The draconian Belmarsh supermax regime is a tried and tested program the British national security state has used to break dissidents that threaten their power.
In 1997-98, MI6 whistleblower Richard Tomlinson spent 6 months in Belmarsh for giving the summary outline of a book to an Australian publisher. He writes about it in his book Big Breach. You can read the relevant section from page 173 onwards here: wikispooks.com/w/images/f/f1/…
Tomlinson says MI6 were adamant he shouldn’t get bail because they wanted to pressure him into a guilty plea. They even got him designated a Category A prisoner at Belmarsh, Tomlinson says. The pressure eventually worked. He pled guilty.
So many parallels with how Assange has been treated. Even the stopping ability to shave which led Assange to being grabbed from embassy with that beard. Tomlinson says they did same “demeaning little ploy” to him to ensure he “looked as disreputable as possible”. Excerpt below.
In 2002, MI5 whistleblower David Shayler was jailed for six months and put in Belmarsh before later being transferred to a different prison. But this experience contributed towards Shayler suffering a severe mental breakdown.
The scary thing is what kind of judicial system appears to allow its conduct to be guided by the whims of the secret services? Frightening connotations.
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Tonight, London Mayor Sadiq Khan—who joined the British-American Project in 2008—hosted an event for the organisation at City Hall.
Panellists included Matt Palmer, Deputy Chief of Mission at the US embassy in London. Event was chaired by BBC’s Jane Hill, who joined BAP in 2005.
UK-based people joining the BAP this year include:
-Kate Forbes, MSP for SNP (Anas Sarwar joined in 2018)
-BBC journalists Emma Barnett and Ione Wells
-UK military’s Joanne Crouch
-Emily Benn of MI6-linked firm Hakluyt
-Joshua Molofsky of the US embassy in London
As European empires crumbled in 20th century, the power structures that had dominated the world for centuries were up for renegotiation. Yet instead of a rebirth for democracy, what emerged was a silent coup against its very core—the unstoppable rise of global corporate power.
We started work on the book in 2014 as fellows at @cijournalism and travelled to 25 countries across 5 continents, from Palestine to El Salvador to Cambodia.
I'd recently left the Financial Times, and Claire the Guardian. We both agreed this was the major story of the time.
Northwood Headquarters, a military base in north-west London, is home to Nato’s Maritime Command (Marcom), the central command of all its sea operations.
Marcom’s British commander Keith Blout has operational command of all Nato's standing naval forces.
574 foreign personnel from 29 countries are deployed with Nato in UK. A quarter are American.
Turkey, whose military is occupying northern Syria, has 35 military personnel located in UK w/ Nato.
3 non-Nato nations—Sweden, Austria, Finland—have personnel deployed w/ Nato in UK.