TOKYO MASTER BANNER

MINISTRY OF TOKYO
US-ANGLO CAPITALISMEU-NATO IMPERIALISM
Illegitimate Transfer of Inalienable European Rights via Convention(s) & Supranational Bodies
Establishment of Sovereignty-Usurping Supranational Body Dictatorships
Enduring Program of DEMOGRAPHICS WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of European Displacement, Dismemberment, Dispossession, & Dissolution
No wars or conditions abroad (& no domestic or global economic pretexts) justify government policy facilitating the invasion of ancestral European homelands, the rape of European women, the destruction of European societies, & the genocide of Europeans.
U.S. RULING OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR TO SALVAGE HEGEMONY
[LINK | Article]

*U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR*

Who's preaching world democracy, democracy, democracy? —Who wants to make free people free?
[info from Craig Murray video appearance, follows]  US-Anglo Alliance DELIBERATELY STOKING ANTI-RUSSIAN FEELING & RAMPING UP TENSION BETWEEN EASTERN EUROPE & RUSSIA.  British military/government feeding media PROPAGANDA.  Media choosing to PUBLISH government PROPAGANDA.  US naval aggression against Russia:  Baltic Sea — US naval aggression against China:  South China Sea.  Continued NATO pressure on Russia:  US missile systems moving into Eastern Europe.     [info from John Pilger interview follows]  War Hawk:  Hillary Clinton — embodiment of seamless aggressive American imperialist post-WWII system.  USA in frenzy of preparation for a conflict.  Greatest US-led build-up of forces since WWII gathered in Eastern Europe and in Baltic states.  US expansion & military preparation HAS NOT BEEN REPORTED IN THE WEST.  Since US paid for & controlled US coup, UKRAINE has become an American preserve and CIA Theme Park, on Russia's borderland, through which Germans invaded in the 1940s, costing 27 million Russian lives.  Imagine equivalent occurring on US borders in Canada or Mexico.  US military preparations against RUSSIA and against CHINA have NOT been reported by MEDIA.  US has sent guided missile ships to diputed zone in South China Sea.  DANGER OF US PRE-EMPTIVE NUCLEAR STRIKES.  China is on HIGH NUCLEAR ALERT.  US spy plane intercepted by Chinese fighter jets.  Public is primed to accept so-called 'aggressive' moves by China, when these are in fact defensive moves:  US 400 major bases encircling China; Okinawa has 32 American military installations; Japan has 130 American military bases in all.  WARNING PENTAGON MILITARY THINKING DOMINATES WASHINGTON. ⟴  
Showing posts with label Intelligence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Intelligence. Show all posts

September 01, 2015

Retired US Intelligence Agent Lobbying for USG Protections from Foreign Courts for US Intel Agents



SOURCE
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/aug/31/edward-roche-hackers-expose-the-intelligence-commu/

When the intelligence community is exposed
The U.S. must protect its employees from foreign lawsuits
Illustration on the threats of foreign legal prosecution of exposed U.S. intelligence personnel by Alexander Hunter/The Washington Times

By Edward M. Roche - - Monday, August 31, 2015

Hacking is today’s growth industry. The numbers are staggering. Thirty-two million users of the Ashley Madison sex-sharing website were exposed. Home Depot lost 56 million accounts; Anthem, 80 million; JP Morgan Chase, 76 million; eBay, 145 million; Sony PlayStation Network, 77 million; and TJ Maxx, 94 million records. All of these hacks have caused massive disruption to the targeted organization, legal liability for cyber-negligence, and anguish to consumers.

The U.S. government also is under siege, and along with it the intelligence community (IC), which is a priority target. The recent hacking of the Office of Personnel Management likely exposed the identities of some current and former IC employees. That data breach alone is unlikely to have compromised all IC employees. But when face recognition methods, sophisticated big-data techniques and cross-indexing of multiple data bases such as consumer, insurance or state records, are woven together, it is reasonable to expect most former and even current IC employees eventually will be identified. And when that happens, their identities undoubtedly will be published on the Internet for everyone in the world to see. Then what?

As the information leaks out, the standing army of hostile intelligence community watchers overseas and in the United States will be ready to file lawsuits against individual IC employees or retirees for every type of criminal act and tort they can dream up, no matter how misguided. At the individual level, principles of national jurisdiction guarantee that practically all espionage activities are a violation of the national law where they take place. Generally, there is no immunity for secret agents, although on occasion the acts of an agent have been equated with the national acts of his sovereign and considered sufficient grounds for quietly dropping the suit. But the Internet is making espionage more visible. Counter-espionage, in a sense, has been crowd-sourced to a self-organizing network of watchers worldwide.

Indictment of intelligence officials is not new. Once espionage is uncovered, it is difficult for a prosecutor to resist public outrage by refusing to take action. Prosecution of U.S. intelligence community members is rising in foreign courts. In June, 13 CIA officers were indicted in Italy, and convicted in absentia in July. After all, extraordinary rendition is a casus belli and violation by a nation-state of international law. Now these IC officers no longer can travel to any country that has an extradition treaty with Italy. In February 2007, Italy indicted another 25 supposed CIA agents. In January 2007, Germany issued arrest warrants for 13 CIA operatives. A German citizen, Khaled el-Masri, attempted to sue the United States and Spain over his arrest by American intelligence, but in 2007, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected the case on national security grounds.

What about suing individual U.S. intelligence agents, not in a U.S. court, but in a foreign court? Using standard investigative procedures, in 2005 the Spanish police identified the three American pilots who handled Mr. el-Masri’s flight, and were even able to peel away their false names. For some reason, the German prosecutor held back, and the potential case quickly was escalated up to a matter of diplomacy between the United States and Germany. Nothing happened. This time. But what about the future?

As thousands of intelligence community employee identities are revealed, as they will be, it is reasonable to expect the number of cases against individual IC members will proliferate. Not all can be the subject of bilateral nation-state negotiations. Not all will be in jurisdictions that are close allies with the United States. IC retirees will be faced with mounting headaches, legal bills and seizure of overseas assets.

When intelligence community employees put their lives on the line to serve their country, they knowingly take great personal risks. Their anonymity or false names might help them. But when the curtain is thrown back, and they are exposed, then does the U.S. government owe them protection? Or does the U.S. have a de facto policy that leaves retirees hanging out to dry? This would be neither honorable or just, and undoubtedly is not intended.

Time is short. Sources confirm China’s Ministry of State Security likely has been cross-indexing insurance, airlines and Office of Personnel Management security clearance files. One support network for the IC already has been compromised, and there are more to come.

This problem needs to be studied in greater detail. A legal fund must be established to support the litigation needed to protect exposed agents. U.S. extradition laws might be reviewed. Within the intelligence community, the legal departments that manage accountability need to be funded so they can expand and take on these new challenges. It is bad enough that IC employees no longer can assume their identities will be securely protected by the government, but they should be able to count on robust support if they are attacked in foreign courts.
• Edward M. Roche is a member of the American Society of International Law and the Association of Former Intelligence Officers.
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------


EXTRACT

European court of human rights finds against CIA abuse of Khaled el-Masri

America must now apologise to the German citizen, a victim of mistaken identity who was kidnapped and beaten by the CIA

The much-maligned European court of human rights has this week shown itself at its very best: standing up for the rights of an individual who has been denied justice for almost nine years since he was abducted, secretly detained, and tortured under the CIA's rendition program.

