The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Suella Braverman)
With permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I would like to make a
statement about the Prevent programme. The terrorist threat to the
UK is unrelenting and evolving, and, as I noted earlier this year
in announcing our refresh of Contest, it is rising. To combat that,
the tools to counter terrorism must evolve. Contest, our
counter-terrorism strategy, has four pillars: prevent, pursue,
protect and prepare. Prevent...Request free trial
The Secretary of State for the Home Department ()
With permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I would like to make a
statement about the Prevent programme.
The terrorist threat to the UK is unrelenting and evolving, and,
as I noted earlier this year in announcing our refresh of
Contest, it is rising. To combat that, the tools to counter
terrorism must evolve. Contest, our counter-terrorism strategy,
has four pillars: prevent, pursue, protect and prepare. Prevent
aims to stop people becoming involved in terrorism by tackling
radicalising ideologies at their root. It is an early
intervention programme that relies on frontline public services
across society, including healthcare, education, local
authorities, the police and civil society.
I am delivering wide-ranging reforms, following the reappraisal
of its effectiveness by the independent reviewer of Prevent, Sir
William Shawcross. Prevent needs to better understand the threats
we face and the ideology underpinning them. Ideology is the lens
through which terrorists see the world. Our agencies work closely
with leading experts, practitioners and former extremists. They
all say that ideology is pivotal.
Terrorism is fundamentally an attack on our ideas and freedoms,
so we must attack the threat at its source and disrupt those who
seed and spread extremist ideology. Non-violent extremism can
certainly lead to violence, but it is a problem even where it
does not. It undermines our values and divides communities by
diluting our sense of shared belonging. That is why I have been
so disturbed by the sorts of incidents we have seen recently in
Batley, Wakefield and elsewhere. We do not have blasphemy laws in
Great Britain and we must never succumb to their de facto
imposition by a mob. Individuals under the Prevent duty must
challenge those who enable “permissive environments” for
radicalisation, where grievances, identity politics and
disinformation are used to whip up fear and division.
Six months on from the publication of the independent review of
Prevent, I am pleased to report significant progress to the
House. We are on track to deliver our commitment to implement
each of the independent review’s recommendations in full. So far,
working closely with the Minister for Security, we have completed
10 out of 34 recommendations, and 68 out of the 120 tasks. I
expect to have implemented at least 29 of the 34 recommendations
a year after the review’s publication, and the rest shortly
thereafter.
Today I am publishing the first major revision of the Prevent
duty guidance since its introduction in 2015. Subject to the
approval of Parliament, it will come into force on 31 December
this year. The guidance is the key text underpinning the way in
which Prevent is delivered by the range of partners most central
to its success. The changes reflect the spirit and the detail of
Sir William’s recommendations.
I accepted the review’s recommendation for thresholds to be reset
to ensure proportionality across all extremist ideologies. RICU,
the Research, Information and Communications Unit, which provides
analytical and analysis products on behalf of the Home Office,
was identified by Sir William as a concern. In the past, it
has
failed to draw clear distinctions between mainstream Conservative
commentary and the extreme right. People such as my right hon.
Friend the Member for North East Somerset (Sir ) and Douglas Murray express
mainstream, insightful and perfectly decent political views.
People may disagree with them, but in no way are they extremists,
and Prevent must not risk any perception of disparaging them as
such again. From now on, all RICU products which report on
extremist trends, and in future themes, will clearly state the
purpose of such reporting and be proportionate.
Our new Prevent duty training, available on gov.uk, will
highlight the importance of ideology and enhance understanding of
the drivers of Islamist and extreme right-wing terrorism. We will
pilot and roll out new face-to-face training alongside the new
guidance so that organisations across the sector have the
appropriate skills to spot genuine radicalisation. A new security
threat check will ensure that strategic decision making related
to Prevent is informed by the current threat landscape and local
threats, and that activity is directed accordingly.
The review recommended great care over terminology. The term
“susceptibility to radicalisation” should be used where
appropriate, and the word “vulnerability” only where necessary.
Many people who embrace extremism are affected by a range of
complicating factors in their lives, but there is almost always
an element of personal decision making in the choices they make.
They must not be absolved of responsibility when they choose this
path.
