developing society. Doctors said at the time that Yueyue’s injuries were severe and warned that she was unlikely to survive. On Friday morning the Guangzhou military district general hospital announced she had died shortly after midnight due to brain and organ failure. “Her injuries were too severe and the treatment had no effect,” intensive care unit director Su Lei told a press conference. Microblogs were flooded with messages of sadness and sympathy, with some users hoping that her death might prove a turning point for society. “Yueyue has left at last. Besides the sadness, can one life get society’s ‘non-indifference’ back in return?” asked one. “If Yueyue’s unfortunateness can reflect anything, I think we shall not blame the others, but examine ourselves. Maybe we walk too fast and some precious things are left on the road.” Police have detained the drivers of both the vehicles that hit Yueyue on suspicion of causing a traffic collision but have not said what charges they will face. Some of those who passed by the injured girl have said they did not see her, while others said they were too frightened to help. Many in China have suggested that fear of extortion, rather than indifference, was to blame for people ignoring her. The country has seen several high-profile cases where people have successfully sued passers by who helped them – claiming they caused the injuries. Some citizens and scholars have called for a Good Samaritan law, but others have argued that the issue is a moral and social one rather than a legal problem. Yueyue’s rescuer has been lauded as a heroine for stopping to assist her, but has gone home to the countryside after being overwhelmed by the public attention. China Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Forensic report says Muammar Gaddafi was shot in arm upon capture, then in the head while being driven away Muammar Gaddafi died from a bullet wound to the head received in crossfire between government fighters and his own supporters after he had been captured in Sirte, the Libyan interim prime minister has said, citing a forensic report. Conflicting reports have emerged about how exactly Gaddafi died. He was captured after a Nato air strike hit his convoy as it tried to break away from the siege of his hometown. “I am going to read to you a report by the forensic doctor who examined Gaddafi,” Mahmoud Jibril told a news conference in the capital, Tripoli. “It said: ‘Gaddafi was taken out of a sewage pipe … he didn’t show any resistance. When we started moving him he was hit by a bullet in his right arm and when they put him in a truck he did not have any other injuries.’”‘When the car was moving it was caught in crossfire between the revolutionaries and Gaddafi forces in which he was hit by a bullet in the head.’” “The forensic doctor could not tell if it came from the revolutionaries or from Gaddafi’s forces,” Jibril said. Gaddafi had been alive when he was taken from Sirte but died a few minutes before reaching hospital, the prime minister said. Jibril said DNA samples and blood was taken from the body. Also removed were samples of Gaddafi’s hair but that turned out to be “fake”, seemingly confirming widespread rumours that Libya’s feared ruler of 42 years had hair implants. Libya’s National Transitional Council had been in touch with the international criminal court, which had wanted to try Gaddafi for crimes against humanity, Jibril said. It had wanted a forensic expert to inspect the body before the burial, he said, but after seeing the NTC’s own report the court agreed that would not be necessary. Gaddafi’s son Mutassim was also killed on Thursday. “As for Mutassim there is a wound in the head and a break in the skull and five bullets in the back and one in the neck,” Jibril said. Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Africa guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Forensic report says Muammar Gaddafi was shot in arm upon capture, then in the head while being driven away Muammar Gaddafi died from a bullet wound to the head received in crossfire between government fighters and his own supporters after he had been captured in Sirte, the Libyan interim prime minister has said, citing a forensic report. Conflicting reports have emerged about how exactly Gaddafi died. He was captured after a Nato air strike hit his convoy as it tried to break away from the siege of his hometown. “I am going to read to you a report by the forensic doctor who examined Gaddafi,” Mahmoud Jibril told a news conference in the capital, Tripoli. “It said: ‘Gaddafi was taken out of a sewage pipe … he didn’t show any resistance. When we started moving him he was hit by a bullet in his right arm and when they put him in a truck he did not have any other injuries.’”‘When the car was moving it was caught in crossfire between the revolutionaries and Gaddafi forces in which he was hit by a bullet in the head.’” “The forensic doctor could not tell if it came from the revolutionaries or from Gaddafi’s forces,” Jibril said. Gaddafi had been alive when he was taken from Sirte but died a few minutes before reaching hospital, the prime minister said. Jibril said DNA samples and blood was taken from the body. Also removed were samples of Gaddafi’s hair but that turned out to be “fake”, seemingly confirming widespread rumours that Libya’s feared ruler of 42 years had hair implants. Libya’s National Transitional Council had been in touch with the international criminal court, which had wanted to try Gaddafi for crimes against humanity, Jibril said. It had wanted a forensic expert to inspect the body before the burial, he said, but after seeing the NTC’s own report the court agreed that would not be necessary. Gaddafi’s son Mutassim was also killed on Thursday. “As for Mutassim there is a wound in the head and a break in the skull and five bullets in the back and one in the neck,” Jibril said. Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Africa guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The Occupy Wall Street movement passes the one-month mark today, and has also reached another milestone–the once fledgling movement has raised $300,000 in donations, according to the Associated Press. Saturday was perhaps the biggest day yet for the protests over income inequality and corporate influence on politics. Hundreds of thousands of people around the world
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