Archive for the 'Police State' Category

Those Kingsnorth police injuries in full: six insect bites and a toothache

When climate camp protesters descended on the site of the Kingsnorth power station for a week-long summer demonstration, the scale of the police operation to cope with them was enormous.

Police were accused of using aggressive tactics, confiscating everything from toilet rolls and board games to generators and hammers. But ministers justified what they called the “proportionate” £5.9m cost of the operation, pointing out that 70 officers had been injured in the course of their duties.

But data obtained under the Freedom of Information Act puts a rather different slant on the nature of those injuries, disclosing that not one was sustained in clashes with demonstrators.

Papers acquired by the Liberal Democrats via Freedom of Information requests show that the 1,500 officers policing the Kingsnorth climate camp near the Medway estuary in Kent, suffered only 12 reportable injuries during the protest during August.

The Home Office has now admitted that the protesters had not been responsible for any injuries. In a three-line written answer to a parliamentary question, the Home Office minister Vernon Coaker wrote to the Lib Dem justice spokesman, David Howarth, saying: “Kent police have informed the Home Office that there were no recorded injuries sustained as a result of direct contact with the protesters.”

Only four of the 12 reportable injuries involved any contact with protesters at all and all were at the lowest level of seriousness with no further action taken.

The other injuries reported included “stung on finger by possible wasp”; “officer injured sitting in car”; and “officer succumbed to sun and heat”. One officer cut his arm on a fence when climbing over it, another cut his finger while mending a car, and one “used leg to open door and next day had pain in lower back”.

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Mobiles set to record conversations

Mobile PrivacyCellphone makers have proven adept at cramming their devices with unlikely new features — and also at ignoring the social mayhem that can follow.

Some lawmakers are working to limit mobile phone use in cars, while others have voiced concerns about surreptitious photos taken with handset cameras and posted online.

Meanwhile, privacy advocates have raised alarms about plans to incorporate so-called geotracking technology in mobile devices that can transmit the physical location of users.

Now, in the latest example of the mobile phone industry’s “anything goes” attitude, Japan’s NTT DoCoMo and chipmaker Texas Instruments are planning to produce a device with the built-in ability to record phone calls.

The recording capability gives further proof of handset developers’ ingenuity. But its development also serves as an illustration of the industry’s approach when it comes to the legal and social effects of what experts call the most widely adopted and disruptive technologies ever created.

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Call for inquiry into DNA samples

DNA Demonstrates Police RacismThe government should look into why black people are over-represented on the UK’s DNA database, says a black police officers’ group. It did not necessarily mean more black criminality, said National Black Police Association spokesman Keith Jarrett.

He said an inquiry should examine if officers used the “same robustness” in taking samples from different groups.

The Guardian has reported 37% of black men are in the database, compared with fewer than one in 10 white men.

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A third ‘will refuse ID checks’

One in three people are expected not to cooperate with identity card checks, Home Office papers from 2004 suggest.ID Cards Papers revealed under information laws show officials have worked on the basis 60% of people would carry a card if and when it becomes compulsory to own one.

They assume 10% will happily confirm their ID via fingerprint or eye scans, but 30% “will refuse” to voluntarily show their card or biometric data.

The Home Office said the documents were “incredibly out of date”.

A spokesman said the identity card scheme had evolved a great deal since these “historic documents” were produced.

But he declined to say whether the assumptions - which only covers people who have got an ID card - themselves had changed.

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‘Talking’ CCTV scheme expanding

In an alarming move “Talking” CCTV cameras that tell off people dropping litter or committing anti-social behaviour are to be installed in 20 areas across England. They are already used in Middlesbrough where anyone seen misbehaving can be told via a loudspeaker, controlled by control centre staff, to stop.

CCTVHome Secretary ‘Mad’ John Reid has earmarked nearly £500,000 to fund the expansion.

Critics (including me) say the cameras are absurd and another example of excessive government intrusion into everyday life.

Mad John said they were aimed at “the small minority” who “litter our streets, vandalise our communities and damage our properties”.

Apart from being absurd, I think it’s rather sad that we should have faceless cameras barking at us

Opponent Steve Hills

“We all pay council tax so, in the end, we all pay when our communities are disrespected - both in our pockets as well as in our daily lives,” he said.

The disturbed home secretary said competitions were being held at schools in many of the areas for children to become the voice of the cameras.

“By funding and supporting these local schemes, the government is encouraging children to send this clear message to grown ups - act anti-socially and you will face the shame of being publicly embarrassed,” Mr Reid added.

The talking cameras will be installed in Southwark, in London, Barking and Dagenham, in London, Reading, Thanet, Harlow, Norwich, Ipswich, Plymouth, Gloucester, Derby, Northampton, Mansfield, Nottingham, Coventry, Sandwell, Wirral, Blackpool, Salford, South Tyneside and Darlington.

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