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Counter-terror bill: amendments passed but concerns persist

Peers also slam government figure on student terrorists used to persuade Lords of need for new laws

Published on
February 5, 2015
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Additional protection for academic freedom has been added to the government鈥檚 counterterrorism bill, but some vice-chancellors and peers still have concerns about the proposed new laws.

At a debate in the House of Lords on 4 February, peers that introduced references to universities鈥 obligations around freedom of speech, and which require guidance relating to the bill to be put before Parliament.

The debate also heard that Home Office minister Lord Bates had written to peers highlighting that nearly a third of all people who have been convicted of terrorism-related offences in recent years were university graduates 鈥 a statistic that was branded 鈥渦tterly useless鈥 by one peer.

As previously reported, one of the amendments requires universities to 鈥渉ave particular regard鈥 to their responsibilities around freedom of speech, enshrined in the Education Act 1986, when carrying out the planned duty to prevent people from being drawn into terrorism.

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The Home Secretary must also have particular regard for freedom of speech in academia when considering whether to issue guidance or to make a direction to a university that was felt to be failing to protect people from being drawn into terrorism, the amendment adds.

探花视频 understands that, while the amendments have been welcomed by many vice-chancellors, some remain to be convinced. Clarification has been sought that the bill will not require universities to exclude people holding views which, while extremist, are non-violent.

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In the debate, Baron Phillips of Sudbury, the former chancellor of the University of Essex, said it was 鈥渦tterly useless鈥 to state that 31 per cent of convicted terrorists 鈥渉ad been students鈥, when there was 鈥渘ot the very slightest idea鈥 whether they had been terrorists before they went to university, or had become terrorists as a result of what happened to them at university.

鈥淚 would be so bold as to suggest that going to university in this country, far from making terrorists, unmakes them,鈥 the peer said. 鈥淯niversities are engines of moderation, truth, objective inquiry, tolerance and so on. The odds are 鈥 if one could ever measure this, and I am quite sure one cannot 鈥 that the statistics would show a radical effect on people going to university鈥 that stopped them becoming terrorists.

Viscount Hanworth, a professor of econometrics and computational statistics at the University of Leicester, agreed. He stated that the 31 per cent statistic seemed a 鈥渟trikingly low figure鈥 given the higher education participation rate among young people, which 鈥渕ight be interpreted as an indication of the efficacy of higher education institutions in diminishing the threat of terrorism鈥.

鈥淭he success of British institutions of higher education as effective agents of counterterrorism ought to be widely recognised,鈥 he said.

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Lord Bates said it was right to protect students from radicalisation.

鈥淵oung people accounted for around 31 per cent of terrorist-related convictions between 2001 and June 2014,鈥 he told the debate.聽 鈥淭he Prevent duty is designed to apply to sectors that can most effectively protect vulnerable people from radicalisation and from being drawn into terrorism.鈥

The bill will have its third reading in the Lords on 9 February.

chris.havergal@tesglobal.com

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