Thursday, 26 May 2011

A TEMPORARY GLITCH

One of the most important principles taught to us two Millennia ago is that enshrined in Matthew 22:39 when The Lord quietly reminded us all that it is incumbent upon us all to love our neighbours as ourselves. In contemporary society - don't just think of yourselves but think of those around you.

"Oh no. That was then. And that's just Jesus outlining a principle which was okay for then, but in the real world, today's world, is not practical."

We have the Ten Commandments from the Old Testament. We also have the principle referred to above and which, upon closer inspection of the passage that we find The Man Christ Jesus referring to as being none other than the Scripture outlined in the Scroll of Leviticus, or what we today refer to as the Book of Leviticus 19:18.

Look it up for yourself. He was quoting a Scripture that was already a couple of millennia in standing.

I've been brought up, as all my generation have been, with that as the cornerstone; and even if not a Christian, it will be found as a cornerpiece of every organised religion or system or belief and faith. It is practical. It is streetwise. It is a principle by which we should all live. When we ignore it, we have injustices which are bad enough when they stand alone. Heaped together, they eventually add up to a Holocaust or two. Exaggeration? Yes, if you do not bother following history. If you do follow history, you'll probably be saying I'm not stressing the point strongly enough.

When we ignore this principle, however we look at it, we do so because we put into place the cornerstone of selfishness.

In September 1939, even though we could do nothing immediately practical to assist the Polish People, we nevertheless acted as we had promised. We 'dared' to declare war on a monstrous tyrant who had not, until then, experienced such a kick up the backside of his pomposity and evil. History reports that Hitler was as one turned to stone, and further reports Herman Goering, that tyrant's Head of the Luftwaffe, remarking "May God have mercy upon us if we lose this War!"

When we realise that something is amiss; that our next door neighbour might be going through some hassle, it is late 20th and current 21st century thinking to utter those detestable words, 'it is not my problem', resting as it does on that equally irresponsible premise: 'out of sight, out of mind'.

Being ex police, ex military and of course being a probate lawyer for 30 years, has emphasised the importance of Matthew 22:39 and Leviticus 19:18. Many a morning starts off with two or three death certificates being placed on my desk and an instruction to my secretary to call out the last will and testament and then for me to make that fateful call to the next of kin.

I recall, at 16, being called out on parade at RAF Locking at 11am one Friday and the Squadron being informed by the Padre that Colin, with whom Don and I had been playing putting shot on Wednesday night on the green in Weston-Super-Mare, had died that morning after collapsing on military exercise on Thursday morning. I recall too the heroic efforts of Mike Barnett who eventually received a commendation for doing all he could to save Colin. He too went on to a very distinguished military career.

I recall the lady who died as I knelt by her in the middle of the Tewkesbury Road dual carriageway and not one car stopping to assist me, then a 20 year old policeman, whilst I and another pedestrian attempted resuscitation pending arrival of the ambulance; on another day another lady who had decided it was all too much for her, and pulling her out of the icy waters of Pittville Lake, Cheltenham; I remember the 'suction' caused by my shin length belted gaberdine over my tunic making movement difficult; I remember the young Mum trying to keep her children in order as she too pulled this very gracious lady to the bank, all the time apologising for the problems she thought she was causing. She too later that day succumbed, but in every incident that I have attended I remember, without exception, the extreme courage of the ambulance crews, A&E staffs, the incredible resolve, kindness and decisive precision of the nurses, doctors and registrars - "all in a day's work" as they would humbly respond if it was ever commented upon.

If something appears amiss, respond, don't pass by on the other side.

Two passed by on the other side; the third was a Samaritan who was expected to pass by but stopped and saved a young man's life.

Every single one of us, from the highest to the lowest, from the most senior to the most junior, has a responsibility to our immediate neighbour. If our neighbour appears to be in some sort of trouble, and we respond by trying to hide, obscure or deaden any sound, then there will be a reckoning. If we ring that simple number that has sirens on the horizon within minutes or less, well done. It matters not that a door might be broken down in the process. A door might be broken but a life will be saved.

