logo
Concern over mass migration is terrorist ideology, says Prevent

Concern over mass migration is terrorist ideology, says Prevent

Telegraph06-06-2025
Lord Young suggested the definition could even capture Mr Jenrick, the former immigration minister, who has previously warned that 'excessive, uncontrolled migration threatens to cannibalise the compassion of the British public.'
Senior Labour politicians could also fall within the scope of the definition, he claimed. Lord Young cited Sir Keir's recent statement that without fair immigration rules, 'we risk becoming an island of strangers, not a nation that walks forward together.'
There are growing fears that police are wrongly seeking to limit free speech.
The Telegraph disclosed last month that Julian Foulkes, a retired police officer, was arrested and detained over a social media post warning about the threat of anti-Semitism. Officers who conducted a search of his house described a collection of books by authors such as Mr Murray as 'very Brexity'. Mr Foulkes later received an apology and £20,000 compensation.
Last year, Allison Pearson, the Telegraph columnist, was questioned at home by two officers over an X post following pro-Palestinian protests.
The Telegraph has also covered the case of Hamit Koskun, who was fined this week for burning a Koran. It led Mr Jenrick to accuse the courts of reviving blasphemy law.
Lord Young said the course material appeared to reflect a shift in the Prevent approach from focusing on conduct – such as acquiring weapons or inciting violence – to 'treating ideology itself as a risk indicator, encompassing belief, alignment or political attitude'.
He said the FSU had already had to support members referred to Prevent, including a 24-year-old autistic man whose social worker reported that he had been viewing 'offensive and anti-trans' websites and 'focusing on lots of Right-wing dark comedy'.
Prevent referral could stain person's name
Even if a person was subsequently deemed to require 'no further action', their name would risk remaining on police and other databases that could be accessed by MI5, MI6, the Home Office, Border Force, HMRC, the Charity Commission and local safeguarding teams.
Lord Young said: 'There are multiple documented cases in which individuals referred to Prevent – despite not meeting the threshold for further action – suffered serious and lasting consequences simply because their names were logged in the system.'
The row comes despite a report by Sir William Shawcross, a former independent reviewer of Prevent, which criticised the way that mainstream literature and even a former Cabinet minister had been described as 'cultural nationalists' by a Home Office research unit on extremism. The minister was later revealed as Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg.
Sir William recommended that Prevent must be 'consistent in the threshold that it applies across ideologies to ensure a proportionate and effective response.'
He added that there were major failings with Prevent more broadly, including that it wrongly funnelled money to extremist organisations and had repeatedly failed to identify people who went on to carry out terrorist attacks.
Lord Carlile, a former independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, said: 'It is a very difficult job that the Home Office has to do, but maybe they should do a careful bit of editing so that people who are close to the political mainstream are not caught up in it.'
A former government adviser said the 'cultural nationalism' definition was 'pretty shoddy'.
'Agencies like counter-terrorism police and MI5 are much more rigorous in their classifications,' they said. 'We are talking about Right-wing extremists, who are often neo-Nazis. It undermines the seriousness of what counter-extremism is all about.'
Professor Ian Acheson, a former government adviser on extremism, said: 'We are now beginning to see the consequences of a referral mechanism built on training like this which skews away from suspicion by conduct to the mere possession of beliefs that are perfectly legitimate but regarded by Prevent policy wonks as 'problematic.''
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The tax change Starmer is being urged to do to improve UK finances
The tax change Starmer is being urged to do to improve UK finances

The Independent

time28 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The tax change Starmer is being urged to do to improve UK finances

Sir Keir Starmer is facing growing pressure to introduce a wealth tax to address a significant shortfall in public finances. New polling indicates that 91 per cent of Labour members support taxing the rich more, with 84 per cent also advocating for an end to the two-child benefit cap. Senior Labour figures, including Angela Rayner and Anneliese Dodds, have previously urged consideration of wealth taxes as an alternative to departmental cuts. The survey also highlights widespread concern among Labour members regarding party discipline, with 74 per cent believing challenging controversial legislation should not result in suspension. Critics within the party warn that the leadership is out of step with its membership and risks losing support if it does not adopt a more progressive policy direction.

