Police State UK: At last, a law to stop almost anyone from
doing almost anything
Source: UK Guardian
Until the late 19th century much of our city space was owned
by private landlords. Squares were gated, streets were controlled by turnpikes.
The great unwashed, many of whom had been expelled from the countryside by acts
of enclosure, were also excluded from desirable parts of town.
Social reformers and democratic movements tore down the
barriers, and public space became a right, not a privilege. But social
exclusion follows inequality as night follows day, and now, with little public
debate, our city centres are again being privatised or semi-privatised. They
are being turned by the companies that run them into soulless, cheerless,
pasteurised piazzas, in which plastic policemen harry anyone loitering without
intent to shop.
Street life in these places is reduced to a trance-world of
consumerism, of conformity and atomisation in which nothing unpredictable or
disconcerting happens, a world made safe for selling mountains of pointless
junk to tranquillised shoppers. Spontaneous gatherings of any other kind –
unruly, exuberant, open-ended, oppositional – are banned. Young, homeless and
eccentric people are, in the eyes of those upholding this dead-eyed, sanitised
version of public order, guilty until proven innocent.
Now this dreary ethos is creeping into places that are not,
ostensibly, owned or controlled by corporations. It is enforced less by gates
and barriers (though plenty of these are reappearing) than by legal
instruments, used to exclude or control the ever widening class of
undesirables.
The existing rules are bad enough. Introduced by the 1998
Crime and Disorder Act, antisocial behaviour orders (asbos) have criminalised
an apparently endless range of activities, subjecting thousands – mostly young
and poor – to bespoke laws. They have been used to enforce a kind of caste
prohibition: personalised rules which prevent the untouchables from intruding
into the lives of others.
You get an asbo for behaving in a manner deemed by a
magistrate as likely to cause harassment, alarm or distress to other people.
Under this injunction, the proscribed behaviour becomes a criminal offence.
Asbos have been granted which forbid the carrying of condoms by a prostitute,
homeless alcoholics from possessing alcohol in a public place, a soup kitchen
from giving food to the poor, a young man from walking down any road other than
his own, children from playing football in the street. They were used to ban
peaceful protests against the Olympic clearances.
Inevitably, more than half the people subject to asbos break
them. As Liberty says, these injunctions “set the young, vulnerable or mentally
ill up to fail”, and fast-track them into the criminal justice system. They
allow the courts to imprison people for offences which are not otherwise
imprisonable. One homeless young man was sentenced to five years in jail for
begging: an offence for which no custodial sentence exists. Asbos permit the
police and courts to create their own laws and their own penal codes.
All this is about to get much worse. On Wednesday the
Antisocial Behaviour, Crime and Policing Bill reaches its report stage (close
to the end of the process) in the House of Lords. It is remarkable how little
fuss has been made about it, and how little we know of what is about to hit us.
The bill would permit injunctions against anyone of 10 or
older who “has engaged or threatens to engage in conduct capable of causing
nuisance or annoyance to any person”. It would replace asbos with ipnas
(injunctions to prevent nuisance and annoyance), which would not only forbid
certain forms of behaviour, but also force the recipient to discharge positive
obligations. In other words, they can impose a kind of community service order
on people who have committed no crime, which could, the law proposes, remain in
force for the rest of their lives.
The bill also introduces public space protection orders,
which can prevent either everybody or particular kinds of people from doing
certain things in certain places. It creates new dispersal powers, which can be
used by the police to exclude people from an area (there is no size limit),
whether or not they have done anything wrong.
While, as a result of a successful legal challenge, asbos
can be granted only if a court is satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that
antisocial behaviour took place, ipnas can be granted on the balance of
probabilities. Breaching them will not be classed as a criminal offence, but
can still carry a custodial sentence: without committing a crime, you can be
imprisoned for up to two years. Children, who cannot currently be detained for
contempt of court, will be subject to an inspiring new range of punishments for
breaking an ipna, including three months in a young offenders’ centre.
Lord Macdonald, formerly the director of public
prosecutions, points out that “it is difficult to imagine a broader concept
than causing ‘nuisance’ or ‘annoyance’”. The phrase is apt to catch a vast
range of everyday behaviours to an extent that may have serious implications
for the rule of law”. Protesters, buskers, preachers: all, he argues, could end
up with ipnas.
The Home Office minister, Norman Baker, once a defender of
civil liberties, now the architect of the most oppressive bill pushed through
any recent parliament, claims that the amendments he offered in December will
“reassure people that basic liberties will not be affected”. But Liberty
describes them as “a little bit of window-dressing: nothing substantial has
changed.”
The new injunctions and the new dispersal orders create a
system in which the authorities can prevent anyone from doing more or less
anything. But they won’t be deployed against anyone. Advertisers, who cause
plenty of nuisance and annoyance, have nothing to fear; nor do opera lovers
hogging the pavements of Covent Garden. Annoyance and nuisance are what young
people cause; they are inflicted by oddballs, the underclass, those who dispute
the claims of power.
These laws will be used to stamp out plurality and
difference, to douse the exuberance of youth, to pursue children for the crime
of being young and together in a public place, to help turn this nation into a
money-making monoculture, controlled, homogenised, lifeless, strifeless and
bland. For a government which represents the old and the rich, that must sound
like paradise.
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