UK spy centre faces court action over surveillance

Published July 3, 2014
“These widespread attacks on providers and collectives undermine the trust we all place on the internet,” said Eric King, Privacy Inter­national’s deputy director. — File photo
“These widespread attacks on providers and collectives undermine the trust we all place on the internet,” said Eric King, Privacy Inter­national’s deputy director. — File photo

LONDON: Britain’s electronic eavesdropping centre GCHQ faces legal action from seven internet service providers who accuse it of illegally accessing “potentially millions of people’s private communications”, campaigners said on Wednesday.

The claim threatens fresh embarrassment for the British authorities after leaks by fugitive NSA worker Edward Snowden showed GCHQ was a key player in covert US surveillance operations globally.

The complaint has been filed at a London court by ISPs Riseup and May First/People Link of the US, GreenNet of Britain, Greenhost of the Netherlands, Mango of Zimbabwe, Jinbonet of South Korea and the Chaos Computer Club of Germany, plus campaigners Privacy International.

They claim that GCHQ carried out “targeted operations against internet service providers to conduct mass and intrusive surveillance”. The move follows a series of reports by German magazine Der Spiegel which claimed to detail GCHQ’s illicit activities.

These reportedly included targeting a Belgian telecommunications company, Belgacom, where staff computers were infected with malware in a “quantum insert” attack to secure access to customers.

The legal complaint says this was “not an isolated attack” and alleges violations of Britain’s Human Rights Act and the European Convention of Human Rights.

“These widespread attacks on providers and collectives undermine the trust we all place on the internet and greatly endangers the world’s most powerful tool for democracy and free expression,” said Eric King, Privacy Inter­national’s deputy director.

Published in Dawn, July 3rd, 2014

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