I have strengthened the operational delivery of Prevent by
switching to a regional delivery model that provides support for
all local authorities in England and Wales. The 20 areas in
England and Wales with the highest risk ratings will receive
multi-year funding. I have also provided Home Office Prevent
expertise to Scotland. It is vital that Prevent does nothing
actively to undermine its mission, for instance by supporting
groups that work against the freedom and values that we stand
for. Due diligence checks on partners delivering Prevent in local
communities have been strengthened following input from the
Commission for Countering Extremism and the Department for
Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.
Prevent, and public authorities such as the police, should not
fund or work with those who legitimise extremism, such as CAGE or
MEND—Muslim Engagement and Development. That is completely at
odds with Prevent objectives. Extremist and anti-Prevent groups
have waged mendacious and malicious campaigns to try to discredit
Prevent as anti-Muslim to undermine its work. Through the work of
a new specialist unit, we are now working to rapidly rebut and
counter inaccurate information about Prevent when it appears.
The independent review found that Prevent had not taken
antisemitism seriously enough, so specialist intervention
providers have now been recruited to better address the
prevalence of antisemitism in those referred to Prevent. They
will work directly with those susceptible to radicalisation to
deconstruct their extremist mindset and tackle it head-on. This
approach is complemented by new research allowing Prevent to
explain the pernicious and often subtle indicators of
antisemitism.
Like any public service, Prevent needs independent oversight, and
I expect the new standards and compliance unit to be operational
and publicised online early in 2024.
It will process complaints from both the public and
practitioners, and will take instruction from Ministers to
conduct investigations and publish findings. The unit will be
delivered by the Commission for Countering Extremism, and will be
answerable to Ministers on the Prevent oversight board, chaired
by my right hon. Friend the Security Minister.
Extremists of whatever disposition, be they neo-Nazis or
Islamists, must know that in our fight against them, we will
never be hampered by doubt or cowed by fear. Ensuring that
Prevent is fit for purpose is critical to delivering that
message, and to winning that fight. I commend this statement to
the House.
12.15pm
(Normanton, Pontefract and
Castleford) (Lab)
I thank the Home Secretary for her statement. I join the
Government in paying tribute to the work of our security
services, our counter-terrorism police, the myriad different
agencies—local communities, councils and education bodies—that
work on the Prevent programme, and all those who work so hard to
keep us safe.
Extremists try to divide us and to undermine our democratic
values and our respect for one another. Extremist ideologies are
a stain on our society: they feed on fear and vulnerabilities to
promote hatred and violence. We have seen appalling terror
attacks, from the attack on children in Manchester and the attack
in Fishmongers’ Hall to the attacks on our own and . A strong and determined
response to extremism and terror threats and threats to our
national security, wherever they come from, is immensely
important to our safety.
The Contest strategy rightly includes “prevent”, “pursue”,
“prepare” and “protect”, and it was right for the Home Secretary
to update the House on the approach to extremism and to the
Prevent programme. However, on a day when there are grave
unanswered questions about how a terror suspect could possibly
have escaped from prison, before trial, hidden on the bottom of a
food van, I am astonished that she said nothing about Prevent and
prisons. We have unanswered questions about how on earth the
escape could have happened, and also about staffing levels. There
have been repeated warnings of 30% staff absences and shifts not
being covered. Those staffing issues are a matter for Prevent as
well. The independent review highlighted an issue about which
countless other reports have warned: the lack of sufficient
action on deradicalisation and Prevent in our prisons. Prisoners
are actually leaving prison more radicalised than they were when
they went in. Referring to extremism-related training for staff,
Sir William said:
“it became clear during the review that this training was
frequently cancelled due to staff and resource shortages…I was
further told that there have been delays to staff beginning
Prevent training and to extremist prisoners beginning
rehabilitative programmes. These delays are attributed to
staffing and resourcing issues”.
The Government have been warned repeatedly about this, and I am
concerned about the complete lack of reference to it in the Home
Secretary’s statement. Will she please tell us what action is
being taken, and also what action is being taken for those due to
be released from prison—those who are due to be deliberately
released, that is, as opposed to those who escape? Contest has
warned that
“four of the nine declared terrorist attacks since 2018 were
perpetrated by serving or recently released prisoners.”
The joint inspectorate warned just a few months ago that there
were not enough senior officials in place to oversee the 120
prisoners with terror-related convictions who are due to be
released by next March. What deradicalisation and Prevent work
have those 120 prisoners undergone in prison, and what provisions
are in place in the community to ensure that there is no risk to
the public? We cannot afford any suggestion of failure by the
Home Office and the Ministry of Justice to take national security
treats in prison seriously.