Khaled El-Masri, a German national, was seized by Macedonian security officers on 31 December 2003, at a border crossing, because he had been mistaken for an al-Qaida suspect. He was held incommunicado and abused in Macedonian custody for 23 days, after which he was handcuffed, blindfolded, and driven to Skopje airport, where he was handed over to the CIA and severely beaten.

The CIA stripped, hooded, shackled, and sodomized el-Masri with a suppository – in CIA parlance, subjected him to "capture shock" – as Macedonian officials stood by. The CIA drugged him and flew him to Kabul to be locked up in a secret prison known as the "Salt Pit", where he was slammed into walls, kicked, beaten, and subjected to other forms of abuse. Held at the Salt Pit for four months, el-Masri was never charged, brought before a judge, or given access to his family or German government representatives.

The CIA ultimately realised that it had mistaken el-Masri for an al-Qaida suspect with a similar name. But  it held on to him for weeks after that. It was not until 24 May 2004, that he was flown, blindfolded, earmuffed, and chained to his seat, to Albania, where he was dumped on the side of the road without explanation.

This is the first court to comprehensively and specifically find that the CIA's rendition techniques amounted to torture. The decision stands in sharp contrast to the abject failure of US courts to deliver justice to victims of US torture and rendition.

Both the United States and Macedonia must now issue el-Masri a full-scale public apology and appropriate compensation.

[...] 

The European court's decision in the el-Masri case is a clarion call for accountability for the flagrantly illegal CIA rendition program.

[ ... ]

FULL STORY AT SOURCE
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/dec/13/european-court-human-rights-cia-abuse-khaled-elmasri

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------





Now Can Torture Survivor Khaled El-Masri Have His Apology?

By Steven M. Watt, Senior Staff Attorney, ACLU Human Rights Program
December 15, 2014 | 2:33 PM

EXTRACTS

[ ... ]

It took the intervention of the National Security Council to settle the dispute and secure Khaled's repatriation to [Albania, where he was dumped on the side of the road] Germany in May 2005. That would confirm that, despite her claim to the contrary, Condoleezza Rice, a member of the council then and later secretary of state, would have known that mistakes had been made resulting in Khaled's wrongful rendition and detention when she visited Germany in December 2005.

[...]
Despite all this, the Obama administration has so far declined to acknowledge Khaled's wrongful detention and abuse, and State Department lawyers have yet to respond to his petition to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, filed over six years ago. Protecting legitimate state secrets wasn't the CIA's primary interest. It invoked secrecy to cover up its embarrassing mistakes – which included egregious human rights violations – and to avoid accountability.

Now that the CIA's mistakes and atrocities are a matter of public record, the government should take responsibility for them and make amends. As an important first step, the United States should provide Khaled – and other victims of CIA torture – with a full, official, and public accounting of what the CIA did to him, and grant him an apology, compensation, and counseling for rehabilitation.

FULL AT SOURCE
https://www.aclu.org/blog/speakeasy/now-can-torture-survivor-khaled-el-masri-have-his-apology

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Added following above, because it is an important detail:

[Albania, where he was dumped on the side of the road]
If the National Security Council settled a dispute regarding el-Masri's 'repatriation to Germany', why was he subsequently dumped, mafia style, by the side of the road in Albania?







The CIA's El-Masri Abduction: Cables Show Germany Caved to Pressure from Washington

By Matthias Gebauer and John Goetz

December 09, 2010 – 07:49 PM 

The American diplomatic cables provide new details about the case of Khaled el-Masri, a German citizen abducted by the CIA in 2003. The reports confirm just how much pressure the US put on Germany to not pursue 13 agents believed to have been involved. But they also reveal how cooperative and responsive German officials were in light of American worries.
[ ... ]

Just a few days ago, WikiLeaks published a cable recounting the details of a meeting that then-Deputy US Ambassador John M. Koenig had in the German Chancellery, the official office of Chancellor Angela Merkel. During the conversation, Koenig asked the Germans to "weigh carefully at every step of the way the implications for relations with the US" that investigations into the CIA-organized abduction would have. In another embassy cable, the Americans reported that Berlin had been informed of the "potential negative implications for our bilateral relationship" in the longer term.

A previously unknown cable from the US Embassy in Berlin, dated Feb. 1, 2007, throws light on how the Germans behaved during this back-room horse-trading. A day earlier, German prosecutors in Munich had issued arrest warrants for 13 suspected CIA operatives believed to have been involved in the abduction of el-Masri in Macedonia in late 2003 as well as in his being taken via Baghdad to a secret CIA prison in Afghanistan on Jan. 23, 2004. There, el-Masri was detained and interrogated until finally being released without charges and brought back to Germany at the end of May that year.
[ ...]
The details that have recently emerged illustrate that Germany was engaged in a bit of double-dealing when it came to the el-Masri case. In public, the German government continued to call for an investigation. But neither the government of Chancellor Angela Merkel nor the Justice Ministry would have touched the hot issue of illegal CIA kidnappings if it hadn't have been for the pressure exerted upon them by the media. Behind closed doors, German officials agreed that el-Masri was apparently merely the unfortunate victim of mistaken identity because of his name. But nobody wanted to have investigations into the CIA, which would surely cause even more damage to already tattered German-American relations.

[ ...]
...  In 2007, then-Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries decided not to further pursue the 13 CIA agents. Though their names were still on an Interpol wanted persons list, the United States stated that it would not recognize its validity. Zypries explained that the Americans had made clear to her that they would neither arrest nor hand over the 13 CIA agents. In the end, she concluded that, given the slim chances of success, it made no sense to even try to get them extradited.
FULL AT SOURCE
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/the-cia-s-el-masri-abduction-cables-show-germany-caved-to-pressure-from-washington-a-733860.html

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------













August 22, 2015

Massive US Intelligence Incursion on Civilian Population Planned | 'US Wants Private Companies to Spy on Americans'


SOURCE
http://www.sott.net/article/300055-U-S-intelligence-agencies-want-even-more-cooperation-from-private-business-to-monitor-people
U.S. intelligence agencies want even more cooperation from private business to monitor people

RT
Tue, 11 Aug 2015 13:46 UTC
Image
© Beawiharta / Reuters
The US Office of the Director of National Intelligence wants to make it easier for private, "uncleared" companies, which don't usually aid the intelligence community (such as ridesharing company Uber) to contribute to next generation surveillance needs.

The strategy to encourage unconventional partners to collaborate with intelligence agencies is part of a recently released, unclassified roadmap that outlines the future of data analysis. The "Enhanced Processing and Management of Data from Disparate Sources," as the plan is called, explains six areas that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), led by James Clapper, believes will be crucial for surveillance community in the near future.

"One of our goals for the coming year is to try and extend our outreach via whichever trade associations are willing to take it on, into the uncleared community as well," David Honey, the ODNI director of science and technology, told Nextgov.

