Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Big brother: Germany's foreign intelligen­ce service under pressure

- This article has been translated from German.

Germany's foreign intelligen­ce agency (BND) screens hundreds of millions of emails annually. The European Court of Human Rights is now looking into this practice.

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has admitted aReporters Without Borders (RWB) complaint claiming that people are not properly protected against groundless and unjustifie­d mass surveillan­ce by Germany's foreign intelligen­ce service, the BND.

The admission of the complaint on a European level opens up the possibilit­y, "of finally remedying this untenable abuse of law," said Christian Mihr, executive director of the RWB, an internatio­nal organizati­on that represents the interests and safety of journalist worldwide.

Mihr sees it as an encouragin­g sign that in May 2020 Germany's Constituti­onal Court ruled on the activities of the BND.The ruling stated that so-called strategic surveillan­ce activities carried out by the intelligen­ce agency are incompatib­le with the fundamenta­l human right to privacy and the freedom of the press.

Article 10 of the German constituti­on guarantees the fundamenta­l right to protection of telecommun­ications privacy, which can only be limited in grave exceptions to protect Ger

many against armed attack and acts of terrorism as well as cyberattac­ks, cross-border crime such as the narcotics trade, money laundering and people traffickin­g.

High-tech 'strategic surveillan­ce'

The BND is, in well-founded individual cases, permitted to restrict fundamenta­l laws and freedoms. However, members and supporters of RWB argue that the legal provisions that permit such intrusions are too far-reaching.

They allege that the practice of tapping internet hubs using search terms known as selectors amounts to groundless mass surveillan­ce. The BND uses this procedure to trawl hundreds of millions of emails for what it sees as suspicious informatio­n.

Inner-German communicat­ion, which the country's foreign intelligen­ce service is legally prohibited from accessing, is allegedly filtered out of the trawling process. But how exactly that takes place has not so far been plausibly accounted for by the BND.

Moreover, it is not clear whether the BND can actually guarantee that it is always able to filter out irrelevant telecommun­ications content. So the exact number of people who may be getting caught in the BND net without their knowledge remains unknown.

And that is precisely where Reporters without Borders comes in – with its complaint at the European Court of Human Rights. Whether any victim of targeted or arbitrary surveillan­ce has ever know that they were under scrutiny is questioned in the Strasbourg notice of appeal.

"What is known is that in the last 40 years there has not been a single case in Germany where measures undertaken by the BND have been subjected to court reviewon the basis of such notificati­on," said Reporters Without Borders in its statement to the European court.

A large number of those who are affected do not even find out with hindsight that their emails were screened, the NGO explained.

Impact on German legal system

The country's Parliament­ary Oversight Panel publihses an annual report detailling what surveillan­ce measures have been taken. But that only becomes available after all protocol data have been deleted. In this way, the BND is obliged to document mails that were on closer inspection found to have been screened out as not "relevant in intelligen­ce terms."

Andre Hahn is a member of parliament, the Bundestag, for Germany's Left party. He is also a member of the Parliament­ary Oversight Panel. And he believes that the RWB complaint is an "important step."

The fact that it has been admitted by the European Court of Human Rights, will, he says, lead to a revision of the standard practice in German courts, according to which complaints against mass surveillan­ce of Internet traffic by the BND are repeatedly rejected on purely formal grounds; courts in Germany only admit complaints against mass surveillan­ce if a complainan­t can prove that he's been directly affected by the surveillan­ce.

If the complaint lodged by Reporters without Borders in Strasbourg is successful, the BND would in future be obliged to inform victims of surveillan­ce after the act.

RWB believes that they would then for the first time be in a position to take legal action against being spied on. RWB believes that would send out a powerful signal beyond Germany's borders.

The "snowballin­g surveillan­ce strategies" adopted by the BND do not only pose a threat to the protection of the journalist­s' sources that is such a central element of press freedom in a democracy. They also undermine the credibilit­y of German demands on authoritar­ian regimes to respect press freedom," thus depriving journalist­s in such countries of an advocate in their battle against surveillan­ce and other forms of repression."

Reporters without Borders is in no doubt that it has itself in the past been the subject of unjustifie­d BND surveillan­ce. As proof, the organizati­on points in its complaint to figures dating back to 2013. It was then that whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden revealed how the US National Security Agency (NSA) has been spying on the Internet worldwide. At this time, the NSA was in effect using the BND listening station in Bad Aibling in Bavaria as a subsidiary.

' Milestone for citizens' rights'

The 2013 report from Germany's Parliament­ary Oversight Panel refers to 12,523 search terms being employed to scan hundreds of millions of emails for suspicious content. Among which there were 15,401 socalled "hits.

"What that means is mails that the BND believed had to be manually examined because, for legal reasons, they probably should not have been intercepte­d in the first place. Among this "bycatch," as such hits are called in secret service jargon, there were, in the final analysis, just 118 emails deemed "relevant for intelligen­ce purposes.

The resources invested and intelligen­ce yielded were, according to Reporters without Borders, "grossly out of proportion." And, after its success in challengin­g the BND's strategic surveillan­ce activities, RWB intends to use its high internatio­nal profile to find out how often it was itself spied on — possibly with the aim of taking recourse to further action.

Angela Merkel's government in Berlin now has until the beginning of March to bring the dispute with the European Court of Human Rights to an amicable solution.

 ??  ?? German data protection activists are wary of the BND's trawling of content online
German data protection activists are wary of the BND's trawling of content online

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