industryterm:anti-terrorism law

  • Egypte : Sissi signe une nouvelle loi qui donne encore plus de pouvoir aux autorités dans le cadre de « la guerre contre le terrorisme » - Reuters/Daily mail

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/reuters/article-2966496/Egypts-Sisi-issues-decree-widening-scope-security-crackdown.html

    CAIRO, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has signed off on an anti-terrorism law that gives authorities more sweeping powers to ban groups on charges ranging from harming national unity to disrupting public order.
    The move, announced in the official Gazette, is likely to increase concern among human rights groups that the government has rolled back on freedoms gained after the 2011 uprising that ended a three-decade autocracy under Hosni Mubarak.
    Authorities have cracked down hard on the Islamist, secular and liberal opposition alike since then army chief Sisi toppled elected Islamist president Mohamed Mursi in 2013 after mass protests against his rule.
    According to the government’s Gazette, the law enables authorities to act against any individual or group deemed a threat to national security, including people who disrupt public transportation, an apparent reference to protests.
    Loose definitions involving threats to national unity may give the police, widely accused of abuses, a green light to crush dissent, human rights groups say.
    The Interior Ministry says it investigates all allegations of wrongdoing and is committed to Egypt’s democratic transition.
    Under the mechanism of the law, public prosecutors ask a criminal court to list suspects as terrorists and start a trial.
    Any group designated as terrorist would be dissolved, the law stipulates. It also allows for the freezing of assets belonging to the group, its members and financiers.
    Since taking office in 2014, Sisi has identified Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood as a threat to national security.
    He has linked the Brotherhood, the region’s oldest Islamist grouping, with far more radical groups, including one based in Sinai that supports Islamic State, allegations it denies.
    Hundreds of supporters of the Brotherhood, which says it is a peaceful movement, have been killed and thousands arrested in one of the toughest security crackdowns in Egypt’s history.
    Since Mursi’s fall, Sinai-based militants have killed hundreds of police and soldiers, and the beheading of up to 21 Egyptians in neighbouring Libya prompted Sisi to order airstrikes against militant targets there.
    Some Egyptians have overlooked widespread allegations of human rights abuses and backed Sisi for delivering a degree of stability following years of political turmoil triggered by the 2011 Arab Spring uprising.

  • Islamists: #Jordan's anti-terror amendments seek to create “police state”
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/islamists-jordans-anti-terror-amendments-seek-create-police-state

    Controversial amendments to Jordan’s anti-terrorism law seek to curb the influence of homegrown al-Qaeda affiliated jihadists fighting the regime of the kingdom’s northern neighbor #syria, analysts said, but critics fear they will be used to stifle dissent at home. New articles added to the law approved by MPs on Tuesday deem “joining or attempting to join armed or terrorist groups, or recruiting or attempting to recruit people to join these groups” acts of terrorism. read more

    #anti-terror_law #Muslim_Brotherhood #Top_News

  • http://dissenter.firedoglake.com/2013/12/17/for-first-time-anti-terrorism-law-used-to-have-americans-prot

    For First Time, Anti-Terrorism Law Used to Have Americans Protesting #Keystone XL Pipeline Arrested
    By: Kevin Gosztola Tuesday December 17, 2013 10:22 am
    http://www.democraticunderground.com/101680858

    A demonstration against Devon Energy and the company’s role in fracking and tar sands mining, including the Keystone XL pipeline, ended with four individuals being placed under arrest last week. Two of them were arrested by police on the basis that they had violated an Oklahoma anti-terrorism law prohibiting “terrorism hoaxes.”

    It is strongly suspected that this happened as a result of advice that TransCanada has been giving local law enforcement in states, where protests against the Keystone XL pipeline have been taking place. They have been meeting with law enforcement and suggesting how terrorism laws could be applied to stop citizens from protesting the corporation’s activities.

    I spoke with the two individuals arrested on terrorism charges, their lawyer and a spokesperson for Great Plains Tar Sands Resistance (GPTSR), which for months has been conducting nonviolent direct actions against construction of the Keystone XL pipeline in Oklahoma.

    On December 13, several people entered Devon Tower in downtown Oklahoma City to protest Devon, an energy company involved in natural gas and oil production that involves fracking. They are also invested and involved in tar sands mining in Canada. Devon Energy CEO John Richels sits on TransCanada’s Board of Directors.

    <snip>

    #terrorisme

    • Keystone XL protesters’ glittered banner leads to ’terrorism hoax’ arrest
      http://america.aljazeera.com/watch/shows/the-stream/the-stream-officialblog/2013/12/19/glitter-on-bannerleadstoterrorismhoaxarrestsatpipelineprotest.htm

      Two protesters involved in a demonstration at Devon Energy headquarters in Oklahoma City were arrested last week for allegedly staging a “terrorism hoax,” marking the first time anti-terrorism laws have been applied to anti-fracking protests. A group of about a dozen were protesting Devon Energy’s involvement in hydraulic fracking and its ties to TransCanada, the company building the Keystone XL pipeline.

      Stefan Warner and Moriah Stephenson were part of a protest at Devon Tower organized by Great Plains Tar Sands Resistance (GPTSR) and Cross Timbers Earth First, in which several activists staged a mock oil spill outside the company’s headquarters and others locked themselves in the building’s revolving door entrance.

      Warner and Stephenson hung a large Hunger Games-themed banner, pictured below, in the tower’s lobby. Some glitter from the banner fell onto the ground, which police on the scene referred to as a “black substance.” After a janitor had already swept up most of the glitter, an FBI hazmat team arrived to investigate the “black substance.” The protesters, who were already in custody before the hazmat team arrived, reported hearing police on the scene "communicating with someone off site attempting to find some statute in the Oklahoma anti-terrorism statutes” that could be applied to them.

  • #Iraq executes seven convicted on terrorism charges
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/iraq-executes-seven-convicted-terrorism-charges

    Iraq has executed seven people over the past two days convicted on terrorism charges, the justice minister said on Thursday. The seven “were found guilty under Article IV of the anti-terrorism law,” Justice Minister Hassan al-Shammari said in a statement, adding that all seven were Iraqi nationals. Iraq has executed nearly 170 people this year who were convicted of terrorism charges, but the rulings have had no discernible impact on the unrest gripping the country. Violence in Iraq has surged this year to levels not seen since 2008, when it was just emerging from a brutal conflict. read more

    #Top_News