GCSB
hearing: Dotcom faces off against PM
German
internet tycoon Kim Dotcom says Prime Minister John Key is lying
about what he knew about him before police raided his Coatesville
home in January 2012
3
July, 2013
Mr
Dotcom made the claim to reporters after appearing before a
Parliamentary hearing into controversial new GCSB legislation where
he outlined his concerns the new law would undermine New Zealanders'
privacy.
In
his submission he told the committee chaired by Mr Key that he had
"the misfortune of experiencing what happens when surveillance
powers are abused".
"These
abuses should never happen again that's why I'm here to speak out
against the proposed spy law."
Mr
Dotcom also told the committee he knew that Mr Key knew about him and
his activities before a January 19, 2012 briefing which Mr Key says
was the first he knew of the MegaUpload founder and alleged internet
pirate.
That
briefing took place the day before Police raided Mr Dotcom's
Coatesville home.
Facing
reporters outside the committee room, Mr Dotcom said he had proof Mr
Key had earlier knowledge of him.
However
he could not provide the proof until he and his business associate
Bram van der Kolk and two other colleagues appeared in court over a
US bid to extradite them on internet piracy charges.
"That
has to come out in court and not here today."
"He
lied to all New Zealanders when he said he didn't know about me."
Accompanied
by Mr van der Kolk, Mr Dotcom's face off with Mr Key in the committee
room was at times testy, with the German businessman taking issue
with the 15 minutes allocated for his presentation rather than the 25
minutes he thought he had.
The
verbal jousting between the two escalated when Mr Dotcom made his
claim about Mr Key's prior knowledge of him.
"He
knew about me before the raid", Mr Dotcom said in response to a
question from Labour Leader and committee member David Shearer.
"I
didn't," Mr Key replied.
"You
know I know," Mr Dotcom said.
"I
know you don't know actually, but that's fine", Mr Key said,
drawing laughter from those gathered in the packed out committee
room.
"Why
are you turning red, Prime Minister?" Mr Dotcom asked.
"I'm
not. Why are you sweating?" was Mr Key's response.
"I'm
hot", Mr Dotcom said.
Earlier,
Mr Dotcom pointed to the recent reports of widespread monitoring of
internet communications and spying on EU allies by US intelligence
agencies.
That
was not a model that New Zealand should be trying to emulate he told
the committee.
Mr
Key had failed to explain why greater powers for the GCSB were
needed.
"We
should avoid blindly following the US into the dark ages of spying
abuse."
He
said that in 1980s New Zealand had "stood up to the United
States" by banning nuclear ships.
Former
Prime Minister David Lange's "great stand" had given New
Zealand "true independence and the moral high ground"
albeit at the cost of billions of dollars in trade with the US.
He
questioned whether that "heroic stand" should be repeated
over with regard to surveillance issues.
Mr
Key is the chairman of Parliament's Intelligence and Security
Committee which is having rare open sessions this week to hear
submissions on the Government Communications Security and Related
Legislation Amendment Bill.
Arriving
at Parliament for the hearing this afternoon after travelling to
Wellington by helicopter, Mr Dotcom was asked whether New Zealanders
could trust this country's spy agencies. His reply was "no".
Earlier
this afternoon Mr Key said he didn't believe Mr Dotcom was
responsible for the legislation being overhauled.
"The
truth is the GCSB legislation actually was not the issue when it came
to Kim Dotcom, actually the people in GCSB simply got it wrong and no
changes we're making to the law would actually have made any
difference to that."
However,
Mr Key conceded issues around GCSB's role in monitoring Mr Dotcom and
his associates before his home was raided, "certainly sparked
off the inquiry that led to a strengthening of the whole
organisation".
Asked
whether he was concerned about facing Mr Dotcom, Mr Key said he was
"not bothered in the slightest".
"He's
another submitter isn't he? He's here to talk about the bill, I'm
sure he'll try and do his own set of grandstanding... if he wants to
talk about anything else he's free to do that but it's not going to
make any difference."
Asked
whether he was prepared to compromise over the bill, Mr Key
downplayed the prospect of material alterations but "there will
definitely be changes" as he sought to build a parliamentary
majority to pass the legislation.
Earlier
today, the Intelligence and Security Committee was told the new GCSB
bill should specifically address the issue of metadata.
At
present the bill makes no mention of it.
Mr
Key has refused to answer questions, not only about the collection of
metadata (information about communication) by the GCSB, but Herald
questions about whether he sees some part of the bill as authorising
its collection.
Thomas
Beagle of Tech Liberty, an affiliate of the Council for Civil
Liberties, said "metadata" should be subject to the same
controls and limitations as "communications" in the bill.
That
would mean that the GCSB would not be able to collect metadata on New
Zealanders or permanent residents without a warrant or an access
authorisation.
Section
14 of the bill says that nothing can be done by the GCSB for the
purpose of collecting private communications of New Zealanders or
permanent residents.
Mr
Beagle wants that protection to be extended to metadata.
He
referred to the fact that the collection of metadata at Parliament
had played a role in the resignation of an MP - Peter Dunne as a
minister as the chief suspect in the leak of the Rebecca Kitteridge
report into the GCSB.
Mr
Beagle also said the bill should ban the GCSB from creating databases
of information about New Zealanders who are not actively under
investigation.
The
GCSB is New Zealand's foreign intelligence agency but it has been
spying on New Zealanders for over a decade when helping other
domestic agencies such as the police, the SIS domestic spying agency,
and the defence force.
The
bill will explicitly authorise that sort of spying and also allow the
GCSB to spy on New Zealanders in carrying out its function of
protecting Government and private cyber systems from threat.
Mr
Beagle said the GCSB was not the right agency to be responsible for
cyber security.
"It
will be difficult to trust an agency that has the dual role of both
spying on systems while ensuring that they are protected from
others."
Former
Green MP Keith Locke was the first submitter today.
He
said the bill should not proceed while "we are a long way from
finding out how much intrusion there is on our privacy by the manner
in which the GCSB and its Five Eyes partners [Australia, USA, UK and
Canada] collect information on people's communications.
The
disclosure about the systems of mass collection and processing of
millions of email and internet communications by the US National
Security Agency raised questions about whether New Zealanders were
being caught up in the "dragnet."
Mr
Locke also said any help New Zealand was giving to the NSA to help
spy on China was not in New Zealand national interests.
Mr
Key asked Mr Locke if he believed that China might be collecting
information on New Zealand. Mr Locke thought that New Zealand was an
open society and there wouldn't be much information it would be
interested in.
Mr
Key also asked whether he believed that the Chinese telecoms
equipment company Huawei was spying on communications - as Labour and
the Greens have claimed - and he didn't believe so.
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