Simple clear advice in plain English

MP fears Orwellian society

Liberal Democrat MP warns of putting CCTV in small villages

  • Andrea-Marie Vassou
  • News
  • Web
  • 22/05/2007
image: CCTV
security/surveillance-camera

Liberal Democrat MP Nick Clegg today agreed with claims made this week by a police chief that putting CCTV cameras in rural areas will lead to an Orwellian society.

Speaking on Sunday's BBC Politics show, Ian Readhead, Hampshire's deputy chief constable said he was "really concerned about what happens to the product of these cameras, and what comes next”.

He added: "If it's in our villages, are we really moving towards an Orwellian situation where cameras are at every street corner? I really don't think that's the kind of country that I want to live in."

Lib Dem Shadow Home Secretary, Nick Clegg agreed claiming the implementation of cameras in rural areas would, in time, lead to a Big Brother society. He said: “This Government’s obsession with new intrusive surveillance technologies and apparent indifference about our individual rights has demolished the ancient distinction between guilt and innocence.

“Something [is] wrong when police officers, rather than Government ministers, [are] more concerned about the protection of our customary British liberties.”

This was a similar concern shared by Shami Chakrabarti, director of Civil Rights group Liberty, who said: "Politicians like to present the police as ever hungry for more powers. Yet even the police are concerned that we are losing the value of privacy.

"We are not calling for a blanket ban on CCTV, which we agree can be useful in providing evidence, but we are worried that it is being used as an alternative to putting more police on the streets and that so much of the [police] budget is being put into CCTV when it has not been conclusively proven to be a deterrent."

Clegg also agreed with Readhead calling for a review of the use of speed cameras and for justification into why DNA evidence of suspects was kept. Currently the Government's DNA database contains more than four million samples, including those of 1.1million people who have been arrested but never convicted.

“[The] Deputy Chief Constable is also really onto something when he highlights his concern about the retention of DNA details on thousands of innocent British citizens,” said Clegg.

However, the Home Office and Association of Chief Police Officers have said they will take the concerns of the public into their review of CCTV, in which they will assess how it can be used more effectively.

Results of this will be published shortly, the Home Office has said.

Reader Comments

   

Add your comment

All fields must be completed. Your email address will not be displayed or used to send marketing messages.

All messages will be checked by moderators before appearing on the site.

See our Privacy Policy for more information.

Related articles

Brits under constant surveillance

Big Brother Britain

Information Commissioner says he needs stronger powers

Snoopers dog our lives

Big Brother comes home

Panasonic launch two home network cameras for added home security

Question & Answer

Q.Can I switch boot drives so that I can work on older...

> Read the answer

Q.Can I open my old genealogy files or have they gone...

> Read the answer

Q.Why are odd patterns appearing on my monitors shortly...

> Read the answer

Best deals on the web

img

Apple iMac 21.5" (MC309)

£927.29- Buy it now

img

Dell Inspiron 620 ST Intel Core i3-2100 3.10GHz / 3GB / 500GB / DVDRW / Win 7 Home Premium

£329.00- Buy it now

img

ZooStorm 7877-1023

£386.38- Buy it now

Latest issue & subscription deals

Poll

Are you concerned about viruses that target mobile phones?

Jargon Buster

Computing terms explained in plain English

Restore point

A Windows backup of system files and settings.

Great shopping deals from Computeractive