Journalist Asa Winstanley is most concerned about stopping police from searching his devices for information that would put his sources at risk.
London-based journalist Asa Winstanley says when British counter-terrorism police raided his home on October 17 they asked which electronic devices were personal and which were used for journalism.
âI was very reluctant to do that because it seemed to me that by doing that I would almost set myself up,â Winstanley added during a Space hosted by Sulaiman Ahmed. âItâs a way of stopping me from doing my journalism, if they were going to take those devices away.â
But if Winstanley did not identify the devices that he used for journalism, the implicit threat was that they would âbasically ransack the whole house.â The police âwould take all devices in the whole house.â He did not want that to happen.
Police permitted him to call a lawyer. Winstanley chose to âcooperate in a limited extent,â however, when they asked for passwords, he refused to provide them.
âItâs a very, very strange situation. I wasnât arrested. I wasnât charged with anything, and yet because of the unjust laws of the British stateâthese so-called anti-terror lawsâtheyâre so broad. They can just seize your devices like this,â Winstanley declared.
Winstanley, who is an associated editor for the Electronic Intifada, was the latest journalist to be targeted by authorities in the United Kingdom through an operation that is apparently called âOperation Incessantness.â In fact, the warrant indicated that police were aware that they were raiding a journalistâs home.
Officers explicitly singled out Winstanleyâs postings on social media, suggesting that he had âencouraged terrorismâ through his opposition to the Israeli governmentâs genocidal violence in Gaza as well as his coverage of Israeli military actions (like the âHannibal Directiveâ).
Since the raid, Winstanley has received an outpouring of support from a number of independent journalists as well as the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and the National Union of Journalists (NUJ). (Winstanley is an NUJ member.)
NUJ General Secretary Michelle Stanistreet declared, âThe UK government cannot on one hand state its commitment to valuing media freedom whilst endorsing the targeting of journalists through raids and seizures of journalistic material in this manner.â
âThe IFJ is shocked at the increased use of terrorism legislation by the British police, and firmly condemns the abuse of counter-terror legislation as harmful to journalists and media freedom.,â IFJ General Secretary Anthony Bellanger stated. âThe recent practices of the police clash with the UK governmentâs defence of freedom of expression and its commitment to journalism, which is one of the pillars of democracy.â
On October 22, the Electronic Intifada announced that they had hired lawyers in the U.K. to help Winstanley and the media organization âdefend its interests in the journalistic material on the seized devices, with the aim of preventing British authorities from accessing such materials.â
Winstanley indicated that he took his responsibility to protect his sources âvery, very seriously.â He worked with âmany activistsâ and âother journalists,â who could be at risk.
âFor the most part, my sources are not politicians, right? Theyâre not the powerful. Theyâre not the police. Theyâre not the security services. Those are not my circles,â Winstanley emphasized. âMy circles [are] the people.â
âWhen I was reporting on the Labour Party, my sources werenât in the leadership in the Labour Party. They werenât in the top ranks. It was the grassroots. It was the people, and I could not have done all this reporting without the support from the people who tried to make a difference and tried to make the Labour Party into something different than it has been for many decades, which is a tool of the ruling establishment.â
In May 2023, Winstanleyâs book, âWeaponising Anti-Semitism: How the Israel Lobby Brought Down Jeremy Corbyn,â was published by OR Books. He believes his work exposing the Labour Party and the role of Keir Starmer, who is now the countryâs prime minister, is part of why he was targeted.
The warrant mentioned his involvement in the âundercover policing inquiry,â according to Winstanley. Specifically, he authored a report in July 2019 that exposed a British police spy, who had infiltrated the London chapter of the International Solidarity Movement between 2004 and 2007.
An official inquiry launched in 2014 confirmed that spy cops had collected information on the âpersonal lives of political activists, such as their holiday plans, sexuality, and bank accounts.â More than 1,000 left-wing and progressive groups were spied on by 139 undercover officers between 1968 and at least 2010.
Given the history of the British police in espionage activities against activist groups, Winstanley shared, âMy concern now is I donât want to endanger any of [my sources] by my devices being digitally strip-searched.â
In September, Mohamed Elmaazi reported for The Dissenter on the increased and alarming application of provisions in the Terrorism Act 2000 and Terrorism Act 2006 to suppress journalism. Writer Tony Greenstein and journalists Richard Medhurst and Sarah Wilkinson were targeted. Wilkinson faced a worse raid, where police ransacked her home.
Neither Greenstein, Medhurst, Wilkinson, nor Winstanley have been charged with any crimes, but they have been forced to live under a cloud of investigation that greatly undermines their ability to exercise their freedom of expression and do their jobs as journalists and commentators.
Winstanley does not know if he will be charged with a crime. It depends on whether there is enough pushback against authorities. So far, no establishment media in the U.K. have given what occurred any meaningful attention, including The Guardian.
As Winstanley put it, this crackdown on journalism suggests that the âBritish state is at minimum collaborating with and coordinating with the Israeli state or proxies of the Israeli state, such as the pro-Israel lobby.â U.K. officials are being pushed to âstop journalists and stop activists,â who are either trying to report on the violence or prevent whatâs happening to Palestinians.
âThe prospect for free speech and independent journalism in this country [is] becoming increasingly bleak,â Winstanley continued. It is as if the British government is increasingly willing to destroy âsome of its own institutions in order to help Israel.â
Even in the United States, colleges and universities are cracking down on student encampments and damaging the reputation of âgreat institutions of learning. Itâs all to support Israel. Itâs all to support the genocide that Israel is carrying out on Gaza. But the silver lining is after a year of this genocide people are not backing down.â
âEveryone is still coming out for all the demonstrations, for all the different ways that people can resist this,â Winstanley concluded, highlighting the nonviolent direct action of Palestine Action against arms factories in Britain.
âI guess thatâs where I get my hope from. The people havenât accepted this, and will never accept it.â
Source: Popularresistance.org







