Door knocking

Latest in my door-knocking sessions on Sunday evening – Highgate this time. Every Sunday of the month, bar one, I am going out with the local ward councillors and Focus editors knocking on doors. With the turning back of the clocks, it is now pitch black – but I have chosen this time of the day and day of the week because most people are in. Usually when you door knock – the outs win the day.

Like any normal person, going out whatever the weather on a Sunday in the dark might not be first on my list of things to do – but as always with door knocking, my faith in human nature is restored.

We picked up seven new deliverers – very important as our leaflets and newspapers are very popular and a main source of communication, but they take an army of volunteers to deliver. (Don’t hesitate to contact me if you would like to deliver your street!)

But the best thing about it is that you come back reassured that the vast mass of humanity is decent, reasonable (whatever their political persuasion) and just trying to get on with their lives best they can. And that goes across all areas! From the media coverage of life in the UK, you would think that people will be unhappy with their lot, discontented, mean and cross with whoever comes across their path. That just isn’t the case – the vast majority of people are very nice and decent. And before anyone says that Highgate is a nice comfy area – the same holds true in all areas across my very diverse constituency, regardless of class, culture or income.

Is one of my constituents a terrorist?

My latest surgery brought the debates over what legal measures are acceptable in the fight against terrorism right to my doorstep. For one of the people who came to see me was Mouloud Sihali. He was tried – and acquitted – in relation to the Wood Green ricin plot of 2003, but it is clear that the authorities still very much suspect him.

A bit of background first, as I’ve always been a bit uneasy about some events around the ricin plot. First, news of the incident was not promptly reported to key leaders in Haringey’s local emergency planning due to – a senior source told me – “news management by Number 10”. I can understand keeping information from the public for a short time to avoid undue panic etc, but to have Number 10 directly intervene to stop local emergency planning officials know smacks of something wrong – particularly as this was potentially an evacuation scenario.

Second, when news did become public it was all about a ricin plot being thwarted and the story basically was “ricin found, terrorists stopped, all now ok” – except that it then turned out there was no ricin. (And if the absence of ricin was the reason for not telling emergency planning officials initially, then how come its absence didn’t make it to the media? Was someone wanting the threat to sound worse to the public than it really was?).

Third, the Government has tried to use the ricin plot as justification for extending the period people can be detained without trial. It is true that one of the people skipped to Algeria – but he was actually released after only two days, so even under current laws, the police could have kept him in detention for much longer if they’d wanted to. And anyway he could have been charged with acts preparatory to terrorism. If this was a major terrorist whose existence would justify allowing people to be detained without trial for 90 days – why did the police let him go after just two?

All of which adds up to good grounds for being sceptical of how the ricin case has been handled, but that doesn’t mean everyone accused is all sweetness and light. Indeed, Mouloud Sihali himself was convicted of a passport offence. However, as quite a few people were caught up in it all, it doesn’t follow from the final conviction of Kamel Bourgass that everyone else charged at some point was necessarily involved in the plot.

Mr Sihali had come to see me (and was happy for me to talk publicly about his visit) because he is under a virtual control order. Without actually being under a control order – and despite being cleared of the ricin plot and freed (completely free) for five months – he is now tagged, under curfew, not allowed to have a mobile phone or use the internet, or to have visitors to his room, and he has to report each day to the police. Free for five months – again there’s this nagging doubt that enters my mind about quite what the authorities are really up to. If they are convinced he is a terrorist – well why was he let wander round completely free for five months? Is it that they’ve changed their minds back and forth as to whether he really is a terrorist – and if they’ve been changing their minds, how good then is the evidence?

He’s now facing deportation as a threat to the security of our country, but the evidence will be judged in secret and the evidence will never be seen by either the normal court system nor Mr Sihali.

And so this is the problem. As he’s been convicted of a passport offence and was in this country illegally, I don’t have a problem with deportation action being taken against him and being judged in an open, public process. But he’s facing deportation on the grounds of being a threat to national security – i.e. if deported this way he’ll have the stigma of being thought a terrorist hanging over him for the rest of his life. That is an awful burden to carry … unless he really is a terrorist. Yet he doesn’t get the chance to argue his own innocence – and his argument is that he should be given a chance to clear his name against the secret evidence. (You can read some of his case in his statement on this website).

