Camden Council claims to promote freedom of speech in all its
forms. On its website the council clearly states that
Camden has a proud history of being an epicentre of radical
thought and political activity. Often, decades (or centuries)
later, what was once radical is considered mainstream. A culture
of fostering thinking that sits against the grain keeps Camden
at the forefront of innovation in all sorts of areas of life,
the arts, science and business.
The website goes on to say: “It is vital that people are given
the space to think and speak freely, even when we disagree or are
offended by what they have to say.” It cites Article 10 of the Human
Rights Act (1998) and says it understands this to “include the right
to express views aloud, or through, [amongst other means ]
communication on the internet”.
The website adds that
public authorities may restrict the right to freedom of
expression if they can show that their action has a proper basis
in law and is necessary and “proportionate”… The public
authority must show that the restriction is “proportionate”, in
other words the restriction must be no more than is necessary,
appropriate and not excessive in the circumstances.
Double tongued
Sadly, it appears that the human rights pledges made by Camden
Council are restricted to its website alone and do not apply apply
to its actual policies and actions.
As a user of Camden’s public computers, I was appalled to learn,
in the wake of Israel’s war on Gaza (July-August 2014) that I could
no longer access my own articles on the Redress Information &
Analysis website. As a result, I lodged an official complaint
addressed to the head of library services in Camden. My complaint
was dismissed by the council on the grounds that the Redress
Information & Analysis website is “intolerant and anti-Semitic”.
Regrettably, the Local Government Ombudsman has also upheld Camden
Council’s decision to continue blocking indefinitely Redress
Information & Analysis. (For the full details, see my article, “London’s
Camden Council censors criticism of Israel”, published in
Redress Information & Analysis.)
Disappointed and disillusioned by Camden Council’s sheer
disregard for the democratic values it publicly claims to hold, I
wrote to the council’s chief executive,
Mike Cooke, in the hope that he would revise and overturn the
council’s baseless decision to block Redress Information &
Analysis on its public computers, which number more than 100.
Perhaps expectedly, Cooke did not take long time to respond to my
letter. He said:
The censor’s words – uncensored
I’ve now looked at the background and the details of this
situation.
You may be aware that we use automatic website filtering to
assist us in ensuring appropriate use of computers. In the case
of the Redress [Information & Analysis] website, it was
filtered by the software but then was reviewed by officers. A
number of articles were assessed as being perfectly acceptable,
a number were questionable in terms of conveying an attitude of
intolerance and significantly the site also was found to contain
a number of violent images which were alone sufficient to keep
the website blocked.
As a public authority, the council believes it should not
directly enable access to material that could be reasonably
considered to be containing material [sic] that is promoting
intolerance or found to be offensive. We have an important role
to promote social cohesion.
Having looked into this, I am satisfied that we have acted
reasonably and appropriately. If the Redress [Information &
Analysis] website changes or develops, then we would of
course review the blocking in the light of those changes.
My reply to Cooke’s letter reflected my deep sense of frustration
and outrage:
I was disappointed, though not surprised, to see that
you have upheld Camden Council’s decision to block the website
of Redress Information & Analysis. I wonder if you had a
chance to read
my latest article on [the] website, a link to which I sent
you in my previous email. This article included my response to
the Local Government Ombudsman and addressed all the points made
by Camden Council which you seem to have simply reiterated in
your response to my email complaint.
I also noted that while initially the council blocked the
website of Redress [Information & Analysis] on the
grounds of being intolerant and anti-Semitic – mentioning
violent images only in passing – your letter now seems to cite
violent images as the main reason for blocking the website. This
point has been already addressed in my response to the Local
Government Ombudsman where I argued that the “the internet and
the press quite often include graphic images of mutilated bodies
and corpses which could be easily accessed by the users of
Camden libraries’ computers, and all national and local press
have an email edition which could be accessed by public computer
users”.
If indeed the filter system of Camden Council has filtered
out the website of Redress [Information & Analysis], how
would you explain the fact (as was mentioned in my own article
on Redress website) that four London boroughs whom I
contacted randomly did not filter out/block the website
of Redress [Information & Analysis] on their public
computers…
The “crime” of criticising Israel
Throughout my work on the public computers of Camden Council,
I found quite a number of websites blocked by the council whose
singular “crime” seems to have been criticism of Israel’s
policies. I also wonder if you read the advice given by the
Liberty officer who did not see any reason for the council’s
blocking of the website of Redress [Information & Analysis]
apart from suspected political motives, clearly noting: “I have
only had a chance to skim a few of the articles on
www.redressonline.com;
however, I agree that there is a strong case that the library
has blocked political speech which is not sufficiently
threatening, abusive or insulting to any religious or racial
group as to engage the Public Order Act (or any equivalent
legislation).”
It is virtually a scandal that Camden Council, which claims
to hold up the principles of democracy, is blocking the website
of Redress Information & Analysis (and quite a few other
websites) for criticising Israel’s policies – claiming that the
website is intolerant and anti-Semitic. This kind of censorship
on the part of Camden Council has to be made public. I hope that
it would , indeed, get the attention of the wider community
through the press and social media.
Disproportionate and unlawful
To sum up, transparency is at the heart of local democracy. Yet,
at no time did Camden Council disclose the criteria employed by the
filtering system for totally blocking a website and material it
deems unacceptable. If, indeed ,”a number of articles [on the
Redress Information & Analysis website] were perfectly
acceptable” – as the Camden Council chief executive noted in his
letter to me – why has the council taken the decision to block
indefinitely the whole of Redress Information & Analysis
rather than simply filter out the “violent images” they found
“unacceptable”.
That leaves Camden Council open to the charge of acting
unlawfully and disproportionally, in contravention of Article 10 of
the Human Right Act (1998) – covertly advancing the interests of the
pro-Israel constituency in the multicultural Borough of Camden.
It appears that freedom of expression is merely granted to a
selected local constituency by Camden Council, whose authorities
have little concern for the true meaning of the Human Rights Act.
*Ruth Tenne is an Israeli human rights
activist.