TMR
160: Adeyinka Makinde: Can the British State Convict itself? (Part Two: “Rendition”
& “The Troubles”)
PART
2
The second part of a
wide-ranging nterview with Julian Charles of The Mind Renewed about my proposed
paper, “Can the British State Convict itself?” This segment looked at Britain’s
role in the American-led extraordinary rendition of Islamist terror suspects
involving the former foreign secretary Jack Straw and the former head of
counter-intelligence at MI6, Mark Allen and Britain’s counter-insurgency
strategy in Northern Ireland which was initiated in the early 1970s by the then
Brigadier Frank Kitson.
Julian
Charles: Hello everybody! Julian Charles here of The Mind Renewed dot Com coming to you as usual from
the depths of the Lancashire countryside here in the UK, and very
straightforwardly this week we’re going to be listening to the second part of
my interview with the lawyer and university lecturer Adeyinka Makinde on the
subject of his forthcoming academic paper, “Can the British State Convict
Itself?” Now in the first part last week, we talked about then U.K. Prime Minister
Tony Blair’s decision to take Britain to war against Saddam Hussein’s Iraq in
2003, and also we talk about the fact that a good deal of legal opinion
considered that decision to have involved participation in a conspiracy to wage
an aggressive war in contravention of established international criminal law.
Well, in this second part now we go on to discuss Britain’s role in the U.S.-led
so-called ‘extraordinary rendition’ of Islamist terror suspects and consider to
what extent former U.K. Foreign Secretary Jack Straw was involved in that, and,
indeed, the former head of counter-intelligence at MI6 Mark Allen. And we end
with a look at Britain’s counter-insurgency strategy in Northern Ireland which
was initiated in the early 1970s by then Brigadier Frank Kitson. Of course, if
you haven’t heard the first part, I do highly recommend that you go back and
listen to that before listening to this part, not only because that discussion
about the Iraq War and Tony Blair was very interesting in its own right, but
because Adeyinka gives some very important background to all this about
international and U.K. domestic law, which I think helps to frame the whole
discussion, so please do go back and listen to that first part if you haven’t
read it already. So as I say, in this part we move on to questions surrounding
rendition and also the “Troubles” in Northern Ireland and continue to ask that
question, can the British state convict itself? O.K, so I’d like briefly to
look at the other couple of examples. We took a long time –I thought this was
going to be a very interesting in-depth conversation- I hope you don’t mind.
Adeyinka Makinde: Oh
no, don’t worry.
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