"That's why getting this information on to the ODNI's open website was so important to us. We want to have that outreach to the nontraditionals to include the uncleared performer community so that they can gain insight into what the challenges are that we face so that they can come forward with ideas."

Accessing private sector research and syncing it with ODNI threat assessments for the future means "the right technology will be ready at the right time at the right price," Nextgov reported.

For example, ride-sharing company Uber could offer the government tools that could be molded to fit intelligence-gathering needs, Honey said.

"Maybe they've got scheduling algorithms that would help us with our logistics problems," he said. "If we can leverage those kinds of tools, maybe we gotta adapt them a little bit, but that certainly beats having to go and pay for those things from scratch."
Comment: It's hard to believe that a relatively recent business like Uber could be better at logistics than the U.S. government. This is likely just a bland excuse given to hide the real purpose, to be better able to monitor as many people as possible.
Some areas ODNI is seeking to develop, according to Nextgov, include: "expertise in determining the biases of social media site moderators, geolocation in the presence of encryption, room temperature quantum computing, and immersive virtual world user experience."

While the intelligence community's go-to technology development firms are reliable partners, Honey said some of the nontraditional players have the luxury of thinking outside intelligence-gathering frames that could lead to applications valuable to ODNI.

Honey said US intel agencies and those reliable partners are crowdsourcing updates to their five-year science and technology strategy in order to match ODNI needs with corporate projects via a classified website.

Spy agencies "need to be able to post the challenge in a way that the system automatically alerts the right technology suppliers," Honey said, adding "if you're a technology provider and you are posting new solutions, the solutions need to be able to find their way to the customer" with ease. With that in mind, he said ODNI may create an unclassified public online portal for those without a security clearance to offer suggestions for the strategy.

Honey said ODNI will gather interested businesses next week to begin developing ways to measure the intel community's progress in addressing their five-year strategic plan.

"If you are too close to the classified information, you are going to try to create a faster horse," Honey said. "Quite often, people who have just a general knowledge of what we're trying to do are in a better position to help us think about new solutions, than those who are deeply ingrained in the machine."

The Obama administration has requested $53.9 billion to fund the ODNI in 2016.
SOURCE
http://www.sott.net/article/300055-U-S-intelligence-agencies-want-even-more-cooperation-from-private-business-to-monitor-people
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

SUMMARY

US Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI)
 
Head:  James Clapper, Director ODNI

Program: 
'Enhanced Processing and Management of Data from Disparate Sources'

6-Area Plan
Civilian Surveillance Partner Outreach

Areas of expertise sought:
  • biases of social media site moderators
  • geolocation in the presence of encryption
  • room temperature quantum computing
  • immersive virtual world user experience
Seek to utilise non-traditional players outside of intel community to exploit:

thinking outside the box / ie outside intelligence-gathering frames

may create public online portal for anyone who wishes to assist the totalitarian state in becoming more totalitarian

nutting out how to measure the progress/success of the 5-year strategic plan

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

COMMENT

What happens in the US doesn't stay in the US.

Expect this to be applied by US intelligence partners as well, in some form or other.

That's $53.9 billion in 2016 for this sector assigned to keeping the subjugated population under totalitarian control ... Mein Gott!

And this is only a fraction of what this totalitarian state spends on maintaining surveillance and other forms of such control.

Hypocrites have smeared the Russians for years for what they themselves have done and continue to do.    lol


PS ... sounds like they're hiring hackers.  lol
Oh, and this social media surveillance stuff sounds seriously sick


August 18, 2015

PageLink-Intel - GCSB, New Zealand - Government Communications Security Bureau

GCSB
NEW ZEALAND
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE

(See also:  Domestic Intel - NZSIS - Security Intelligence Services - here)
Hon Christopher Finlayson, Attorney-General- here
2015/16 the budget: $89.6 million

Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB)

  • national security
  • part of ECHELON
see Nicky Hager, writer (book)

David Lange
{ report released in error } -

Targets of GCSB:

Japan, Philippines, Argentina, France, Vietnam, + many small Pacific island states.
+ United Nations diplomatic traffic.

Two listening stations + Secret Post + Southern Cross fibre-optic cable:

Waihopai Station

1) SATELLITE communications interception station - Waihopai (near Blenheim)
  • Part of ECHELON
intercepts and processes all phone calls, faxes, e-mail and computer data communications.
Tangimoana Station

2) RADIO communications interception station at GCSB Tangimoana (near Palmerston North)
  • Part of ECHELON
3) Secret listening post

codenamed "Caprica" - NZ High Commission in Honiara, Solomon Islands

4) Southern Cross Cable
95% international internet access point
Construction & Ownership

1999: laid by the ship 'CS Vercors'
Spark New Zealand (50.01%)
SingTel (39.99%)
Verizon Business (10.00%)

mass surveillance - internet & phone traffic - 95% all NZ traffic
(part trans-Pacific network of telecommunications cables)
  • operated by Bermuda company Southern Cross Cables Limited
  • Southern Cross Cables Limited asked NSA to pay them for MASS SURVEILLANCE
allows government to spy on all phone calls and internet traffic from New Zealand  { NZ govt denies & claims merely negotiation w/ NSA }
  • collection and processing of intel
  • distribution of intel
  • information assurance | cyber security
  • Signals Intelligence
  • Communications Security
  • Anti-Bugging Measures
  • Computer / IT security
  • technology

Foreign intelligence
Assistance to other NZ govt agencies
GCSB reports to the minister holding the Intelligence portfolio
by convention: always the Prime Minister

* Illegal surveillance of Kim Dotcom
Shortly before Fletcher (head GCSB) was appointed, the GCSB illegally spied on Kim Dotcom, a German national but New Zealand resident.
By law the agency cannot spy on New Zealand residents.
The GCSB admitted that Hugh Wolfensohn, acting director at the time, knew the organisation was spying on Dotcom.
Kitteridge Report
*may have unlawfully spied on up to 85 ppl b/w April 2003 and Sept 2012
(Kitteridge report, leaked - Rebecca Kitteridge, Cabinet Secretary)

Ian Fletcher (former diplomat) = Director GCSB
controversy re appointment (forgotten friend of John keys)

---------------------- ꕤ  ----------------------
SOURCE
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_Communications_Security_Bureau

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Cross_Cable




August 13, 2015

ANDREA VANCE - 'NZ spies want greater powers'


NZ spies want greater powers

ANDREA VANCE

Last updated 12:18, August 13 2015


Grapes grow in a vineyard around the GSCB monitoring station in the Waihopai Valley near Blenheim.

STEPHEN RUSSELL/FAIRFAX MEDIA

Grapes grow in a vineyard around the GSCB monitoring station in the Waihopai Valley near Blenheim.

The release of a "hit list" by Islamic State with a Kiwi's name on it comes as New Zealand's spy agencies demand greater surveillance powers.

Emergency anti-terror laws passed last year were promoted as measures to stop foreign fighters leaving for conflicts in Syria and Iraq.

However, they also allowed the Security Intelligence Service (SIS) to monitor any terrorist suspects for 24 hours without a warrant.

Additionally the reforms permitted the spy agency to conduct video surveillance on private property in cases of suspected terrorism.