Today’s report from the borders inspectorate is highly critical
of Border Force’s failures on insider threats, saying that
organisational structures for addressing
“insider threat were found to be confused, with complex
inter-relationships and unclear lines of accountability”.
What action is the Home Secretary taking to deal with insider
threats?
There is also no mention of any action on online radicalisation
or the use of artificial intelligence. Online radicalisation was
raised by the independent review, and we know that generative AI
raises further challenges and questions. We have identified
potentially serious legal loopholes in our ability to take action
against those who choose to use generative AI to try to
radicalise people. What action is being taken on that? We have
asked the Home Secretary about this before. Will she agree to
Labour’s proposal to tighten the law?
The majority of the extremist threats our security agencies deal
with are Islamist extremism, followed by far-right extremism.
Other warped ideologies have also driven violent threats, but the
main focus must continue to be on Islamist extremist threats. I
welcome the emphasis on antisemitism, but the agencies, the
police and the Prevent programme need to follow the threats of
violence and hateful extremism wherever the evidence goes, rather
than having to follow any political hierarchies that have been
set.
Neil Basu, the former counter-terror chief, has said that we also
need to make sure there is earlier intervention and prevention.
He said:
“If we set the bar for Prevent so high that it can deal only with
those who are already radicalised, we will have more terrorists,
not fewer.”
Finally, what action is being taken in response to the former
countering extremism commissioner’s report on hateful extremism,
published some years ago? Are the Government ever going to
respond to that or update the countering extremism strategy,
which is now eight years out of date? We need that action.
Prevent is not a whole countering extremism strategy. We need
broader action if we are to keep our democratic values safe.
I thank the right hon. Lady for her response. She raised several
points to which I will respond.
First, I pay tribute to all the professionals and experts in our
agencies who work day and night to keep the British people safe
from the evolving, changing and, indeed, increasing risk we carry
when it comes to terrorism. They work in many ways of which we
will not be aware, but they make huge sacrifices. I am very proud
of the progress that they and this Government have made in recent
years. That includes the opening of a new counter-terrorism
operations centre that is now up and running
and delivering state-of-the-art counter-terrorism work between
all the agencies—be they the police or others—working in one
place in a co-ordinated and streamlined way. I was pleased to
visit CTOC recently. Our Contest strategy was relaunched earlier
this year and, since 2018, 39 attacks have been disrupted by the
brave men and women working in law enforcement and other
agencies. That huge amount of work is going incredibly well.
Of course, the threat remains substantial, which means an attack
is likely. There is no room for complacency on this issue, which
is why I am wholly committed to focusing on the effective
delivery of Sir William Shawcross’s recommendations. That is why
I have come to update the House today.
The right hon. Lady mentioned prisons and, of course, William
Shawcross referred to the threat of terrorism, extremism and
radicalisation within the prison estate. In fact, recommendation
27 makes it clear that better and more training is required for
prison officers, which is why I am very pleased that there has
been significant progress on the roll-out of the new terrorism
risks behaviour profile. This new prison-based product is led by
the Ministry of Justice, building on the recommendations made by
Jonathan Hall and reiterated and built on by Sir William. That
roll-out will be completed by the end of the year. The value of
this new tool is that prison officers will be better trained.
They will have more skills and more tools at their disposal to
better identify terrorism and the risk that it poses within the
prison estate. That is a direct response to recommendations and
concerns that have been raised.
I refer the right hon. Lady to the previous statement made by the
Lord Chancellor on the broader issues. I am receiving regular
briefings on the circumstances leading to the escape of Daniel
Khalife yesterday and on the wide-ranging operation involving the
police, Border Force and the agencies to track him down.
The right hon. Lady also mentioned resources. Let me be clear
that funding for counter-terrorism is as high as it has ever
been, and Prevent funding has not been cut. However, we are
redirecting resources to better reflect the evolving threat
picture, so that our resources are directed at the priorities
informed by the intelligence picture. For example, I am very
pleased that all local authorities now have a dedicated Home
Office point of expertise and contact. That has been rolled out
throughout England and Wales. It will properly equip those in the
local authority sector to have proper training and a connection,
a dialogue and a meaningful relationship with the Home Office so
that they can be better tooled up to respond to radicalisation
and the risks relating to Prevent in the community.
