How can Britain keep itself safe?
Hours after his appointment, British Home Secretary Sajid Javid gave a public interview, in which he confirmed that ‘keeping the country safe’ was his top priority. He said that the threat from terrorism was one of the starkest the UK was facing.
Major
challenges, which prompted a fundamental review of counterterrorism strategy in
the UK, include:
1-
ISIS’s success to use social networks and the
Internet in recruiting European young people and sending them to war zones in
Syria and Iraq. The European Jihadists
formed groups, the most notorious of which, was the British-Bengali
Association, which attracted British young people and teenagers. Its members
were killed in the Ayne al-Arab Kobani in northern Syria in late 2014.
2-
The threat from terrorism
is shifting and evolving in the UK and globally. A marked shift was
demonstrated by the appalling attacks in London and Manchester in May last
year, which cost the lives of 36 innocent people. ISIS deliberately planned its attacks on
vulnerable places, such as concerts, to claim bigger casualties and attract the
attention of bigger number of frustrated Muslim young people.
3-
ISIS’s deployment of ‘lone wolves’ to beat
security measures in Britain and EU member states. The lone wolves are British
and European fighters, who returned from Syria and Iraq. Forming sleeping
cells, they become active in the daylight only after receiving the signal.
4-
British Jihadists returning from Syria and Iraq
are causing a nightmare to the British security authority. The International
Counterterrorism Centre, ICCT, estimated the number of foreign fighters in
Syria and Iraq at 3710, including 2838 from four European countries: Belgium, France,
Germany and the UK. ICCT discovered that
about 30% of these foreign Jihadists returned to their countries and were
representing potential threats to the domestic security.
To counter the new challenges to the British security and the
safety of its people, the British government announced on June 4 a
thoroughly-reviewed counterterrorism strategy. The British Home Secretary said
that the government decided to give counter-terrorism
policing a £50 million increase in funding this year – to over three quarters
of a billion pounds.
Named CONTEST, the new strategy aims at reducing the risk to the public and denying
safe places to terrorists to act. However, it remains uncertain whether the UK’s CONTEST
will be appealing to security authorities in different European countries. The
British Home Secretary explained that CONTEST was responding to the scale of
the threat and the speed with which plots were developing.
The British government is confident
that its CONTEST
provides a new, more agile, flexible and co-ordinated approach designed to
better prevent, detect and disrupt terrorist attacks, and where attacks get
through, to limit the impact and recover swiftly. CONTEST will also
help prevent safe spaces for terrorists to operate
Also central to the new strategy is
working in partnership at international, national and local level, between
government, agencies, the private sector and communities.
The counter-terrorism strategy will
be underpinned by new legislation to enable the police and security services to
disrupt terrorist threats earlier. This legislation will:
- amend existing terrorism offences to update them for
the digital age and to reflect contemporary patterns of radicalisation and
to close gaps in their scope, including making it an offence to repeatedly
view streamed video content online
- enable further terrorism offences committed overseas to
be prosecuted in the UK courts.
- Provide new multi-agency approaches – initially in
London, Manchester and the West Midlands – to involve MI5 and the police
using and sharing information more widely, working with partners such as
local authorities to improve understanding of those at risk of involvement
in terrorism and enable a wider range of interventions.
Through Prevent, the government,
local authorities, police and communities will continue to safeguard and
support vulnerable people from the risk of being drawn into terrorism, working
with a wide network of partners to prevent radicalisation and build resilience.
The UK’s CONTEST seeks to encourage
those who have already engaged in terrorism to withdraw and rehabilitate. The
new counterterrorism philosophy will be further developed, including through
the expansion of the Desistance and Disengagement Programme, a new element of
Prevent.
Also the British government
will work more closely with the private sector on a range of issues including
protecting economic and physical infrastructure, gaining faster alerts to
suspicious purchases, continuing to make it difficult for terrorists to use the
internet for propaganda and ensuring
critical access to communications.
The British government will harness
developments in technology including machine learning and quantum computing
which have the potential to dramatically change and enhance counter-terror
operational capabilities.
According to CONTEST, the sentencing
framework for terrorism will be strengthened by increasing the maximum penalty
for certain offences, to ensure that the punishment properly reflects the crime
and to better prevent re-offending