While
this has been headlines on RT it is missing from today's New Zealand
headlines.
Radio
NZ, however, has covered the issue with some interesting interviews
with investigative journalist Nicky Hager and former McClatchy
journalist, Jon Stephenson.
Journalist
adamant that military spied on him
Journalist
Jon Stephenson is adamant the military spied on him, despite the
Defence Force insisting it did not.
30
July, 2013
Another
journalist Nicky Hager says the Defence Force monitored Mr
Stephenson's phone calls while he was reporting in Afghanistan.
Mr
Stephenson was reporting on Afghanistan last year for McClatchy
newspapers in the United States.
McClatchy
vice president Anders Gyllenhaal told Morning Report it is hard to
determine at the moment whether the accusations are true. But, he
said, the situation raised serious questions.
Mr
Gyllenhall said he will wait for a full review of the accusations
before making a judgement.
Defence
Minister Jonathan Coleman on Monday rejected Mr Hager's claim,
because the Defence Force told him it had no evidence it happened.
But
Jon Stephenson told Morning Report that Defence has been trying to
discredit him and has threatened his sources and spread rumours that
he is anti-military.
He
also said senior officials in Defence believe the Force should
withold important information about the War on Terror from the
public.
Dr
Coleman says he would be happy for Mr Hager or Mr Stephenson to put
forward their evidence of spying.
The
investigative journalist, Nicky Hager, is standing by his story that
the Defence Force monitored freelance journalist Jon Stephenson's
phone calls when he was in Afghanistan.
Jon
Stephenson says NZDF asked for help to obtain metadata
This
is how McClatchy reports this =
Report:
New Zealand military collected data on phone calls of McClatchy
contributor
New Zealand’s defense minister said Monday that an investigation is underway into a report that U.S. intelligence agencies helped his nation’s military track the mobile telephone calls of a freelance journalist while he worked for McClatchy Newspapers in Afghanistan. |
28
July, 2013
New
Zealand Defense Minister Jonathan Coleman said he’d seen “no
evidence to support these claims at this point. However, the Defense
Force is carrying out extensive record checks to see if there is any
evidence that this occurred.”
Coleman
issued the statement in response to a report published in the Sunday
Star Times of Auckland that said that the New Zealand military asked
“U.S. spy agencies” to help them collect the “metadata” of
cellular calls made by Jon Stephenson, a New Zealand freelance
journalist who was based in Afghanistan.
The
data collection occurred in the latter half of last year while
Stephenson was under contract in Kabul for McClatchy and was aimed at
identifying Stephenson’s contacts, the report said, citing
unidentified sources.
The
report said the New Zealand military also obtained the metadata of
cellular phones used by Stephenson’s “associates,” but did not
identify those individuals. The data were used to build a “tree”
of Stephenson’s contacts.
“The
Defense Forces assured me that this is not something that they would
regard as a legitimate practice,” Coleman said in his statement. “I
would be most concerned if this had occurred.”
Maj.
Gen. Tim Keating, the acting chief of New Zealand’s military, said
in a statement that no military personnel had undertaken “unlawful
interception of private communications.”
“I
have asked the officers responsible for our operations in Afghanistan
whether they have conducted monitoring of Mr Stephenson . . . and
they have assured me that they have not.”
The
statement, however, did not address whether metadata, which includes
the location from where a call is made, the number and location of
the person who is being called and the duration of the call, was
collected for Stephenson’s phones. Such data are generally
considered business records of a cell phone provider and are obtained
without intercepting or real-time monitoring of calls. In the United
States, for example, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has
ordered Verizon to deliver such records of all its customers to the
National Security Agency on a daily basis.
While
under contract to McClatchy, Stephenson used McClatchy cell phones
and was in frequent contact with McClatchy editors and other
reporters and correspondents.
McClatchy’s
vice president for news, Anders Gyllenhaal, called the report
“worrisome” but said the company, the third largest newspaper
publisher in the United States, had little information beyond the
Sunday Star-Times report. “Allegations that any government may have
been spying on journalists are very serious and worrisome, but we
need to know more about what happened before drawing any
conclusions,’’ he said.
The
Sunday Star Times report did not identify the U.S. intelligence
agencies that allegedly helped New Zealand military officers serving
with the U.S.-led International Security Assistance Force to collect
Stephenson’s cellular metadata.
The
report comes amid an uproar in the United States over revelations by
a former NSA contractor that the agency has been collecting the
metadata of tens of millions of Americans under the court order.
The
Obama administration says the collection is legal under the Patriot
Act, and that it is needed to identify suspected terrorists.
While
the administration insists that it doesn’t monitor the content of
the calls, critics say that metadata can be more valuable because it
can be used to build a profile of a person, their habits and their
contacts.
The
Sunday Star Times report said that the New Zealand military wanted to
trace Stephenson’s contacts because it was unhappy with his
reporting on the handling of Afghan prisoners by New Zealand special
forces in 2002.
A
story Stephenson wrote in August 2009 for a New Zealand newspaper
quoted legal experts as saying that New Zealand special forces had
committed war crimes by failing to record the identifies of Afghan
“ghost” prisoners who were tortured after they were turned over
to U.S. troops.
The
Sunday Star Times said that an officer of the New Zealand Security
Intelligence Service, a civilian intelligence agency, was based in
Kabul and “was known to be involved in the Stephenson
investigations.”
New
Zealand’s equivalent of the NSA, the Government Security
Communications Bureau, also had staff at a U.S. intelligence center
at Bagram, the main U.S. military base in Afghanistan, that “likely”
collected Stephenson’s cellular metadata, it said.
“There
were New Zealand military people who were carrying around copies of
Jon’s metadata,” the report’s author, Nicky Hager, said in a
telephone interview with McClatchy. “There was no doubt about it
existing.”
In
his report, Hager quoted Stephenson as saying 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.”
These
are comments from Jon Stephenson's former employer, McClatch
newspapers -
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