It is an unprecedented case. And it risks triggering an unprecedented threat to journalism. The UK police have repeatedly tried to obtain the passwords to the phones of the British independent journalist, Richard Medhurst, the first reporter arrested in London under Section 12: his analyses and comments on Israel’s bloodbath in Gaza – which Amnesty International has characterised as genocide – have been interpreted by the police as support for organisations banned from the UK, such as Hamas and Hezbollah.

The British journalists’ union, the NUJ, and the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) publicly condemned his arrest and the use of anti-terrorism laws against journalists “simply for carrying out their work”.

  • @jimmydoreisalefty
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    202 days ago

    “The ultimate test of a society’s freedom is not how it treats its good, obedient, compliant citizens; it’s how it treats its dissidents.” - Glenn Greenwald

  • @[email protected]
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    883 days ago

    If you search his name, you’ll see exactly zero big news orgs covering this story. BBC, Reuters, AFP, every British newspaper, all notable by their absence. Why? This is A Story, right?

    • GreatAlbatrossM
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      2 days ago

      There are a few reasons this can happen.

      Super Injunction (sometimes self applying). But these tend to be used for privacy issues.

      Unverifiable sources (which is why jumping to assuming a gag order is sometimes premature)

      And it’s possible that the major outlets are trying to prepare reports in a watertight way. Or that part of the story just hasn’t been proven/released yet.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 days ago

        According to the article the British Journalist Union condemned the arrest.

        Medhurst openly supports Palestinian armed resistance. Which is probably why the big newspapers do not report on him.

      • @[email protected]
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        I’d like one of these to be the reason, but I see no evidence to support it.
        Super injunction - as you say, usually used for privacy issues, unlikely to apply here and if it is the case, then the other, smaller, news orgs covering the story would be in trouble.
        Unverifiable sources - the IFJ is a rock solid source. Even if it weren’t, then this claim would assume that the news orgs that have published are all guilty of cowboy journalism.
        Watertightness - for the Panama papers, yes. For this small story, no way. It’s A Story, and it’s the journalist’s job to get copy out as quickly as possible.
        As I said I’d like it if any of these were the case and thanks for pointing them out as I certainly hadn’t thought of them when I wrote my comment, but I’m still just not seeing it. It seems like a decision has been made not to pursue this story, but I’m not jumping to conclusions as to why. It’s hard to keep the faith though, when there are zero major outlets reporting on it, which means that decision not to pursue has been made multiple times by multiple different editors. WTF

  • @TheGrandNagus
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    I dislike Richard Medhurst for a whole bunch of reasons.

    Pro-Assad, pro use of child soldiers (as long as it’s the side he supports anyway), has expressed he wants to ethnically cleanse Israelis, is an avid supporter of China and denier of the Uighur genocide, is a contributor to and paid by PressTV (Iranian government owned news), is a contributer to and paid by Russia Today, believes NATO are the aggressors in the Russia-Ukraine war, etc.

    There’s also allegations from two women that he groomed them while they were teenagers, but as this is unproven I will assume his innocence on that one.

    I don’t think of this person as a journalist at all. He’s a hack. A hack that has shown support of more than one proscribed terrorist institutions.

    But I do believe you should have a fundamental right to privacy and not having to give your passwords up. Failing to give up his password should result in no extra charges against him IMO.

    • @IndustryStandardOP
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      Medhurst is not necessarily pro Assad, moreso anti Israel and US imperialism. A big motivation I heard him speak on was the Arab spring which was hijacked by the US to install dictatorships all over MENA.

      And the assassination of Gadaffi which would bring so called freedom but served US interest and destroyed Libya.

      • @TheGrandNagus
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        He’s definitely pro-Assad. He’s consistently said sanctions against Assad-led Syria need to be lifted, lied about humanitarian aid from the west not being sent to Syria (it has), denied that Assad’s government used chemical weapons on their own citizens (they provably did), and said that Assad’s government was democratic (lol), secular (lol), and welcoming to all people (lol), whereas the new government is evil. He also said that in kicking out Assad they had chosen to become subservient to Israel and NATO – a position not only completely absurd and pro-Assad, but also dog-whistling the conspiracy theory that Jews are controlling the world.

