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LONDON, Nov. 6 (Xinhuanet) -- British Prime Minister
Tony Blair may have to back down over plans for new laws allowing police to hold
terror suspects for up to 90 days without charge, a spokesman for Blair's
Downing Street office said on Sunday.
"The Prime Minister acknowledges
there will have to be negotiations and/or compromise but as far as he is
concerned 90 days continues to be right," said the spokeswoman who would not
beidentified.
Blair told the Sunday Telegraph it would be a
"defeat" for British security if plans to detain suspects for up to 90 days
without trial was blocked.
However, in an interview to be broadcast on Sunday,
former Conservative Prime Minister John Major attacked the government's
controversial terror proposals and said the detention of terror suspects without
charge for 90 days risked breaching their civil liberties.
In the Commons last week, Home Secretary Charles
Clarke was forced to promise fresh talks after it became clear the government
was facing certain defeat on the measure with Labor rebels in the Commons
reducing the government's majority to one in a protest over the anti-terror
bill.
The home secretary is due to meet his Tory and
Liberal Democrat counterparts, David Davis and Mark Oaten, on Monday following
informal telephone discussion on the weekend.
British police can currently hold terror suspects for
14 days under the present legislation.
The bill creates several new offenses, including
encouraging or glorifying terrorism, preparing terrorist acts and attending
terrorist camps. Enditem
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