Khaleej Times

‘UK security in cat and mouse game with criminals’

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london — The man responsibl­e for reviewing Britain’s anti-terrorism laws called on Thursday for greater judicial oversight over data intercepti­on as ministers prepare legislatio­n firming up the powers of security services following leaks by Edward Snowden.

The move would be a way of “helping build the relationsh­ip” with US technology giants and could make it more likely they would comply with requests from British law enforcemen­t agencies, senior lawyer David Anderson said.

After winning last month’s general election outright, Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservati­ve government wants to pass new legislatio­n giving intelligen­ce services and the police increased powers to monitor Internet and phone use.

It is thought the law will aim to make it easier for British authoritie­s to access details of terrorism suspects’ conversati­ons from Internet giants like Google and Facebook.

Ministers and top spies say new measures are needed to keep Britain safe from groups such as the Islamic State jihadists in Iraq and Syria.

But the issue of how far new laws should go is sensitive due to privacy concerns highlighte­d by leaks from Snowden, an ex-US National Security Agency worker who claimed Britain’s communicat­ions nerve centre GCHQ was carrying out bulk data collection.

Launching a government-commission­ed report into the issue, Anderson, the independen­t reviewer of terrorism legislatio­n, said security services were in a “cat and mouse game” with criminals.

He added that changes to the current “fragmented” laws were needed to build public trust in the wake of the Snowden affair. “If this sense of disillusio­nment and disenchant­ment is perpetuate­d and spreads further, then I think that both law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce lose the public confidence that they actually need,” he told reporters.

Anderson’s recommenda­tions include that warrants authorisin­g data intercepti­on should be authorised by a judicial commission instead of the interior minister.

He also backed the right of agencies to carry out bulk collection of data, subject to extra safeguards.

But he urged a “law-based system in which encryption keys are handed over by service providers or by the users themselves only after properly authorised requests”.

Cameron welcomed the report, saying it would provide a “firm basis” for consultati­ons on the new legislatio­n. “It is particular­ly important to engage communicat­ions service providers in developing solutions, given the technology supporting modern communicat­ions,” he said in a written statement to parliament. Senior figures in Britain’s intelligen­ce community have broken ranks recently to make rare public comments highlighti­ng the challenges they face tracking terrorism suspects online.

GCHQ’s director Robert Hannigan called the Internet the “terrorist’s command and control network of choice” in November, urging more cooperatio­n from technology companies.

Andrew Parker, director-general of MI5, Britain’s domestic intelligen­ce agency, said in January that changes in technology were making it ever harder for agencies to intercept communicat­ions of suspected terrorists. —

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