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El Rojo
12th January 2011, 21:48
fuck me. if anyone had said there were deep cover moles in the activist scene even i would've thought they were from the tin-foil hat brigade. Im worried what this will do in regards to people becomming paranoid of infiltration

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/12/second-undercover-police-officer


The controversy over a police (http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/police) surveillance network embedded in the environmental protest movement deepened dramatically tonight after the Guardian identified a second undercover officer who spent years living a double life as an activist.
The woman's name has been known to a group of six activists since Mark Kennedy – the police infiltrator identified by the Guardian on Monday as having spent seven years inside the movement – claimed she was also a police officer when confronted by them about his own identity last October.
Senior police chiefs said tonight that they were concerned for the safety of the second spy, and a major operation involving several UK forces is now under way to identify other operatives whose safety may have been compromised by Kennedy.
The second spy spent four years living as an environmental activist in Leeds, gaining the trust of dozens of activists and playing a central role in planning a demonstration to shut down Drax power station in North Yorkshire.
Her deployment ended in 2008, when she told activist friends she was leaving town for personal reasons. The Guardian has established the identity of the officer, who is from a force in the south-east of England, but has decided, after representations from senior police officers, to refer to her only as Officer A, and to use pixellated pictures of her.
Meanwhile politicians across Europe demanded information about the activities of Kennedy, the first undercover operative identified, who was on Tuesday accused of having had several sexual relationships with activists while undercover – relationships denounced as "unacceptable" by senior police sources today.
His UK-based handlers have flown to the US in an attempt to find an agent now accepted to have "gone rogue".
Aside from questions over his conduct while undercover, Kennedy, a Metropolitan police officer, committed a serious breach of protocol when he told friends from the protest movement that Officer A was his colleague. A police chief with detailed knowledge of the deployments of undercover officers in the protest movement said Kennedy's breach of protocol could lead to the "relocation of a considerable number of people".
That included undercover officers currently involved in ongoing police investigations across the UK and their families. "This is serious stuff," the police chief said. "Lots of people are at risk – their lives are at risk."
Kennedy, who has expressed remorse over an operation he told friends was "wrong", now appears to have been a key player in a pan-European network of leftwing and environmental groups.
Using a fake passport, he travelled to more than 22 countries from his base in Nottingham. A parliamentarian in Germany said today Kennedy had been "operating on the border of illegality" in the country, and demanded disclosure about the operation. Kennedy's activities in Iceland, Ireland and Italy are also coming under scrutiny.
Documents obtained by the Guardian also suggest that, after quitting the Met last March, Kennedy attempted to continue to use his adopted identity to infiltrate protest groups. In an indication he planned to turn his hand to corporate espionage, Kennedy, who is said to have had money problems, set up two companies. One is connected to an individual who previously worked at Global Open, a private security firm set up by a former special branch detective. The company specialises in keeping a "discreet watch" on protest groups.
Today, police chiefs discussed the unfolding crisis at a meeting of the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo), which has limited company status and to which Kennedy and Officer A were seconded.
It is now believed several undercover police officers have been living long-term in the environmental movement, feeding intelligence back to the National Public Order Intelligence Unit (NPOIU), an Acpo body that runs a nationwide intelligence database of political activists. After concerns were raised about the accountability of NPOIU, police chiefs came up with a plan to move the unit to Scotland Yard. Subject to agreement, the unit will be taken over by Met officers next month.
However, a major review will now be under way into the oversight of officers such as Kennedy. Explaining why he and Officer A had spent so long undercover, the police chief said: "It is simply because of the environment. If you are a deeply ideologically motivated person … then getting close to you to understand your thought processes – and some idea of what you're doing – takes a lot longer."
He added that Kennedy's numerous sexual relations with women would not have been officially sanctioned. "That is conduct that is not acceptable," he said.


guardian

scarletghoul
12th January 2011, 21:52
If they're doing this to environmentalists, who lets face it do not pose even a potential threat to the state, imagine what theyre doing or will do to revolutionary socialists

Sasha
12th January 2011, 22:18
If they're doing this to environmentalists, who lets face it do not pose even a potential threat to the state, imagine what theyre doing or will do to revolutionary socialists

i'm afraid that at the moment in the uk the quite massive and mainstream environmental movement is an way bigger threat to the system (ie the unhindered workings of capitalism) than the marginal amount of revolutionary socialist... seems they just have their priorities in order.

