Wednesday June 4, 7:54 PM
German anti-crime bill fuels snooping debate
BERLIN (Reuters) - The German government decided on
Wednesday to give police more rights to monitor homes and
phones, fuelling a heated debate about privacy laws in a
country shocked by a snooping scandal at Deutsche Telekom.
Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said the new draft
law, still to be approved by parliament, would strengthen the
means available to Germany's Federal Crime Office (BKA) to
investigate terrorist suspects and fight international crime.
"The threat to our country has made it necessary to give
the BKA such rights to counter threats," Schaeuble told a news
conference presenting the so-called BKA law.
The draft law extends police rights to conduct online
searches, video surveillance of homes and phone monitoring.
Opposition politicians and rights groups said the new law
would further curb privacy rights at a time when many Germans
were highly sensitive to data protection questions due to the
snooping revelations at Deutsche Telekom.
"This is the 'best of' the surveillance state's catalogue,"
Claudia Roth, head of the opposition Greens, said.
"All of Mr Schaeuble's security fantasies have been pushed
through. We need resistance to that. I don't want us to be a
state in which everyone is suspicious," she told TV station
N24.
Data protection and privacy are sensitive issues in a
country haunted by memories of domestic spying by the Nazi
Gestapo and communist East Germany's Stasi secret police.
Deutsche Telekom has acknowledged it illegally monitored
phone call records in 2005, after a magazine said management
spied on directors and journalists to find out who was leaking
information to the press.
German prosecutors are investigating Telekom and the
government has called the spying "unacceptable".
Lawmakers at Germany's Bundestag lower house of parliament
are to debate the Telekom case later on Wednesday.
Opposition politicians say the Telekom case highlights
wider concerns over new anti-crime rules, which since the
beginning of the year require telecom firms to store phone data
for 6 months.
A recent forsa poll showed 48 percent of Germans considered
the data storage a necessary means to fight crime, while 46
percent said it was disproportionate and unnecessary hindrance
to rights of freedom.
Schaeuble rejected criticism of excessive state
interference. "The constitutional state works," he said.
"The protection of the personal private sphere in our
system ... is no lower than in any other part of the world and
it's higher than it's ever been at any other time in our
history. I'm proud of that and working for it with great
determination."
(Reporting by Kerstin Gehmlich)
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