London Bridge terror coroner demands new online laws
LONDON: Britain’s chief coroner investigating the 2017 London Bridge terror attacks called for new laws to eliminate “offensive and shocking” propaganda from the Internet.
Mark Lucraft said that the country’s intelligence agencies and police were currently powerless to prevent people viewing such material online.
“While there are offences of possessing a document likely to be useful to a person in committing an act of terrorism ... and of disseminating terrorist publications, there is no offence of possessing terrorist or extremist propaganda material,” he said in a report published Friday.
“It may be impossible to take action even when the material is of the most offensive and shocking character ... The evidence at the inquests indicates to me that the lack of such an offence may sometimes prevent counterterror police taking disruptive action which could be valuable in their work of combating terrorism,” he added.
Lucraft is in charge of establishing the causes and circumstances that led to the death of eight people.
Some 48 people were also seriously injured when extremists in a van ploughed into pedestrians on London Bridge before attacking people at random.
Khuram Butt, 27, Rachid Redouane, 30, and Youssef Zaghba, 22, were shot dead by police.
The coroner highlighted 18 “matters of concern” in the report, which warned there was “a risk that future deaths could occur unless action is taken”.
Butt had looked at extremist material created by the Islamic State group online in the months before the attack.
Lawyer Helen Boniface, who represented six of the victims’ families in the inquest, said she was “pleased the chief coroner has recognised the risks presented by terrorist propaganda, possession of which must be taken seriously”.