Daily Tribune (Philippines)

UN probes COP27 ‘surveillan­ce’

Delegates say cameras directed at the face of speakers were unnecessar­y

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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.”

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