The right hon. Lady also said there should not be a hierarchy of
threats. Of course, there is no such hierarchy. Prevent is
ideologically agnostic, but we must always be clear about the
facts. When I last updated the House, for example, 80% of live
investigations by the counter-terrorism police network were
Islamist in nature, and MI5 is clear that Islamist terrorism
remains our predominant threat, accounting for 75% of its case
load, yet only 16% of Prevent referrals in 2021 were Islamist.
That is a
fundamental problem that Sir William identified and that I am
addressing right now through these robust and wide-ranging
reforms.
Prevent is a security service, not a social service. The role of
ideology in terrorism has too often been minimised, with violence
attributed to vulnerabilities such as mental health or poverty
and to the absence of protective factors, rather than focusing on
individual responsibility and personal agency in the choices that
these people are making.
I am implementing all the review’s recommendations, and I have
committed to reporting back to the House on progress. I am clear
that Prevent must focus solely on security, not on political
correctness or appeasing campaign groups. Its first objective
must be to tackle the ideological causes of terrorism. We will
not be cowed by fear, and we will not be hampered by doubt. I am
very grateful to the House for hearing this update.
(Hemel Hempstead) (Con)
It is welcome that the Home Secretary has come to the House today
to update us on the report. I am sure the whole House and the
country will be grateful that all the review’s recommendations
have been accepted. She is absolutely right to say that it is
about individuals making individual choices and that there can be
no excuses relating to their background or the indoctrination
that has taken place. This is about freedom of speech, too.
People should not be frightened that Prevent intrudes on freedom
of speech. It is about keeping this country safe from
terrorism.
I could not agree more with my right hon. Friend. He is
absolutely right that this is about national security and public
safety. It is not about appeasing campaign groups or the fear of
offending particular minority groups. It is not about putting
community cohesion ahead of the interest of national security. I
am absolutely clear that our Prevent professionals in all the
relevant agencies must work without fear or favour and in the
interest of national security first and foremost.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
I call the Scottish National party spokesperson.
(North Ayrshire and Arran)
(SNP)
The Shawcross review has found that the Prevent strategy has
failed and lost its way. The very system that aimed to identify
would-be terrorists has allegedly funded a group whose head was
sympathetic to the Taliban. That failure is why the Home
Secretary is coming to the House today to make a statement. I am
sure she will agree that public confidence in the Prevent
strategy has been shaken to its foundations. We know that those
previously referred to Prevent went on to commit terrorist acts
and that the terrorist threat across the UK remains substantial,
which means that an attack is likely. What long-term work is
being done to monitor those who leave prison after serving
sentences to ensure that they do not remain a threat to our
communities and national security?
Islamist terrorism is the primary terrorist threat, but it is not
the only one. The fact that the Wagner group is to be declared a
terrorist organisation has to be welcomed, but there must be
ongoing concern and vigilance in respect of extreme and far right
incel movements. Questions
about how to tackle online radicalisation remain. Will the Home
Secretary assure us that there will be full co-operation with the
devolved nations as we seek to tackle the scourge of terrorism?
What guarantees will she provide that Prevent will have the
necessary budget and resources to fulfil its central aim and
mission of preventing terrorism across the UK?
Finally, the Home Secretary talked about better training for
prison officers, but staffing crises in our prisons are rife.
Training is all well and good, but it is important that the
prison estate has the proper manpower levels to play its part in
deradicalising and rehabilitating those who have been convicted
of terrorist offences, so that when they are released they can go
back to their communities without causing alarm. What action is
she taking to address the staffing crisis in our prisons, as part
of this strategy?
The hon. Lady talked about historical Home Office funding of
groups linked with extremism, an issue identified by Sir William
in his landmark report. I was appalled when I read that Prevent
had historically funded groups that have legitimised extremism or
has worked with groups whose values totally contradict our own.
That is not a proper use of public money, it undermines Prevent’s
objectives and it is potentially a threat to national security. I
will ensure that that never happens again. As a result of that
issue identified in the report, we are running a full-scale audit
of all counter-extremism funding arrangements and we will
immediately terminate all agreements that fall below our
standards. We are working closely with the Commission for
Countering Extremism to ensure that we strengthen our oversight
and vetting procedures to ensure that taxpayers’ money always
goes to the right groups.