Afghans resettled in UK affected by new MoD data breach
Afghans resettled in UK affected by new MoD data breach

BBC News

time29 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Afghans resettled in UK affected by new MoD data breach

Thousands of Afghans brought to safety in the UK have had their personal data exposed, after a Ministry of Defence (MoD) sub-contractor suffered a data breach. The names, passport information and Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (Arap) details of up to 3,700 Afghans have potentially been affected after Inflite The Jet Centre, which provides ground-handling services for flights at London Stansted airport, suffered a cyber-security comes just a month after it was a revealed another major data breach in 2022 leaked the details of almost 19,000 people who had asked to come to the UK in order to flee the Taliban. The government said the incident "has not posed any threat to individuals' safety, nor compromised any government systems." There is currently no evidence to suggest that any data has been released Afghans affected are believed to have travelled to the UK between January and March 2024, under a resettlement scheme for those who worked with British troops. An email sent out by the Afghan resettlement team on Friday afternoon warned their families that personal information may have been exposed."This may include passport details (including name, date of birth, and passport number) and Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (Arap) reference numbers," it affected also include British military personnel and former Conservative government ministers, the BBC understands.A government spokesperson said: "We were recently notified that a third party sub-contractor to a supplier experienced a cyber security incident involving unauthorised access to a small number of its emails that contained basic personal information."We take data security extremely seriously and are going above and beyond our legal duties in informing all potentially affected individuals." Inflite The Jet Centre said in a statement it believes "the scope of the incident was limited to email accounts only" and has reported it to the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO). The BBC has contacted the ICO for comment. The incident follows a February 2022 incident in which the personal data of nearly 19,000 Afghans who had applied to move to the UK under the Arap scheme was mistakenly leaked by a British official, leading to thousands of Afghans being secretly relocated to the UK. The leaked spreadsheet contained the names, contact details and some family information of the people potentially at risk of harm from the Taliban. That incident was made public for the first time in July of this year.

Primary pupils in Midlothian added to WhatsApp group with 'nude photo requests'
Primary pupils in Midlothian added to WhatsApp group with 'nude photo requests'

BBC News

time29 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Primary pupils in Midlothian added to WhatsApp group with 'nude photo requests'

Children at a primary school in Midlothian were added to a WhatsApp group in which they were told to send explicit have launched inquiries into the malicious group, which told pupils "not to let parents know" they had been added to the pupils affected are in primary six at Paradykes Primary in Loanhead. Such pupils are typically aged nine or 10.A spokesperson for Midlothian Council said support was available to children affected by the incident. The local authority said the group had not been accessed using council-issued devices given to children at the start of term on were sent a warning to check their children's phones and remove them from the group by the school on Thursday. An email from the school's head teacher, seen by BBC Scotland News, said some of the messages were "highly inappropriate, referring explicitly to body parts" and "requesting nude photos".It added that 84 people were members of the group, warning it "went beyond" children solely from is understood some of the children were targeted on their personal devices.A council spokesperson said: "The head teacher at Paradykes Primary emailed P6 parents today after a parent reported concerns about the online safety of children on a WhatsApp group."The head teacher has passed the matter to the police, and the council will issue guidance to all parents in Midlothian on how to keep their child safe online."Support is available to any Paradykes Primary School pupil upset by this incident, if required." Guidelines issued by WhatsApp, which is owned by Facebook parent company Meta, state the messaging service should not be used by those under the age of the was lowered from 16 last Scotland said inquiries were ongoing, but were at an early stage.A WhatsApp spokesperson added: "We give all users options to control who can add them to groups. "The first time you receive a message from an unknown number and when you are added to a group, we give you more context and the option to exit or block and report."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store