John Stewart, Chair of AirportWatch, on secret blacklist – which may have been why he was barred from the USA

John Stewart, a leading campaigner against Heathrow expansion, Chairman of HACAN and of AirportWatch, has found his name on a “blacklist”, fuelling claims that such secret files have been more widely used than thought. John believes this list may be behind the reason why he was barred from the US in 2011, on a speaking tour, with no reason given. He has no criminal convictions, does not belong to a trade union and worked in retail before taking up peaceful campaigning. When his plane landed in New York he was escorted off it by armed guards and sent home. John has been told by the GMB union that he was on a blacklist previously thought to have only contained names of alleged “troublemakers” and trade unionists from the building industry. The Standard comments: “If this is true, the problem becomes very disquieting indeed. It’s hard to think of anything more inimical to the modern spirit of openness and transparency than the existence of a secret blacklist circulating between employers and institutions. And if it includes people whose only offence is to hold views or conduct campaigns that some companies or institutions find troublesome, it becomes downright frightening”.

 


Heathrow campaigner barred from US was on secret blacklist

27.2.2013 (Evening Standard)

John Stewart, a leading campaigner against Heathrow expansion, has found his name on a “blacklist”, fuelling claims that such secret files have been more widely used than thought.

Mr Stewart, 63, chairman of pressure group Hacan (Heathrow Association for the Control of Aircraft Noise), believes it could explain why he was barred from the US in 2011 with no reason given.

Mr Stewart, who is from Clapham, has no criminal convictions, does not belong to a trade union and worked in retail before taking up peaceful campaigning. When his plane landed in New York he was escorted off it by armed guards and sent home. He had planned a speaking tour with fellow campaigners.

Mr Stewart has been told by the GMB union that he was on a blacklist previously thought to have only contained names of alleged “troublemakers” and trade unionists from the building industry. “It could explain why I was refused entry to America in 2011,” he said. “The list seems to have been around for some years. It’s worrying that somebody like me, without convictions, can find myself on a blacklist like this.”

Zac Goldsmith, the Conservative MP and environmentalist, said he was astonished: “If John Stewart has been refused entry to the States because of his Heathrow campaign, the tolerance threshold must be astonishingly low. He is superbly effective, but it’s hard to think of a more civilised campaigner.”

The list was found in 2009 when the Information Commissioner’s Office, which enforces data protection rules, raided an organisation called the Consulting Association in Droitwich, Worcestershire. It has now closed.

Most of the 3,213 people on the list were construction workers and the database was used to vet staff for the industry. It included details about workers’ personal relationships, trade union activity and employment history. But the GMB estimated 200 names were of green campaigners. Tamsin Omond, of Climate Rush, was also on the list.

Alternative explanations for the US barring Mr Stewart could be that he did not have a work visa, and was travelling with a man who claimed to have superglued himself to Gordon Brown. The US Embassy would not comment. GMB general secretary Paul Kenny said: “The blacklisting scandal now widens to include abuses of basic freedoms like the right to travel abroad. Some on the list never worked in construction, so who put them on it and why?”

http://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/heathrow-campaigner-barred-from-us-was-on-secret-blacklist-8512869.html?origin=internalSearch

.


 

,

Evening Standard comment

A troubling blacklist and our basic rights

http://www.standard.co.uk/comment/comment/evening-standard-comment-a-troubling-blacklist-and-our-basic-rights-8512973.html

 

27 February 2013

The blacklist of individuals regarded as troublemakers that was compiled by a body called the Consulting Association and revealed by the Information Commissioners after a raid in 2009 was disturbing in itself, and calamitous for the job prospects of more than 3,000 people whose names were on it and who were sometimes given short shrift by potential employers.

But until now it has been taken as read that the blacklist chiefly affected people working in the construction industry, including trade union activists and those who raised health and safety concerns at work. Now, the GMB union says that it included the names of 200 environmental activists.

One of them is John Stewart, who has led a good deal of the opposition to the expansion of Heathrow Airport. He is respectable, retired, with no criminal convictions and a reputation as a formidable campaigner. Two years ago, he was refused entry to the US, and escorted off a plane by armed guards with no reason given. He feels now that this may be because his name appeared on the list.

If this is true, the problem becomes very disquieting indeed. It’s hard to think of anything more inimical to the modern spirit of openness and transparency than the existence of a secret blacklist circulating between employers and institutions. And if it includes people whose only offence is to hold views or conduct campaigns that some companies or institutions find troublesome, it becomes downright frightening, particularly if it affects people’s basic rights, including freedom of movement. Totalitarian regimes have secret lists of troublemakers; Britain has the Freedom of Information Act.

It is not clear whether Mr Stewart was barred from America because he was classed as a potential agitator or for some other reason; the US does not give explanations. But he should know what use was made of his data. Plainly, the Government has some way to go to reinforce a culture of openness in private industry as well as public institutions. Good citizens must be free to engage in public-spirited campaigns without fearing for their rights.

 http://www.standard.co.uk/biography/evening-standard-comment

 

.


.

 Back in 2011:

 

Barred from America – John Stewart on US refusal to allow him to visit America

John Stewart, Chair of AirportWatch and of HACAN, was denied entry to the USAon 29th September, though no reason was given and he qualified for entry under
the US visa waiver scheme. John questions how a a mysterious call was made by
some person or some organisation which had access to the flight’s passenger list,
alleging that he had made threats to the President; a call that ensured that he
would be subject to detailed questioning at JFK. 
9.10.2011

Barred from America

I have been barred from America.  Or, more precisely, I have been denied a visa
to do a series of talks about the successful campaign to stop a third runway at
London’s Heathrow Airport.

