Photo: US NAVY/Zack Baddorf. Banking system has become counter-terrorism's enforcer
Source: IRIN
LONDON, 11 November 2014 (IRIN) - The US anti-terrorism laws introduced
since the World Trade Centre attacks are a minefield for humanitarian
agencies and international NGOs, varying widely in their application
from one country to another and targeting a whole variety of different
political groups and individuals. The US-based NGO alliance,
Interaction, says it needs six full time staff members just to ensure
compliance with anti-diversion policies, two of whom spend most of their
time checking partners against various anti-terrorism and other lists.
Any guidance is clearly welcome, especially for the smaller charities,
and the Humanitarian Policy Group (HPG), based at the Overseas
Development Institute (ODI) in London, has now produced a paper Counter-Terrorism Laws and Regulations - What Aid Agencies Need to Know.
Sara Pantuliano, the HPG director, explains: “There's been a lot of
research done, a lot of analysis... But we felt there was a bit of a gap
to help the practice community get more clarity on this issue. We hope
that the paper really helps practitioners understand all these laws and
all these measures out there.”
What they have produced is not exactly a handbook, and perhaps because
its authors are lawyers, they warn that they are not telling people what
to do or offering legal advice. Rather, the paper offers suggestions on
what NGOs should be thinking about - identifying which parts of their
programmes might be subject to sanctions and which country's laws apply,
assessing whether they could benefit from humanitarian exemptions and
so on, so that they don't run into trouble with the law, but also so
that they don't let a general nervousness about the issue hamper their
work unnecessarily.
No ban on talking
For instance, even where the law forbids giving resources to banned
organizations, you can still talk to them, still negotiate with them,
and that in itself may be crucial in those parts of the world where,
increasingly, such organizations or armed groups are seeking to control
territory and establish some kind of administration. But the inhibiting
effect of anti-terrorism laws is such that many NGOs are wary of doing
even that.
Humanitarian organizations trying to comply with the law have to decide
whose law they are complying with - the country where they operate, the
country where they are headquartered or the country which is providing
them with funding? New Zealand, for instance, offers a humanitarian
exemption for food, clothing or medicine to meet the essential human
needs; the USA does not.
At a meeting in London to discuss the new paper, participants were keen
to look at the way this variation in law could provide opportunities as
well as just headaches. Joe Press, a researcher at Royal Holloway
College, told IRIN: “Maybe the financial sector has something to teach
us here. Maybe you can move your operation - you 'Google' to Luxembourg,
you 'Amazon' to wherever, you change your legal framework.”
That might be considered extreme, but Abdurahman Sharif, of the Muslim
Charities Forum, confirmed that in the case of Syria, NGOs were already
having to pick and choose between donors to comply with donor demands
and still keep operating. “In Syria we are talking about one of the
biggest humanitarian catastrophes ever, and unfortunately agencies have
had to refuse money from certain donors to be able to operate in certain
areas. And those tend to be the larger, more established organizations;
medium or small organizations don't necessarily have that choice.”
Conflicts with international humanitarian law
As well as often conflicting with each other, these new anti-terrorism
provisions may conflict with international humanitarian law, such as the
rule that all wounded shall be treated without distinction. Yet in the
case of a wounded commander from a group on the proscribed list, the act
of offering medical assistance could be criminalized as a form of
material support. The sentiment at the London meeting was very much in
favour of treating the wounded regardless of this. “The whole basis of
international humanitarian law when it was first established was to help
wounded soldiers,” said the ODI's Scarlett Sturridge. “So if an
organization is going to take that as its principle, then they should
uphold it.” The authors of the paper invite NGOs to think about whether
they have any “red lines” which they wouldn't cross; this may well be
one of them.
Another issue raised in the paper is whether, if you do break these
anti-terrorism regulations, you will actually be prosecuted. The report
points out that, in general, humanitarian organizations have not been
prosecuted, even where they have been in violation of anti-terrorism
regulations, but says this “illegal in theory, tolerated in practice”
situation is far from satisfactory. “The fact remains that it is
undesirable to have individuals or groups engaging in possible violation
of the criminal law... Criminal law is intended to instruct society not
to engage in particular acts, regardless of whether those people expect
to be prosecuted. The current approach engenders uncertainty and
confusion.”
One thing which emerged clearly from both the paper and the discussion
is that the implications of contravening anti-terrorism legislation go
beyond official prosecution. The fallout can include having banking
services withdrawn and serious reputational damage.
That is something which the London-based NGO Interpal knows only too
well. Interpal works with Palestinians, and it was designated by the US
Office of Foreign Exchange Control as an organization with which US
citizens should not do business, because of alleged links with Hamas.
Since then, despite being cleared of impropriety by the UK Charity
Commission and winning libel suits against its detractors, it has
suffered a barrage of hostile press and had its banking services
withdrawn.
“We've already been designated in the US,” Summereen Khan, Interpal's
projects officer, told the meeting, “which means that our position is
very different from anyone else's here. We have to work against that
constantly, and there's very little redress, despite our being extremely
stringent with how we work in Gaza and the West Bank. There's very
little redress for charities which have been burned by the politics of
counter terrorism.”
In practice the banking system has become counter-terrorism's chief
enforcer. Tom Keatinge of the Royal United Services Institute worked in
the sector for 20 years and says the banks' reaction is understandable,
given that the NGO sector is not very profitable and the fines if banks
get it wrong can run into the billions. “Banks are looking for
opportunities to de-risk, and if you are sitting on the 31st floor of a
tower block in Canary Wharf (London's financial district), and you're
presented with a situation where a client may or may not be doing
something which may or may not be illegal, in the context of various
different laws which may or may not be compatible, that uncertainly
generally leads to one very simple risk-management decision, and that is
'No'.”