Key
invokes the al-Qaeda bogeyman
Prime
Minister John Key has used al-Qaeda training camps as a further
justification to introduce the GCSB bill. He told reporters before
the vote on Thursday that people who have been in New Zealand have
then gone to the camps in Yemen.
1 August, 2013
"That's
just the way things are. We live in a global environment where there
are real threats and that's the point we make with the GCSB
legislation.
"That's
why (Labour Prime Minister) Helen Clark passed the legislation in
2003 that while it's very narrow and very small in number, the facts
of life are that New Zealand is not immune from those potential
risks."
Mr
Key said some of the people involved could have been New Zealanders,
but he was unable to give specific numbers. He said he has signed
warrants, as the Minister Responsible for the GCSB and the Security
Intelligence Service for people training in Yemen.
Sir
Bruce Ferguson headed the GCSB from 2006 to 2011 and said on Thursday
he was not aware of people going from New Zealand to the camps, but
that didn't mean it did not happen.
Sir
Bruce said normally, this would have been handled primarily by the
SIS, not the GCSB. He said it is possible the GCSB could have been
asked to help under warrant, but he has no memory of that.
Spy
bill passes second reading
Legislation
that would allow the Government's electronic spy agency to legally
gather information on New Zealanders passed its second reading in
Parliament.
The
Government had support for the Government Communications Security
Bureau and Related Legislation Amendment Bill, including votes from
independent MP Peter Dunne and ACT Party leader John Banks.
The
bill passed by 61 votes to 59 on Thursday afternoon. It will be back
before Parliament next Tuesday for committee stages.
Its
passage through the House has prompted nationwide protests by people
concerned about the power it will allow the Government Communications
Security Bureau to wield.
One
objection is that the GCSB is part of an international spy agency
network, through which New Zealanders' private information will be
shared. Another point of contention is that the bill will only just
scrape through with a one-vote majority.
Attorney-General
Chris Finlayson told Parliament that the public was being misled by
ill-minded fear-mongering.
"This
legislation is not a revolution in the way New Zealand conducts its
intelligence operations and national security. It is not a case of
expanding the borders of some intelligence empire."
Opposition
parties say the legislation is dangerous and deeply flawed.
Labour
leader David Shearer said the party accepts there are problems with
the country's intelligence agencies but the bill has been a complete
train wreck and Prime Minister John Key has not justified the
proposed laws.
Earlier,
Independent MP Peter Dunne said he would not reconsider his support
despite revelations a reporter had her phone records released to a
ministerial inquiry into the leaking of a report into the GCSB.
Mr
Dunne has said the man leading the investigation, David Henry, went
too far when he sought the records of Fairfax Media journalist Andrea
Vance, but would still support the legislation.
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