Posts Tagged ‘government’

* All Our Freedoms

Posted on December 3rd, 2008 by jill. Filed under Leadership Abuja Nigeria articles 2008.






Police committee and leaders met last week in a damage limitation exercise following their arrest of a member of the British parliament, an opposition front bencher Damien Green. Although the police are legally allowed to arrest whoever they want, there is a convention that they deal very gently with members of parliament.
While all the fuss is about the rights of members of parliament to access information ordinary people don’t need to know, the truth is that Mr Green, shadow immigration minister, has been receiving confidential information from Christopher Galley, a 26 year old Home Office worker. Why he chose Mr Green to blab the official secrets to we will perhaps never know, but it has been going on for two years, since the young man was turned down for employment as Green’s secretary. It seems Green has been strongly encouraging the younger man to spill the beans, and this leaves him vulnerable to a charge of conspiracy, which is extremely serious.  It all seems quite strange.
Galley worked in immigration, and whispers suggest the leaks are about people who might possibly be terrorists - Muslims, I suppose. It named several immigrants who have been cleared to work in sensitive positions, while perhaps being susceptible to fundamentalist influences and therefore to pose a terrorist threat.
Meanwhile another young man, Dr Bilal Abdulla, a UK born Iraqi citizen, is on trial for an attack at Glasgow airport last year, when he was persuaded to blow a car up in front of the airport in protest about the Iraq war. Although a lot of hatred abounds in blogs about this man, I prefer to see him as another kind of victim of this unjust war, a victim of frustration and hatred. A junior doctor, a man who all his life has worked only to do good for his fellow man, even he can go over to the dark side because of the injustice befalling Iraqis and others in these terrible times.
We all need to get a grip now, and ensure we maintain control of our emotions as these events continue which threaten peace and democracy, not only in countries the US and UK see fit to attack, but in every country in the world. Dr Abdulla cracked in a rather spectacular way, but it seems Damian Green has cracked as well, or was mischief making for political ends. How much illicit information had he stored up to use in Parliament against the government, when the time came?
It was with tired irony that I gave a weary laugh when I heard about the MP’s arrest. Only in October, the government was forced to abandon the plan to detain terrorist suspects for 42 days without charge. This spectacular infringement of liberty was defeated, not by elected members, but by the non-elected second house, the House of Lords. During the long months when Gordon Brown and co tried to persuade us that the law would only be used on those who might be suspicious-looking (i.e. Muslims with dark skin), I wrote many letters to various MPs, to no avail. The government and the opposition both supported the Bill, and Damien Green was also a supporter.
The gist of the leaks seems to be to build up a file indicating that people from suspect-type countries should be automatically considered to be potentially dangerous terrorists. My protest against the Bill included the reason that, once in place, it would give carte blanche to the police to take people into custody willy-nilly, and without having to explain their reasons. So the irony is that one of those who tried to increase police powers with regard to terrorism, should be the first to suffer from them. This is justice indeed.
The police in the UK are non-political, and they are very proud of this neutral stance. Created originally by John Peel to protect ordinary people in the rough streets of Victorian London, the police to this day regard their role as simply protecting the public. They have developed subtle means to divest themselves of impositions successive governments try to put onto their broad and brave shoulders, from Thatcher and the Battle of the Bean Fields, when police were expected to defend the ancient Standing Stones of Stonehenge from hippies trying to have a Midsummer Night party there (you couldn’t make it up!) to this last attempt to pick up ethnic minorities. The police have worked long and hard to rid themselves of the slur of racism, and they don’t want it coming back. Better to strike first, and strike hard!
What better way to make sure that the harsh duty of holding people without charge for 42 days, long enough to ruin a person’s life, long enough to lose your job, your home, your family, long enough for word to get around, than to arrest the lawmakers first. 
At the moment the uproar is all about the police having the audacity to walk into the Houses of Parliament and search the arrested man’s office. Parliament is in an uproar because the police ‘didn’t have a warrant.’ Two things: firstly, it is generally accepted in the UK that those who are innocent will always do their best to help the police with their enquiries, so it would be reasonable for police officers to assume no warrant would be requested, as indeed it wasn’t at the time; secondly, it is perfectly within the law for police to search the home and offices of anyone who is under arrest, without the need for a warrant.
Parliament is fuming about the audacity of the police in seeing fit to arrest a senior MP but, when the furore dies down, it will slowly dawn on the rest of the House, that they have, in this case, made their own bed, and now must lie in it. in another ‘Stalinist’ move on Wednesday however, the Speaker of the House swiftly changed the law so that, while police have the right to search ordinary people’s offices and so on, government offices are now exempt. Surely this is another example of government in the UK becoming less transparent, not more, as intended by the original New Labour Government in 1997, when they promised clean government. Now it seems, we will no longer be able to know if the government is clean or not. I have a feeling this is something we will regret. .
 
