complaint against the uk in re: international covenant on civil and political rights

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1 83 Priory Gardens London N6 5QU England 20 December 2012 Dr Navanethem Pillay United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Palais des Nations CH-1211 Geneva 10 Switzerland Dear High Commissioner Pillay I am writing to you, as the director of the Network for Church Monitoring (N4CM), to ask you to urge the United Kingdom to accede to the first Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the multilateral treaty that commits its parties to respect the civil and political rights of individuals, including the right to freedom of speech. The first Optional Protocol sets out a system by which the UN’s Human Rights Committee can receive and consider complaints from individuals who allege a violation of the ICCPR. But since the UK Government has not ratified the Protocol, individuals from the UK are not currently permitted to submit written communications to the Committee. Indeed, the UK is the only European Union member state and one of only three members of the Council of Europe not to have acceded to the Optional Protocol. My wife and I complain of an orchestrated campaign of harassment and intimidation by the Security Service (MI5) and/or Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) over a period dating back to September 2003 after having exhausted all available domestic remedies, and after having my application declared inadmissible by the European Court of Human Rights. Please see my Communication enclosed herewith. Paragraphs 35-41 outline why the Vatican and the hierarchy of the Catholic Church should be monitored. We note the UK Government’s response in the sixth periodic report under the ICCPR that it does not see “a compelling need to accept individual petition to the UN”, in particular its claim that “[t]he practical value to the individual citizen is unclear”. However, we believe that the Government should be urged to reconsider, as a priority, accession to the first Optional Protocol in order to guarantee effective and consistent protection of the full range of ICCPR rights. Yours sincerely Declan Heavey Director Network for Church Monitoring

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Communication submitted to the UN on 20 December 2012 for consideration under the first Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

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Page 1: Complaint against the UK in re: International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

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83 Priory Gardens London N6 5QU

England

20 December 2012 Dr Navanethem Pillay United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Palais des Nations CH-1211 Geneva 10 Switzerland Dear High Commissioner Pillay I am writing to you, as the director of the Network for Church Monitoring (N4CM), to ask you to urge the United Kingdom to accede to the first Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the multilateral treaty that commits its parties to respect the civil and political rights of individuals, including the right to freedom of speech. The first Optional Protocol sets out a system by which the UN’s Human Rights Committee can receive and consider complaints from individuals who allege a violation of the ICCPR. But since the UK Government has not ratified the Protocol, individuals from the UK are not currently permitted to submit written communications to the Committee. Indeed, the UK is the only European Union member state and one of only three members of the Council of Europe not to have acceded to the Optional Protocol. My wife and I complain of an orchestrated campaign of harassment and intimidation by the Security Service (MI5) and/or Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) over a period dating back to September 2003 after having exhausted all available domestic remedies, and after having my application declared inadmissible by the European Court of Human Rights. Please see my Communication enclosed herewith. Paragraphs 35-41 outline why the Vatican and the hierarchy of the Catholic Church should be monitored. We note the UK Government’s response in the sixth periodic report under the ICCPR that it does not see “a compelling need to accept individual petition to the UN”, in particular its claim that “[t]he practical value to the individual citizen is unclear”. However, we believe that the Government should be urged to reconsider, as a priority, accession to the first Optional Protocol in order to guarantee effective and consistent protection of the full range of ICCPR rights. Yours sincerely Declan Heavey Director Network for Church Monitoring

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DECLAN HEAVEY V. THE UNITED KINGDOM

COMMUNICATION SUBMITTED FOR CONSIDERATION UNDER

THE FIRST OPTIONAL PROTOCOL TO THE INTERNATIONAL COVENANT ON CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS

Before: The United Nations Human Rights Committee c/o Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights 1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland Fax: + 41 22 9179022 Submitted by: Declan Heavey 83 Priory Gardens London N6 5QU United Kingdom Mobile: + 44 77 92843167 Email: [email protected] Date: 20 December 2012

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I. APPLICANT/STATE CONCERNED

A. Information Concerning the Applicant of the Communication

1. The Applicant in this Communication is Declan Heavey, a citizen of the Republic of Ireland and resident of the city of London in the United Kingdom. He was born on 4 September 1960. His wife, a naturalized Irish citizen born in Madrid in Spain, resides with the Applicant in London. They have no children. The Applicant is the director of the Network for Church Monitoring (N4CM).