(Blackpool South) (Ind)
I welcome the Home Secretary’s statement and her strong
leadership on this issue. The additional measures taken by the
Ministry of Justice earlier this year to crack down on the
activities of terrorist prisoners were very welcome. Is she able
to provide an update on any assessments the Home Office, in
conjunction with the MOJ, has completed on the success of those
measures so far?
The Prevent duty applies to those working in the prison estate.
Sir William identified a particular concern relating to the
threat of radicalism and terrorism occurring and evolving within
the prison estate, which is why he made a recommendation. I am
pleased that we have made significant progress on rolling out the
terrorism risks behaviour profile, which will now enable prison
officers to have better training so that they can better spot,
and are more confident and knowledgeable about, the signs of
radicalisation, extremism and terrorism within the prison estate
and are thereafter empowered to take steps to mitigate and
eliminate that risk.
Madam Deputy Speaker
I call the Chair of the Home Affairs Committee.
(Kingston upon Hull North)
(Lab)
In ensuring that Prevent is fit for purpose, the Home Affairs
Committee looked at the Prevent review and we were concerned
about the under-representation of the Islamist threat in Prevent
referrals when compared
with right-wing extremism referrals. Some 22% of the 4,915
referrals related to Islamist radicalisation and 25% related to
right-wing extremism. However, 75% of those who ended up on
remand for terrorist offences were categorised as Islamist and
22% were categorised as extreme right-wing. When the Security
Minister appeared before our Committee, he said that the
Government needed to look at the reasons for that, and that they
were going to look at the misallocation and seek to make sure
there was better representation of the actual threat. Will the
Home Secretary therefore set out what work has been done to
ensure that we have that proper representation in those initial
Prevent referrals?
We saw exactly that incongruity and disparity between the
intelligence picture and the security threat picture, and what
was happening on the ground among the Prevent community in the
referrals that they were making. That is a problem, which is why
today marks an important step forward in rectifying that
erroneous approach. The new statutory guidance will focus
increasingly on ideological causes of terrorism, and there will
be much more stringency and robustness in looking more rigorously
at the ideology behind extremism. Importantly, we are also
adopting Sir William’s recommendation of including the security
threat check, which consists of specialist questions that are
directly informed by the intelligence and Home Office analysis of
the security and counter-terrorism picture. That will form a
series of principles that will help to ensure that Prevent
referrals on the ground properly reflect the threat picture.
(Denton and Reddish)
(Lab)
Coming from Greater Manchester, I know tragically what the end
result of Islamist indoctrination can be for a community, so I
welcome very much the re-emphasis on tackling Islamist
indoctrination. In the Home Secretary’s reset of the Prevent
system, will she explain to the House how she is going to take
local communities with her? She knows that one criticism of the
Prevent system as it stands is that it also stigmatises whole
communities, not just those who are extremists. What confidence
is she going to give to diverse communities across the UK?
It is not right to say that Prevent is anti-Muslim. Prevent is
about ensuring that Islamism, extremism, radicalisation and
violent ideology about hatred, evil and values totally at odds
with ours are stamped out. The vast majority of British Muslims
make a valuable contribution to the UK, but we must be courageous
in calling out permissive environments and tolerance for
extremism among some parts of our community. That requires a
fearless approach, one that is not cowed by political correctness
or fear of upsetting particular groups in the name of community
cohesion. If we want to save lives, we need to take a united
approach, but a robust and fearless one to calling out Islamism
when we see it.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I thank the Home Secretary for her statement, and for the
strength of character and delivery of purpose as well. She
referred to discussions about possible support for Scotland. She
is right to be strong on radicalisation. Steps have been taken to
combat that in Northern Ireland, where the rewriting of history
is leading to the glorifying of terrorism
for a new generation—that must be combatted. Will she confirm the
effectiveness of Prevent in all areas of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland?
As I mentioned when we refreshed our Contest strategy, we are
seeing a concerning level of terrorism related to Northern
Ireland. That is a very sorry reflection of unacceptable
behaviour, which must be condemned in the strongest possible
terms. Our agencies work UK-wide and we are always working
closely with the Police Service of Northern Ireland and other
authorities at the local level, to ensure that all leads are
followed in the fullest possible way and measures are put in
place to mitigate risks as they emerge. However, as we saw
earlier this year, that threat is a concern and we must remain
vigilant to it.
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