From:   "Charles Parker", [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Spectator - 17 Feb 2001

A national police force is being assembled, and newspapers are looking the 
other way
STEPHEN GLOVER

When people say that this government has a tyrant’s heart I usually take it 
with a pinch of salt. Surely Tony Blair and nice Jack Straw and that strange 
Geoff Hoon can’t really be trying to deprive us of our hard-won liberties. 
Granted there are worrying examples, such as the plan to limit july trials. 
But need we get so het up?

Yes we do. Unnoticed by most newspapers, and ignored by all lobby 
correspondents, a select committee has been considering the Armed Forces 
Bill. Tacked on to this is a separate section relating to the powers of the 
Ministry of Defence police. The effect of these proposals, if adopted, would 
be to create a national police force for the first time, directly answerable 
to the Secretary of State for Defence.

Let me go back a bit. In 1987 the powers of the Ministry of Defence police 
were extended under the Ministry of Defence Police Bill. However, the 
relevant minister, Archie Hamilton, gave an assurance that all ‘serious 
crimes [would be] passed on to the domestic police department’. In other 
words, the MoD police would still be largely restricted to the no doubt 
important work of guarding Ministry of Defence property and investigating 
minor crimes committed by MoD personnel. This undertaking has been more 
honoured in the breach than in the observance. Increasingly, the MoD police 
have been investigating serious crimes. More ominously, they have been 
acting as an arm of the state against civilians. Readers may remember the 
cases of Tony Geraghty and Nigel Wylde, two utterly decent men, and both of 
them civilians, whose houses were raided by MoD police in December 1998. 
Charges against both men were later dropped, but not before they had been 
harassed and intimidated.

So the powers of the MoD police have been gradually and stealthily 
increased. Now the government wants to extend them further. If the Armed 
Forces Bill becomes law, the Ministry of Defence police will have full 
jurisdiction and investigative powers anywhere in the United Kingdom. But 
whereas existing constabularies face local accountability, the Ministry of 
Defence police would be accountable only to the Secretary of State for 
Defence. They would be perfectly within their rights if they raided your 
house or mine, or arrested us in the street. The Bill requires that the 
local chief constable agree, but that is all.

Perhaps you think I am being a little paranoid. We are all British, after 
all. Surely the MoD police would not overstep the mark. Well, I wouldn’t 
count on it. Nigel Wylde has uncovered an extraordinary speech made by 
Walter Boreham, the retiring chief constable of the MoD police, last 
October. Mr Boreham was addressing the Defence Police Federation conference, 
and was rather indiscreet. He revealed that during the fuel protests the 
previous month he had been approached by the government and asked for 
assistance. ‘I wrote back to the second permanent under-secretary,’ said Mr 
Boreham, ‘and told him that he could have as many officers as reasonably 
practicable but he wouldn’t be able to use them for the specific role the 
Home Office had intended — of aiding fuel convoys or policing picketed oil 
refineries. Having explained our dilemma in great legislative detail, it 
wasn’t long before the second permanent under-secretary was on the case.’

In others word, the government considered using the MoD police during the 
fuel protest, thinking that they would be more effective than normal police. 
Upon discovering this was not permissible under existing legislation, the 
government decided to extend the powers of the MoD police so that they could 
work as a national police force. Hence the new section in the Armed Forces 
Bill.

This section is meeting spirited opposition in the select committee, led by 
the Tory MP Robert Key and the Liberal Democrat Paul Keetch. Labour MPs on 
the committee, by contrast, do not appear unduly alarmed by their 
government’s tyrannical inclinations. Amendments will be introduced by 
opponents, and the Bill will get a rough ride in the Lords. It may not reach 
the statute book before a May election, but that wouldn’t stop New Labour 
having another go if it wins. Mr Key is surely right when he speaks of 
‘mission creep’ on the part of the MoD police. The government is attempting 
to introduce an unaccountable national police force by the back door, and it 
must be stopped.
--
Fantastic, is what I say.<G>  If there is a national police force then
maybe we can get a national firearm licensing system out of it too. <GGG>

Steve.


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