Snowden releases classified docs for public good. Key to release them for personal political gain. Time to change Govt #LoveNZ #Green2014
Key
to de-classify spy documents
Prime
Minister John Key says he will de-classify spy documents to prove
that the Government Communications and Security Bureau is not
carrying out mass surveillance of New Zealanders.
14
September, 2014
American
journalist Glenn Greenwald and Internet Party founder Kim Dotcom are
set to reveal details of domestic spying by the GCSB.
Mr
Greenwald - who received leaked documents from the fugitive security
analyst Edward Snowden - told TV3 the Government had engaged in
extraordinary amounts of metadata analysis, both here and overseas,
yesterday.
John
Key is promising to release classified documents that will counter
any of those claims made.
"We're
more than happy to declassify and release some documents that will
demonstrate that, I have absolutely no doubt that will never satisfy
some people on the left, but their motivations aren't to get to the
truth, their motivations are deeply politically rooted."
Mr
Key said the details that Mr Greenwald and Mr Dotcom will release
refer to a business case that the GCSB was working on for widespread
cyber protection, but it was never finished.
Mr
Key would not speculate about what Mr Greenwald would say at
tomorrow's meeting, but was adamant the Pulitzer Prize-winning
journalist would be proved wrong.
"When
you hack into people's information and you steal it, sometimes you
get part of the information but not all of the information.
"Now,
in the fullness of time we'll respond to Dotcom's little henchman,
but mark my words, he's wrong. There never has been mass surveillance
and there is no mass surveillance."
Mr
Key said the GCSB could assist police, Security Intelligence Service
or the defence force, but would not be drawn on what data the GCSB
would be looking for if it searched for metadata.
He
said if the SIS had a particular group of New Zealanders who they
thought might pose a terrorist threat the GCSB could provide support
for that.
Mr
Greenwald and Kim Dotcom will hold a public meeting in Auckland
tomorrow night.
Revelations
could cause 'diplomatic blow back'
Glenn
Greenwald previously revealed Australia and the United States spied
on Indonesian, German and Brazilian heads of state.
International
relations lecturer at Victoria University Robert Ayson said similar
revelations about the GCSB could embarrass the New Zealand Government
- but they should not come as a surprise.
"The
GCSB is primarily asked to look at overseas targets, if New Zealand
wasn't seeking intelligence from overseas targets intercepting
signals then we'd want a fair bit of our $70 million a year money
back from the GCSB budget."
Invasion
of privacy
Thomas
Beagle from the Council for Civil Liberties said in the past the GCSB
had not defined collecting metadata as a form of surveillance.
Metadata
showed details of who people are communicating with and when, but not
the content of the communications, he said.
Mr
Beagle said if the GCSB has been collecting metadata it would be a
significant invasion of privacy, which would undermine democracy.
Key
'downplaying claims'
Labour
Party leader David Cunliffe said the Prime Minister was trying to
downplay the serious claims.
He
said Mr Key was worried about what Mr Greenwald might reveal.
"He's
going to have to provide some pretty full answers to whatever
questions that are raised."
Mr
Cunliffe said the new claims could be enough to swing the election in
Labour's favour, yesterday.
++
Mr
Cunliffe has given an assurance he had no knowledge of a plan for the
Government's spy agency to carry out mass surveillance of New
Zealanders.
The
Prime Minister has revealed the GCSB had considered a business case
for widespread cyber protection, but that he pulled the plug before
it went ahead.
Mr
Cunliffe said, as far as he was aware, no one in Labour was briefed
on that.
He
said he wou;d prefer to have been told, but it was up to the Prime
Minister to explain why it was kept secret.
New
Zealand First leader Winston Peters said he believed Mr Greenwald,
and that Mr Key was in a difficult position over the claims.
Mr
Peters said the Prime Minister's problem was that he claimed not to
have known about the raid on Kim Dotcom's Coatesville mansion.
He
said that either meant Mr Key was not telling the truth, or had no
idea what was going on in his own department.
Green
Party co-leader Russell Norman said it was outrageous the Prime
Minister was at one stage contemplating plans for mass surveillance,
but did not tell the public.
Dr
Norman said the Prime Minister should have said something much
earlier.
"In
the middle of the giant debate about the GCSB the Prime Minister was
considering plans to enable mass surveillance of New Zealanders by
the GCSB, that's according to the Prime Minister's own words today
and he told us nothing about it."
National
'will take hit'
Former
leader of the National party, Don Brash said tomorrow's announcement
would almost certainly damage National in the lead-up to the
election.
Mr
Brash told Radio New Zealand's Sunday Morning that whatever is
announced would not be good for the party.
"It's
hard to see how it can help them at all, how much damage it does is
difficult to judge."
Mr
Brash said he would have expected Nicky Hager's Dirty Politics book
to have had more of a negative effect on National in the polls than
it has.
Watch
a pretty thick journalist, Corin Dann, of TVNZ interview Glenn
Greenwald HERE
And
Robert Amsterdam HERE
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