So here sitting in front of me I had the whole problem in a nutshell around the issue and the legality of control orders and secret evidence, the terrorist threat and civil liberties. Getting it wrong either way brings huge consequences – letting a terrorist go free or tarring an innocent man for life.

He is one of my constituents – should I be fighting to help an innocent man, or would I be aiding a terrorist? I have no idea, without knowing what the secret evidence is. My only route is to try and get a meeting with Home Secretary John Reid to find out more about what evidence does exist, seek advice and find out what routes are actually open to Mr Sihali to pursue.

But whereas I trust our judicial system to be fair and just – my confidence in this Government’s dealings with truth and trust has been fundamentally eroded – especially when you add in the issues about how they have already behaved over the ricin plot to their abuse of the public trust with the exaggeration and manipulation of evidence over WMDs in Iraq.

And even if all the evidence stacks up, and the man is a terrorist – is deporting him really the answer? Does shuffling a terrorist to another country really help when the accusation is that he’s part of an international terrorist organisation and there is an international war on terror?

Underneath all the veneer of Labour’s tough talk on terrorism, here I am left facing a case where there’s a risk an innocent man in unjustly tarred as a terrorist without a chance to clear his name, but if he’s really a terrorist – then simply deporting him ain’t much of a punishment or deterrence either.

Remembrance Sunday

Red poppies photoToday is Remembrance Sunday and the official ceremony at which the Haringey dignitaries and leaders lay memorial wreaths. The ceremony is very well done with the scouts and the venture scouts raising standards or laying wreaths for those too frail to do so themselves. The sun shone brightly down, the traffic was stopped and those who died that we might live were honoured and remembered.

Memorial service at Hornsey Central Hospital

A very, very special memorial service at the war memorial chapel at Hornsey Central Hospital (which will be preserved whatever happens on that site)! I think this is the first time the memorial has been opened for years for the memorial ceremony and, on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month – with so many of the names of those who fell there – it was truly moving.

I talked to one of the veterans who had served in the Navy. It was just extraordinary to think of what this one man saw and witnessed. I won’t reveal what he said about sailor’s reputations in regard to each port of call – still cheeky at 80-odd! But alongside the humour, he also told me that he and one other colleague were the only survivors out of eight men attacked in a gun turret. It is impossible to understand what that generation saw and survived. And every time I write the message to go on the wreath I lay – and I thank those who died that we might live – I am moved to tears.

Afterwards I was chatting to lots of the people who had come – and the last chap to nab me was very agitated. Basically he wanted to express his anger – as a serving member of the RAF – as regards how he didn’t think it was fair for lads to fight for their country but when they were in need of state support (housing) they couldn’t get anywhere because immigrants got all the houses. And did I think he was racist, and political correctness was ignoring blokes like him, and he would have to vote for the BNP – there was no alternative.

Now whilst I said to him that I didn’t think we were likely to see eye to eye – I don’t think it is racist to bring this sort of grievance to light. The BNP made huge inroads in the east of London because Labour ignored the ‘already heres’. I don’t think it is just white working class – which was his argument. I think it is a real battle between the entitlement people who have worked and paid into the system for years feel they should have against the needs of the newly arrived.

I wrote about this clash of the already heres versus newcomers. I wrote extensively on in my chapter in Britain after Blair because I think there is a real and unaddressed issue here. And that issue, above and beyond this hopeless unfit for purpose Home Office, is about the allocation of a limited pot of public resource.

So – this young man was very, very angry with a country that he fights for but which he believes no longer cares or listens to people like him. I didn’t agree with his more prejudiced remarks – but I do agree that these are the issues we need to resolve if we are to avoid the BNP finding any favour for its hideous bile. Breeding grounds for discontent – particularly when they have some validity – are easily swung to extreme views.

Anyway – at that point I had to go on somewhere else and so made my excuses, though as I left the young chap then said I was quite good looking for an MP – and would I like to go out for a drink! For me though it was off to the Lib Dem Council Group’s Away Day (they didn’t get very far as the venue is next door my constituency office in High Street Hornsey). I took a break out session on crime and policing and then giving a general talk on how to take the issues that matter to their ward constituents and turn them into action.