Responding to help is something that comes very, very naturally to our armed forces and emergency services and those who used to serve. To the older generation, those who are over 30, likewise. To those who work in restaurants, coffee shops as managers, waiters, baristas, etc, likewise. It is always wonderful to see how young people interact and learn this vital principle. To other young people such responses are the stuff of TV Soaps - "Oh, I didn't realise this stuff happened for real. But even if it does, it's not my problem."

I've learned much over the last four weeks. As I look about the library of my mind and see the windows blasted, and slowly go about putting all the books and files of memory neatly back on the shelves, it makes me realise what a privilege it was to serve with the people I did, the way they came to my rescue and even in these past few days to talk with friends who themselves served in the Royal Navy, who have that instinctive understanding; to have that reassurance from all those young people in service industries, the laughing and joking and putting books and files back in place.

The other week I was sat down quietly in the City and thinking about, of all things, the Liverpool Blitz. For the briefest moment there was a flash. Luminescent. In my mind's eye I stooped and placed the file on the shelf of my mind. What did it say?

Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by this some have entertained angels without knowing it.

Hebrews 13.2

I report only an incredible sense of peace, and an absolute certainty about our origin and future and our individual responsibility.

Ian Bradley Marshall
May 26 2011
LIVERPOOL

Monday, 2 May 2011

THIS STORY ISN'T OVER

So speaks Adam Brookes, the BBC political commentator speaking from the BBC's agency in Washington DC this morning.

9/11 - 2/5 It has been a long haul, just a little less than ten years in fact, and thousands of lives have been lost along the way. The most chilling footage this morning is from 1998 when Osama Bin Laden gave a televised interview to America's ABC network. He stated bluntly that he did not have the constraints of the West, namely, the need to distinguish between military targets and innocent civilians. This man emphasised that if that person was American, then that person was a legitimate target, a fact we saw played out with grim determination less than 3 years later when the twin towers came down.

There are times when it is necessary to take the retributive action that has resulted in Bin Laden's death, without forewarning the host nation if that nation cannot guarantee security of information.

Pakistan alas has a long history of too many people within its intelligence services being double-agents, so the US President had no alternative but to authorise the action in confidence. On this occasion it was the right thing to do. But let it not set the precedent for the future.

The euphoria in Times Square and Washington is understandable. Let that quickly dissipate and let us as a world community move on, remaining even more vigilant and ready for the inevitable reprisals from people with twisted and demented ideologies.

Ian Bradley Marshall
LIVERPOOL
2 May 2011

Wednesday, 20 April 2011

OUR PHOTOGRAPHERS AND JOURNALISTS IN EQUAL DANGER

Tim Hetherington, Photographer

Although I never had the privilege of knowing Tim Hetherington, his death today in Libya is nevertheless a grim and salutary reminder of the price that freedom exacts when we are in the business of dealing with dictatorships and tyranny.

Tim Hetherington is an outstanding Photographer, who insisted on using traditional 'old fashioned' equipment, development through negative, so as to truly capture the visciousness of war, that we at home might become more aware and educated on just what price is being paid in the various theatres of war in which this country is currently engaged.

His unique ability lies also in his method of reporting; his style, his humanitarian and compassionate approach, all with one aim: to alert all of us to the sacrifices being made and to bring the full facts to us.

It is absolutely essential that our photographers and journalists be allowed access to areas of operations. We, the general public, must know what is going on. The presence of photographers and journalists just might be that final lifeline to a community that, without their presence, would be in even greater danger and possibly facing mass slaughter.

This is the horror of war.

It is the scenario upon which human nature plays itself out; and our photographers and journalists are that vital check and balance that might stay the hand of a tyrant, and which enables our own troops to complete the operation in Afghanistan, or the rebel forces on the ground in Libya, and the NATO air forces enforcing the no-fly zone above.

Captain Lisa Jade Head

Equally tragic this week is the death of Captain Lisa Jade Head from 11 Explosive Ordnance Disposal Regiment, Royal Logistic Corps, who died at Queen Elizabeth NHS Hospital, Birmingham of wounds suffered in Afghanistan on Monday. The second female British soldier to have been killed in action in this war and the 364th soldier to have been killed in action since operations began in Afghanistan.

