Tribunal says surveillance by UK spies was unlawful

Published February 7, 2015
Civil liberties activists hold a rally against surveillance of US citizens. —AFP/File
Civil liberties activists hold a rally against surveillance of US citizens. —AFP/File

LONDON: British spies acted illegally when they scooped up data about Britons’ electronic communications gathered by the US National Security Agency (NSA), a court ruled on Friday in a landmark judgment against Britain’s security services.

However, the judges said now that details of the practices are known, they are within the law.

Britain’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal, which deals with complaints against the intelligence services, ruled in a case brought by civil liberties groups against the electronic intelligence agency, GCHQ.

It said that before December 2014, “the regime governing the soliciting, receiving, storing and transmitting by UK authorities of private communications of individuals” gathered by the NSA contravened European Union protections of privacy and freedom of expression. But it said the practices were now legal because the rights groups’ lawsuit had made details of the procedures and safeguards public.

The groups brought the case after US intelligence analyst Edward Snowden’s disclosures about the mass harvesting of communications data. Mr Snowden disclosed NSA programmes known as PRISM which accessed data from internet firms such as Yahoo and Google — and Upstream, which tapped into undersea communications cables.

The groups that brought the claim — Liberty, Privacy International, Bytes for All and Amnesty International — called the judgment a partial victory.

Published in Dawn, February 7th, 2015

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