B. State Party Concerned

2. The State Party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (the Covenant or ICCPR) against which this Communication is directed is the United Kingdom.

3. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland formally acceded to the ICCPR on 20 May 1976, but has yet to accede to the first Optional Protocol (see cover letter to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights dated 20 December 2012 above). II. ARTICLES VIOLATED/EXHAUSTION OF DOMESTIC REMEDIES/OTHER INTERNATIONAL PROCEDURES

A. Articles of the ICCPR Violated

4. This case arises in relation to the harassment, directed surveillance and interception of communications by the Security Service (MI5) and/or Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) over a period dating back to September 2003. It is submitted that this case involves the violation of Article 19, relating to the Applicant’s right to freedom of expression (in particular, his right to impart information on the Internet), taken together with Article 2, which requires the State Party to take proactive measures to “respect and ensure” the rights recognized in the Covenant.

B. Exhaustion of Domestic Remedies

5. Since 2003, the Applicant has sought repeatedly to put a stop to the harassment in its various forms without success. On 16 June 2010, the Applicant’s parliamentary representative Home Office Minister Lynne Featherstone wrote to the Home Secretary Theresa May laying out the Applicant’s concerns regarding the interception of his and his wife’s emails. In a letter dated 12 November 2010, Security Minister Baroness Pauline Neville-Jones recommended the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) to investigate. The IPT is the only Tribunal to whom complaints about the Intelligence Services can be directed, and under section 67(8) of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, there is no appeal from a decision of the IPT. The Applicant therefore exhausted all possible domestic remedies by bringing a claim before the IPT.

6. The Applicant lodged his claim with the IPT on 10 August 2011 in respect of ongoing interception by MI5 and/or GCHQ over a period dating back to September 2003. The Applicant also alleged harassment, directed surveillance, the disabling of Internet access at

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home and in public libraries, interference with a website, blog and emails and interception of privileged communications by one or both agencies.

7. The Applicant informed the IPT that he and his wife currently live in the same house MI5 whistleblower David Shayler lived in for a couple of years (until 2007), where they are being repeatedly threatened and harassed by their live-in landlady, human rights activist Belinda McKenzie (see paragraphs 22-24 below). It is unfortunate that Mr Shayler declared that he was the Messiah in 2007, became a squatter, and was subsequently ridiculed in the press for changing his name to Delores Kane. A New Statesman article published in September 2006 featuring Mr Shayler and Ms McKenzie gives no indication that Mr Shayler believed he was the Messiah at that time; whilst a Daily Mail interview with Mr Shayler explicitly shows he believed himself to be Jesus by June 2007 (see Annex 1, p. 14). He has never regained his normal self.

8. Within two weeks of the Applicant’s complaint to the IPT, Facebook had disabled his wife’s account; their web host SiteGround had to twice block their IP address due to a large number of simultaneous connections towards their server; Ms McKenzie had served them with a backdated notice to vacate their flat; and Haringey Council left the Applicant with his first shortfall of £76.92 in rent to pay (see paragraph 23(1) below). Nonetheless, the Tribunal dismissed the claim within three weeks, on 1 September 2011, stating (see Annex 2, p. 15):

The Investigatory Powers Tribunal has carefully considered your complaint and Human Rights Act claim, and has concluded that it is obviously unsustainable, and thus falls within the provisions of Rule 13(3)(a) of the Investigatory Powers Tribunal Rules 2000, such that, pursuant to s67(4) of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, the Tribunal has resolved to dismiss the claim.

9. The Applicant remains aggrieved by the decision of the IPT to dismiss his claim

without calling upon information or evidence in addition to that provided by him, which he had informed the Tribunal was “wide-ranging”, including, but not limited to, papers correspondence, memoranda, contracts, agreements, and other records contained in a blog/diary. The N4CM Blog, which has been vandalised on several occasions, even carries a screenshot of a Skype chat exposing the homophobic abuse of a distinguished American professor by an anonymous perpetrator. It was also made known to the Tribunal that the Applicant could adduce evidence other than his own. For example, third parties could have been contacted to confirm that several phone calls from the Applicant were cut off in mid-sentence.

10. According to the UK human rights group Justice, the IPT has only ever upheld 10 complaints out of 1,100 considered over the past decade. They observe that “[e]ither public bodies get their surveillance decisions miraculously right in 99.1% of cases, or the IPT is simply inadequate as a mechanism for investigating claims of abuse”. Liberty, one of the UK’s leading civil liberties and human rights organisations, asks: “How can the public have any confidence in a process which is held in secret, gives little or no reasons for its decisions and whose judgment cannot be brought into question in any court of law?”