        Medhurst just looks to what western nations think and supports the opposite, regardless of whether they’re right or wrong. He’s a misinformation spreader literally paid by Russia and Iran (through his work for RT and PressTV). He’s no journalist. He’s a tankie.

        But like I said, I do believe he should have the right to keep his password to himself if he desires. Doing so should lead to no extra charges.

        E: I know Lemmy has a serious tankie problem, but come on. Support of Assad too? Really, Lemmy? Sometimes you’re worse than Reddit.

    • @[email protected]
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      -42 days ago

      None of that has anything to do with the case at hand though, and I don’t understand why you would bring it up. This bad law is being abused and just because you don’t like the person being targeted in this specific instance, it will just be a matter of time before it’s used to target journalists that you like.

      I understand that ultimately argued against what the government is doing to him, but I think all the other information you posted (with no sources at all by the way) is not relevant at all and just a pointless distraction.

      • @TheGrandNagus
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        I was agreeing with the sentiment that privacy is paramount. On this instance, I’m literally on his side, despite him being a pro-Russia/Assad/China tankie. A political persuasion that I find utterly evil and repulsive.

        The point of bringing it up was that even if you don’t like someone or what they stand for, they should still have rights, such as the right to privacy. To me it’s inalienable.

  • @[email protected]
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    993 days ago

    “including a highly secure phone with a Graphene operating system”

    Wow, what an endorsement.

  • @RunawayFixer
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    483 days ago

    Section 12 of the Terrorism Act 2000 criminalises anyone who “invites support for a proscribed organisation” or “expresses an opinion or belief that is supportive” of such a group. Those arrested under the section say the threshold is so low that individuals could be arrested with no intention of doing anything they are charged with.

    https://www.declassifieduk.org/free-speech-threatened-as-journalists-treated-like-terrorists/

    This law seems so broad, that it could be used to arrest anyone they want.

    How does “expresses an opinion or belief that is supportive” work? If Hamas is in support of rescueing puppies and I am in support of rescueing puppies, does that make me a terrorist in the UK?

  • NoneOfUrBusiness
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    543 days ago

    As someone from a dictatorship I seriously can’t stress the importance of fighting this case and others like it. These people are trying to steal democracy from you, so hold on for dear life and do not let go. It’ll be too late if you wait until there’s a secret police arresting people for criticizing the state.

    • Victor
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      72 days ago

      ❤️ I hope you and your family are well.

  • @feedum_sneedson
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    22 days ago

    I don’t know man, I’m not sure I trust that scarf.

  • @somtwo
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    353 days ago

    As I prepare to watch the US slip into authoritarianism it pains me to see that, in some ways, the UK is already there.

    • Captain Aggravated
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      23 days ago

      If there’s one thing we’ve actually had in the United States it’s been the freedom of speech and the press. Nearly no one protected that freedom as absolutely as we did. Past tense. Thought crime legislation on the books by the end of January you watch.

        • @asdfasdfasdf
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          That has nothing to do with freedom of the press. The government was not involved in this at all. The cartoon wasn’t published because The Washington Post decided not to publish it.

          There isn’t any country which has a law like “if an employee wants to publish something then the business must comply”.

        • socsa
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          22 days ago

          I mean yes… You can see the cartoon right? It’s in your link. That is literally free press in action.

        • Captain Aggravated
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          83 days ago

          Is this a case of the government shutting down a press because of something it printed or did it just get Dixie Chicks’d?

          • Not really a Dixie Chicks case, as that was mostly a sort of cancelling by the public at large.

            This cartoonist quit over a cartoon in which she depicted rich people and corporations (like Mickey Mouse aka Disney) offering money and worship to a Trump statue. It was shut down, likely by directions the WaPo got from Bezos, same reason he killed the Harris endorsement and started meeting Trump.