The new laws came on the back of expanded powers handed to the Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB) in 2013.

Caught out illegally spying on Kiwis, the foreign agency was now sanctioned to use its technology and agents to carry out surveillance on behalf of the police, SIS and Defence Force.

Terrorism suppression legislation, passed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, designated terrorist groups and created offences around financing and allowed for the freezing of assets.

It also incorporated international obligations, establishing offences relating to recruiting, bombing and handling explosives.

It also meant planning a terrorist act, or making a "credible" threat, was illegal even if it was not carried out.

Five years later, the law was amended and now allowed for the Prime Minister to designate which groups were considered terrorists, where previously it was the role of the high court.

A review of that legislation was abandoned by the Government in 2012.

Interception warrants - for monitoring communications - could be done under a range of laws such as the SIS and GCSB Acts and the International Terrorism (Emergency Powers) Act 1987.

But security services were pushing for more, arguing current laws were outdated and did not keep pace with technology.

Canada, Australia and the UK are in the process of pushing through tough anti-terror laws which they said were needed to counter jihadis.

British Prime Minister David Cameron last month outlined a five-year plan to counter extremism, focused on how ideology was communicated - but critics fear it would curb freedom of speech.

The GCSB legislation established a review of the security services, which was currently being carried out by former deputy prime minister Sir Michael Cullen and lawyer Dame Patsy Reddy.

On Tuesday, SIS director Rebecca Kitteridge said the legislation governing her agency needed to change.

SIS and GCSB minister Chris Finlayson refused to rule out expanded surveillance powers when questioned in Parliament this week.
SOURCE
http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/71090362/nz-spies-want-greater-powers
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
  
Foreign intel - GCSB - here
Internal intel - NZSIS - here
Hon Christopher Finlayson, Attorney-General- here
----------------------
COMMENT

Wow, that was some interesting NZ information in the look ups.

Both agencies have a record of spectacularly overstepping their bounds and unlawfully violating civil liberties, yet more power is sought.

Some confusion on my part as to who is responsible.  If I understand correctly, it's John 'Teflon' Key, according to convention (Wikipedia). But it looks like responsibility for intel has maybe been hand-balled.
Assume from the article that the minister responsible for both agencies is the attorney-general, Christopher Finlayson.  Did Key handball it to the attorney-general, or is Key ultimately responsible and overseeing the attorney-general? Alternatively, is this really attorney-general territory in practice?
It looks like Finlayson's minister in charge of SIS (Security Intelligence Services), going by his profile.  Don't see anything re the foreign intel agency, GCSB.
Freedom of speech Civil liberties are definitely on the line, if this lot's going to have a crack at controlling how ideology is communicated' expanding their already considerable powers.

Everybody's freedom of speech is civil liberties are at risk - not just a select group, because anybody can become be designated a 'threat' - eg.  NZSIS designated 20 apartheid protesters of the 1980s as 'subversives' and put them on what is presumably a secret surveillance list.
Edit:  GCSB - also caught spying illegally / see Kitteridge Report.
For government agencies known to spy on activists, animal activists and, by implication, NZ political parties (see Gillchrist 10 years paid NZ govt spy & the NZSIS), these organisations (and the govt that controls them) ought to be kept in check, rather than awarded further powers.   They've already have proven they don't abide by existing laws.  'More' power isn't what they need.
NZSIS spying on students and university staff, under the pretext of protecting New Zealanders from 'weapons of mass destruction' is hilarious.  Don't know whether the humour's in the Wikipedia entry, or if they really did use that insane excuse.  Didn't look further than the Wikipedia entry.

If it's left to John Key and his government to designate 'terrorist' targets for surveillance by these agencies, the danger is that Teflon will chose on the basis of political considerations - like preservation of power.  lol

Note also:  anyone who is deemed a political or like threat (as in threat to maintenance of power, cover-ups etc), is likely labelled 'terrorist'.

For example, Julian Assange (WikiLeaks) was labelled 'terrorist' by the Americans ... for exposing US war crimes!  

People, this is comedy gold.

Instead of writing that propaganda show for the BBC, mocking the serious danger Assange is in, had those entertainment writers given even a cursory look at intelligence agencies, they'd have found themselves comedy gold.   

Never going to happen.  Just as mainstream journalism seldom challenges those in power in any meaningful way, entertainment writers apparently also dare not challenge the powerful.  Like hyenas, they despicably attack the target of the powerful.
---

Hey, New Zealand
This Is What Happens When Intel Agencies Have
Unchecked Power

spying and monitoring of pipeline critics was illegal and had a "chilling" effect on Canadians' freedom of expression and freedom of association

complaint against RCMP and CSIS for 'illegal' monitoring of peaceful activists

government spied on these people and shared information about the activities of environmental groups with petroleum companies.

MORE - here


+ MORE ELSEWHERE
PS


This post is a mess, but I'll let it stand as testimony to my stupidity.  lol

Don't know what I was thinking.  Must have got confused by the mention of the UK implementations.  
Same deal, whether it's speech or privacy issue, so it all stands.

PPS

If they're using the argument that "current laws were outdated and did not keep pace with technology," they're probably wanting to amp up digital surveillance in NZ, I'm guessing.



April 22, 2015

Foreign Service Updates








US embassy in Kyrgyzstan
denying reports re colour revolution
152 tons of "unknown cargo" on Ukrainian aeroplane

cargo flew under "diplomatic pouch"
mail diplomats can send mail without inspection by receiving country

Press speculation:
1) small denominations cash to pay protesters "Maidan" in Bishkek.
2) espionage equipment

US embassy
says it's building materials for the new embassy building

Report of US GAO:
In 2008 US State Dept shipped
55 million pounds of cargo via diplomatic pouch
Uh-oh!

http://www.eng.24.kg/bigtiraj/175386-news24.html

Vietnam antiques
Joining UNESCO convention
=  legal foundation to claim back antiques from other countries
http://tuoitrenews.vn/lifestyle/27573/royal-rickshaw-comes-home-to-be-displayed-in-central-vietnam

Kuwait
National Security Apparatus chief
talks with ambass of France + Australia (Warren Hauck) re co-op relations
http://www.kuna.net.kw/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=2436677&language=en

Israel
Iran spy {Belgian national}
 
sentenced to 7 years in Israeli court for espionage
/ Ali Mansouri
Shin Bet alleges Mansouri setting up companies in Israel for Iran intel services to undermine Israeli / Western interests.
caught with:
photos of a top-secret installation, US Embassy & Ben-Gurion Airport, + review of  security Ben-Gurion airport
http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Iranian-spy-sentenced-to-seven-years-after-being-found-guilt-of-espionage-398813

UAE

x5 Gulf Cooperation Council nationals { security officials }
in court
accused of setting up site that mocks UAE leaders
'libellous images'

also accusation of import of spy chips / prohibited audio analytical devices
"The lawyer added that the defendant did not cause any damage in the relations between the UAE and the USA or China, where the items were imported from, and that he did not use UAE soil to store the devices because he was exporting them through ships directly to the Studies and Research Centre in his home country."
https://en-maktoob.news.yahoo.com/five-gcc-nationals-court-mocking-leaders-095100296.html