11. In this regard, it is important to underscore that the discriminatory surveillance suffered by the Applicant and his wife is not an isolated event. Rather, it is emblematic of a larger pattern of surveillance and discriminatory practices by law enforcement officials in the UK that has been well-documented by international and domestic human rights bodies. In May 2012, Liberty expressed concern that “state sanctioned surveillance against specific individuals takes place on a massive scale”. Six years ago, in July 2006, Norman Baker MP accused the British Government of “hoarding information about people who pose no danger

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to this country”, after it emerged that MI5 was holding secret files on 272,000 individuals – equivalent to one in 160 adults.

C. Other International Procedures

12. The Applicant complained to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) on 19 October 2011. He invoked Articles 8 (right to respect for private and family life and correspondence) and 13 (right to effective remedy) of the European Convention on Human Rights. He submitted that the interference with his rights under Article 8 was not prescribed by the law, that it did not pursue any of the legitimate aims in Article 8(2), and that the interference was not necessary in a democratic society. He also submitted that there was no effective remedy available in respect of the interference, in violation of Article 13.

13. The ECHR, sitting in a single-judge formation (VA De Gaetano assisted by a rapporteur), dismissed the claim within 14 weeks, on 24 January 2012, stating (see Annex 3, p. 16):

In the light of all the material in its possession, and in so far as the matters complained of were within its competence, the Court found that they did not disclose any appearance of a violation of the rights and freedoms set out in the Convention or its Protocols.

14. The ECHR letter of dismissal dated 31 January 2012 refers to the Applicant’s

“application lodged on 5 September 2011”. In fact, the Applicant’s application was lodged with the Court on 19 October 2011. On 5 September 2011, the Applicant merely expressed his intention to lodge an application with the Court. III. BACKGROUND FACTS

15. The Applicant believes that the activities complained of are directly linked to a 1997 High Court case in Ireland involving the Roman Catholic Hospitaller Order of St John of God which the Applicant successfully defended in person, and his subsequent move to the UK in 2003 to develop the then Network of those Abused by Church (NAC). The four-day High Court case was the first ever hearing of a ward of court action before a jury. The Applicant also applied to have the case heard publicly and – in another first in the history of the State – the ward of court process was opened to public scrutiny (see Annex 4, “Wards of court lose rights and liberties”, The Irish Times opinion article, 6 March 1997, p. 17). The Applicant alleged that the action, arising out of a dispute over his father’s will, was no more than an attempt to cover up wrongdoing by the Hospitaller Order of St John of God in the mid-1980s (see Annex 5 and 6 for details, pp. 18-20).

16. The St John of God Order is a Spanish Catholic congregation with over 300 hospitals and centres in 53 countries throughout the world. The Order provides mental health services, care for older people and services for children and adults with disabilities. It is one of 18 religious orders that signed up to the 2002 redress agreement between the congregations and the Irish Government which indemnified the orders from claims made by abuse victims in exchange for payments and property capped at €127 million. According to The Irish Times, unpublished estimates compiled by senior Department of Education officials put the final bill for the redress scheme at €1.47 billion, up from the €1.36 billion that had been quoted. There are 138 religious congregations in Ireland, including the 18 held accountable by the State for abusing children in their institutions.

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A. Birmingham (September 2003 to November 2006)

17. Upon arriving in the UK from Ireland in 2003, the Applicant and his wife first

settled in the city of Birmingham to work on the NAC website. From the outset they were subjected to an orchestrated campaign of harassment and intimidation, including difficulties with the administration of bank, electricity and gas accounts, and extensive damage caused by flooding from a flat above, all well documented in the Applicant’s personal website (now offline), with photographs of the damage done to their flat. For two years the Applicant and his wife survived off their savings until they were forced to go on state benefits in July 2005.

18. On 27 September 2006, the Applicant’s joint claim for Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) was terminated by the Department for Work and Pensions because it was alleged by Erdington Jobcentre in Birmingham that he did not sign on for JSA earlier that day, when in fact he was not scheduled to sign on until two days later (see Annex 7, Department for Work and Pensions: Letter terminating benefits claim, p. 21). A simple check of the Applicant’s and his wife’s previous signings would have established that they signed on every second Friday, not every second Wednesday. However, subsequent letters from the Applicant to the Jobcentre and the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions went unanswered, in clear violation of the Jobseeker’s Allowance Regulations 1996.