            In other words, the government didn’t shut it down. Fear for a Trump-led government did. Which honestly I’m not sure is better or even worse. Trump doesn’t have to censor shit, the corporate-owned “free” press will apparently self-censor to avoid his wrath in the first place.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 days ago

          This is an example of free press in action. The Post is getting ruined by Bezos and his corporate interests, but they are free to publish the cartoons they want to and not publish those they don’t. More folks should be resigning from The Post.

      • @Valmond
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        123 days ago

        The press? You can just buy it, USA style.

  • @FelixCress
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    643 days ago

    This is clear abuse of power and the officers detaining him should face false imprisonment charges.

    • @x00z
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      203 days ago

      Nowadays you have a duress password on Graphene. So you just claim “i forgot it” and then sadly sob out the duress password when they throw a fit.

      • DefederateLemmyMl
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        11 day ago

        Wouldn’t they just immediately realize you’ve only given them the duress password?

        Also, they will have imaged the phone already before attempting to unlock it, so the “delete all data” feature would be pretty pointless.

        • @x00z
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          11 day ago

          Good point. Best to use the duress password when you believe you are in danger.

          Regarding imaging, also good point, but Graphene is considered safe BFU and is supposed to disable the USB port while locked.

      • @[email protected]
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        103 days ago

        I’ve always wanted to be able to have different pin logins on android. Log in 1 is all my shit, log in 2 is a dummy login with shit to show authorities. Log in 3 could be my porn log in.

          • @Velonie
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            42 days ago

            That’s basically the duress password in graphene os. It deletes all data and e-sims but keeps the os installed

        • @x00z
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          63 days ago

          Seems like 3 should be 2. Cops can’t stand sexuality. They’ll cry and give it back.

  • @[email protected]
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    263 days ago

    It’s cool how some zionist piece of shit downvotes people who take his side. But pieces of shit exist, so oh well.

    • Skeezix
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      -123 days ago

      Every member of hamas and hezbollah is a piece of shit. So there’s that.

      • @[email protected]
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        143 days ago

        Okay, but what does that have to do with a journalist being arrested for investigating them?

            • @[email protected]
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              -22 days ago

              This is his “investigating” https://youtu.be/N51xmP-EwSU

              Terrorist slop content of IDF soldiers being shot because “oh it’s so impressive”.

              Really great stuff to get terrorist dicks hard.

              Hope this guy’s rots in a cell haha.

              • @[email protected]
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                22 days ago

                That was a really boring and poorly made video. Could you tell me what part of it makes you sure this man is a terrorist? I might have missed it.

                • @[email protected]
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                  Literally never said he was. I said he makes content for terrorists to jerk off to. I bet he cheers when he watches beheading videos. He’s a disgusting freak and should be locked up.

            • @[email protected]
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              42 days ago

              Hey, we’re all terrorists! I like dogs, Hitler liked dogs, and I don’t want to give my pin to the police, that makes me a criminal, right?

            • @[email protected]
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              -12 days ago

              Well if you can find the videos glorifying terrorist kills I have on my YouTube channel I guess that’s true. Here’s his https://youtu.be/N51xmP-EwSU

              Yea I wasn’t 100% sure, I just remembered thinking this guy was an insane person. Glad I looked up his channel, glad he’s been arrested, hope they stop him making videos for terrorists and antisemites to jerk off to.

  • @[email protected]
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    How loyal is our supreme court to the govt? I know it’s not-partisan but they do seem to mostly be old Oxbridge men (=tories?).

  • @[email protected]
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    I didn’t remember much about this guy when I clicked on this post, but some soy losers were arguing with me in the comments and I came back and checked his yt channel. https://youtu.be/N51xmP-EwSU

    So yea, I don’t give a fuck about this guy. If he is so impressed by terrorists he can go fight with them. He thinks they are winning so it should be an easy choice for him.