Daily Mail

15 years for viewing IS videos

Rudd vows tough new sentences and attacks tech giants who refuse to tackle web terror

- By Ian Drury and Jason Groves

WATCHING terrorist propaganda such as beheading videos and bombmaking guides online could be punished by 15 years in jail, the Home Secretary will announce today.

Amber Rudd has vowed to introduce tougher prison sentences for those convicted of viewing sickening jihadist and far-right content online.

A stricter 15-year jail term will also be brought in for fanatics who target police or members of the armed forces.

In an interview with the Daily Mail yesterday, Miss Rudd attacked tech giants who said there was ‘no business case’ for tackling web terror – a view she called ‘totally unacceptab­le’.

She said Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter and other companies had a ‘moral obligation’ to stop the use of their sites to promote terrorism.

In the interview yesterday, the Home Secretary also said:

Ministers have held talks with online retailers including Amazon after it emerged terrorists in the UK had bought components for home-made bombs over the internet;

Tech firms must allow security chiefs to access encrypted messaging services such as WhatsApp so there are no ‘godark areas’ for terrorists;

Half of the 800 British jihadis who went to fight in Syria are dead – concerns remain about the survivors who could reenter the UK.

At the Tory conference today, Miss Rudd will pledge to tighten the law to target terrorists’ use of the internet.

She will propose changes to strengthen the existing offence of possessing informatio­n likely to be useful to a terrorist so that it applies to material viewed repeatedly online.

Currently the power applies only to online material that has been downloaded and stored on a computer or smartphone or printed off as a hard copy.

The changes will also increase the maximum jail term from ten to 15 years.

Ministers are acting after prosecutor­s complained they were unable to bring terror charges against a man who had repeatedly viewed bomb-making videos on YouTube, because he had not saved the footage.

The Daily Mail has led the way in pushing for social media and internet firms to accept their responsibi­lities after a string of atrocities on Britain soil.

We have repeatedly revealed how easy it is to find terrorist content online.

A day after Khalid Masood murdered four and injured more than 50 outside Parliament in March we revealed how terror handbooks encouragin­g jihadists to mount a car attack before going on a stabbing rampage – the method used by Masood – were available on Google and Twitter.

The Mail also exposed how a day after the London Bridge attacks in June, which killed eight, an Islamic State manual telling followers not to be ‘squeamish’ about slitting people’s throats was being circulated on Google and Twitter.

It took less than 30 seconds to find links to the material, even though the internet companies have been warned repeatedly that their platforms are being used to recruit jihadists.

Last month Theresa May used a summit in New York to warn tech giants that her patience is running out over their failure to clamp down on jihadi groups.

Yesterday Miss Rudd said ministers could legislate so that Google, Facebook and others would face punishing fines unless they remove terrorist propaganda within a two-hour limit. She said the aim was to stop people feeling they could view extremist material ‘with impunity’, adding that it was ‘an important step forward’.

She said most of the 11 terror attacks – successful and thwarted – against the UK in the past year had ‘some sort of digital element’.

The Government is concerned easy access to terrorist propaganda and guides online is radicalisi­ng vulnerable individual­s.

Miss Rudd added: ‘This is an absolutely critical element, we believe, of creating the dangerous terrorists we have been receiving attacks from.’

Salman Abedi reportedly used extremist websites to learn how to build the explosive device that killed 22 people at a pop concert in Manchester in May.

Miss Rudd said: ‘I want to make sure those who view despicable terrorist content online including jihadi websites, far- right propaganda and bomb making instructio­ns face the full force of the law.

‘There is currently a gap in the law around material which is viewed or streamed from the internet without being permanentl­y downloaded.

‘This is an increasing­ly common means by which material is accessed online for criminal purposes, and is a particular­ly prevalent means of viewing extremist material. Changes will enable police and the security service to … intervene earlier in an investigat­ion given the speed with which online radicalisa­tion is taking place.’

Of the tougher sentence for terrorists who the military and police, Miss Rudd said: ‘Now the message that comes out from Daesh [IS] is … be a hero in the country that you are – and then often it says targeting policemen and armed forces.

‘That is why we are stepping up the penalties.’

Figures show that in the first eight months of this year 44,000 web links to IS propaganda were created and shared.

Miss Rudd said tech firms must do ‘much, much more’ to combat jihadist material.

The Home Secretary told how a senior tech executive had dismissed her calls to remove terror content because it would hit profit margins.

Miss Rudd added: ‘When they say there isn’t a business case for this … I would say, “That is a completely unacceptab­le answer. We are talking about human lives.”’

Twitter spokesman Nick Pickles said: ‘The technology simply isn’t there where you can flick a switch and go, this algorithm will find more terrorists online … We are just not there yet.’

‘Intervene earlier’ ‘Full force of the law’

 ??  ?? Crackdown: Amber Rudd
Crackdown: Amber Rudd

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