B. Sleeping rough in London (November 2006 to July 2009)

19. For more than 2 ½ years, from 4 November 2006 to 13 July 2009, the Applicant and his wife were forced to live rough on the streets of London, where the Applicant’s case regarding the termination of his joint benefits claim was dismissed by the High Court (Judicial Review), the Court of Appeal and the ECHR. Neither the Applicant nor his wife could be referred to a hostel due to not being on benefits and had to resort to day centres for the homeless where they experienced harassment and violence at the hands of homeless people, all well documented with crime reference numbers and other supporting evidence in the N4CM (then NAC) Blog. The N4CM Blog also contains video evidence, crime reference numbers and police tickets that show that at night the Applicant and his wife were attacked on several occasions, hosed, urinated on, and were regularly harassed by the police. The Applicant complained in open correspondence with senior church leaders, police officers and politicians, but without effect on any front (see, for example, Annex 10, City of London Police: Reply from Commissioner Michael Bowron, pp. 24-25).

20. The Applicant submits that the following three examples – by no means exhaustive – from his and his wife’s time on the street bear all the hallmarks of directed surveillance (i.e. surveillance that is covert but not intrusive):

1) On 22 September 2007, at a time when the Applicant was answering questions on the James Randi Educational Foundation Forum to raise money to help him and his wife survive on the street, his wife was severely assaulted while sleeping (crime reference no. CR/007884/07); 2) On 8 March 2008, three days after an email from the Home Office stating that it was unlikely the Applicant’s emails were being intercepted, the then NAC website was removed from the Internet (see N4CM blog of 14 March 2008 “SpamCop reports Declan as a spammer”);

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3) On 18 June 2008, the same morning the Applicant was due to post his second Request for Priority to the ECHR, all their money and documents were stolen in a day centre for the homeless run by the Roman Catholic Sisters of Mercy (crime reference no. 4215697/08). The nuns subsequently refused to release CCTV footage of the robbery to the police (see Annex 8, Sisters of Mercy: Letter signed by the Apostolic Nuncio, p. 22).

21. The Applicant’s Internet activity was monitored and restricted throughout the time

he and his wife were confined to living on the street. In October 2007, he began an online petition to the United Nations in support of embryonic stem cell research. This petition had been signed by 22 Nobel Prize winners by the time the NAC website was removed from the Internet (see paragraph 20(2) above). In an email of 29 February 2008 to then Home Secretary Jacqueline Smith, the Applicant not only complained of interception but pointed out that all emails sent to him after 12 August 2007 had been moved to Trash and over 300 draft documents deleted, including the names and email addresses of more than 2,500 scientists from around the world (see Annex 9, Home Office: Complaint to the Home Secretary regarding interception, p. 23).

C. London (July 2009 to the present day)

22. On 13 July 2009, through an associate in America, the Applicant and his wife were put in contact with human rights activist Belinda McKenzie after the Applicant received an email earlier in the day from the City of London Police confirming that, without a court order, the police would physically remove him and his wife from where they had been sleeping for almost a year (see Annex 10, City of London Police: Reply from Commissioner Michael Bowron, pp. 24-25). Ms McKenzie, who housed MI5 whistleblower David Shayler for a couple of years (see paragraph 7 above), agreed that the Applicant and his wife could be tenants in her house. On 29 July 2009, Ms McKenzie wrote to the same associate stating that her house could be an “in house charity” for impoverished activists supported by “some kind of international fund” (see Annex 13, Belinda McKenzie: Letter to the Prime Minister re property warrant, p. 29).

23. On 9 October 2009, three months after the tenancy began, the Applicant had his joint claim JSA reinstated. However, the Applicant and his wife continued to be the targets of a well-orchestrated campaign of harassment and intimidation. The following are illustrative examples of the sorts of tactics employed in this campaign and come from the last year alone:

1) On 24 January 2012, High Court Judge Mitting ruled that it was lawful for Haringey Council to have left the Applicant with a shortfall of £76.92 in rent to pay each month during the preceding six months because the Council intended covering his annual rent liability (see Annex 12, Haringey Council: Order by High Court Judge Mitting, p. 28). These shortfalls arise from the difference between the Applicant’s housing benefit payments of £230.77 per week, paid fortnightly at the rate of £461.54 (£923.08 per four week period) and his monthly rent liability of £1000. Despite Mitting J’s ruling, the Applicant submits that the Council is knowingly discriminating against him in the manner they are paying his rent by effectively reimbursing shortfalls with a second payment to him in the amount of £461.54 at the end of the rental year. The Applicant and his wife are only able to meet these shortfalls throughout the rental year out of their JSA (for them both) of £105.95 per week because they pay rent inclusive of all extraneous charges save telephone line. 2) On 21 August 2012, Ms McKenzie signed an undertaking to the Court promising not to harass the Applicant and his wife for a period of one year following her builder’s

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removal of the door to their flat on 27 July 2012 (see Annex 14, Belinda McKenzie: Undertaking to the Court promising not to harass, pp. 30-31). Nonetheless, the Metropolitan Police have not recorded Ms McKenzie’s removal of the door as a criminal offence because, according to an investigation outcome letter dated 11 October 2012, she alleged that the Applicant had erected the door himself, which he did not (“On arrival the officers have established that your landlady has arranged for a builder to remove the front door which she stated, you had erected without her permission”). This finding that no criminal offence had been committed also runs contrary to what Ms McKenzie wrote to the Court in a statement dated 11 September 2012. At paragraph 8, she wrote: “…I removed the interconnecting door that makes the flat self-contained, in order to signal to them that their tenancy was over, in my mind anyway. They immediately called the police who said I had a right to remove my own door….” The Applicant’s appeal against the Metropolitan Police’s refusal to refer this case to the Crown Prosecution Service is currently before the Independent Police Complaints Commission (see Annex 11, Metropolitan Police: Letter from the IPCC, pp. 26-27).

3) On 20 August 2012, the Applicant appealed Deputy District Judge Peart’s order granting Ms McKenzie accelerated possession of his and his wife’s flat with effect from 1 November 2012 (see Annex 15, Accelerated Possession: Order by Deputy District Judge Peart, p. 32). The Applicant sought permission to appeal to the Circuit Court on the grounds that the order was unjust because of a serious procedural irregularity in the lower court proceedings (see Annex 16, Accelerated Possession: Grounds of Appeal, pp. 33-34). Circuit Judge Cryan sent the case back to the District Court for hearing on 7 December 2012 (see Annex 17, Accelerated Possession: Order by Circuit Judge Cryan, p. 35). At this hearing, District Judge Alderson acknowledged that there was a note in the file from Peart J stating that he did not read the Applicant’s defence. Alderson J also conceded that Ms McKenzie’s claim for an accelerated possession order did not contain the right paperwork; however, because he had the correct paperwork in the Applicant’s appeal bundle, he granted Ms McKenzie accelerated possession of the Applicant and his wife’s flat with effect from tomorrow, 21 December 2012 (see Annex 19, Accelerated Possession: Order by District Judge Alderson, p. 39).

24. With reference to paragraph 23(3) above, the Applicant had with him in court before

Alderson J a folder containing compelling evidence that he and his wife are being blocked from finding a flat. Since 31 October 2012, the Applicant has made repeated contact with over 60 letting agents by email, phone and in person and only one has come through with a landlord who accepts DSS/Housing Benefit on a one-bedroom flat. The applicant called into this letting agent on 28 November. The property advisor told the Applicant that there would be no tenancy agreement and then made a phone call to his handyman to ask him to go to a particular property and throw the tenant’s belongings to the street and change the locks so he couldn’t re-enter the house. It is surely not unreasonable to assume that this sort of behaviour was the product of surveillance (see Annex 18, Accelerated Possession: Opening Statement to the Court, p. 36-38).

25. The N4CM website has been removed from the Internet on five distinct occasions. Most recently, in May 2012, it was removed from the Internet after Just Host, the domain’s then registrar, changed the domain name server (DNS) records without permission or authorization and disabled the Applicant’s wife’s facility to correct these records herself (see Annex 20, Just Host: Email to the European Commission, pp. 40-45). No sooner had the Applicant’s wife successfully transferred the domain name to SiteGround’s registrar on 8 June, than, on 14 June, the website was vandalised to such an extent that the Applicant’s wife was advised by the wordpress theme designers that she had no option but to scratch the theme

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she had been working with for over two years and start over with a new theme (see Annex 21, WordPress: Final exchange with theme designer, p. 46). The Chairman of N4CM, Dr Stephen D Mumford from North Carolina, US, has been funding the N4CM website since December 2010, and domain since June 2012.

