The New Zealand Herald

Is this a club we want to be part of?

Dialogue We must demand answers on NZ’s role in Five Eyes to ensure important values are upheld

- Anna Crowe, formerly a New Zealand lawyer, is a Legal Officer for Privacy Internatio­nal, a London-based charity that focuses on the right to privacy.

Since the release of documents by Edward Snowden nearly a year ago, New Zealand has often been seen as a passive participan­t in the Five Eyes intelligen­ce-sharing alliance, not unlike a good kid hanging out with the wrong crowd.

However, Snowden documents released last month and the news that New Zealand appears to be sharing intelligen­ce used in drone strikes shows this perception is far from the truth.

The Government is an active participan­t in this secretive surveillan­ce alliance between the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

The Government Communicat­ions Security Bureau (GCSB), our representa­tive, is keyed into US National Security Agency (NSA) programmes that have caused controvers­y abroad: spying on close allies, mass surveillan­ce of foreign population­s and weakening our ability to protect our privacy online.

Sadly, we aren’t just following the poor examples of some bullies. We are one of the bad kids.

These revelation­s shouldn’t be surprising. As the references to “NZL” at the bottom of so many Snowden documents indicate, New Zealand is fully integrated into Five Eyes systems.

In light of the Snowden revelation­s, there are crucial questions the public deserves answers to: what is New Zealand’s role in the Five Eyes? What are the benefits and disadvanta­ges? These are not questions the Prime Minister seems prepared to answer.

What emerges from the Snowden revelation­s and earlier documentat­ion is a picture of an alliance that has operated outside political control and often against the interests of the communitie­s it purports to serve.

The Five Eyes constitute­s an integrated network of operations: the whole purpose of the alliance, embodied in its founding documents, is to share informatio­n.

Apart from informatio­n, the alliance also shares staff: GCSB staff work overseas in partner organisati­ons; NSA staff work in New Zealand at the GCSB.

As the least powerful member of the Five Eyes club, New Zealand is in the weakest position to negotiate the terms of its membership: it is possible the GCSB does not know exactly what informatio­n its data collection systems send overseas.

New Zealanders are entitled to know the degree to which the GCSB — a department of the government that operates under New Zealand law — is beholden to a foreign government.

The Five Eyes alliance also creates a system of plausible deniabilit­y for politician­s faced with awkward questions.

When John Key denies the GCSB conducts mass surveillan­ce of New Zealanders’ communicat­ions he is following a tactic used by officials in Britain when they discuss the mass surveillan­ce programmes of GCHQ, GCSB’s sister agency. They characteri­se the wholesale intercepti­on, collection and storage of personal emails and phone calls as “bulk access” or “bulk collection”.

The GCSB appears to have “bulk access” to New Zealanders’ communicat­ions at the click of a button. This is how the XKeyscore system, which Snowden documents confirmed GCSB staff received training in, operates.

None of New Zealand’s laws have any impact on the fact that hundreds of thousands of NSA and GCHQ analysts can almost certainly read New Zealanders’ communicat­ions without restrictio­n, along with the communicat­ions of millions of people living in other countries — a situation GCSB facilitate­s. This is just one price we pay for membership.

And our reputation as a country that fearlessly pursues an independen­t foreign policy and promotes respect for human rights is tarnished, perhaps irrevocabl­y.

While New Zealand’s participat­ion previously escaped much internatio­nal notice, moves by the European Union to reconsider whether our laws are adequate to protect European citizens’ personal data, because of our involvemen­t in the Five Eyes, indicate this is changing.

Our reputation is further damaged when we support controvers­ial US foreign policy through the GCSB. The Prime Minister confirmed last month New Zealand is “totally comfortabl­e” with passing on intelligen­ce it collects for US drone strike missions, even when it could have been used in the killing of a New Zealand citizen.

The Prime Minister asserted last October he hasn’t “bothered to ask” the GCSB whether New Zealand is part of mass surveillan­ce overseas. This blase attitude illustrate­s the lack of oversight that allows the GCSB to continue to be involved in programmes fundamenta­lly at odds with values New Zealanders hold dear.

It’s time to demand answers about GCSB’s actions in New Zealand and also abroad. We need to ask ourselves: is the Five Eyes really a club New Zealand should be part of?

 ?? Picture / Getty Images ?? New Zealand is one of the baddies when it comes to spying.
Picture / Getty Images New Zealand is one of the baddies when it comes to spying.

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