Hague Netherlands
British Embassy fire in The Hague - 7.30am Tue
Man held. No further info.
http://www.euronews.com/2015/04/21/man-held-over-british-embassy-fire-in-the-hague/

Libya
Bomb explodes near Spanish Embassy in Tripoli
after ISIL attacks foreign nationals, oil fields & diplomatic posts
also follows killing of Libya 30 Christians
http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/04/21/407271/Tripoli-blast-hits-near-Spanish-Embassy

Qatar plans $350bn in development projects over next 15 years
announcement re Project Qatar 2015
to attract 50,000
http://www.tradearabia.com/news/CONS_280262.html

24th April - Turkish Embassy
25th April - 100 on hunger strike on Downing Street to commemorate Armenian Genocide
http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/21/100-people-go-on-hunger-strike-on-downing-street-to-commemorate-the-armenian-genocide/

Lithuania going after Japan tourism
Lithuanian paganism a draw card
Japanese fast growing sector
http://www.baltic-course.com/eng/tourism/?doc=105220'

Singapore
  • 300 Danish co. currently set up in Singapore / many in shipping
  • 20% of the shipping register
  • abt 200 vessels = Danish carriers
competition leadership in maritime field,
focus is on education & environment {green shipping}
http://shippingwatch.com/carriers/article7641969.ece

Singapore a significant port:  2nd largest port in world
+ junction for traffic in Southeast Asia
will be expanded by 50%


UAE
has attracted maritime companies
concentrated Dubai region
Danish-based bunker firms have established business
http://shippingwatch.com/carriers/article7641969.ece

'bunker' is bins or containers for storing fuel on-board ships  {I think}

Denmark Singapore Martime Nov 2014
Denmark's 3rd largest bunker fuel /ship fuel supplier OW Bunker goes bankrupt

discovered suspected fraud by senior employees in Singapore-based subsidiary
co. owes 13 banks & cannot survive w/out new credit

Singapore based Dynamic Oil Trading subsid.
=  fraud by senior employees
OW Bunker publicly listed 2014
est $150m trade loss

Singapore
Alleged fraud at:  Dynamic Oil Trading
= biggest financial market scandal to hit Singapore in last decade

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-29961566







April 19, 2015

Foreign Service Updates









North Korea warns US envoy Mark Lippert of ‘bigger mishap’ than a knife attack if he continues insulting NorK
NorK says Lippert has:
"bad habit of rashly engaging in scheming chatter distorting the truth and instigating war"
http://pakobserver.net/detailnews.asp?id=262264

Iran
Protest outside SaudiArabia embassy re Yemen invasion
http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/04/18/406799/Iranians-slam-Saudi-war-on-Yemen

China
Journalist Gao Yu, a Chinese news veteran & critic of Communist Party / 7yr sentence leaking state secrets
sentence denounced
Fmr law professor says:  political party’s internal documents cannot be regarded as a ‘state secret.

http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1324846-chinese-regime-sentences-senior-journalist-to-7-years-on-charges-of-leaking-state-secrets/

IRAQ Friday:
Irbil - capital semi-autonomous Kurdistan region - car-bomb explodes outside US consulate & compound
*common in Iraq, but rare in Ibril*
http://www.dw.de/is-targets-us-consulate-in-irbil-suicide-attack/a-18390760

Ireland  / Venezuela
Venezuela – Dublin solidarity rally at US Embassy 2pm Sunday
http://www.anphoblacht.com/contents/24913 

Canada
Officials In Hungary To Seek Information On Roma Exodus From Miskolc
40-50 local Roma families emigrated
http://hungarytoday.hu/cikk/canadian-officials-budapest-seek-information-roma-exodus-miskolc-44835

Ukraine

Zaporizhstal
CEO Rostyslav Shurma
Ukraine 4th largest steel maker {Rinat Akhmetov}
invested abt $120 million in production modernisation
William H. "Chip" Laitinen Economic Officer, Office of US Ambassador to Ukraine, approves
http://en.interfax.com.ua/news/economic/261154.html

India
India appointments / Ambassadors to:
> Egypt
> Venezuela
http://netindian.in/news/2015/04/17/00033396/sanjay-bhattacharyya-appointed-ambassador-egypt

UK
Ugandan High Commission in London worker
sentenced to 6yrs prison /£4.8 million tobacco duty evasion
http://en.starafrica.com/news/ugandan-jailed-in-uk-for-tax-evasion.html

NZ
New Snowden docs reveal NZ spies & America's top govt hackers cooked up plan to spy on China
http://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/news/national/snowden-documents-reveal-attempt-to-spy-on-china/

Op "Frostbite" NZ intel plan to spy on China
GCSB worked with the NSA's hacker team - TAO
2013 doc
= plan had verbal approval same month PM John Key was in China pledging NZ friendship

China is NZ largest trading partner
bilateral trade =  $20-billion pa
Greens Russel Norman says spy revelations put that at risk
Spying on Chinese diplomatic communications in NZ to curry favour with US govt  spy agencies = pointless & reckless

"The fact that John Key must have personally approved this operation will add insult to injury ..." 
"John Key is willing to subvert NZs broader international economic & political interests to please the US Government"
http://www.odt.co.nz/source/nzme/339554/leaked-papers-show-plan-spy-china

SouthAfrica
President Jacob Zuma cancelled trip to Indonesia
to deal with xenophobic violence
Jan 2015:
Soweto violence = 6 killed / looters rampaged
South Africa violence sparked angry responses in other African nations
http://en.prothom-alo.com/international/news/64223/Zuma-seeks-to-reassure-foreigners

Canada
Canadians rally nationwide against Bill C-51 anti-terrorist bill
PM office picketed / protests scheduled
aim to protect & maintain democratic freedoms
NDP & Green party oppose the bill
3rd reading Mon, then law
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2015/04/18/22351896.html


Pakistan
Scholars of Islamic law attend dinner at  Saudi Embassy
updates on Yemen
Pakistan ready to lay down life to defend Saudi Arabia

Pakistan SaudiArabia Yemen
Sounds like they're wanting to wage religious war?

Saudi Consul says support to Houthis
considered attack on sovereignty of SaudiArabia
Claims it is 'joint war' SA + Yemen vs rebels
http://www.thenews.com.pk/Todays-News-13-37083-Troops-should-be-sent-for-protection-of-S-Arabia-whenever-necessary-Ulema

India
Shaken by Corporate Espionage Scandal, Defence Ministry issued a series of security alerts &  directives
Yikes!
Cell phone can be used as effective, unobtrusive, listening device for eavesdropping even when switched off
http://www.newindianexpress.com/thesundaystandard/Spy-Alert-Cellphones-Banned-at-South-Block-Meetings/2015/04/19/article2771047.ece

Poland / FBI

Poland’s ambassador to US sent letter of protest to FBI Director James Comey over alleged historical revisionism 
FBI director Comey:  suggested that Poland shared responsibility for the Holocaust
http://sptnkne.ws/eqT

USA - Domestic
FBI forensic overstated hair 'match' evidence
in 95% of 268 trials prior 2000
14 of 32 executed or died prison

Note:   pattern-based forensic techniques in question
eg hair & bite-mark comparisons
= 25% of 329 cases DNA-exoneration

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/crime/fbi-overstated-forensic-hair-matches-in-nearly-all-criminal-trials-for-decades/2015/04/18/39c8d8c6-e515-11e4-b510-962fcfabc310_story.html

COMMENT
Odds and ends that caught my attention.