26. The Applicant further complains that the extent of the manipulation and control of his and his wife’s emails has resulted in the shelving for almost two years of his petition to the United Nations in support of embryonic stem cell research, which more than two years ago had been signed by no less than 28 Nobel Prize winners as well as hundreds of other distinguished scholars from around the world. It has also resulted in the almost immediate shelving of the Applicant’s statement to President Barack Obama and members of the US Congress regarding forest conservation, published in April 2011, which within 48 hours had been signed by a recipient of the Blue Plant Prize, widely considered the environmental equivalent of a Nobel award. In April 2010, an associate of the Applicant’s in America wrote to Minister Featherstone, stating: “I am truly appalled by the unlawful violation of the Heavey’s basic right to send and receive email without interference. I would be grateful for anything you may be able to do by way of taking measures to correct this gross abuse.”

27. Despite Minister Featherstone’s letter to the Home Secretary in June 2010 regarding interception (see paragraph 5 above), there has been no response from the Home Office into why the Applicant and his wife continue to encounter problems with their email. The Applicant has also amassed substantial evidence relating to the sabotage of his and his wife’s mail, including the non-delivery of registered items. In the case of Heavey v Haringey Council (see paragraph 23(1) above), the Applicant was denied an oral hearing which he otherwise would have been entitled to had he received an order from the Court when it was sent to him. The Applicant’s application for an order extending time for renewing his application for permission to apply for judicial review to an oral hearing and for the file of his claim to be re-opened was refused by Mitting J (see Annex 12, Haringey Council: Order by High Court Judge Mitting, p. 28).

28. The Applicant submits that the harassment, intimidation and discrimination he and his wife continue to experience is politically motivated, that it is the product of directed surveillance, and that it is certain to continue. In June 2012, the Applicant received a response from the European Commission concerning the problems his wife encountered when seeking to renew her passport at the Irish Passport Office in London. She had been told by a passport officer that her application could not be processed unless she surrendered the originals of all her proof documents. This is something the Applicant was not asked to do when he renewed his passport in December 2011. According to the EC Directorate-General for Justice, given that Irish law provides for passports to be issued and renewed, Ireland complies with its obligations under EU law regardless of how burdensome or unwarranted the requirements of the Irish authorities might be (see Annex 22, Irish Passport Office in London: Letter from the European Commission, p. 47). The inescapable conclusion to be drawn from this reason as to why it was not open for the European Commission to pursue the Applicant’s wife’s case further is that under EU law there is no remedy for discrimination.

29. The Applicant and his wife are deeply concerned about what lies in wait for them in

their next accommodation when they have to reconnect and maintain utilities such as telephone, Internet, gas, electricity, and related services. On 6 December 2012, the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman wrote to Minister Featherstone about the Applicant’s complaint that Her Majesty’s Courts and Tribunals Service (HMCTS) have acted with maladministration, stating: “...we do consider HMCTS’s handling of Mr Heavey’s complaint to be so poor as to indicate poor service.” This afternoon, the Applicant’s wife

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posted a blog titled “Facebook: N4CM website under attack”. This blog shows that articles throughout the N4CM website are currently being attacked, and Facebook share counts in every section of the site have been reduced in number by anything up to 600 shares. IV. VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 19 OF THE COVENANT

30. Article 19 of the Covenant provides, in pertinent part:

2. Everyone shall have the right to freedom of expression; this right shall include freedom to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers, whether orally, in writing or in print, in the form of art, or through any other media of his choice. 3. The exercise of the rights provided for in paragraph 2 of this Article carries with it special duties and responsibilities. It may therefore be subject to certain restrictions, but these shall only be such as are provided by law and are necessary:

a) For the respect of the rights or reputations of others; b) For the protection of national security or of public order, or of public health or morals.

31. The Applicant and his wife are indisputably targeted because they are imparting

information through the N4CM website which is often critical of church authorities, in particular the Vatican and the hierarchy of the Catholic Church. The types of action taken by States to limit the dissemination of content online not only include measures to prevent information from reaching the end-user, but also direct targeting of those who seek, receive and impart politically sensitive information via the Internet. Physically silencing criticism or dissent through harassment and intimidation is an old phenomenon, and also applies to Internet users. This issue has been explored in the Special Rapporteur’s report to the General Assembly under the section on “protection of citizen journalists” (A/65/284). Such actions are often aimed not only to silence legitimate expression, but also to intimidate a population to push its members towards self-censorship.

