Allowing the Rest of the World to Speak Directly to Americans Promoting Peace, Diplomacy and Cross-Cultural Understanding.
Israel Hayom , Israel
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Lawsuit Seeks to Halt Dutch 'Laundering' of NSA-Acquired Data (de
Volkskrant , The Netherlands)
"The NSA violates the law in the Netherlands and then
delivers information to the AIVD. The Service is then allowed to be secretive
about the data's origins, ultimately whitewashing the data. Something like this
is obviously not permissible. Our demand is simple: this practice must stop."
--
Investigative journalist Brenno de Winter
By Thomas van der Kolk
Translated By
Marion Pini
November 7, 2013
The
Netherlands - de Volkskrant – Original Article
(Dutch)
A
group of citizens, and authorities, are taking Home Affairs Minister Ronald Plasterk to court. They are demanding that the Netherlands
stop using data obtained by the U.S. National Security Agency through its eavesdropping
methods.
Coalition Against
Plasterk
The
group believes the data is illegally obtained, and that the Dutch
intelligence service AIVD
subsequently “launders” it. The lawsuit seeks to put an end to this. In
addition, the complainants demand that Minister Plasterk
informs individuals whose data has been unlawfully used.
The
group consists of Rop Gonggrijp
(hacker and co-founder of ISP XS4ALL , Jeroen van Beek , Criminal Lawyer
Bart Nooitgedagt , investigative journalist Brenno de Winter, and Mathieu Paapst
(Law and ICT lecturer at the University of
Groningen). The participating organizations are the Dutch Association of
Criminal Defense Lawyers, the Dutch Association of Journalists, the Internet
Society Netherlands and the Privacy First Foundation. The complainants write
that Plasterk must appear to defend his policy in
court at The Hague on November 27.
Today
[Nov. 6] the minister debates the NSA-issue in the Lower House. Plasterk has informed the House that in January, the
committee that oversees the intelligence services, the Review Committee on the
Intelligence and Security Services - sometimes referred to as the "Sneaky Committee"
- will publish its research into the procedures followed by the AIVD and MIVD
[Dutch military intelligence].
'Absolute
Confidence'
On
Wednesday afternoon, Plasterk told the ANP news agency that he would await the process.
"I
have absolute confidence that our intelligence agencies adhere to all legal
frameworks - and you will just have to wait and see if all this stuff is
declared admissible."
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According
to Bureau Brandeis, who represents the group, this is only a formality.
"The
request for a consultation is a formality that must be met for proceedings
against the state," the spokeswoman let it be known. "This is under
penalty of inadmissibility. It is now up to the minister to step forward and respond."
Posted
By Worldmeets.US
If
Plasterk does not meet the specified requirements, the
court case will proceed as far as the complainants are concerned.
Investigative
journalist Brenno de Winter also thinks the minister
should be more open about the state of affairs.
"The
NSA violates the law in the Netherlands and then delivers information to the
AIVD. The Service is then allowed to be secretive about the data's origins, ultimately
whitewashing the data. Something like this is obviously not permissible. Our
demand is simple: this practice must stop," De Winter writes
on his blog at The Post Online .
Intelligence Service
Report Coming in January
Home
Affairs Minister Plasterk told the Lower House on
Wednesday that the committee that oversees the intelligence services, the CTIVD , will publish its investigation into procedures followed
by the AIVD and MIVD in January.
Since
August, at the request of the Lower House, the Committee, among other things,
has been looking into the powers of the services related to the interception of
phone calls and the exchange of information with foreign intelligence services.
A
majority of the House wants to wait for the investigation to be complete before
further steps are taken. On Tuesday, D66 Member of Parliament
Gerard Schouw suggested that the House start a parliamentary
inquiry into the wiretapping practices in the Netherlands, but the VVD and PvdA are opposed, as it
turned out during the debate.
According
to Plasterk , consultation with the Americans is the
only way to prevent them from continuing to monitor phone data in the
Netherlands.
"Technically,
the wiretapping can continue, and under U.S. law, it is allowed. Here it is not.
The only way to stop it is to make agreements with the U.S."
The
minister went on to say that the AIVD will work closely with German
intelligence on non-surveillance agreements with the United States. Germany
wants to enter such an agreement before the end of the year. The head of the
AIVD is traveling this week to meet with his German colleague, Plasterk said.
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Posted By Worldmeets.US Nov. 7, 2013, 5:14pm