Best is probably the New Zealand spying outed by Snowden documents.

FBI 'overstated' evidence story is pretty shocking. Didn't realise you can 'uptalk' science.  Imagined science was sure thing.





April 12, 2015

Socialist Perspective - Assange Hunted by Imperialist Powers to Disrupt WikiLeaks






ARTICLE

Wikileaks, Sex & Imperialist Law


COMMENTS

Note the following re above article:
a) Reference to 'charges' in two instances should read 'allegations' in lieu of 'charges', as there are no 'charges' to date (2015).

b) Link to quoted material referred to in article (in text format) returns a 404 error.
Valid link for Stratfor analyst remark:  here.

c) Additional link to material quoted in article - Red Notice issue re sexual assault allegation anomaly & trying to disrupt WikiLeaks - here.
Really good article by International Bolshevik Tendency (IBT) based on inspiring address by  Roxanne Baker, in support of Julian Assange. 

So, there I was writing off the lefties (in general) as pseudo-lefties and corporate stooges, but that's not necessarily the case for all lefties.
Wow, I think I really like the Bolshevik perspective.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
What I got out of this:
Largely hoovering references in the article - Persecution of Julian Assange is an attack on democratic rights, particularly press freedom

Any differences on left, a matter of
> subservience to ruling-class
> acting as imperialist propaganda conduit
Assange & WikiLeaks: challenged the powerful by exposing monstrous crimes committed in Iraq & Afghanistan

Savage persecution of Chelsea (Bradley) Manning
shows ‘enemies of the state’ USA ill treatment & erosion of democratic rights

SW:  TERMINATED interview & REFUSED to READ or SIGN transcript
on learning intent of Sweden police

Sweden Police uploaded SW transcript to police data system & AMENDED transcript subsequently

UNUSUAL intervention of Chief Prosecutor Marianne Ny is possibly indicative of 'political string-pulling from high up'.

AA
= link w. US govt funded Ladies in White
LIW is supported by CIA asset Luis Posada Carriles

Carriles = terrorist & former CIA agent. Born in Havana.
SEE also Carriles & CIA Cuba link:
http://palgrave.typepad.com/yaffe/2011/03/cia-spies-and-videotapes-cuba-exposes-us-programme-of-subversion-.html

Other interesting info -
See also:  2009-10 Cuba - CIA
USAID op undermines Cuba's hip-hop protest scene

http://bigstory.ap.org/article/7c275c134f1b4a0ca3428929fcece82d/us-co-opted-cubas-hip-hop-scene-spark-change

---
AA = brother in Sweden intelligence
a liaison in WA to US intelligence services
as referred to in above article:
http://www.bolshevik.org/1917/no35/ibt_1917_35_12_wikileaks-hands_off_assange.html
and as referred to in Counterpunch article, 2010:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2010/12/07/information-terrorists/
--
  • Socialist Workers Party
  • Alliance for Workers’ Liberty
Naivety - given evidence that Sweden obliges CIA

NO chance ‘fair trial’
prejudicial press / implacable hostility of ruling elites re WikiLeaks revelations

On USA going after ASSANGE -
Stratfor intelligence analyst: this is about trying to DISRUPT WikiLeaks

Much discussion neglects to examine POLITICALLY motivated character of Sweden law enforcement allegations

Assange - No chance fair trial
high risk of extradition or rendition
SOCIALISTS must oppose extradition

Assange is being hunted by America for daring to shine a light on the crimes of IMPERIALISM

USA conducting a witch-hunt against whistleblower publisher WikiLeaks, which remains active as at 2015.

Julian Assange is an advocate of freedom of press & information, whose revelations have exposed lawlessness.

Defending individual rights & liberties, such as those of Julian Assange
(rights & liberties which ruling political elites seek to erase, in this instance and generally speaking) provides a BASIS for:
1) challenging a system of global oppression

2) challenging imperialist rule - the cause of such oppression
3) challenging an imperialist, oppressive rule that aims to SILENCE truth tellers

Defending Julian Assange is defending civil liberties
& challenging ruling elites - in what is a class struggle
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Note also:

1) Unsigned, unread statement - SW refused to sign or read, on learning of Sweden Police intent regarding Assange.
2) Transcript uploaded onto police database & SUBSEQUENTLY AMENDED.
3) AA could be described as highly instrumental - see source article.

4) The key police witness is compromised by her personal relationship with AA.  Furthermore, the telephone 'statement' taken by that police officer (and friend) of AA, was taken over the telephone, which I understand is a breach of police procedures.

5) Matter was dismissed by a senior prosecutor for lack of evidence, but was UNUSUALLY revived again - almost 500km away in Stockholm.

6) Interpol Red Notice issue is also unusual (as pointed out by the US private intelligence service, Stratfor - which is also known as a 'shadow CIA').

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Anyway, they're just some things to think about.

I'm off to find a home for my file-away marked up version of the article ... after I've checked all these links.  Excuse any typos - I'm in a mad rush. 

Happy reading, Comrades.  ;)
--------------------------------------------------------------------

QUICK LINKS:

1. WikiLeaks, Sex & Imperialist Law - here.

2. Ladies in White / Carilles - here.

3. AA - bother intelligence officer [Counterpunch] - here.

4. Example of USG / CIA subversive activity, Cuba - here.

5. Stratfor:  how to go after WikiLeaks - here.

6. Stratfor: Charges of sexual assault rarely Interpol Red Notice - Disruption of WikiLeaks quote - here.

7.  Women Against Rape
For decades we have campaigned to get rapists caught, charged and convicted. But the pursuit of Assange is political"  - The Guardian - 23/08/2012  - here.







*




April 07, 2015

UK - Privacy International - Surveillance Industry - Surveillance General



Meet the privacy activists who spy on the surveillance industry
by Daniel Rivero
Illustration by Shutterstock, Elena Scotti/Fusion
April 6, 2015
http://fusion.net/story/112390/unveiling-secrets-of-the-international-surveillance-trade-one-fake-company-at-a-time/
LONDON– On the second floor of a narrow brick building [...]

Once he’s infiltrated the trade show, he’ll pose as an industry insider, chatting up company representatives, swapping business cards, and picking up shiny brochures that advertise the invasive capabilities of bleeding-edge surveillance technology. Few of the features are ever marketed or revealed openly to the general public, and if the group didn’t go through the pains of going undercover, it wouldn’t know the lengths to which law enforcement and the intelligence community are going to keep tabs on their citizens.

“I don’t know when we’ll get to use this [company], but we need a lot of these to do our research,” Omanovic tells me. (He asked Fusion not to reveal the name of the company in order to not blow its cover.)

The strange tactic– hacking into an expo in order to come into close proximity with government hackers and monitors– is a regular part of operations at Privacy International, a London-based anti-surveillance advocacy group founded 25 years ago. Omanovic is one of a few activists for the group who goes undercover to collect the surveillance promotional documents.