32. Freedom of expression, as protected under Article 19 of the Covenant, has been recognised by international tribunals, national courts and commentators as vital not only to the development of the individual, but to the securing and protecting of democracy itself. As the Committee has explained: “It is in the essence of [free and democratic] societies that its citizens must be allowed to inform themselves about alternatives to the political system/parties in power, and that they may criticize or openly and publicly evaluate their Governments … within the limits set by Article 19, paragraph 3” (see Aduayom et al. v. Togo, Communication Nos. 422-24/1990 (1996), § 7.4).

33. According to the Report of the Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression (A/66/290):

… restrictions must be formulated in a way that makes clear that its sole purpose is to protect individuals from hostility, discrimination or violence, rather than to protect belief systems, religions or institutions from criticism. The right to freedom of expression implies that it should be possible to scrutinize, openly debate and criticize, even harshly and unreasonably, ideas, opinions, belief systems and institutions, including religious ones, as long as this does not advocate hatred that incites hostility, discrimination or violence against an individual or a group of individuals.

34. Furthermore, the Special Rapporteur stresses that, as stipulated in Human Rights

Council resolution 12/16 (para. 5(p)(i)), the following types of expression should never be

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subject to restrictions: discussion of government policies and political debate; reporting on human rights, government activities and corruption in government; engaging in election campaigns, peaceful demonstrations or political activities, including for peace or democracy; and expression of opinion and dissent, religion or belief, including by persons belonging to minorities or vulnerable groups.

Why the Vatican and the hierarchy of the Catholic Church should be monitored

35. If the Special Rapporteur was concerned that the restrictions just referred to created problems under Article 19, the Committee will surely find the harassment and intimidation that the Applicant and his wife endure to be troubling. Sadly, the institution of the Roman Catholic Church appears to have become a political one above all else. To survive and expand for so many centuries it was compelled to become a political power, and it has become a financial power as well. Sometimes the Church undertakes activities that are political or economic under the guise of religion. But the image of the Catholic Church presented by the mainstream media does not reflect these realities.

36. N4CM Chairman Dr Stephen D Mumford, the founder and President of the Center for Research on Population and Security in North Carolina, US, has written extensively about the Vatican’s grave threat to the future of humankind and the democratic institutions of the United States posed by the Catholic Church. He has revealed that the Church has exerted great influence on US policy in population matters as a result of its intimidation of elected officials and the built-in reverence most Americans have for an ecclesiastical hierarchy. The teachings of the Church and its hierarchy’s insistence that these teachings be followed have resulted in an unintentional suppression of the substantial knowledge about the consequences of overpopulation. The main source of energy, organization, and direction of the anti-abortion movement in the United States and the movement to frustrate enforcement of US immigration laws is the Roman Catholic Church.

37. In his book American Democracy and The Vatican, Dr Mumford reveals that the Catholic Church, in effect, controls most governments in Latin America and many in Africa and the Philippines. Authorities in these countries live under constant intimidation by the Church, which can threaten to bring about the downfall of a regime by arousing its citizens through pastoral letters and other means should the government refuse to conform to the Church’s agenda. This ultimate step is ordinarily avoided through manipulation – by weeding out “troublemakers” before they rise to power. On the other hand, those who are loyal are well rewarded in their search for positions of power; they are assisted by the Church in their ascension to high positions in government. Government leaders who owe their first loyalty to the Vatican represent different proportions of office holders in different countries.

38. Dr Mumford cites an example in Chile. In 1979, with approval from the minister of health of Chile, Dr Ben Viel began setting up a female sterilization program with $1 million worth of sterilization equipment provided by the International Planned Parenthood Federation in London. When the equipment arrived in Chile, a Father Ibanes Langlois, serving as a messenger for the Vatican, met with the president of Chile. There was then and continues to be a disagreement between Chile and Argentina, almost bringing the two countries to war over the Beagle Channel at the tip of South America, that may prove to be rich in oil. Chile and Argentina had agreed to let the pope mediate the dispute. Langlois informed the president that, if this sterilization equipment was not removed from Chile, the pope would favour Argentina in the settling of the Beagle Channel dispute. The president called in the minister of health and ordered him to get the sterilization equipment out of the country. Dr Viel was so notified by the minister of health, and it was shipped out.

