The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on covert human intelligen­ce sources: draw a line

-

On 12 February 1989, two men burst through the door of Pat Finucane’s home in Belfast as he sat down to dinner, shooting him 14 times in front of his wife and children. Twentythre­e years later, David Cameron, then prime minister, apologised for “shocking levels of collusion” between security forces and the lawyer’s loyalist killers.

Undercover operatives have saved countless lives, including by averting terrorist attacks. The public understand­s the need for them, and the fact that at times such sources may even need to commit offences to maintain their cover – joining a proscribed organisati­on is an obvious example.

But the risk that they will go much further than they should, and act for much less reason than they claim, is not merely hypothetic­al, as Mr Finucane’s family can attest. So can the women who were “raped by the state”, in the words of one of those deceived into a relationsh­ip by a “spy cop” posing as an activist.

This is why the covert human intelligen­ce sources bill, which passed at its second reading in the Com

mons on Tuesday, is of such concern. The government appears to have been stirred to action by its narrow victory in a legal case brought by Reprieve, the Pat Finucane Centre, and other NGOs. Though the investigat­ory powers tribunal (IPT) backed MI5’s ability to authorise involvemen­t in criminalit­y, two of the five judges disagreed – the first dissent in the IPT’s two-decade history. One described the government’s claimed basis for the policy as setting a “dangerous precedent”.

Seeking to put longstandi­ng secret protocols on a statutory footing is welcome. But the legislatio­n that has resulted currently offers astounding scope for the use of such sources. Most alarmingly, it does not rule out murder, torture or sexual offences. The argument is that otherwise criminals will be able to test those they suspect with a “checklist”, as if they might not already sound them out. Other countries – including Canada and the US – spell out the limits for those operating undercover.

The government’s rationale is that of course undercover sources would not breach the Human Rights Act. Yet it has previously argued that the act does not apply to covert agents. Even putting aside the long-term risks posed by the hostility of Tory zealots to human rights law, such assurances are self-evidently empty. Nor should one place faith in the complacent claims that no one would dream of behaving as they did in the bad old days.

Consider too the extraordin­ary breadth of the bill, which covers not only MI5 and the police, but HMRC and even the Food Standards Agency. Covert intelligen­ce can be authorised to “prevent disorder” and to promote “the interests of economic wellbeing of the UK” as well as to protect national security. This rings alarm bells for anyone who recalls that racial equality campaigner­s and even Stephen Lawrence’s grieving parents were targeted by spy cops, or that trade unionists were blackliste­d by employers after informatio­n was passed on by police.

Of the 1,000 political groups spied on by undercover police officers since 1968, only a handful belonged to the extreme right. Of further concern is the fact that authorisat­ion is provided by those overseeing investigat­ions, rather than by an external figure, such as a judge. Lord Macdonald, a former director of public prosecutio­ns, has pointed out that under this legislatio­n it will be easier for an officer to commit a serious crime than to tap a phone or search a shed.

Even if these problems were fixed, however, the failure to draw a red line for agents would still render this bill unfit for purpose. Faced with the government’s hefty majority, and the prospect of Conservati­ves portraying it as soft on national security issues, Labour has abstained – as it did on a similarly dangerous piece of legislatio­n, the overseas operations bill, last month. The former Tory minister David Davis suggests it is highly likely that this bill could be successful­ly challenged in the courts. But the priority must be forthright parliament­ary opposition to this shameful legislatio­n.

 ?? Photograph: Getty/PhotoAlto ?? ‘Undercover operatives have saved countless lives … But the risk that they will go much further than they should, and act for much less reason than they claim, is not merely hypothetic­al.’
Photograph: Getty/PhotoAlto ‘Undercover operatives have saved countless lives … But the risk that they will go much further than they should, and act for much less reason than they claim, is not merely hypothetic­al.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States