Aurora
13th January 2011, 01:30
Not surprising really, except the first infiltrator turning that was quite fun lol

And ya the police infiltrate left groups too especially in the coming period when they are getting larger, the police infiltrated the Youth Against Racism in Europe in the 90's which was lead by the SP at the time: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/articles/9019/17-03-2010/state-infiltration-a-warning-to-the-workers-movement
http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/articles/9009/15-03-2010/letter-to-the-observer-i-remember-officer-a-well

Amphictyonis
13th January 2011, 01:35
Cops. They'll do their darnedest to make a case if they don't have one. The undercovers themselves are idiots but the politicians responsible for sending them undercover are the real threat. The western nation states are trying to claim the "new wars" won't be fought by nation states but it will be nation states against "terrorists" inside our respective nation states. It's all rather Orwellian. In the USA the government can seize all assets of 'suspected terrorists' (which includes left wing activists). They can deny medical care and make it a felony to financially assist any 'suspected terrorist'. Read about it in Project Censored 2008.


From the article below concerning the recent FBI raids in the US


Under the law, individuals can face up to 15 years in prison for providing "material support" to groups designated by the US government as terrorists, even if their work is intended to promote peaceful, lawful objectives.

http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/09/27/18660103.php


This has been going on for decades but has increased since 9/11

http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2003/10/04/16505501.php

Sam_b
13th January 2011, 01:44
Guardian 'identified' something that has been on Indymedia for a couple of months now?

human strike
13th January 2011, 11:38
I think I once read on WSWS that more money is spent in the UK on surveillance of leftist groups now than during the cold war.

brigadista
13th January 2011, 13:38
interesting that this is being publicised just when huge cuts package has been announced and after the student demos....

chegitz guevara
13th January 2011, 16:24
fuck me. if anyone had said there were deep cover moles in the activist scene even i would've thought they were from the tin-foil hat brigade

That was terribly naοve of you.

An archist
13th January 2011, 16:51
Interesting part in an article about the first undercover:

"...one has to ask if the police were facing up to the possibility their undercover agent had turned native."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/09/undercover-office-green-activists

El Rojo
13th January 2011, 17:29
Guardian 'identified' something that has been on Indymedia for a couple of months now?

Nope. Mark Stone had been unmasked and exposed on indy for a while, a female police officer is new to indymedia I believe, as there is a thread that has recently appeared discussing the situation that also has the officer's personal details and description

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/471994.html?c=on#c262540

KurtFF8
13th January 2011, 18:39
i'm afraid that at the moment in the uk the quite massive and mainstream environmental movement is an way bigger threat to the system (ie the unhindered workings of capitalism) than the marginal amount of revolutionary socialist... seems they just have their priorities in order.

Absolutely, this is why Leftists should never look at the issue of the environment, or the focus on it as some sort of bourgeois liberal single issue cause. This is why I have so much respect for the Monthly Review (http://monthlyreview.org/), and also for David Harvey. These folks cover the issue and approach it from a scientific standpoint and how that relates to our current social relations, not some policy change that needs to be fixed.

You can also see how important the issue is to the Bolivarian Revolution.

A socialist critique of the environmental movement is becoming more popular, we can see this with the failed UN conference that happened relatively recently (well multiple ones now), and it's certainly an important flash point for global capitalism: how to deal with the ecology question.

Socialists need a good answer, and part of developing that answer is to link the anti-capitalist workers movement with a socialist environmental movement.