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39. In a videotaped interview with Dr Mumford available on the N4CM website, Prof

Milton Siegel details how the Vatican seized control of World Health Organization (WHO) family-planning/contraception-related policy-making right from its earliest stages. Prof Siegel was the assistant director-general of WHO for its first 24 years, and considered among the world’s foremost authorities on the development of WHO policy. During the third World Health Assembly (1950), the Vatican threatened to kill WHO and start their own organization if the director general did not stand up before the Assembly and specifically state that WHO would not get involved with family planning, which he duly did. WHO did not get involved at all for more than a decade. In its 64-year history, WHO has had a deplorable record in family planning. Its commitment has been minuscule, and even today family planning accounts for only a tiny fraction of its budget. The Vatican continues to have considerable influence at WHO. For example, in the mid-1990s it succeeded in having appointed as director of WHO’s Human Reproduction Program a professor from a Catholic University in Rome, Dr Giuseppe Benagiano, the son of Pope Paul VI’s dentist. Dr Benagiano promptly set out to kill any further clinical studies of a non-surgical method of female sterilization called quinacrine sterilization, or QS. At that time, it had been accepted voluntarily by more than 50,000 Vietnamese women with no reported deaths or life-threatening complications (see Annex 23, “WHO creates demand for abortions” by Donald Collins, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review feature article, 28 January 2004, p. 48).

40. The Vatican has, according to Paul Blanshard in American Freedom and Catholic Power, a full civil government with a flag, a police force, courts and postage stamps. It issues currency and passports to its citizens, and has a large and active diplomatic corps, headed by a Secretary of State with ambassadors called nuncios. The government is completely autocratic with all legislative powers vested in the pope. This means that there is no separation of church and state. It also means that the Vatican claims jurisdiction “everywhere where there are Catholics”. It claims representation in the United Nations and functions like a nation-state in international gatherings at the same time that it functions like a church. Yet, politicians would never investigate the Vatican’s numerous attempts to influence or control nation states’ foreign or domestic policy because, like a chameleon, it would claim it was merely functioning as a church, not as a state. In fact, it is already so powerful that anyone who tried to investigate it would find such an endeavour a political liability.

41. The inescapable conclusion to be drawn from these observations is that the Catholic Church is skilfully manipulating governments and influencing international bodies of a purely secular nature. The Vatican uses its position not only to protect its autonomy from outside intervention, but to impose its view on the rest of the world. Numerous observers over the years, including scholar Paul Blanchard, have correctly described the Catholic Church as a political institution cloaked in religion.

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TABLE OF ANNEXES

ANNEX 1: MI5 whistleblower David Shayler 14

ANNEX 2: Investigatory Powers Tribunal Decision 15

ANNEX 3: European Court of Human Rights Decision 16

ANNEX 4: Irish Times opinion article 17

ANNEX 5: St John of God Order: Complaint by Elliott Duffy Garrett Solicitors 18

ANNEX 6: St John of God Order: Letter signed by the Provincial of All Ireland 20

ANNEX 7: Department for Work and Pensions: Letter terminating benefits claim 21

ANNEX 8: Sisters of Mercy: Letter signed by the Apostolic Nuncio 22

ANNEX 9: Home Office: Complaint to the Home Secretary regarding interception 23

ANNEX 10: City of London Police: Reply from Commissioner Michael Bowron 24

ANNEX 11: Metropolitan Police: Letter from the IPCC 26

ANNEX 12: Haringey Council: Order by High Court Judge Mitting 28

ANNEX 13: Belinda McKenzie: Letter to the Prime Minister re property warrant 29

ANNEX 14: Belinda McKenzie: Undertaking to the Court promising not to harass 30

ANNEX 15: Accelerated Possession: Order by Deputy District Judge Peart 32

ANNEX 16: Accelerated Possession: Grounds of Appeal 33

ANNEX 17: Accelerated Possession: Order by Circuit Judge Cryan 35

ANNEX 18: Accelerated Possession: Opening Statement to the Court 36

ANNEX 19: Accelerated Possession: Order by District Judge Alderson 39

ANNEX 20: Just Host: Email to the European Commission 40

ANNEX 21: WordPress: Final exchange with theme designer 46

ANNEX 22: Irish Passport Office in London: Letter from the European Commission 47

ANNEX 23: Pittsburgh Tribune-Review article 48

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