Extracts from Commons debate on Leaving the EU: Security, Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice - Jan 18
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The Minister for Policing and the Fire Service (Brandon
Lewis):...Criminality and terrorism are increasingly transnational.
International organised crime groups exploit vulnerabilities such
as inadequate law enforcement and criminal justice structures.
Threats that we now face, such as cybercrime, which is moving ever
more quickly, or online child sexual exploitation, are by
definition international in a technologically interconnected world.
The UK National Crime Agency’s most recent...Request free trial
The Minister for Policing and the Fire Service
(Brandon Lewis):...Criminality and terrorism are
increasingly transnational. International organised crime groups
exploit vulnerabilities such as inadequate law enforcement and
criminal justice structures. Threats that we now face, such as
cybercrime, which is moving ever more quickly, or online child
sexual exploitation, are by definition international in a
technologically interconnected world. The UK National Crime Agency’s most recent
public estimate suggests that more than 6,000 organised crime
groups are seeking to operate in the United Kingdom...
...We are liaising closely with our colleagues in the devolved Administrations as it is crucial to ensure that we find a way forward that works for all of the UK. We are drawing on the invaluable frontline experience of operational partners such as the National Crime Agency and the Crown Prosecution Service, and I am grateful for the ongoing contributions of all those organisations. The work is being drawn together with the support of our colleagues in the Department for Exiting the European Union and will form part of our wider exit negotiation strategy... Ben Howlett (Bath) (Con): The National Crime Agency has said that joint investigation teams are incredibly important to the UK. Will my right hon. Friend join the National Police Chiefs Council and the Met police in agreeing that Eurojust is hugely valuable and that co-operation agreements must be guaranteed as soon as we leave the EU? Brandon Lewis: When I talk to the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners and the National Police Chiefs Council, they are clearly uniform in their desire to make sure that we keep as many toolkits as we can actively working for the benefit of our residents. The work that we have to do in the years ahead must reflect the fact that we have been very clear that, as the Home Secretary and the Prime Minister have said, when people voted on 23 June last year they did not vote to be any less safe... Lyn Brown (West Ham) (Lab):...In particular, they highlighted the inability directly to submit data and conduct searches within the Europol databases, the need to conclude a separate bilateral arrangement to connect to Europol’s secure information exchange network application, and the inability to sit on Europol’s management board, which sets the organisation’s strategy. That tells us that Mr Wainwright is highly unlikely to stay in his post. In summary, to borrow the words of David Armond, deputy director general of the National Crime Agency, any alternative arrangement to full membership would be “sub-optimal, not as good as what we’ve currently got”. Frankly, that does not feel comfortable to me... Joanna Cherry (Edinburgh South West) (SNP):...It is sometimes also suggested that our partnerships with other countries, such as our “Five Eyes” partners, will somehow replace or supersede what we have in place with the EU, but that will not work either, because the “Five Eyes” partnership, important though it is, does not cover all aspects of our security. For example, it does not cover all aspects of day-to-day policing. In fact, the National Crime Agency has said that one concern for it and its “Five Eyes” partners is the impact that the absence of the UK from Europol will have on the other “Five Eyes” countries’ relationships, because they often use the UK as a proxy for getting work done at Europol when the UK is working with it. Such difficulties are the reality of the situation, and it is not just the SNP or the Labour party highlighting them; as we have heard, they have been highlighted by the NCA, Rob Wainwright and the House of Lords Select Committee that has looked into these matters in some detail...Robert Neill (Bromley and Chislehurst) (Con): My hon. Friend makes a powerful point. Is he aware that similar evidence exists in relation to the Schengen information system? The National Crime Agency has stated: “Loss of access to SIS II would seriously inhibit the UK’s ability to identify and arrest people who pose a threat to public safety and security”.
James Berry (Kingston and Surbiton)
(Con): I entirely agree with my hon. Friend. In fact, I
do not think that a single senior police officer or police
organisation takes a view counter to the one he has just
outlined... “a second-tier member of our club” if it left the EU and that, like Iceland and Norway, it would be denied direct access to Europol data and, of course, would not have direct influence on the overall direction of the agency, which has proved so beneficial in recent years. Those are not trivial matters and could mean that a request for information on missing or wanted persons takes days rather than hours, which could be crucial for those involved. That is why the NCA’s David Armond has called on the Government to seek something more than the operational partnership enjoyed by other states...
Keith Vaz (Leicester East)
(Lab):...I know the Minister is busy tweeting parts of
my speech, but may I occupy his time for just one moment? It is
possible for us to get an arrangement with Europol that will mean
not that we are sitting on its management board, but that we are
very near that position. We know, from watching what the United
States has done, that it is possible to be there. It is not as
good as running the organisation, but it is being near the centre
of power, which is where we need to be with Europol. As we have
heard, every serving chief constable, the head of the NCA and the
head of the Metropolitan police say how important it is for us to
stay a part of it. The Policing Minister knows that, because I am
sure that police officers have said as much to him. At the very
least, we should be able to negotiate something equivalent to
what the United States has negotiated, whereby we have a room, a
desk and access to the kind of information that we so desperately
need... |
