NZ
journalist spied on after ‘inconvenient, embarrassing’
Afghanistan report
New
Zealand faces allegations of spying on a journalist in Afghanistan
with the help of US agencies over his coverage of NZ’s treatment of
prisoners. Defense denies the allegations, while the PM says
reporters can get caught in surveillance nets.
29
July, 2013
The
New Zealand Defense Force (NZDF) has reportedly put freelance
journalist Jon Stephenson under surveillance and collected phone
metadata while he was working for US news organization McClatchy in
Afghanistan last year, Nicky Hager with the Sunday Star-Times
newspaper revealed.
A
screenshoot from stuff.co.nz
Metadata
can reveal information such as the location of the caller and the
length of the call.
New
Zealand opened a probe into the allegations.
Allegedly
NZDF was able to track who Stephenson had called and who the people
he talked to subsequently called, which created what is known as a
‘tree’ of the journalist's associates. The goal was to identify
Stephenson's contacts and sources within the Afghan government and
military.
The
surveillance was reportedly put in place after the government became
unhappy with his reporting about New Zealand’s treatment of Afghan
prisoners.
Hager
revealed that it was most likely the NZ’s Government Communications
Security Bureau (GCSB) that monitored Stephenson, as it had posted
staff to the US’ main intelligence center north of Kabul at Bagram
and was capable of such monitoring.
US
soldiers belonging to the NATO-led International Security Assistance
Force (ISAF) as they keep watch during a patrol in a village outside
Bagram Air base, some 50 kms north of Kabul (AFP Photo / Shan Marai)
Stephenson
told Sunday Star-Times that there is "a
world of difference between investigating a genuine security threat
and monitoring a journalist because his reporting is inconvenient or
embarrassing to politicians and defense officials."
NZ
Prime Minister John Key denied allegations on Monday stating that his
country does not spy on journalists, but said there is a chance
reporters could get caught in surveillance nets when the US spies on
enemy combatants.
Key
said that it is theoretically possible that if a journalist called a
member of the Taliban who was being watched by the US, he or she
could end up in surveillance records.
NZDF
added that there is no evidence that its military or the US had spied
on Stephenson.
"We
have identified no information at this time that supports [these]
claims,"
acting Defense Force Chief Maj. Gen. Tim Keating said in a statement.
This
is not the first run-in the journalist has had with the NZ’s
government. NZDF earlier implied that one of the interviews
Stephenson published with Afghanistan’s unit commander about
mishandling of prisoners was fabricated.
Stephenson
sued for defamation. During this month’s trial, the NZDF confirmed
that the interview may have taken place. The trial ended with the
hung jury.
Advocate
groups were outraged by what has unfolded. The Human Rights
Foundation told Sunday Star-Times it was an abuse of fundamental
human rights.
"Don't
they understand the vital importance of freedom of the press?"
spokesman Tim McBride stated. "Independent
journalism is especially important in a controversial war zone where
the public has a right to know what really happens and not just get
military public relations."
Journalists
run at the site of a gunfight between gunmen and Afghan police in
Kabul (AFP Photo / Massoud Hossaini)
In
the meantime, the NZ government admitted to the existence of a secret
order that lists investigative journalists as potential threats to
security and puts them alongside other spies and terrorists.
The
confidential order, which was leaked to Hager, stated that
investigative journalists “may
try to acquire classified information, not necessarily to give to a
potential enemy, but because its use may bring the government into
disrepute.”
The
order was first issued a decade ago and reissued in 2005.
The
US National Security Agency (NSA) sometime shares information with
NZ, as part of the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance, which
also includes the UK, Australia and Canada.
The
news comes as thousands of people marched to protest
a new bill on Sunday that would grant the New Zealand government
sweeping spy powers, giving the GCSB free rein to listen in on
citizens’ phone conversations.
John
Key has been playing
down
the nationwide protests, arguing that those involved in the mass
demonstrations are ill-informed or have a political agenda.
The
US involvement with global spying has grabbed the world’s attention
after the whistleblower Edward Snowden leaked information the extent
of US spy programs.
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