The extraordinary bravery of soldiers called upon to clear minefields cannot be overstated. Few are able to even stay the intsenive course of training. Those who do and then take up operations in the field are very brave people indeed. For let us not forget that often, whilst they are very carefully and methodically defusing an explosive device, they are doing so under fire; not occasional fire, but systematic fire, a full blown battle that involves sniping, mortar fire and even hand to hand fighting; something that is not fully reported.

Let us keep the bravery of these courageous people in mind.

Ian Bradley Marshall
LIVERPOOL
21 April 2011

JUDICIAL REVIEW

This morning's outcome of the Judicial Review in the High Court is a landmark review and one can only hope that if the banks appeal, as they are likely to do, then the Supreme Court will not bottle out at the last moment.

Meanwhile, every customer who has been sold payment protection insurance by these banks, should seriously consider lodging a claim. Lodge the claim and request confirmation of the new reference number. Keep it short and simple, direct and to the point. Do not start arguing the case in that letter. All the notification of claim is doing at this stage is to put the banks on notice that there is likely to be a groundswell of public opinion that will increase dramatically over the months ahead.

In all my years I have never seen the banks behave in flagrant disregard of the general public as we have seen over the last decade, although to be fair, some are now trying to bring some measure of order to their disordered houses. That the banks have actually done everything possible to turn the Recession that they caused, to their own personal private advantage beggars belief. In less tolerant regimes, we do not need to use our imagination as to the outcome. Thankfully, this is the United Kingdom. That does not mean that the general public is soft. Far from it.

This Judicial Review will today have made quite a few well cushioned bums on seats in high places, chairmen and chief executives, higher executives and not a few bank officials on the counter, feel a little queezy.

So be it. It is deserved.

Today's Judicial Review has all the hallmarks of turning the general public's concern into outright anger and demand for even more root and branch change as did the Daily Telegraph when it first blew the whistle on MPs Expenses.

Let the action begin.

Ian Bradley Marshall
LIVERPOOL
20 April 2011

Saturday, 9 April 2011

HACKING

It goes without saying that with the advance of technology now being so fast, today's developments often being rendered obsolete by tomorrow or certainly within the week, there travels alongside it the ever present temptation to misuse that technology.

A decade ago I would not have been paying too much attention to the News of the World, or News International because at that time I had no contact with the media industry in any form. So what reporters and journalists got up to didn't interest me too much.

Now it is different.

A friend told me how two weeks ago a young person's facebook account was left on, friends entered the barracks room in his absence and made adjustments, and then posted them on to the wall. I am well acquainted with the military, suffice to say that had that ever happened in my command, there would have been instant dismissals. Now what is left is the smoking gun.

Two years ago, I too found to my horror that my own emails had been read for a whole year by one of my own employees who was in an extremely privileged position. That person had set up the firm's computer network and when he mentioned one day that he had set filters to intercept inappropriate emails, it did not occur to me that he was filtering mine too. No wonder he seemed always to be totally in tune with matters of company policy, discussions at board level and so on. Long after the company had closed, this came to light when friends asked me why it was that they were receiving 'on holiday away from office' emails from this person in relation to emails I was sending them, 4 months after the end of his employment.

I shall never forget the sinking feeling. Nor the sense of total betrayal. Professional correspondence, family correspondence, the lot! And something like that takes a long, long time to get over. Fortunately, I am able to write and so decided to just get it out of my system by writing the poems The Blackmailer and Blagger

We have some of the finest Journalists in the world. We see their reports daily whether at home or from the front line in Afghanistan or Libya or the Ivory Coast or Japan or New Zealand.

It is therefore essential that the police properly conduct their investigation and seriously consider presenting their findings to the Crown Prosecution Service for a decision on whether to proceed to trial to protect privacy but also to protect the reputation of good Journalism.

I wonder what would happen if the general public decided on Sunday morning that it had had enough of this misbehaviour and decided that from next Sunday on, it would not buy a single copy of the News of the World?

An interesting point to ponder.

Ian Marshall
LIVERPOOL
9 April 2011

Saturday, 26 March 2011

PEOPLE POWER

Across the world we are seeing the effects of people power - regimes being challenged, heads of state being forced to step down, some with dignity, others less so, and still another forcing his country into a state of war.

In Syria we now have open suppression of the people and, according to the BBC World News and Reuters, at least 53 people killed in street protests.

