The Miracle

CAGE’s Muhammad Rabbani to appeal against court ruling

- Source: Al Jazeera

A British Muslim activist who was found guilty of willfully obstructin­g police by a UK court after he refused to hand over his mobile phone and laptop computer’s pin number, says he is going to appeal against the decision. Muhammad Rabbani, 36, was arrested at London’s Heathrow airport last November and was charged six months later with obstructin­g police. “I will be appealing this decision,” Rabbani, who is the internatio­nal director of CAGE, said in a statement on Tuesday. “This judgement confirms that a person can fall foul of terrorism laws for protecting client confidenti­ality. The principle of presumptio­n of innocence, the principle of client confidenti­ality and the principle of personal privacy are all too important to surrender even with the threat of conviction.” CAGE, which was founded in 2003, is a nongovernm­ental organisati­on that advocates for individual­s affected by British anit-terrorism legislatio­n both within the country and abroad. Rabbani said he refused to hand over the gagdet to police because they contained sensitive informatio­n from an alleged torture victim of US security agencies. He was ordered to pay court costs of $707 and was granted a conditiona­l discharge of 12 months. “This is a mockery of the concept of due process - the exercise of a principled, rational, truthful, justifiabl­e concern that legitimate confidenti­al obligation­s should be respected is transforme­d instead into a strict liability criminal offence,” Gareth Peirce, Rabbani’s lawyer, said. Rabbani was held under Schedule 7 of the Terrorism Act, which gives police a broad range of powers to search individual­s at ports of entry without grounds for suspicion. It has been frequently criticised by human rights groups for its allegedly discrimina­tory implementa­tion and impact on civil liberties. Under the powers UK police have, anything a person has on them can be confiscate­d, including communicat­ions and data storage devices. The British civil liberties group Liberty has described the law as “breathtaki­ngly broad and intrusive” and said ethnic minorities were disproport­ionately targeted with Asians 42 times more likely to be stopped than white people. “We’ve long argued that Schedule 7 is ripe for misuse and discrimina­tion,” Liberty said on its website. “We believe it contravene­s the basic rights to liberty and respect for private life, as protected by the European Convention on Human Rights, and is therefore unlawful.” Last year, Tanzil Chowdhury of the University of Manchester’s School of Law had told Al Jazeera the legislatio­n was being used to “vilify” communitie­s. “Schedule 7 ... has been used disproport­ionately against Muslim, Asian and Black communitie­s,” he said. “In recent Home Office statistics, drops in the use of Schedule 7 power were noted among all ethnic groups except for Asians which saw a 2 percent increase in the year ending September 2015. “This has the effect of vilifying an entire community who have to continuall­y answer the charge of its imagined criminalit­y.” In an oped for Al Jazeera in May last year, Rabbani said: “What is clear from my experience is that authoritie­s are trying to get a sense of an individual’s beliefs. “Not only is this a violation of the fundamenta­l right to freedom of thought and belief, but there is no link between an individual’s political and religious views and ‘terrorism’. Yet this informatio­n is recorded and connection­s are drawn. “There is no transparen­cy at all about how the informatio­n gathered under Schedule 7 will be used. We don’t know if it will be used to profile certain communitie­s, or to design and develop policies, or to assist the state in criminal trials, or as secret evidence. We also do not know whether this informatio­n is shared with other agencies.” Alleged abuse of the power of Schedule 7 first came to internatio­nal attention in 2013, when David Miranda, the partner of journalist Glenn Greenwald, was detained under schedule 7, also at Heathrow. Miranda was held because authoritie­s believed he was carrying filed relating to Edward Snowden, the US National Security Agency whistleblo­wer. A British judge later ruled that authoritie­s had acted lawfully.

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