Itâs been a demoralising week in the UK as Islamophobic rhetoric among its political elites reaches new heights.
According to former home secretary Suella Braverman and Conservative MP Lee Anderson, Islamists are apparently running the country, the capital and its mayor â and by Islamists, they mean those protesting Israelâs war on Gaza.
âThe Islamists, the extremists and the anti-Semites are in charge now,â wrote Braverman in an , âIslamists are bullying Britain into submissionâ.
This âthreatâ that these protests pose was used as justification for the chaotic scenes in Westminster preceding the Scottish National Partyâs proposed vote on a Gaza ceasefire.
Adding to the pile on, William Shawcross, appointed as the Independent Reviewer of Prevent â the governmentâs controversial counter-terrorism policy â weighed in after the government reported on the progress it had made on his recommendations, there was not enough being done about âHamas peopleâ in the UK.
Thereâs plenty that could be said about how pro-Palestine solidarity and support for Hamas are wrongly conflated and politicised.
Right now, itâs important to know that the government, through its and the education secretaryâs letters to schools and universities, are asking for more attention to institutionsâ duties under Prevent, nodding to peopleâs sentiments following the latest Gaza war.
The Prevent Duty is mandated under the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015, obligating teachers, social workers, health professionals and many others in positions of trust to report individuals they believe are vulnerable to radicalisation. The idea is that identifying such individuals would reduce the threat of terrorism.
Frivolous referrals are well-documented, and when referred to the police, lead to â.â
However, while teachers, social workers, and health workers are urged to err on the side of caution when reporting and recording concerns, a Prevent referral is no casual action â it could have a lasting impact on the person being referred.
A published by Open Rights Group last week showed how personal data processing under Prevent can harm individuals, iterating what case workers and watchdog Prevent Watch have been sounding the alarm about for years.
Prevent can go through two pathways. The policy aims to identify vulnerable individuals and then offer interventions to âderadicaliseâ them, a programme known as Channel, led by the local authority involving many different bodies. It could also go through a police-led process if the referee refuses an intervention or it is inappropriate for the Channel programme.
Freedom of information disclosures exposed that some of those referrals could be shared with other bodies or mechanisms that can potentially lead to disruption in a personâs life, such as the or immigration services and the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office.
However, even if a referral doesnât warrant going through either route and requires no further action, the data can still be held for a minimum of six years, subject to review, potentially for the remainder of their life, just in case they âreoffendâ â even though no offence has actually taken place.
As Prevent and the data processing under it does not rely on consent, referees may not know they have been referred, only finding out if social services visit them or if a school or college raises concerns or withdraws an offer, as shown by the case studies in the report.
Referral data can be wide-ranging and intrusive, including health data, information about relatives, religious and political beliefs, ethnic origin and online activity. And there have been numerous cases of the latter leading to a Prevent referral.
Take the case of Noah in the report, whose fascination with the Middle East and militarism online led to a Prevent referral being stored even though it was concluded it was no more than childlike curiosity.
In a by Amnesty International, Aranâs story involves a Prevent referral based on his social media posts about anti-capitalism, anti-racism, international solidarity and trade union activism. According to the case study, those posts alone demonstrated he wanted to abolish the British state.
Since the Hamas attack of 7 October and the ensuing Israeli war on Gaza, there has been a in the number of Prevent referrals.
The governmentâs nod towards Prevent could be more than just words. And the potential reach of who can be targeted appears to have no visible parameters or oversight.
Not only have there been hundreds of thousands of people in the streets protesting about the war in Gaza but so many of us are online now doing whatever is in our power to raise awareness and keep the conversation going.
Yet, these small acts of protest - protected by the UN Declaration of Human Rights - could, in theory, lead to a Prevent referral.
This digital and decentralised element of policing is not new â the rights group Defend Digital Me previously reported that with software on childrenâs devices filtering keywords that could arbitrarily indicate a Prevent referral.
Weâve also seen this type of policing in the supposed war on gangs, with flagging content, including music, as indicators of a propensity to violence.
If the picture looks bleak, it will only get worse.
The Online Safety Act, which received Royal Assent in October 2023, means there is more onus on online platforms to that might lead to terrorist activity; that could mean algorithms flag and remove plenty of content that has no such ill intent â pro-Palestinian solidarity included.
While individuals might not know if they have a Prevent referral, finding out could get harder as the proposed Data Protection and Digital Information Bill will see that the rights to access personal information .
When narratives are now trying to label activists as âextreme,â âradicalâ or âIslamist,â we have to be extra vigilant and ensure that standing with Palestine and speaking out against racism and oppression does not mean that someone is marked for life.
Sophia Akram is a researcher and communications professional with a special interest in human rights, particularly across the Middle East.
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