“At last count we had about 1,400 files,” Matt Rice, PI’s Scottish-born advocacy officer says while sifting through a file cabinet full of the brochures. “[The files] help us understand what these companies are capable of, and what’s being sold around the world,” he says. The brochures vary in scope and claims. Some showcase cell site simulators, commonly called Stingrays, which allow police to intercept cell phone activity within a certain area. Others provide details about Finfisher– surveillance software that is marketed exclusively to governments, which allows officials to put spyware on a target’s home computer or mobile device to watch their Skype calls, Facebook and email activity.

The technology buyers at these conferences are the usual suspects — the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the UK’s Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), and the Australian Secret Intelligence Service– but also representatives of repressive regimes —Bahrain, Sudan, pre-revolutionary Libya– as the group has revealed in attendees lists it has surfaced.

At times, companies’ claims can raise eyebrows. One brochure shows a soldier, draped in fatigues, holding a portable device up to the faces of a sombre group of Arabs. “Innocent civilian or insurgent?,” the pamphlet asks.

“Not certain?”

“Our systems are.”

The treasure trove of compiled documents was available as an online database, but PI recently took it offline, saying the website had security vulnerabilities that could have compromised information of anyone who wanted to donate to the organization online. They are building a new one. The group hopes that the exposure of what Western companies are selling to foreign governments will help the organization achieve its larger goal: ending the sale of hardware and software to governments that use it to monitor their populations in ways that violate basic privacy rights.

The group acknowledges that it might seem they are taking an extremist position when it comes to privacy, but “we’re not against surveillance,” Michael Rispoli, head of PI’s communications, tells me. “Governments need to keep people safe, whether it’s from criminals or terrorists or what it may be, but surveillance needs to be done in accordance with human rights, and in accordance with the rule of law.

The group is waging its fight in courtrooms. In February of last year, it filed a criminal complaint to the UK’s National Cyber Crime Unit of the National Crime Agency, asking it to investigate British technology allegedly used repeatedly by the Ethiopian government to intercept the communications of an Ethiopian national. Even after Tadesse Kersmo applied for– and was granted– asylum in the UK on the basis of being a political refugee, the Ethiopian government kept electronically spying on him, the group says, using technology from British firm Gamma International. The group currently has six lawsuits in action, mostly taking on large, yet opaque surveillance companies and the British government. Gamma International did not respond to Fusion’s request for comment on the lawsuit, which alleges that exporting the software to Ethiopian authorities means the company assisted in illegal electronic spying.

“The irony that he was given refugee status here, while a British company is facilitating intrusions into his basic right to privacy isn’t just ironic, it’s wrong,” Rispoli says. “It’s so obvious that there should be laws in place to prevent it.”

PI says it has uncovered other questionable business relationships between oppressive regimes and technology companies based in other Western countries. An investigative report the group put out a few months ago on surveillance in Central Asia said that British and Swiss companies, along with Israeli and Israeli-American companies with close ties to the Israeli military, are providing surveillance infrastructure and technical support to countries like Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan– some of the worst-ranking countries in the world when it comes to freedom of speech, according to Freedom House. Only North Korea ranks lower than them.

PI says it used confidential sources, whose accounts have been corroborated, to reach those conclusions.

Not only are these companies complicit in human rights violations, the Central Asia report alleges, but they know they are. Fusion reached out to the companies named in the report, NICE Systems (Israel), Verint Israel (U.S./ Israel), Gamma (UK), or Dreamlab (Switzerland), and none have responded to repeated requests for comment.

The report is a “blueprint” for the future of the organization’s output, says Rice, the advocacy officer. “It’s the first time we’ve done something that really looks at the infrastructure, the laws, and putting it all together to get a view on how the system actually works in a country, or even a whole region,” says Rice.

“What we can do is take that [report], and have specific findings and testimonials to present to companies, to different bodies and parliamentarians, and say this is why we need these things addressed,” adds Omanovic, the researcher and fake company designer.

The tactic is starting to show signs of progress, he says. One afternoon, Omanovic was huddled over a table in the back room, taking part in what looked like an intense conference call. “European Commission,” he says afterwards. The Commission has been looking at surveillance exports since it was revealed that Egypt, Tunisia, and Bahrain were using European tech to crack down on protesters during the Arab Spring, he added. Now, PI is consulting with some members, and together they “hope to bring in a regulation specifically on this subject by year’s end.”

***

Privacy International has come a long way from the “sterile bar of an anonymous business hotel in Luxembourg,” where founder Simon Davies, then a lone wolf privacy campaigner, hosted its first meeting with a handful of people 25 years ago. In a blog post commemorating that anniversary, Davies (who left the organization about five years ago) described the general state of privacy advocacy when that first meeting was held:

    “Those were strange times. Privacy was an arcane subject that was on very few radar screens. The Internet had barely emerged, digital telephony was just beginning, the NSA was just a conspiracy theory and email was almost non-existent (we called it electronic mail back then). We communicated by fax machines, snail mail – and through actual real face to face meetings that you travelled thousands of miles to attend.”

Immediately, there were disagreements about the scope of issues the organization should focus on, as detailed in the group’s first report, filed in 1991. Some of the group’s 120-odd loosely affiliated members and advisors wanted the organization to focus on small privacy flare-ups; others wanted it to take on huge, international privacy policies, from “transborder data flows” to medical research. Disputes arose as to what “privacy” actually meant at the time. It took years for the group to narrow down the scope of its mandate to something manageable and coherent.

Gus Hosein, current executive director, describes the 90’s as a time when the organization “just knew that it was fighting against something.” He became part of the loose collective in 1996, three days after moving to the UK from New Haven, Connecticut, thanks to a chance encounter with Davies at the London Economics School. For the first thirteen years he worked with PI, he says, the group’s headquarters was the school pub.

They were fighting then some of the same battles that are back in the news cycle today, such as the U.S. government wanting to ban encryption, calling it a tool for criminals to hide their communications from law enforcement. “[We were] fighting against the Clinton Administration and its cryptography policy, fighting against new intersections of law, or proposals in countries X, Y and Z, and almost every day you would find something to fight around,” he says.

Just as privacy issues stemming from the dot com boom were starting to stabilize, 9/11 happened. That’s when Hosein says “the shit hit the fan.”

In the immediate wake of that tragedy, Washington pushed through the Patriot Act and the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, setting an international precedent of invasive pat-downs and extensive monitoring in the name of anti-terrorism. Hosein, being an American, followed the laws closely, and the group started issuing criticism of what it considered unreasonable searches. In the UK, a public debate about issuing national identification cards sprung up. PI fought it vehemently.

“All of a sudden we’re being called upon to respond to core policy-making in Western governments, so whereas policy and surveillance were often left to some tech expert within the Department of Justice or whatever, now it had gone to mainstream policy,” he says. “We were overwhelmed because we were still just a ragtag bunch of people trying to fight fights without funding, and we were taking on the might of the executive arm of government.”

The era was marked by a collective struggle to catch up. “I don’t think anyone had any real successes in that era,” Hosein says.