It all started in dramatic fashion when I was escorted off the plane by six armed
American policemen minutes after it had arrived at JFK Airport on Thursday 29th
September.   I was rushed through customs past the waiting queues of passengers
straight to Immigration Hall.  Over the next seven hours I was to remain there,
questioned by the Immigration Service, the FBI, and the American Secret Service
before being put on a plane back to Heathrow.

My papers had been in order.  I was travelling on a Visa Waiver which the US
authorities encourage passengers to get if they are on relatively short visits
on business or to see family.  I learnt from Fox News after I had arrived back
in Heathrow that, when I was in flight, a call had been made saying that a passenger
– myself – had made threats against President Obama –http://www.myfoxny.com/dpp/news/delta-flight-investigated-after-threat-against-the-president-20110929-akd  My Visa Waiver had been cancelled when I was in mid-flight.

The Police asked me about threats to the President as they rushed me through
customs but the threats hardly featured in my interviews with the Immigration
Service, the FBI and the Secret Service.   When they discovered who I was they
were much more interested in my speaking tour.  What seemed to worry them was
the fact that the Third Runway Campaign had included direct action, what the Americans
referred to as “civil disobedience”.  They became particularly interested when
they realized that my fellow speaker in the tour was to be Dan Glass who, as member
of Plane Stupid, had taken direction action.  (Dan is still waiting to hear whether
or not he will get a visa, months after applying).

I explained that the third runway campaign was led by residents; that direct
action formed just a part of it; that the direct action at all times was non-violent;
that I had not taken part in it; and that I had no criminal convictions.  But
to no avail.  The conversation with the FBI became surreal:  concerns that I was
going to incite people at the meetings to engage in perhaps armed civil disobedience
against the airports.  More details of the interviews can be found in this excellent
piece of investigative reporting by Kate Sheppard of the respected American journal
Mother Jones:  http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/10/environmentalist-terror-threat-john-stewart

But, in retrospect, the details of what I was or was not asked are not so important.
The fact remains that a mysterious call was made by some person or some organisation
which had access to the flights’ passenger list, alleging that I had made threats
to the President; a call that ensured that I would be subject to detailed questioning
at JFK.  Was it somebody from the aviation industry or the security services themselves?
The question is posed in this news piece from ITN’s London Tonight: http://www.itv.com/london/arrested-at-jfk37177/ or http://youtu.be/1JSM0RHJ3ig

The feeling that some of the authorities did not want the Heathrow Story told
in the US was re-enforced when, back in London, I went to the American Embassy
to apply for a full visa.  No, they said, not for this tour. If you want to come
back to the US at another time, for another reason, you can apply again.  But
this case is closed.

John Stewart

9.10.2011

 

see also

 

 

Has Green Become the New Red in America? – by John Stewart

John was denied entrance into the USA on 29th September, after arrival at New
York JFK airport, and six hours of questionning by the FBI, the American Secret
Service and immigration officials. He asks “Just why are the authorities so keen
to silence environmentalists?” The Bush Administration promoted the practice of
excluding people from the US because of their beliefs: ideological exclusion.
Has green become the new red, with environmentalists targetted?

9.10.2011

I was denied entry to the United States on Thursday last week.  I was coming
to America for a series of meetings and talks organized by the Aviation Justice
Express.  I had been invited, along with Scottish community activist Dan Glass,
to talk about the successful campaign which defeated plans for a third runway
at London’s Heathrow Airport.

However I never made it beyond JFK Airport.  I was escorted off the plane by
six law enforcement officers before being questioned for several hours by the
FBI, the American Secret Service and immigration officials.  I was then sent straight
back to London.  No reason was given.

I have now learnt via Fox News that I was alleged to have made some threats against
President Obama.  That never came up in the questioning.  I can only conclude
that this was simply an excuse to deny me entry to the country.

Just why are the authorities so keen to silence environmentalists?  Has, as a
new book by Will Potter suggests, green become the new red?  Are they now seeing
a green under every bed planting seeds of revolution and sowing sedition?

The campaign against the third runway at Heathrow was the most diverse ever assembled
anywhere in Europe to protest against an airport expansion.  It included local
residents, many of whose politics are far to the right of President Obama, politicians
of all political parties as well as representatives of environmental NGOs and
green activists, some of whom took part in non-violent civil disobedience.  It
was this coalition of interests, which I chaired, that persuaded Conservative-led
Government, when elected, to scrap the plans for the expansion of Heathrow.

The aviation industry in the UK, perhaps in the whole of Europe, had never suffered
such a reverse.  Expansion at Europe’s busiest international airport had been
denied by a fiscally-conservative Government on the basis that the environmental
and economic arguments didn’t stack up.

If this process were to be repeated across Europe and the US, it would harm the
corporate interests of the aviation industry.  Potter argues in Green is the New
Red that it is precisely to protect the profits of corporate interests that environmentalists
are being targeted.  He has written, “Much like the Red Scare and the communist
witch hunts of the 40s and 50s, the Green Scare is using one word—this time, it’s
“terrorist”—to push a political agenda, instill fear, and chill dissent”.

There may be something else going on here as well.  The Bush Administration promoted
the practice of excluding people from the US because of their beliefs: ideological
exclusion.  Although the Obama administration has made some positive strides towards
putting an end to the practice, the American Civil Liberties Union is arguing
that it should retire it for good.

A reduction in flying in the US would hit the profits of the aviation industry.
So a message which argues that flights should be curbed is one the American aviation
industry doesn’t want to hear.  It would threaten its profits and corporate power.
It doesn’t want the public to know that high-speed rail could potentially provide
a realistic alternative to many short-distance flights in the US.  Easier to silence
the messenger.  But the message will be heard.  The tour will go on.  Dan Glass
and myself will be skyped into the events we were due to speak at across the country.

John Stewart

9.10.2011