Difference between revisions of "Alex Carlile"

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Carlile also attended [[CSTPV|CSTPV's]] International Terrorism and Intelligence conference in 2005 and 2006. <ref>see [[Media:International Terrorism and Intelligence 2005.pdf|International Terrorism and Intelligence 2005 (PDF)]] and [[Media:International Terrorism and Intelligence 2006.pdf|International Terrorism and Intelligence 2006 (PDF)]]</ref>
 
Carlile also attended [[CSTPV|CSTPV's]] International Terrorism and Intelligence conference in 2005 and 2006. <ref>see [[Media:International Terrorism and Intelligence 2005.pdf|International Terrorism and Intelligence 2005 (PDF)]] and [[Media:International Terrorism and Intelligence 2006.pdf|International Terrorism and Intelligence 2006 (PDF)]]</ref>
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==Criticism==
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In February 2010 Carlile's endorsed the use of control orders for terror suspects, a practice condemned by human rights groups. <ref>Maev Kennedy, '[http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/feb/01/carlile-control-orders-terrorism-suspects Lord Carlile finds 'no alternative' to control orders for terrorism suspects]', guardian.co.uk, 1 February 2010</ref> This led the chair of the joint committee on human rights [[Andrew Dismore]]  to question whether Carlile had lost credibility, saying: 'I think there is a risk of the perceptions of [Carlile's] independence being undermined'. Another member of the committee asked whether an official in such a post would 'go native' over time. <ref>Paul Lewis, '[http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/feb/03/counter-terrorism-watchdog-credibility-questioned Lord Carlile's 'credibility' as terror watchdog questioned by MP]', guardian.co.uk, 3 February 2010</ref>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Revision as of 16:38, 4 February 2010

Lord Carlile

Alexander Charles Carlile was born on 12 February 1948. A Liberal Democrat politician and High Court judge, he became Baron Carlile of Berriew in 1999. In 2001 he was appointed the government's independent reviewer of terrorism legislation.[1]

Links to CSTPV

Despite his role as an independent reviewer of the UK's Anti-Terror legislation, Carlile has links to CSTPV, and its main figure the terrorlogist Paul Wilkinson. Wilkinson pushed for repressive anti-terror legislation for years, and was involved in the legislative process which led to the Terrorism Act 2000. [2]

In November 2005 Lord Carlile told the House of Lords he considered Paul Wilkinson “the greatest non-lawyer expert in this country… on terrorist organisations around the world.” He also commented offhand that he had “sat in Professor Paul Wilkinson's interesting attic office in the University of St Andrew's Centre for the Study of Terrorism.” [3]

Carlile also attended CSTPV's International Terrorism and Intelligence conference in 2005 and 2006. [4]

Criticism

In February 2010 Carlile's endorsed the use of control orders for terror suspects, a practice condemned by human rights groups. [5] This led the chair of the joint committee on human rights Andrew Dismore to question whether Carlile had lost credibility, saying: 'I think there is a risk of the perceptions of [Carlile's] independence being undermined'. Another member of the committee asked whether an official in such a post would 'go native' over time. [6]

Notes