UN probes COP27 ‘surveillance’
Delegates say cameras directed at the face of speakers were unnecessary
SHARM EL SHEIKH, Egypt (AFP) — United Nations officers running security at the COP27 climate summit in Egypt said Monday they are probing allegations of surveillance and misconduct by Egyptian police towards delegates.
Participants at COP27 — including activists, rights defenders, and civil society groups — have raised cases of “surveillance” during the summit, which opened on 6 November at Egypt’s Red Sea resort city of Sharm al-Sheikh.
The UN Department for Safety and Security, which works with Egyptian police to secure the summit, said Monday it had “been made aware of allegations” of violations of the code of conduct and was “investigating these reports.”
But Wael Aboulmagd, representative of Egypt’s presidency of the COP27 said the allegations were “ludicrous,” he told reporters.
“Some people we’ve been talking to, from the developing world in particular, are tired of these apparently intentional distractions from climate issues,” Aboulmagd said.
Claims surfaced after the German delegation hosted an event featuring Sanaa Seif, sister of jailed hunger-striker and pro-democracy activist Alaa Abdel Fattah.
A German diplomatic source said a complaint was lodged with Egypt as the delegation “felt we were being watched.”
Liane Schalatek, associate director of the Heinrich Boll Stiftung foundation in Washington, told Germany’s ZDF broadcaster that said she felt “watched” and was “clearly more uncomfortable than at any other COP before.”
A complaint was lodged with Egypt as the delegation ‘felt we were being watched.’
Schalatek, a climate finance expert who has attended COP conferences since 2008, says this time cameras in meeting rooms were directed at the faces of speakers.
“This is both unnecessary and unusual for such internal coordination meetings,” she said. “The possibility that everything is being recorded cannot be ruled out.”
Human Rights Watch had previously condemned Egypt’s “sweeping surveillance” plans, which included the installation of cameras in hundreds of taxis in Sharm al-Sheikh.
The New York-based rights group also warned that Egypt’s smartphone application for COP27 attendees, which it said requires “access to the phone’s camera, microphone (and) location,” raises “surveillance and privacy concerns.”