Thousands
protest NSA spying in Berlin
Thousands
of people took to the streets of Berlin, Germany on Saturday to
protest against NSA surveillance activities and fight for their right
to privacy.
RT,
7
September, 2013
Demonstrators
carried banners which read, “Stop spying on us,” along with the
phrases “NSA killed by internet” and “Thanks to PRISM the
government finally knows what the people want.” The event was
organized under the slogan “Freedom Rather Than Fear.”
"Intelligence
agencies like the NSA shamelessly spy on telephone conversations and
Internet connections worldwide [and] our government, one of whose key
roles is the protection from harm, sends off soothing explanations,"
Kai-Uwe Steffens from the German Working Group on Data Retention
said, as quoted by AFP. Steffens was one of the speakers on stage at
the rally.
The
protest was put on by Germany’s Green party, along with the Left
and Pirate parties. The event hosts claimed that the rally was
attended by around 20,000 people. Police declined to confirm the
numbers, only stating that their “tally differs from that of the
organizers.”
“The
Europeans have been outraged by the amount of their personal details
that have not only being obtained through spying scandal, but also
just handed over [to the US intelligence] by certain companies,”
RT’s Peter Oliver reported from Berlin.
Documents
leaked by whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed close cooperation
between the NSA and internet giants such as Facebook and Google.
“Our
data should be protected and we should have access to information, so
we know what’s going on,” one of the protesters told RT. “At
this moment, everything is strictly confidential and we have no way
to defend ourselves from surveillance and today we’d like to show
that we will not accept this.”
On
Thursday, German Justice Minister Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger
raised the possibility of new, tangible measures to punish
corporations that participate in American spying activities.
She
called for the creation of EU-wide rules to regulate the protection
of information, adding that "United States companies that don't
abide by these standards should be denied doing business in the
European market."
When
Snowden’s leaks were first revealed, German Chancellor Angela
Merkel claimed that she learned of the US surveillance programs
through press reports.
However,
it later came to light that Germany’s BND intelligence service
sends “massive amounts” of intercepts to the US and UK daily.
Although
government spying is anything but new, Snowden’s revelations
showcase the large scope of modern day surveillance programs, said
Gavin MacFadyen, director of the Center for Investigative Journalism
at London’s City University.
“It’s
been going on for a long time. People forget that in the 70s, a spy
system called Echelon was uncovered...what was different about that
spying system and the present one is the sheer extent of it,”
MacFadyen told RT.
“The
major security companies and social networking companies have opened
their effective backdoors to the NSA. Even commercial confidentiality
as an area of secrecy has been violated completely by this hovering
up of everything. So I think people are alarmed as they realize it
will affect them personally – it’s not just political opponent.
But a possibility of blackmail is enormous, some indecent federal
employee can easily sift this material, find something terribly
damaging, and then use it for personal gain or political gain,” he
continued.
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