Open Door and Highgate Wood School

I met with Open Door yesterday – which literally opens its doors to young people in trouble. It is a charity and has to scrabble for funding grants and pots and donations – but delivers the most incredible service to young people who need talking therapies to hold them safe as life’s challenges destabilise them on their passage to adulthood.

This is a centre of excellence in terms of the quality of the staff and a truly professional organisation in an area where there is a need for real professionalism. With so many quasi-professionals offering a variety of counselling in a variety of circumstances with very little oversight or supervision, there has to be a concern about standards, training and outcome.

So when you have an excellent local organisation working in a key area, you would have thought that Haringey Council would welcome Open Door with open arms. And yet, my understanding is that they won’t even agree to meet with them to see how Open Door can be involved and engaged in this area.

Lord knows, I get so much traffic on issues around young people and behaviour – I can only assume that the Council is so big that it doesn’t truly understand how to involve and engage organisations like Open Door. I will write to Sharon Shoesmith – Director of Childrens’ Services – to try and orchestrate a meeting between the Council and Open Door. I have no doubt that this could be a very beneficial engagement – particularly if they can be involved with schools and the well-being of young people. Early intervention in terms of support for those who without such support may go on to a lifetime of troubles seems like a good idea to me!

Then it was straight on to meet the new Headmaster of Highgate Wood School. Patrick Cozier seems a very good thing to me and in the end, it is the enthusiasm and vision of the Head that plays such a large role in inspiring the staff and the pupils and the school. He seemed very clued up as to relations with the local community. Take the recent hoo-haa over flood-lighting for example – where the local papers describe it as a sort of war. In reality he and staff are meeting and working with local residents and local residents’ associations. Schools always bring hazards for those living close by – but a Head who understands and wants to work with the community is half the battle. And the other half is his ambition to inspire the school to improving results in line with other schools in the borough. So – I hope to help wherever I can and look forward to working with Mr Cozier, the staff and the pupils.

And finally – I had an American shadow me the other day and she blogged me! You can read about here experience at http://myfairladybug.livejournal.com/51887.html.

Alexandra Palace update

On The future of the birthplace of regular TV at Alexandra Palace is under threatThursday it was the meeting with Cllr Charles Adje (Haringey Labour councillor and Chair of Alexandra Palace Board) and Mr Firoz Kassam (of Firoka Group – who are purchasing a 125 year lease on Ally Pally). Cllr Wayne Hoban (ex Ally Pally board, Lib Dem Deputy Leader of the Opposition and ward councillor for the Palace) came with me.

The meeting was not exactly a resounding success in terms of agreeing any changes ahead of the signing of the contracts on Tuesday to protect the historic TV studios. Being so close on the deadline for signing the contracts it was clear that the long delays over signing since last May had exasperated those involved in the process and so there was reluctance to make any more changes at the last moment.

In my view – in that case it should have been dealt with earlier and anyway it is important to get everything right if you are signing something over for 125 years! As to why it hadn’t been dealt with earlier – well, when the issue was originally raised and proposed by the two Liberal Democrat members on the Ally Pally board and minuted – it was voted down. So this was a last (and unsuccessful) pre-contract signing attempt to change things.

However, Mr Kassam recognises the importance of the history of the birthplace of television. The contract provides for a museum of television history and until the deal is signed and sealed this remains the state of play. As a businessman there is also no doubt that he recognises that the historic site is a unique selling point and that he will want to maximise that advantage.

Mr Kassam seemed open to discussions on the museum post-contract signing. One point made during the public kafuffle over the last couple of weeks was the issue around the BBC expecting the Firoka Group to put up the funds to preserve the artefacts and create the television museum and the BBC not being able to put money in itself. I am hopeful that given Mr Kassam’s willingness to look at these issues with interested parties that the BBC and Mr Kassam will be able to talk the issues over.

