UK unveils new counter-terrorism strategy

Press Trust of India  |  London 

UK today unveiled his new counter-strategy under which domestic will share information with other agencies on British citizens suspected of having terrorist sympathies.

In his first keynote speech on security since he became home secretary, Pakistani-origin Javid announced a range of steps aimed at strengthening the powers available to security agencies to prevent attacks from Islamist as well as extreme right-wing terror groups.

He said will be allowed to declassify and share information on UK citizens suspected of having terrorist sympathies with other agencies, local authorities and businesses, the reported.

Under the new counter-plan, he said, key biographical data will be given to neighbourhood police, councils and the charity commission in London, and trial schemes.

Javid said there had been a "step change" in the threat to the UK, with 25 Islamist-linked plots foiled in the last five years and four extreme right plots stopped since March 2017.

He said there is a need for increased and faster sharing of information between and the police as well as local authorities and other public agencies so that there is no "safe space" in the UK for terrorists to plan and carry out attacks.

The currently hold information on around 20,000 people labelled "closed subjects of concern" who have previously been investigated and it is believed could pose a threat in the future, the said.

Intelligence on up to a hundred of these could initially be shared.

Examples of co-operation, he said, could lead to "faster alerts for suspicious purchases, improving security at crowded places across the UK, and reducing the vulnerability of our critical infrastructure".

Other proposals include increasing maximum sentences for some offences and enhancing the use of data to track suspects.

Javid's speech comes a day after Bridge attack. The attack involved three attackers led by Pakistani-origin terror suspect going on a rampage killing eight people and injuring 48 others before being shot by police.

The new strategy came amid reports that and security services are facing a surge in the number of convicted terrorists released from prison.

newspaper reported that more than 40 per cent of the sentences for terrorism offences handed down over a 10-year period will have been served by the end of the year.

More than 80 of the 193 terror-related sentences handed down between 2007 and 2016 will expire this year. The number of individuals released could be much higher as prisoners are eligible for release halfway through their sentence, the daily said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, June 04 2018. 18:35 IST