Privacy and civil liberties advocates are slamming the findings of a U.K. commission’s 18-month investigation into the government’s mass surveillance programs, released Thursday.
The report by the U.K. Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Commission (ISC), launched as a response to NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden’s revelations in 2013, found that the government’s spying operations need a complete overhaul, but also determined that the Government Communications Headquarters’s (GCHQ) existing programs do not break any laws and that bulk data collection does not impinge on the right to privacy.”We have serious concerns about the resulting lack of transparency, which is not in the public interest.”
—Intelligence and Surveillance Committee
“[T]he U.K.’s intelligence and security Agencies do not seek to circumvent the law—including the requirements of the Human Rights Act 1998, which governs everything that the Agencies do,” the report (pdf) stated. “However, that legal framework has developed piecemeal, and is unnecessarily complicated. We have serious concerns about the resulting lack of transparency, which is not in the public interest.”
According to U.K.-based digital rights nonprofit Privacy International, the long-awaited report “should trouble every single person who uses a computer or mobile phone.”
“Far from allaying the public’s concerns… [the] ISC has attempted to mask the reality of its admissions by describing GCHQ’s actions as ‘bulk interception’. However, no amount of technical and legal jargon can the fact that this is a parliamentary committee, in a democratic country, telling its citizens that they are living in a surveillance state and that all is well,” the group stated.
Jim Killock, who heads the civil liberties organization Open Rights Group, stated, “The ISC’s report should have apologised to the nation for their failure to inform Parliament about how far GCHQ’s powers have grown. This report fails to address any of the key questions apart from the need to reform our out-of-date surveillance laws.”
In a blog post, ORG campaigner Ed Paton-Williams also posits that the GCHQ did not have to circumvent any laws to conduct its surveillance sweeps because the laws themselves are weak, as revealed by the Snowden documents.
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“This just confirms that the ISC lacks the sufficient independence and expertise to hold the agencies to account,” Killock added.
The ISC report contradicts other recent developments on this issue. In February, the U.K.’s most secretive court, the Investigatory Powers Tribunal, found the GCHQ violated Articles 8 and 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights by accessing NSA information without sufficient oversight.