Counter-Terrorism and Border Security Act 2019
The act will ensure that law enforcement and intelligence agencies have the powers they need to help keep the country safe from the threat posed by terrorism and hostile state activity.
The act updates, and close gaps in existing counter-terrorism legislation to ensure that it is fit for the digital age and reflect contemporary patterns of radicalisation. It was introduced to the House of Commons on 6 June 2018, and received Royal Assent on 12 February 2019.
In addition, the act ensures that the punishment properly reflects the crime, better preventing re-offending, and ensure that terrorist offending can be disrupted more rapidly. It also contributes to the government’s objective of hardening the UK’s defences against hostile state activity.
The main provisions:
- extend the offence of inviting support for a proscribed organisation to cover expressions of support that are reckless as to whether they will encourage others to support the organisation
- clarify that the existing offence of displaying in a public place an image which arouses reasonable suspicion that the person is a member or supporter of a proscribed organisation, covers the display of images online (including of a photograph taken in a private place)
- update the offence of obtaining information likely to be useful to a terrorist to cover terrorist material that is just viewed or streamed over the internet, rather than downloaded to form a permanent record
- provide for a new offence of entering or remaining in an area outside the United Kingdom that has been designated in regulations by the Secretary of State in order to protect the public from a risk of terrorism
- confer extra-territorial jurisdiction on a number of further offences to ensure that individuals abroad can be prosecuted for having encouraged or carried out acts of terror overseas
- increase to 15 years’ imprisonment the maximum penalty for certain preparatory terrorism offences
- require Registered Terrorist Offenders to provide additional information to the police in line with what Registered Sex Offenders must provide
- add terrorism offences to the list of offences for which an individual can be subjected to a Serious Crime Prevention Order to enable the ongoing management of an individual convicted of a terrorism offence
- introduce a statutory bar on the admissibility as evidence in a criminal trial of oral admissions made in an examination at a port under a Schedule 7 to the Terrorism Act 2000
- amend the Terrorism Act 2000 so that the detention clock can be paused when a detained person is transferred from police custody to hospital
- enables local authorities, as well as the police, to refer persons at risk of being drawn into terrorism to local channel panels. A channel panel helps to deliver the aims of the Prevent strategy by ensuring that individuals who are identified as being at risk of being drawn into terrorism are given appropriate advice and support to turn away from radicalisation
- provide for an independent review on the Government strategy for supporting people vulnerable to being drawn into terrorism
- amend the Reinsurance (Acts of Terrorism) Act 1993 so that the government-backed terrorism reinsurer, Pool Re, can extend its business interruption cover to include losses that are not contingent on physical damage to property
- introduce a power to stop, question, search and detain an individual at a port or border area in order to determine whether they are, or have been, involved in hostile state activity
Documents related to the Counter-Terrorism and Border Security Act can be found on the Parliament website.
Factsheets
Bill documents
Circular
Updates to this page
Published 6 June 2018Last updated 7 May 2019 + show all updates
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Circular 004/2019 informs law enforcement agencies, and other relevant public authorities, of certain provisions of the Counter-Terrorism and Border Security Act 2019.
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Updated collection page to reflect the bill now being an act.
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First published.