From: "Gary D Chance"
To: "BBC News Channel"; "David Miliband"; "William Hague"; "Karen Buck"; "Diane Abbot"; "Reprieve"; "BBC Panorama"; "BBC London"; "BBC Today"
Sent: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 3:20 PM
Subject: David Miliband's performance in Commons was stunningly misleading for the British public given 11.5 years of 24/7/365 surveillance torture in North Kensington carried out indefinitely against me which continues.
BBC News Channel
As I began this Email, David Miliband and William Hague started an interview on the BBC News Channel focussing on these issues raised in the Commons a little earlier.
I was impressed with the bipartisan concern noted in the questions about the essence of torture complicity that was exhibited by MPs' questions particularly that of Diane Abbott and other Labour Party MPs.
However, I was doubly disappointed that not only was Karen Buck, my MP for the moment (redrawing the boundaries will change her constituency shortly), not present (leastwise I didn't see her) but that she had also raised a question during PMQs about police manning in London referring to the Mayor's cutting of police officers and never breathed a word about 11.5 years of surveillance torture in North Kensington given the context of what was happening this morning concerning UK torture complicity and policy.
Despite being fully informed about this surveillance torture abuse since September 2000, Ms Buck has never raised this issue in the Commons or anywhere else for that matter except by a letter to the Metropolitan Police Commissioner in January 2001, a copy of which she sent to me, at a time just before a full blown surveillance escalation occurred with the importation of US agent thugs (Colonel Vine and Lt Harry Bird USMC Ret) with their most sophisticated surveillance technology that still beggars most people's belief.
The torture was so intense at that time that it destroyed my High Court proceedings in March 2001 where I had sought the protection of the High Court (since personal injuries had been sustained and were an issue) under the Protection From Harassment Act of 1997 as well as the Human Rights Act which had fully come into effect in the UK in October 2000.
I never received any further communication from Ms Buck about this ongoing torture abuse issue by surveillance technology (although she has responded where matters of child abuse were raised through the NSPCC) which had been in effect from mid-August 1998 reflecting a policy of the UK government directly involving the police, NHS and other departments of government as well as those whom I had reported for child abuse in May 1998 in the torture activity which has continued indefinitely up to and including this writing.
David Miliband:
"Where there is possible wrong doing, an investigation is undertaken with charges brought if appropriate." Not in my experience. I've been victimised further by the government blaming the victim in two letters from the Home Office after correspondence was sent to Charles Clarke and then John Reid. Later David Blunkett, MP, by then a backbencher replied to an Email reiterating the blame the victim denial.
"Where there are serious allegations, proper independent investigation" should be undertaken, he went on to say. Nope. Not done.
"Our laws and values" is a phrase often used. My conclusion based upon 11.5 years experience 24/7/365 is that the UK is a secret police torture state. Those are its laws and values.
"No truth in policy to outsource torture." Nope, its done in the UK by the police, NHS and others right alongside US agents who supply the means. I have much else to say on this matter which I have described in the past but do not want to digress at this point.
He referred to "practices we would never conduct ourselves," but this is simply outrageously false.
He also wanted to put to rest statements that intelligence services "operate without independent oversight by government, ministers and courts." How could torture be carried out against me 24/7/356 for 11.5 years if this were not the case?
William Hague:
"I hope we've got to the bottom of this." Expectations should not be based on hope.
We should "not be complicit; not turn a blind eye; police must investigate." But, what if the police are involved?
Asked question about security services awareness of what was going on?
"It is clear that government tried to make sure that lawyers had evidence."
I notified MI5 directly in writing of the abuse against me and received a letter reply from the office of the DG directing me to the Tribunal which I considered a deflection and waste of time.
Since I was subjected to totally invasive surveillance technology anything that I did would be closely followed and countered by those carrying out the surveillance abuse as they had done in March 2001 with legal proceedings.
The Tribunal was not an option and was also more focussed on intrusions under RIPA which were more physically conventional and not those of the surveillance kind which I have experienced for the past nine years.
"Cruel and inhuman punishment are damaging; degrading treatment or torture as [serious as] being defeated on the battlefield because they are propaganda gifts that play into hands of terrorists, weakening the UK and damaging national security," William Hague concluded as close as I could recall his words.
OK, why is it then that no one has done anything about this torture abuse carried out with the knowledge of hundreds from the bottom to the top of government without its ever being stopped?
This is the future, folks, for everyone unless it is properly recognised and placed under democratic control with effective redress of grievances. Unless this is done, everyone will be subjected to this kind of surveillance which will destroy the UK completely.
This is no urban myth as my GBH and SBH, massive documentation and evidence will attest.
Gary
cc The Rt Hon David Miliband, MP, Secretary of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office
The Rt Hon William Hague, Shadow Foreign Secretary
The Hon Karen Buck, MP, Regent's Park and North Kensington; Member Home Affairs Select Committee
The Hon Diane Abbot, MP
Clare Algar, Executive Director, Reprieve
BBC Panorama
BBC London
BBC Today