But around 2008, the group’s advocacy work in India, Thailand and the Philippines started to gain the attention of donors, and the team decided it was time to organize. The three staff members then started the formal process of becoming a charity, after being registered as a corporation for ten years. By the time it got its first office in 2011 (around the time its founder, Davies, walked away to pursue other ventures) the Arab Spring was dominating international headlines.

“With the Arab Spring and the rise of attention to human rights and technology, that’s when PI actually started to realize our vision, and become an organization that could grow,” Hosein says. “Four years ago we had three employees, and now we have 16 people,” he says with a hint of pride.

***

“This is a real vindication for [Edward] Snowden,” Eric King, PI’s deputy director says about one of the organization’s recent legal victories over the UK’s foremost digital spy agency, known as the Government Communications Headquarters or GCHQ.

PI used the documents made public by Snowden to get the British court that oversees GCHQ to determine that all intelligence sharing between GCHQ and the National Security Administration (NSA) was illegal up until December 2014. Ironically, the court went on to say that the sharing was only illegal because of lack of public disclosure of the program. Now that details of the program were made public thanks to the lawsuit, the court said, the operation is now legal and GCHQ can keep doing what it was doing.

“It’s like they’re creating the law on the fly,” King says. “[The UK government] is knowingly breaking the law and then retroactively justifying themselves. Even though we got the court to admit this whole program was illegal, the things they’re saying now are wholly inadequate to protect our privacy in this country.”

Nevertheless, it was a “highly significant ruling,” says Elizabeth Knight, Legal Director of fellow UK-based civil liberties organization Open Rights Group. “It was the first time the [courts have] found the UK’s intelligence services to be in breach of human rights law,” she says. “The ruling is a welcome first step towards demonstrating that the UK government’s surveillance practices breach human rights law.

In an email, a GCHQ spokesperson downplayed the significance of the ruling, saying that PI only won the case in one respect: on a “transparency issue,” rather than on the substance of the data sharing program. “The rulings re-affirm that the processes and safeguards within these regimes were fully adequate at all times, so we have not therefore needed to make any changes to policy or practice as a result of the judgement,” the spokesperson says.

Before coming on board four years ago, King, a 25-year old Wales native, worked at Reprieve, a non-profit that provides legal support to prisoners. Some of its clients are at Guantanamo Bay and other off-the-grid prisons, something that made him mindful of security concerns when the group was communicating with clients. King worried that every time he made a call to his clients, they were being monitored. “No one could answer those questions, and that’s what got me going on this,” says King.

Right now, he tells me, most of the group’s legal actions have to do with fighting the “Five Eyes”– the nickname given to the intertwined intelligence networks of the UK, Canada, the US, Australia and New Zealand. One of the campaigns, stemming from the lawsuit against GCHQ that established a need for transparency, is asking GCHQ to confirm if the agency illegally collected information about the people who signed a “Did the GCHQ Illegally Spy On You?” petition. So far, 10,000 people have signed up to be told whether their communications or online activity were collected by the UK spy agency when it conducted mass surveillance of the Internet. If a court actually forces GCHQ to confirm whether those individuals were spied on, PI will then ask that all retrieved data be deleted from the database.

“It’s such an important campaign not only because people have the right to know, but it’s going to bring it home to people and politicians that regular, everyday people are caught up in this international scandal,” King says. “You don’t even have to be British to be caught up in it. People all over the world are being tracked in that program.”

Eerke Boiten, a senior lecturer at the interdisciplinary Cyber Security Centre at the University of Kent, says that considering recent legal victories, he can’t write off the effort, even if he would have dismissed it just a year ago.

“We have now finally seen some breakthroughs in transparency in response to Snowden, and the sense that intelligence oversight needs an overhaul is increasing,” he wrote in an email to me. “So although the [British government] will do its best to shore up the GCHQ legal position to ensure it doesn’t need to respond to this, their job will be harder than before.”

“Privacy International have a recent record of pushing the right legal buttons,” he says. “They may win again.”

A GCHQ spokesperson says that the agency will “of course comply with any direction or order” a court might give it, stemming from the campaign.

King is also the head of PI’s research arm– organizing in-depth investigations into national surveillance ecosystems, in tandem with partner groups in countries around the world. The partners hail from places as disparate as Kenya and Mexico. One recently released report features testimonials from people who reported being heavily surveilled in Morocco. Another coming out of Colombia will be more of an “exposé,” with previously unreported details on surveillance in that country, he says.

And then there’s the stuff that King pioneered: the method of sneaking into industry conferences by using a shadow company. He developed the technique Omanovic is using. King can’t go to the conferences undercover anymore because his face is now too well known. When asked why he started sneaking into the shows, he says: “Law enforcement doesn’t like talking about [surveillance]. Governments don’t talk about it. And for the most part our engagement with companies is limited to when we sue them,” he laughs.

When it comes to the surveillance field, you would be hard pressed to find a company that does exactly what it says it does, King tells me. So when he or someone else at PI sets up a fake company, they expect to get about as much scrutiny as the next ambiguous, potentially official organization that lines up behind them.

Collectively, PI has been blacklisted and been led out of a few conferences over the past four years they have been doing this, he estimates.

“If we have to navigate some spooky places to get what we need, then that’s what we’ll do,” he says. Sometimes you have to walk through a dark room to turn on a light. Privacy International sees a world with a lot of dark rooms.

Being shadowy is acceptable in this world.”

http://fusion.net/story/112390/unveiling-secrets-of-the-international-surveillance-trade-one-fake-company-at-a-time/

Highlights are for me.  Link to source article for an easier read.

Great article.  Not sure I'll remember all of this information.
Prior advocacy work:
  • India
  • Thailand
  • Philippines
More investigations coming:
  • Kenya
  • Mexico 
  • Colombia  
Completed report:  heavily surveilled in Morocco (strong USA ally, with heavy French & Spanish trade, credit and investment).

StingRays are used routinely by Chicago Police Dept:
Chicago PD
seized drug money = first purchases 2005
incl. StingRay surveillance' digital 'hoovers'

http://inthesetimes.com/article/17808/who-do-you-protect-who-do-you-surveil 
Central Asia report software companies that have not responded:
  • NICE Systems (Israel)
  • Verint Israel (US / Israel)
  • Gamma (UK)
  • Dreamlab (Switzerland)
Most of Privacy International legal actions have to do with fighting the “Five Eyes” - ie.  "intertwined intelligence networks of the UK, Canada, the US, Australia & New Zealand."

Six court actions in progress currently.

Sales to repressive governments include:
  • Bahrain
  • Sudan
  • Libya (pre-revolutionary)
  • Turkmenistan
  • Uzbekistan
Egypt, Tunisia & Bahrain - used European surveillance technology (crackdown protesters).
European Commission -  has been looking at surveillance export.
Expansive surveillance set down by:
  • Patriot Act (USA)
  • Aviation and Transportation Security Act (USA)
Intelligence sharing between USA (NSA) and UK (GCHQ) ruled illegal prior 2014 because undisclosed.  However:
"Now that details of the program were made public thanks to the lawsuit, the court said, the operation is now legal and GCHQ can keep doing what it was doing."
That outcome sounds rather bizarre to me.