Skip to main content
A dark day for our rights
Judges defend 90-year-old peacenik’s place on ‘domestic extremism’ database

Our civil rights took a pummelling yesterday after Britain’s highest court upheld 90-year-old peace campaigner John Catt’s place on a “domestic extremism” database.

War veteran Mr Catt vowed to fight the Supreme Court verdict, saying he had “no option” but to appeal with the European Court of Human Rights.

Four judges overruled a Court of Appeal decision made last year stating that maintaining the campaigner’s details on the National Domestic Extremism Database was an intrusion on Mr Catt’s private life.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
A camera on top of a Live Facial Recognition (LFR) van during a demonstration of facial recognition technology by Surrey and Sussex Police at Surrey Police headquarters in Guildford, November 11, 2025
Policing / 13 November 2025
13 November 2025
8computerdata
Features / 2 October 2025
2 October 2025

Digital ID means the government could track anyone and then limit their speech, movements, finances — and it could get this all wrong, identifying the wrong people for the wrong reasons, as the numerous digital cockups so far demonstrate, warns DYLAN MURPHY

FW Pomeroy's Statue of Justice stands atop the Central Criminal Court building, Old Bailey, London
Features / 9 August 2025
9 August 2025

ANSELM ELDERGILL examines the government’s proposals to further limit the right of citizens to trial by jury

JUSTICE AT LAST: Senator Ivan Cepeda speaks to journalists outside court in Bogota, Colombia on Monday, July 28 2025, after former president Alvaro Uribe was found guilty of witness tampering and bribery in a case Cepeda brought against him
Features / 1 August 2025
1 August 2025

Alvaro Uribe is found guilty of witness tampering and procedural fraud, reports NICK MACWILLIAM