GCSB Hearings a farce
OASIS - Organising Against State Intelligence and Surveillance July 1, 2013
The Security and Intelligence Committee is missing the point when it hears submissions on the CSB and Related
Legislation Amendment Bill this week, an anti-surveillance group says.
Organising Against State Intelligence and Surveillance (OASIS) is encouraging people to attend the public hearings, but
the group says the main issues are not individual clauses with the Bill.
Instead of arguing over the wording of the Bill, the members of the Security and Intelligence Committee should answer
the question why they think NZ needs a spy agency that is a junior partner to the NSA, a spokesperson for the group
said today.
The recently leaked documents, showing how the NSA and the GCHQ are continuously monitoring the communications of
hundreds of millions of people worldwide, demonstrate the urgent need to seriously curtail state surveillance powers,
not expand them.
The Kitteridge report found that the GCSB has been spying illegally on 88 people, and the governments reaction to this
is to pass a Bill under urgency that legalises that practice, the spokesperson continued.
People have the right to be left alone by the state. Instead, John Key is using the spectre of terrorism to scare
people into giving up their rights. We never gave consent to a surveillance society.
A recently published phone conversation with the former Inspector General of Security and Intelligence, during which he
couldnt remember the name of the GCSBs director, shows the lack of seriousness this and previous governments have
demonstrated in dealing with spy agencies.
This clearly shows how slack the so-called oversight of the spy agencies is, and appointing a new Inspector General and
giving them a deputy isnt going to change that. While we encourage submitters to talk to the committee, we dont hold
our breath that any of the concerns raised will be taken seriously by the government, the spokesperson said.
ENDS