 
1080 words
©   Jill Rees
02 December 2008
 
 

 





Tags: 42-day rule, anti-terrorist laws, Art, Article, Bilal Abdulla, Book, Damian Green, Family, freedom, government, home, jill, justice, Leader, Leadership, Leadership Abuja Nigeria articles 2008, Misc, Peace, Police, political, Rain, Sea, UK, War, Work

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* In School Today

Posted on September 30th, 2008 by jill. Filed under Leadership Abuja Nigeria articles 2008.


It’s nice to get letters from readers of this column, even when the response is not as positive as it could be. Contrary to what a reader recently accused me of, I don’t say things just to ‘provoke a reaction’, as he felt obliged to write his thoughts to me about the intentions of Archbishop Peter Akinole’s attempts to split the African Church from the Rest of the World over the issue of homosexuality. I thought long and hard about whether I should write about a subject that still upsets many Nigerians. In the end I wrote about it because I thought it was right that Nigerians are aware of this big difference in attitude between Nigeria and the developed world.

In the liberal, secular nations, personal choice issues such as homosexuality and sex before marriage are almost universally accepted. Even if a lifestyle is not approved of by an individual, the right to live according to one’s own conscience is strongly upheld by all.  Nigerians have the right to know that that is how we think in the north.

For us it is part of the whole human rights thing and ‘rights of the individual’ thing. In the UK in particular, laws against discrimination are enforced fairly rigidly, and any kind of attack or slight against a gay person, a physically handicapped person or a person of a different race or religion will be taken seriously both by the police and by employers.  Even children can’t be bossed around by strangers. Sometimes this goes a bit far. The other day I was cycling down the canal path when a little boy accompanied by his mother, also on a bike, wobbled about unsure which side to go past me on. As I went by him i called out ‘It’s best if you pull onto the left hand side’. His mother yelled furiously after me,

‘You mind your own f*&^%$£ business you f*&^%$£ cow!’ which I thought was a bit over the top in the circumstances. It reminded me of teaching in English schools.

I found it quite sad last week when I came back to teach in school here to hear the children swearing at their teacher.

‘We don’t want to learn’ they say. Because their parents have bought them the latest blackberry phone, iPod and Wii computer games, they see no reason to work hard for themselves.

Democratically mature countries seem to have a disrespect for authority. Even more, a distrust of those in authority. When Priests have been led into the courts in droves for child abuse, our Prime Minister has lied in the House of Commons about Sadam’s weapons of mass destruction, and where the banks with our mortgages collapse, how are we to trust them? Gordon Brown at the moment can’t put a foot right. Whenever he speaks in his own defence, his audience just laugh mockingly. Nothing he says will sound credible, because we can’t tell lies from truth now.

So while I can understand the children for not trusting what their teachers say to them, I feel sorry for them. Human society progresses only by each generation being able to assimilate just that little bit more each time, and this is achieved by listening to those who have gone before. If children won’t listen to their teachers, they won’t be able to learn. Of course this is how the governments want it, only the most liberal of nations, maybe Sweden or somewhere, would want its young people to genuinely be able to work out what’s going on.

Nigerians I guess can see how, when something is handed to you on a plate, it can be taken for granted. The positive side to it is that when many children in the UK don’t take advantage of their opportunities, it is more worthwhile for Nigerians to persist in becoming qualified as much as they can, despite the hardships. If Nigerians can rid themselves of the reputation they have in England for dishonesty and scams, they will be recognised for the hard-working people the majority are, and will become a sought after workforce in an under populated Europe, for those Nigerians who want a spell abroad.

While every Nigerian is aware of the importance of education, as yet the government has not managed to ensure even Primary education for every child, and huge investment in public education is still needed. Even then, teachers will have to be better trained, and this is going take a generation at best. The same problem occurs in Nigeria as in the UK, if the government can’t be bothered to fund education properly, how can we trust them?

Nigerians have picked up on the idea that their politicians and business leaders may not be entirely honest in their dealings.  If you want to join with us in distrusting our leaders, why not take up the correlative? The good side of this mainly negative trend? The idea that everyone is equal and has the right to be themselves. We need  unity among ourselves to keep a beady eye on authorities, secular or otherwise to get through this.

864 words

30 September 2008

©Jill Rees

Tags: Article, corruption, government, Leadership, Leadership Abuja Nigeria articles 2008, Nigeria, political, priests, school, secular, trust

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Buddhist Quotes

The lion king is said to advance three steps, then gather himself to spring, unleashing the same power whether he traps a tiny ant or attacks a fierce animal. In inscribing this Gohonzon for her protection, Nichiren was like the lion king. This is what the sutra means by “the power [of the Buddhas] that has the lion’s ferocity.”1 Believe in this mandala with all your heart. Nam-myoho-renge-kyo is like the roar of a lion. What sickness can therefore be an obstacle? — Nichiren Daishonin

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