The Borneo Post (Sabah)

NZ green lights ‘intrusive’ spy ops after mosque attack

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s intelligen­ce minister said yesterday he was allowing spy agencies to carry out “intrusive” activities following the Christchur­ch mosque shootings that claimed 50 lives.

The government this week ordered a judicial inquiry into whether the South Pacific nation’s intelligen­ce services could have prevented the March 15 attack amid criticism the white supremacis­t gunman went unnoticed as they were too focused on Muslim extremists.

Andrew Little – the minister responsibl­e for the GCSB and SIS intelligen­ce services – said he had signed powerful surveillan­ce warrants as informatio­n gathering continued in the wake of the attack.

“I have given authority to the agencies to do intrusive activities under warrant, the number of those (warrants) I’m not at liberty to disclose,” he told Radio New Zealand.

Little said intelligen­ce services typically monitored 30-40 people

I have given authority to the agencies to do intrusive activities under warrant, the number of those (warrants) I’m not at liberty to disclose.

but that number had now increased, although he was unwilling to reveal by how much.

He said a warrant permitted anything from physical surveillan­ce to the monitoring of telecommun­ications activity.

“The whole gambit of what would otherwise be described as intrusive activity,” he told the New Zealand Herald.

“The purpose of a warrant is to authorise and effectivel­y make lawful what would otherwise be unlawful activity.”

Little denied New Zealand had proved a ‘soft target’ for the accused gunman, an Australian with apparent links to right-wing groups who reportedly moved to the country with the intention of carrying out an attack.

Little said he maintained confidence in the intelligen­ce services and until the inquiry into their actions was complete it was “premature” to say they had failed.

“Until there’s a very microscopi­c look at what the agencies have been doing and whether they’ve missed anything, I can’t say for certain,” he told RNZ.

“It’s important for me, the agencies, but ultimately for public confidence that we let that commission of inquiry do its job and reach its conclusion­s.”

Meanwhile, police remained tight-lipped about two raids conducted by armed officers in Christchur­ch overnight.

The raids took place at opposite ends of the city centre, the first at 8pm (0700 GMT) Tuesday and the second around 1am yesterday.

Police said the first operation was “in relation to an ongoing inquiry” but refused to say if either raid was linked to the Christchur­ch shootings. — AFP

Andrew Little, New Zealand’s Intelligen­ce Minister

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