Here is London, we have the demonstration of people power with the largest gathering since the anti war marches of 2003. I think we can probably go back even further, 25 years. These people are sending a clear message to the government. 'We understand the need for cutbacks; we understand the need to reduce the deficit. But you are doing it too drastically, too severely. You must ease up.'

It is a very, very powerful argument, especially when Whitehall realises that just a few streets away a protest march of something like a quarter of a million people from all sections of society, of all age groups, is underway.

The police have a very delicate operation. Between 4,000-5,000 police are on duty to prevent a recurrence of the violent scenes in Parliament Square last November with the student protest against the introduction of the £9,000 loan repayment scheme. The police themselves face cutbacks in all forces that I have never seen before. They will be sympathetic but they must also uphold the Queen's Peace and rule of law.

It is right and proper that we are holding this demonstration this day.

The organisers want a peaceful protest. They and the police recognise that there will be elements - troublemakers and anarchists - who will attempt to cause violence and confrontation. The police have explained how difficult it is to spot these people who infiltrate groups of law-abiding protesters, hence very careful monitoring by CCTV and then, once spotted, the need to pull these trouble makers out, and sometimes by means of 'kettling' the group generally, an unpopular crowd control measure.

I know from personal experience how difficult it is to police protests. But provided the organisers, the protesters and the police generally work together, then they will succeed in doing that for which we are famous, culminating in the gathering in Hyde Park to hear the Leader of Her Majesty's Opposition address the nation.

This is how things should proceed in our democracy.

Ian Bradley Marshall
LIVERPOOL
26 March 2011

Friday, 25 March 2011

OUR YOUNG PEOPLE – CARRYING HIGH THE TORCH OF FREEDOM

Lancaster Active Forum

To visitors to this sight of all ages, a visit to the Lancaster Active Forum is worth one's time for families and descendants of crews are conducting much research. This domain is owned by Larry Wright of Canada and who, like Peter Cunliffe, is undertaking invaluable work to keep the history of bomber command, its operations and its crews very much in the public conscience.

Apart from this website, what is so good and refreshing is to see the number of younger and young people throughout our many national museums and galleries, who are taking a very keen interest in Bomber Command, often because they want to find out for themselves exactly what their grandparents, uncles and aunts went through, but also because they want to know anyway.

In an age of apparent cynicism we tend to think that this history will just die out.

Not so.

It is an incredibly moving experience to discover that whilst one tends to think of one self as the nephew of an uncle who is a framed photograph but who died before one was born, that there are other nephews and nieces too in the same situation and, for example, in the case of my own uncle, Flight Sergeant Harry Marshall, to discover the name and rank of his skipper to whom he was the crew's flight engineer, but to learn that that his niece has provided so much valuable information on this Lancaster Active Forum and which has helped me so much too in putting the pieces of a jigsaw together and then to report the facts to my Mum, Harry's sister.

I extend my thanks to Mr Wright, and separately to Mr Cunliffe, for all of this work and also for making it possible for all of the families and enthusiasts to obtain so much information.

Now to the Future

We look to the future and to our young people to pick up the torch and carry it high and fully lit into the night sky, never letting history allow the grass to grow under one's feet.

Flying military operations to enforce a no fly zone is as dangerous as ever, despite the increased sophistication of our military assets and the inferiority of a discredited regime.

This morning we have 350 aircraft and 38 ships of the line enforcing that no fly zone and the thought of being on the receiving end of that firepower is discomfiting. But just as a lifetime ago, young people were going out to fly deadly operations over one of the worst tyrannies in history, so too, the bulk of the fighting today, both by the Coalition (shortly NATO Command) over Libya, and our armed forces in the war in Afghanistan at the sharpest end is our young people. Only this week two more British servicemen have been killed in action in Afghanistan, and this excludes the fatalities suffered by the other nations that make up the Allied Forces. It is a convention of war that in reporting casualties one only reports those relating to one’s own country.

So my point, as ever, is to put before the British People this thought (echoed earlier) that our young people are indeed picking up the torch and carrying it high and fully into the night sky. They, and we of the older generation, are not allowing history to let the grass grow under one’s feet.

To all our young people, and to those who take to the streets with passion, I say, thank you indeed. You are doing the greatest service.

Ian Bradley Marshall
Liverpool
25 March 2011