Home
Britain overrun by Stasi-like children
Australian News.Net Saturday 6th September, 2008
Britons are becoming outraged at the way councils are using powers originally designed to combat terrorism and organised crime to spy on residents.
According to the Telegraph, British children as young as eight have been recruited by councils to serve as environmental volunteers and report petty offences such as littering by their neighbours.
It also emerged last month that around 1,400 security guards, car park attendants and town hall staff have been given police-style powers including the right to issue on-the-spot fines for littering, cycling on the pavement and other offences.
Matthew Sinclair, of the TaxPayers' Alliance, has described the recruitment of children as 'downright sinister'.
'We are deeply troubled by these developments; they are straight out of the Stasi copybook. There is a combination of ever-stricter rules and ever more Draconian attempts to control people,' he said.
'Councils are using anti-terrorist legislation for the tiniest of things, like the people who put out their bins early, and the threats of fines and prosecutions combine to constitute fleecing the people the councils are meant to be serving,' Sinclair added.
'There are hundreds of Junior Streetwatchers, aged 8-10 years old, who are trained to identify and report enviro-crime issues such as graffiti and fly-tipping,' Ealing Council in West London said.
Among the environmental crimes which the volunteers are asked to report, is failure to recycle rubbish, vandalism, graffiti, dog fouling, fly-tipping and abandoned vehicles.
They are assigned James Bond-style code numbers, which they use instead of their real names when they ring a special informer's hotline, the Paper reported.
More than 240 councils across England and Wales were contacted to ask if they had recruited environmental volunteers.
One in six councils was quoted as saying that they had signed up teams of 'environment volunteers' who are being encouraged to photograph or video neighbours guilty of dog fouling, littering or bin crimes.
Email this story to a friend
Have your say on this story
|
 |
 |
- All Test players must address over rate crisis: Ponting
Brisbane, Nov.20 : Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting believes all Test players owe it to the game to address the over rate crisis, which is ruining it at present. [read story]
- Extremist groups using Facebook, MySpace, YouTube to 'recruit members'
Melbourne, Nov 20 : Social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, which have millions of users, are being used by extremist groups to recruit members, experts have warned. [read story]
- Hayden admits this summer might see his career end
Sydney, Nov 20 : Australian opener Mathew Hayden (37), who is believed to have been told by the Cricket Australia (CA) selectors that his career will not last more than a year from now, has said that he is no certainty to be around once this summer is over. [read story]
- Australia, Japan score wins in World Cup qualifiers
Sydney, Nov 20 (DPA) Football fans were convinced Thursday that Australia would make it to a third World Cup, after their team snatched a goal in injury time to clinch a 1-0 victory over Bahrain in Manama. [read story]
- Hugh Jackman named 'sexiest man alive'
Los Angeles, Nov 20 (DPA) Australian actor Hugh Jackman, 40, was named the 'Sexiest Man Alive' by People magazine Wednesday, topping the annual list ahead of James Bond actor Daniel Craig who came in at number two, and past favourites such as Brad Pitt, George Clooney and last year's winner Matt Damon. [read story]
|
|
 |
 |
|
|