As a founding member the UK has been granted the privilege of hosting
the annual Summit of the North Atlantic Treat Organisation (NATO) in
2014. Although I don't know how or when this decision was made the UK
have since decided to host the Summit on September 4th and 5th
(4&5/9/14) in Wales. This should have been a bit of a clue that my
Welsh grandmother is going to be a major theme of the Summit.
This effort began last week with the publication of a report into child
sexual abuse in Rotherham. This long running story centred around in
excess of 1000 of young girls between 10 and 14 years old being
subjected to sexual abuse such as rape and gang rape under threat of
violence including being doused in petrol and being told they would be
set ablaze if they didn't comply. The report found that the police, the
council and associated agencies such as schools and hospitals knew that
this was going on but just decided to let it happen. As the abuse of my
grandmother was well documented with similar bodies the intention was
that people would speculate whether everybody turned a blind eye in that
case for the same long list of reasons that were suggested in the
Rochdale case. The problem is that as lot of people have gone through my
grandmother's case in a lot of detail so there are hardly any mysteries
left particularly around the motivation.
A couple of days later the Rotherham story was forced out of the
headlines by the search for Ashya King who is a 5 year old child with a
brain tumour who was snuck out of hospital and taken across Europe to
Spain by his parents who are Jehovah Witness although the mother is of
Arab heritage. The search part of this story of course covered all the
technical things you can do to track a persons movements such as border
controls, number plate recognition cameras, cellphone tracking, computer
hacking and good old fashioned public appeals.
The rest of the story though contains lots of quite strange connections
to my life. For example a male Sovereign is a "King," I'm quite friendly
with members of another King family and I might have once accidentally
had sex with an Australian Jehovah's Witness. Apparently much like the
Amish or the Mennonites they're allowed a year of
freedom before deciding that they want to spend the rest of their lives
annoying people by knocking on their doors in an effort to convert them.
The King family's destination of Spain is also quite important because
my lesbian wife lived there for a year and I visited there meaning that
the Spanish probably have more knowledge about the nature of the
relationship then the British.
The main comparison between the King case and my
grandmother's is the legal issues surrounding a dispute over medical
care. According to the King family they wanted Ashya's brain tumour to
be treated using something called proton beam therapy which all sounds
very science fiction. However I'm sure that if I checked my high school
physics textbooks it would reveal that it simply involved using a beam
of positively charged electrons to destroy the tumour using heat.
Although this therapy has been proved to work in a limited number of
cases it is still very new meaning that there isn't a facility in the
UK. However the NHS will pay for patients to receive this treatment
overseas, normally in the United States.
While the exact circumstances remain unclear it appears
that the King family refused to allow Ashya to receive any form of
treatment other then photon beam. This prompted his doctors to threaten
to apply to the Court of Protection (COP) for an order permitting them
to treat Ashya without the parents consent. If the King family are being
truthful this shouldn't have been much of a issue because if the
doctors were behaving unreasonably the COP would likely have refused the
application and ordered that Ashya underwent proton beam therapy.
As such it was highly irrational for the parents to
respond by removing Ashya from any medical supervision and take him on a
joyride to Spain where his chances of receiving proton beam therapy are
nil. Therefore I think it is entirely reasonable that they've been
arrested and are extradited to the UK without delay because their
actions certainly raise significant questions about their competence to
make decisions about Ashya's medical care.
I should point out that ultimately my grandmother's
case was not decided by the COP but the High Court following an appeal
against the COP's rulings. The case was heard by Justice Hogg who was
famously involved in the Madeline McCann case. Due to their seemingly
unquenchable thirst for publicity and fund raising the King family do
seem to have a touch of the McCann's about them. The fact that Justice
Hogg has yet to be arrested over her conduct in my grandmother's case
which may constitute a crime against humanity is a source of constant
embarrassment for the UK.
Of course between Britain being awarded the NATO Summit
and the Ashya King case the UK has become extremely concerned about the
terrorist threat presented by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
(ISIL) and other associated jihadi groups. The manhunt element of the
King story obviously provides a neat metaphor for the type of security
measures that can be taken to combat that threat such as tightening
border controls. One possible route for terrorists wishing to enter the
UK would be to travel from Morocco to Spain and then up to the UK
through France. Essentially the route taken by the Kings only in
reverse. The debate around whether the authorities in Rotherham didn't
act against the overwhelmingly Muslim child abusers over fears of being
considered religiously intolerant has an obvious connection to the rise
of ISIL.
Spain and France are also important to the discussion
because they have both either gone through or are going through tough
economic times. Although the western media has in the past been very
keen to portray ISIL as almost undefeatable heroes they are in reality
just a bunch of losers. Basically they're young men who have no purpose
in their lives in Europe so they head out to Syria and Iraq in the hope
of finding some purpose there. One factor that has always been key in
preventing young men finding purpose in their lives has been a lack of
economic opportunity. As such the UK was trying to pose the question of
whether its own rather strange brand of economic austerity was leading
to these men being "neglected" and then radicalised. Rather then being
an attempt to tackle radicalisation this seemed to be the UK trying to
further destabilise the Eurozone by playing on opposition to the very
different austerity measures being championed by Germany. For example
just last week the French President very sensibly sacked members of its
cabinet that were opposed to necessary economic reforms.
The COP is also relevant to anti-terrorism efforts
because it is a very secretive Court. So much so that I could be
committing an offence simply by acknowledging that I have been involved
in one of its cases. However it is still not as secretive as the
anti-terrorism Courts. Not only are the press and the public not allowed
to acknowledge that anti-terror trials are taking place it is often the
case that the defendant is not allowed to know what crime they are
being accused of let alone see any of the evidence being presented
against them. This of course makes it near impossible for them to mount a
defence going against some of the principles that have been core to the
British legal system for hundreds of years. That of course raises the
issue of human rights and civil liberties in anti-terrorism efforts. I
must say though that through the measures that have been announced today
that are similar to measures that have been used against football
hooligans for the past 20 odd years the British government is actually
being surprisingly reasonable when it comes to civil liberties.
However the best way to reduce the number of ISIL
terrorists prepared to attack the UK remains to be to kill as many of
them as possible on the battlefields of Syria and Iraq.
19:45 on 1/9/14 (UK date).
Edited at around 11:00 on 3/9/14 (UK date) to add;
On Friday (29/8/14) Ashya King was made a ward of the
COP which made it responsible for all decisions about his medical care.
This was used to apply for a European arrest warrant which was executed
on Saturday (30/8/14) when the Ashya's parents were arrested in Spain.
I suspect that the British authorities were hoping that
this would lead to the Kings being quickly extradited back to the UK.
However the Spanish Judge decided that they needed to review all the
complex medical paperwork in the case and before that could happen the
paperwork would need to be translated into Spanish. As a result the
Court decided that the earliest it to reach a decision would be Thursday
(4/9/14) afternoon - right in the middle of the NATO Summit.
As it is difficult for the UK to predict let alone
control the decision of a Spanish Court this prompted them to back down.
So yesterday the application for the European arrest warrant to be
withdrawn removing the need for an extradition hearing. However Ashya
remains a ward of the Court and that will not be reviewed until a
hearing on Monday (8/9/14).
With no arrest warrant Ashya's parents were released
from prison and have been granted permission to visit him in hospital.
However as he is still a ward of the Court and because they have a
history sneaking him out of hospitals I assume these are going to be
supervised visits. Also if the Kings fail to return voluntarily to the
UK for Monday's hearing it is extremely likely that this will be viewed
as them forfeiting their parental rights leading to Ashya being taken
into the care of the state.
(Originally Posted on 1/9/14 - UK date).
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