So, we’re back to where we were a few days ago before this meeting was arranged – that is, the Charity Commission consultation that will run for one month – and remains tremendously important in terms of any issues anyone wishes to raise. Therefore, I would encourage everyone to put in their views during the consultation period by emailing the Charity Commission at enquiries@charitycommission.gsi.gov.uk

As always the emails that work best with this sort of lobbying are short, temperate but clear messages that include your full name and postal address. It would be handy if you could also copy your email to me at lynne@lynnefeatherstone.org

Extradition with the US

Catching up on this week – on Wednesday Parliament was prorogued. A strange name for the ending of business – in this case ahead of the Queen’s Speech next Wednesday. So we rushed through finishing off business from the last “Parliamentary year” so the decks are clear ahead of the Queen’s Speech kicking off the new one next week.

So – the Commons (MPs) had to deal with all sorts of odds and sodds of Bills, deciding what to do with changes voted through in the Lords to them. The Commons either has to agree or reject them. Amongst all the completing / finishing off were a few of the unresolved clashes where Labour had lost to the other parties in the Lords but hadn’t been willing to back down in the Commons. In the end either the Lords has to back down or the Commons has to make a concession (or in extreme cases the Commons over-rules the Lords with the Parliament Act).

The most notable being the row of our unequal and unfair of British citizens under the extradition arrangements with the USA. On that the Tory Lords caved in ultimately (and got heavily criticised in the media for their backdown).

I don’t subscribe to caving in on issues that are of such importance as equal treatment of British citizens by foreign Governments. No doubt, we will have to bring the row over extradition back at the next legislative opportunity. Perhaps Labour will roll it up with other treaties on extradition and look to set renegotiating principles. The Government never likes to be seen to be acting on Opposition positions – preferring to bring things back under their own banner. That’s fine – so long as they do.

First Muslim in Congress

One particular result in the US elections has caught my eye – the election of Keith Ellison in Minnesota – as he’ll be the first Muslim member of the Congress. From what I’ve seen of his views (such as two state solution to the Middle East and an endorsement from American Jewish World) this will be very good news – both because of the extra prominence it will give to non-Muslims that Muslim doesn’t equal extremist or terrorist and also because the more prominent moderate Muslims there are in leadership positions, the better for the Muslim community itself too.

Ally Pally progress – and conditional cautions

First – another update on Ally Pally. I’ve had a call to say can I meet Firoz Kassam (the new owner) and Cllr Charles Adje (Labour councillor and Chair of the Ally Pally Board) this Thursday (more quickly than I had suggested last Saturday when I met them at the Ally Pally firework display). The reason give is that the contract will be signed next week.

There is provision for a museum of television in the contract – but it doesn’t preserve the studios. So my proposal is to offer them a draft clause to be inserted in the contract which will save the historical parts of the old BBC studios – though with flexibility as to exactly what the rooms are used for.

I’ve got a couple of experts on the case to draw up the draft clause for me to offer to the Firoka Group and the Ally Pally Board. I hope their bringing forward of the meeting means that they want to show willing prior to the Charity Commission consultation and appear good altruists.

We will see. I gather that the Firoka Group’s current view is that they don’t feel they should spend money on it when the BBC hasn’t. A completely spurious argument as the BBC is hard pressed to spend public money in a building that isn’t theirs and has had a cloud over its future – and has a debt ridden history. And, Firoka are going to have to spend money on the building anyway.

(UPDATE: I’ve put the text of the Early Day Motion I’ve put down in Parliament up on in the news section of my website).

Hopefully, I will be able to persuade Mr Kassam to see the preservation of the directors’ gallery and the other fine parts of the structure as an asset (which it is) rather than a nuisance.

Later – the Police Justice Bill came back to the Commons in the ping pong it is having with the Lords. Ping pong is when the Commons and Lords vote for different wording to be in the Bill – so it goes back and forth until agreement is reached. The last two issues being battled out are extradition to the USA and conditional cautions.

I lead on the cautions – and the Government had tabled some improving amendments in the Lords which the noble Lords had accepted. So my job in my speech was to accept them but flag up all the remaining problems – of which there are many. However, the battle continued on extradition – and it may well be that this goes to the Lords and returns again on Tuesday to the Commons. We will have to see.

More pong than ping – I should say!