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Communications Government United Kingdom

UK Government Illegally Spied On Amnesty International 109

Mark Wilson writes with this excerpt from a story at Beta News: A court has revealed that the UK intelligence agency, GCHQ, illegally spied on human rights organization Amnesty International. It is an allegation that the agency had previously denied, but an email from the Investigatory Powers Tribunal backtracked on a judgement made in June which said no such spying had taken place.

The email was sent to Amnesty International yesterday, and while it conceded that the organization was indeed the subject of surveillance, no explanation has been offered. It is now clear that, for some reason, communications by Amnesty International were illegally intercepted, stored, and examined. What is not clear is when the spying happened, what data was collected and, more importantly, why it happened.
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UK Government Illegally Spied On Amnesty International

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  • When the government does it, there is no such thing!

    • Especially in the UK, where Parliamentary supremacy still, at least in theory, exists. In other words, Parliament can literally make anything legal, even retroactively, that it wants.

    • by Nyder ( 754090 )

      When the government does it, there is no such thing!

      You know, this makes me think. The TPP is basically giving Corporations powers over Governments, so I guess we will be getting into an age where it's not illegal for Corporations to spy on anyone either.

      I wonder what the world would be like if we just all accepted that everyone can see everything we do and nothing is hidden, if this would cut the bullshit out?

  • by turkeydance ( 1266624 ) on Thursday July 02, 2015 @04:41PM (#50035793)
    until there has been prison time.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      img src=letmelaughevenharder.jpg

    • Huh? So something isn't a crime unless someone's gone to prison? Does the same apply to murder if the killer isn't found?
      • Headline is wrong (Score:4, Insightful)

        by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Thursday July 02, 2015 @05:01PM (#50035915)
        FTFA:

        Today’s revelations underscore the urgent need for significant legal reform, including proper pre-judicial authorisation and meaningful oversight of the use of surveillance powers by the UK security services, the organisation said.

        Even Amnesty International stated that the surveillance doesn't appear to be illegal under current law.

        • Re:Headline is wrong (Score:4, Informative)

          by Mark Wilson ( 3799011 ) on Thursday July 02, 2015 @05:25PM (#50036027)
          From the Amnesty post (http://amnesty.org.uk/press-releases/surveillance-uk-government-spied-on-amnesty-international#.VZRD7VrIjak.twitter): "In an email sent today, the Tribunal informed Amnesty that a 22 June ruling had mistakenly identified one of two NGOs which it found had been subjected to *unlawful surveillance* by the UK government. It had said that the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) and the South Africa-based Legal Resources Centre had been spied on, but today’s communication makes clear that it was actually Amnesty International Ltd, and not the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) that was spied on in addition to the Legal Resources Centre in South Africa."
          • by tomhath ( 637240 )
            It's not clear from that post whether the Tribunal used the word "illegal" or whether that was added by Amnesty.
          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            To clarify, it was illegal for a variety of reasons, including interception of legally protected communications (e.g. with lawyers and members of Parliament) and because there was no authorization to spy on UK groups for this purpose.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          It was illegal at the time, but they quietly changed the law a few months ago to make it legal.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 02, 2015 @05:04PM (#50035939)

        Exactly! It's Schrodinger's Trial.

        Until there has been a verdict, there may or may not have been a crime!

      • yes.
  • You do know that those human rights people can write bad things about the UK Government also right? Not saying the UK was/is correct in them wanting to spy on every goddamn thing they can, just providing their motives. It's so sad that we have supposedly "free" Governments who are behaving exactly like those evil communists and dictatorships..
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 02, 2015 @04:52PM (#50035859)

    Those who fight for human rights are now considered to be on the same side as the terrsts.

    Only terrrist want human rights (privacy).

    Government just wants you to be safe. You voted them into power after all.

    • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Thursday July 02, 2015 @04:56PM (#50035889) Journal

      Anyone who embarrasses a Western government or an ally of a Western government is, by definition, a terrorist.

      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        That was a given for the UK in Ireland from the 1960's on. All human rights groups, Irish peace groups, legal teams, Irish lawyers where under constant watch.
        A lawyers ability to speak to gov issues, UK policy, cite international conventions in public, to contact the US and UK press on issues had to be contained.
        How or why this generation of UK based legal teams and human rights groups thought they had been granted some fancy new freedoms is a real mystery.
        The UK has always watched, shaped and infiltrate
      • Which isn't to say that they shouldn't necessarily have dealings with terrorists, but they don't always do a great job at keeping them at arm's length (like the ACLU generally manages to do when they defend people like the Ku Klux Klan), particularly in their dealings with Moazzam Begg [wikipedia.org].

        But even if they were doing a better job of maintaining their moral clarity (a moral clarity built on fighting against arbitrary indefinite detention and torture, which is of course extremely important) in their dealings wi
  • by Anonymous Coward

    >why it happened

    Because they could.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward

    It must be embarrassing to admit to being a government agent now days. Way to fall down people. You no longer have anywhere near the value you used to have.

