GERMAN
JOURNALISTS INVESTIGATED FOR TREASON AFTER PUBLISHING SURVEILLANCE
LEAKS
1
August, 2015.
Two
journalists at the prominent German news website Netzpolitik are
under investigation for treason after publishing details about the
planned expansion of the German Secret Service’s Internet
surveillance program.
On
Wednesday, the organization received
a letter from
the Federal Attorney General of Germany confirming ongoing
investigations against reporters Markus Beckedahl, Andre Meister
(pictured), and an “unknown source” for the articles, one of
which was published in
February and detailed a secret budget plan for surveillance
activities, and another, from April, describing a
new surveillance unit for monitoring social networking and online
chats. Meister has characterized the plans as being part of Germany’s
“post-Snowden” internet surveillance push.
Netzpolitik,
which reports on politics and technology, learned within the last
several weeks that Federal Attorney General of Germany was
investigating the stories, but believed its sources were the target
of the investigation rather than its journalists, Meister said in an
interview. Only yesterday did it became clear that Meister and
Beckedahl were also under investigation.
“This
is a direct attack on freedom of the press, such as hasn’t been the
case in around 50 years in Germany, since the ‘Spiegel scandal’
in 1962,'” Meister told The
Intercept,
citing an incident in
which the German newsweekly Der
Spiegel was
searched and some of its journalists were arrested on treason
accusations stemming from an article questioning the preparedness of
West German armed forces.
“These
charges are an intimidation against media and against potential
sources — which are an integral part of investigative journalism,”
he added. “The public needs whistleblowers to find out about what’s
done in their name and with their money. So the original
investigations against our sources were already a direct attack on
freedom of press and freedom of information.”
Whosoever … allows a state secret to come to the attention of an unauthorised person or to become known to the public in order to prejudice the Federal Republic of Germany or benefit a foreign power and thereby creates a danger of serious prejudice to the external security of the Federal Republic of Germany, shall be liable to imprisonment of not less than one year.
Meister
railed against the implication that he or his publication have
attacked the German state, saying that, as part of a “fourth
pillar” in German society, their job is to “dig deep,
investigate, and provide the public with information that has not
previously been public … providing the public — and thus the
sovereign — with information for public debate that’s integral
for informed consent.”
“Germany
won’t be invaded because of our reporting,” he added. “On the
other hand, one could argue that the pervasive mass surveillance of
the digital world is an attack on the basic freedoms of a free
society. Without privacy, there can be no freedom of thought and
freedom of association without a protected, un-invaded private space.
We want to enable a public debate about these integral issues.”
The
charges have generated significant attention in Germany. A
publicdemonstration has
been organized in support of Netzpolitik,
and today they received high-level support when the Heiko Maas, the
German Federal Minister of Justice and Consumer Protection, expressed
doubts to
the Attorney General that journalists intended to harm Germany or aid
a foreign power.
Asked
if Netzpolitik would
continue to report using materials gained from whistleblowers,
Meister replied, “That’s our job, so of course we will continue
to report about publicly relevant information, which obviously
includes information from whistleblowers from state and private
entities. As a matter of fact, just [yesterday] we have exposed the
new ‘cyber strategy’ of the German Federal Military ‘Bundeswehr’
about offensive cyber attacks.”
“If
anything, all the support is showing that we must be doing the right
thing, so we will continue what we do and maybe even step up the
pace. … To paraphrase a
Google engineer after
yet another NSA leak: ‘Fuck those guys!'”
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