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UK spy agency GCHQ ‘tapped journalists’ emails’

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Britain's electronic spy agency GCHQ tapped emails of journalists at some of the world's biggest media organisations, The Guardian reported.

The report said GCHQ gathered emails from journalists at the BBC, The Guardian, Le Monde, NBC, The New York Times, Reuters, The Sun and The Washington Post.

The emails were among 70,000 gathered in less than 10 minutes in 2008 by the spy agency, Britain's equivalent of the US National Security Agency, according to The Guardian's analysis of documents leaked by former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden.

The emails were gathered in one of many taps of the fibre-optic cables that form the Internet's backbone, and were available for viewing by any cleared staff on GCHQ's intranet, according to the report.

The Snowden documents appeared to show the messages were collected while testing a new tool designed to sift through tapped data to identify relevant chunks.

It is not revealed in the leaked documents if journalists were deliberately targeted, the report said.

Edward Snowden appears in a video conference call as he is honoured with the Carl von Ossietzky meda...
Edward Snowden appears in a video conference call as he is honoured with the Carl von Ossietzky medal by International League for Human Rights in Berlin, December 14, 2014
Tobias Schwarz, AFP/File

A spokesman for GCHQ told the paper: "All of GCHQ's work is carried out in accordance with a strict legal and policy framework, which ensures that our activities are authorised, necessary and proportionate, and that there is rigorous oversight, including from the secretary of state."

The spy agency considers journalists as "a potential threat to security" according to internal security advice cited by The Guardian, with investigative journalists listed as a threat alongside terrorists and hackers.

The report was published Monday amid pressure to limit the British government's ability to spy on journalists' communications, after revelations police accessed phone records to identify journalists' sources within the police.

Over 100 editors of British newspapers published a joint letter to Prime Minister David Cameron on Monday calling on the government to stop law enforcement officials viewing journalists' phone records without a warrant from a judge.

"It is in everyone's interests that the state recognises the over-arching importance of protecting the confidentiality of journalists' sources," said the letter.

"Public sector whistleblowers will not come forward to journalists in future if law enforcement agencies have the power to view journalists' phone records at will."

Cameron renewed calls for increased powers of surveillance in the wake of attacks by Islamist gunmen in Paris that left 17 dead, saying attackers should be denied a "safe space" to communicate.

Britain’s electronic spy agency GCHQ tapped emails of journalists at some of the world’s biggest media organisations, The Guardian reported.

The report said GCHQ gathered emails from journalists at the BBC, The Guardian, Le Monde, NBC, The New York Times, Reuters, The Sun and The Washington Post.

The emails were among 70,000 gathered in less than 10 minutes in 2008 by the spy agency, Britain’s equivalent of the US National Security Agency, according to The Guardian’s analysis of documents leaked by former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden.

The emails were gathered in one of many taps of the fibre-optic cables that form the Internet’s backbone, and were available for viewing by any cleared staff on GCHQ’s intranet, according to the report.

The Snowden documents appeared to show the messages were collected while testing a new tool designed to sift through tapped data to identify relevant chunks.

It is not revealed in the leaked documents if journalists were deliberately targeted, the report said.

Edward Snowden appears in a video conference call as he is honoured with the Carl von Ossietzky meda...

Edward Snowden appears in a video conference call as he is honoured with the Carl von Ossietzky medal by International League for Human Rights in Berlin, December 14, 2014
Tobias Schwarz, AFP/File

A spokesman for GCHQ told the paper: “All of GCHQ’s work is carried out in accordance with a strict legal and policy framework, which ensures that our activities are authorised, necessary and proportionate, and that there is rigorous oversight, including from the secretary of state.”

The spy agency considers journalists as “a potential threat to security” according to internal security advice cited by The Guardian, with investigative journalists listed as a threat alongside terrorists and hackers.

The report was published Monday amid pressure to limit the British government’s ability to spy on journalists’ communications, after revelations police accessed phone records to identify journalists’ sources within the police.

Over 100 editors of British newspapers published a joint letter to Prime Minister David Cameron on Monday calling on the government to stop law enforcement officials viewing journalists’ phone records without a warrant from a judge.

“It is in everyone’s interests that the state recognises the over-arching importance of protecting the confidentiality of journalists’ sources,” said the letter.

“Public sector whistleblowers will not come forward to journalists in future if law enforcement agencies have the power to view journalists’ phone records at will.”

Cameron renewed calls for increased powers of surveillance in the wake of attacks by Islamist gunmen in Paris that left 17 dead, saying attackers should be denied a “safe space” to communicate.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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