The Citizen (Gauteng)

Rica an invasion of citizens’ rights

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This week’s startling revelation­s from human rights group Right2Know’s latest report on surveillan­ce that you are being spied upon, should be taken extremely seriously. At the centre of surveillan­ce, according to the report titled Spooked, was Regulation of Intercepti­on of Communicat­ion Act (Rica) legislatio­n that compelled every citizen to register personal details before purchasing a mobile phone.

Murray Hunter of Right2Know said: “Members of the public should know that when they registered under Rica, they have been robbed of being anonymous, and mobile network service providers store their informatio­n for quite some time.

“When they want to put you under surveillan­ce, they lie to the Rica judge that you are a criminal, then the judge easily signs the warrant, unwittingl­y authorisin­g intelligen­ce operatives to put you under surveillan­ce. It is against this background that amaBhungan­e [an investigat­ive journalism unit] has launched a Constituti­onal Court challenge on Rica, and Right2Know will be a friend of the court. This law is unconstitu­tional.”

The report focused on spying carried out on political activists, journalist­s and whistleblo­wers. Many journalist­s will tell you this is not new, and they knew their phones were tapped in the apartheid era.

Fast-forward to the present and journalist­s are fearful that someone is listening in on their sensitive conversati­ons, according to the report.

In a day and age where corruption is rife, a strong media is needed. Whistleblo­wers are also essential to exposing this cancer called corruption.

President Cyril Ramaphosa needs to move fast to curb abuse of surveillan­ce by spooks.

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