The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US House passes crucial spying law

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WASHINGTON: The US House of Representa­tives passed a crucial surveillan­ce law that reinforced the ability of the country’s spy agencies to intercept and make use of Americans’ private communicat­ions.

The national security establishm­ent saw the reauthoris­ation of the expiring Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act as essential, warning that they would not be able to detect terror plots without it.

But rights groups and libertaria­n-leaning politician­s of both the Democratic and Republican parties saw the bill’s passage as a blow, especially since former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden revealed in 2013 that the NSA was using it to vacuum up massive amounts of data on Americans.

Many had hoped the renewal would strengthen protection­s against invasive electronic wiretappin­g and social media monitoring of Americans by the NSA, the country’s powerful electronic espionage body, and the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion.

The House’s vote for the bill came after President Trump himself sent mixed messages of his own views, tweeting his opposition only to make an abrupt U-turn.

In an initial tweet, he said the section 702 provision had been used by the Obama administra­tion to ‘so badly surveil and abuse the Trump campaign,’ suggesting he was opposed to the bill.

More than an hour later, he reversed himself, saying “today’s vote is about foreign surveillan­ce of foreign bad guys on foreign land. We need it!”

While nearly all lawmakers agree that 702 is an essential tool for US intelligen­ce to safeguard national security, the bill passed the House by 256-164, showing the level of opposition to the powers it gives US spies and law enforcemen­t. The no votes included 45 Republican­s. —

 ??  ?? People protest against Fujimori’s pardon in Lima, Peru. — Reuters photo
People protest against Fujimori’s pardon in Lima, Peru. — Reuters photo

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