United Kingdom Prime Minister David Cameron will move to outlaw forms
of digital communication that cannot be read by law-enforcement and
intelligence agencies if he wins the next general election.
Such a
move could see messaging platforms that encrypt their data, including
apps such as WhatsApp and Snapchat, along with Apple's iMessage and
FaceTime, blocked under the proposed legislation.
Cameron said at
an event in the East Midlands on Monday that such a move would be
"absolutely right" for a modern liberal democracy, reported The Independent.
"In our country, do we want to allow a means of communication between
people, which even in extremis, with a signed warrant from the home
secretary personally, that we cannot read?" said Cameron. "Up until now,
governments of this country have said no, we must not have such a means
of communication.
"That is why, in extremis, it has been possible to read someone's
letter. That is why ... it's been possible to listen in to someone's
telephone call. That is why the same has been applied to mobile
communications.
"But the question remains, are we going to allow a
means of communication where it simply isn't possible to do that? My
answer is no, we are not. The first duty of any government is to keep
our count and our people safe," he said.
The comments follow
Cameron's pledge to introduce legislation dubbed the "snoopers' charter"
following the unity march in Paris on Sunday, held in the wake of the
Charlie Hebdo attack by Islamist terrorists in the city on January 7.
"The
attacks in Paris once again demonstrated the scale of the terrorist
threat that we face and the need to have robust powers through our
intelligence agencies and security agencies and policing in order to
keep our people safe," said Cameron. "And the powers that I believe we
need, whether on communications data or on the content of
communications, I'm very comfortable that those are absolutely right for
a modern, liberal democracy."
Just a day after the Charlie Hebdo
attack, the head of MI5, Andrew Parker, reiterated the importance of
communications interception in the fight against terrorism, and cautioned that changing technology is making it harder for agencies to keep tabs on such communications.
"Interception
of communications, which includes listening to the calls made on a
telephone, or opening and reading the contents of emails, form a
critical part in the Security and Intelligence Agencies' tool kit," said
Parker in a speech
to the Royal United Services Institute in London on January 8. "Changes
in the technology that people are using to communicate are making it
harder for the agencies to maintain the capability to intercept the
communications of terrorists.
"Wherever we lose visibility of what
they are saying to each other, so our ability to understand and
mitigate the threat that they pose is reduced," he said.
Cameron
suggested that although the UK parliament had legislated recently on
communications data, that legislation would fall away automatically in
2016, and the government would have to legislate again at that time.
In July, Britain's parliament voted in favour of emergency legislation to allow police and security services to continue accessing internet and mobile phone data, despite a ruling in April by the European Court of Justice that existing data-retention laws across Europe breached citizens' rights to privacy.
Civil liberties campaigners have criticised the Bill as being intrusive, saying it could infringe on privacy rights.
However,
Cameron said that the potential introduction of legislation to
safeguard against forms of digital communication that cannot be read by
law-enforcement bodies would be introduced with a reasonable amount of
oversight around what information agencies could access under the
scheme.
"Let me stress again, this cannot happen unless the home
secretary personally signs a warrant. We have a better system for
safeguarding this very intrusive power than probably any other country
that I can think of," he said.
Despite Cameron's assurances, Labour's Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said in a statement that any new legislation would have to be balanced with appropriate oversight mechanisms.
"The
capabilities of the intelligence agencies and law enforcement must keep
pace with changing and emerging technology. So too must the oversight
arrangements," said Cooper. "With proper warrants in place, the agencies
need to be able to continue to be able to look at the content of
communications of those feared to be plotting terrorist attacks. And
there must continue to be safeguards to protect innocent people's
privacy."
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