This blog usually comments on matters relating to the law in general and magistrates in particular. Occasionally however there are events and/or circumstances that supercede such limitations. The dreadful events of the last three days constitute such circumstances.
On 26th November 2021 the Islamist terrorist group Hamas become a proscribed terrorist organisation in the UK in its entirety, following Parliament’s approval of an Order which was laid in Parliament a week previously. This means that members of Hamas or those who invite support for the group could be jailed for up to 14 years. That seems simple enough but like so much legal drafting it leaves interpretation to the courts. On 9th October Sky News broadcast a live interview with the Head of Political and International Relations in Hamas, Dr Basem Naim during which he denied that any Israeli civilians were killed. According to his perverted thinking all Israeli citizens are military targets. That interview can be viewed here. I am old enough to remember that during the height of the Troubles in Northern Ireland from October 1988 to September 1994 the British government banned broadcasts of the voices of representatives from Sinn Féin and several Irish republican and loyalist groups on television and radio in the United Kingdom. Margaret Thatcher initiated this ban. Considering the IRA was close to blowing her up in Brighton her personal feelings must have been disturbed to say the least. Her thinking seems to have been that such people can be seen but not heard. In not banning images I suppose she considered that she was still allowing freedom of speech; a pillar of our democracy. It was a foolish compromise and was widely mocked. Three decades later the security situation is quite different. 9/11 in the USA and 7/7 here have exposed an awful weakness; a weakness and paradox all democratic nations eventually have to face. Can a democratic society like the UK refrain from using autocratic ways and means to protect that self same democracy from falling to forces of anarchy and terror? If we have not reached that point we are close to it. The previously mentioned interview was a soundbite for the approval and praise for murdering Jews. (I write "Jews" and not Israelis. The murderers knew that many of their victims and hostages were from foreign countries.) That interview should not have been broadcast.
In our midst we have seen TV footage of screaming fanatical Muslims in Manchester, Liverpool and London not only castigating Israel but repeatedly calling for the elimination of the State of Israel as an entity because calling for a Palestine from the river to the sea means just that: a Palestine occupying all the land from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea. Looting a kosher restaurant in the high street of Golders Green shows how perilously close these Islamists are to emulating albeit on a very small scale so far the actions of the Nazis in 1938 Germany. The full force of existing law must be brought to bear on them. So far Scotland Yard is showing a reluctance to considering that hate crimes are taking place. The paradox of preserving a democracy by undemocratic means is ever closer. The history of Paris after 1789 should be compulsory reading for all politicians.
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