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miércoles, 25 de enero de 2023

Tu Periódico, 25 de enero

The police are psychics now, apparently

The Police Are Psychics Now, Apparently

by Rivkah Brown

First thing's first: what's the public order bill?
The bill is the Tories' latest attempt to expand police powers to deal with escalating protest action, particularly from environmental and anti-racist movements, by effectively treating it as domestic terrorism. In fact, experts have suggested the bill is "more extreme than many counter-terror powers".

First tabled in May last year, it mops up many of the odds and sods that didn't make it into the police, crime, sentencing and courts bill (now the PCSC Act), including criminalising "locking on", suspicionless stop and searches, and serious disruption prevention orders to ban individuals from protesting.

The government knows many of these measures are pointless – in 2021, the police inspectorate advised the Home Office that protest banning orders would both be ineffective and breach human rights – but is ploughing ahead anyway.

So what's the latest?
Well, bills often take many months to pass through parliament and into the statute books. Often, the government will draw out the process in order to exhaust their opponents. That's exactly what the Tories did with the PCSC bill, and it looks as if they're repeating the trick now.

A full eight months after its first reading, the public order bill is now being debated in the House of Lords, where further amendments are being tabled. Last week – the same day that high-ranking Met officer David Carrick was outed as a serial rapist – the government announced a number of new amendments that together represent the potentially unlimited expansion of police power over protest.
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