  • Encrypt (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mars-nl ( 2777323 ) on Thursday July 02, 2015 @05:52PM (#50036173)

    There are a lot of organizations, human rights organizations are one of those, that really should consider encrypting all their email. Setup TLS on your mail server, download Thunderbird/Enigmail/GPG and go.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Unfortunately encryption only hides the message content, not the metadata. As we have seen, metadata is often worse (from a privacy point of view) than the actual data, especially for a charity like Amnesty that needs to communicate with lawyers and MPs.

    • TLS, if it uses a cert signed by a CA under the legal jurisdiction of the US, is really no protection at all. Lavabit proved that the DoJ and others use general warrants to subpeona private signing keys of service providers. Once a government has that information (ostensibly obtained for one purpose, a law enforcement surveillance order), may continue using it for any other "authorized" purpose, such as espionage or impersonation. This is a known problem with PKI generally. That also completely ignores
      • I should have added: host your own data. At least you will *know* when they are looking at your data.

  • NGO fronts (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jblues ( 1703158 ) on Thursday July 02, 2015 @06:21PM (#50036309)

    Every second NGO is a front. While they're non-government their humanitarian causes provide legitimate reasons to go about town, get involved with policy makers and do whatever is needed - issue bribes to influence decisions, gather information, collect dirt, etc. Both the USA and Britain use this tactic all the time, so its not surprising they're also spying on other government organizations, which could be up to the same thing. I'm not saying that Amnesty International is, but it would be worth it for them to check.

    Now every government says that every other government conducts in spying and that its a necessary evil. The real problem is that its not just spying. Because under the radar operations are not answerable to the people, this makes the already blurry line that separates defense from offense a whole lot fuzzier. The cogs of war are always turning.

    Take the example of Afghanistan. The CIA used NGOs extensively there as a base to start funding 'moderate rebels' (terrorists) in order to drive out Soviet Influence. When extra funds were needed, everyone's favorite kingdom Saudi Arabia were happy to help finance operations as well. Speaking of which, Wikileaks just released a report on how Saudi Arabia have extensive operations in every country, to promote their interests.

    We're screwed. While covert surveillance is necessary for defense, there's nothing to stop it being corrupted and used for offense, and the policy decisions that lead to war are all conducted in secret. Things are already well underway by the time the media propaganda machine fires up and puts it to the people for 'popular vote'.

  • I'm guessing (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    I'm guessing there was concern at GCHQ that Amnesty International may discover some dirty little truths about the conditions and placement of captives by other English agencies or their allies that would be impalatable for the English public.

  • by EmperorOfCanada ( 1332175 ) on Thursday July 02, 2015 @11:29PM (#50037363)
    It is very simple as to why they did this. Amnesty was pestering some bad people. These bad people were doing a deal with the UK government that would come under the umbrella of "realpolitik" in order to smooth this deal the home office was asked to help out with some information that would interfere with Amnesty's work. All the little spy drones would say things like "These orders came from the highest level"

    So if you were to ask almost everyone at almost every level if this was a good or a bad thing that they have done they would pretty much all agree that it was in the greater interest of the UK. Thus they did bad things to us for our own good.

    What they never seem to ask themselves is what the average person in the UK would think about dealing with these very bad people. Most people would quickly say things like the ends not justifying the means.

    If you look at the former prime minister TB and his dealing with Libya's madman leader then you know that these people will pursue their own interests, their career interests, and the interests of their friends and supporters long before they would even give a shrug about the interests of the citizenry.

    Also when it comes to these people, I don't see the whole "a few bad apples." because if they know that this is going on and do nothing then they are just as bad as the rest. It is no different than if I know my neighbour is murdering people and I just buy earplugs to not hear the screaming. I might not be guilty of murder but it doesn't make me a good apple.
    • by St.Creed ( 853824 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @01:48AM (#50037679)

      That.

      And, it also helps if you know the sources that provide information to Amnesty International. You can then leak them 'totally by accident' to the friendly raving lunatic in the country you're doing business with, and *poof* no more complaints. Or complainers.

      It happened in the UK as well: human rights campaigners have been targetted by hit squads in the past, especially Irish campaigners, journalists, lawyers etc. in Northern Ireland were at serious risk, because the police would leak the addresses and names of those folks that were suspected of IRA sympathies to the extreme right wing deathsquads of the Orange order.

      So for everyone in the UK, hearing about this brings back a lot of old and unpleasant memories.

      • by Xest ( 935314 )

        Right, but there are also legitimate problems with Amnesty too. It admits itself that it tends more towards criticism of state actors and typically western states because it feels it's safer to investigate them and easier to acquire the information to investigate. You can see Amnesty's own admission of this here, though the cited link doesn't seem to work any more:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

        What this typically means is that say, Hamas can fire rockets specifically with the aim of killing Israeli civil

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian

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