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John Minto: Dark Shadow Of The State Creeps On...

The dark shadow of the state creeps on...

Column - By John Minto.

In a blog earlier this week I said I'd give more details of the laws passed since 2001 which extend state power over New Zealanders' lives and threaten our civil liberties. I prepared the summary below at the time of the 2007 Urewera raids and the police boasting they had uncovered a "terrorist plot" (see previous blog) It was the first attempt by state agencies to use and justify their new powers and vastly increased resources.

Some of the law changes related to UN obligations but for the most part our state agencies, the police and SIS in particular, have used the so-called "war on terror" as a cover to extend their powers and resources. The focus of their attention has been New Zealand political activists.

2002 Terrorism Suppression Act

2003 Government Communications Security Bureau Act

2003 Telecommunications (Interception Capability) Act

2003 Crimes Amendment Act

2003 Counter-Terrorism Act

Enacted as amendments to the Crimes Act; the Summary Proceedings Act; the NZSIS Act among others.

Does three things -

2003 Border Security Act

2004 Telecommunications (Interception Capability) Act

2004 Maritime Security Act

2004 Identity (Citizenship and Travel Documents) Act

2006 Aviation Security Amendment Act

2007 Terrorism Suppression Amendment Act

This bill provided four major changes -

This assumption of power by politicians over court processes is demonstrated most clearly by the US with its treatment of Guantanemo Bay detainees and the CIA's "rendition" programme whereby suspected terrorists have been clandestinely transferred around the world for torture. In both cases the courts have been sidelined.

Two further laws are in the pipeline and being considered by parliament now:

2011 Security Intelligence Service Amendment Bill

2011 Search and Surveillance Bill

For an indication of the end point of this process read George Orwell's book 1984.

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