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Secret service may not tap newspaper's phonesTuesday 13 October 2009 The security service AIVD may not tap the telephone of the editor in chief of the Telegraaf newspaper or reporter Jolande van der Graaf, the appeal court in Amsterdam ruled on Tuesday. The appeal court ruling upholds an earlier ruling by a lower court in July. The case follows the June arrests of an AIVD employee and her partner, who used to work for the same service. They were arrested on suspicion of supplying state secrets to journalist Van der Graaf. The case relates to Telegraaf exclusives earlier this year. In one, the paper accused AIVD staff of simply copying reports about Iran's alleged weapons of mass destruction from Britain's M16 and other foreign security services, without any independent verification of the facts. The Netherlands supported the invasion of Iraq partly on the basis of AIVD reports. The second focuses on claims that threats had been made against the Dalai Lama during his visit to the Netherlands in June. © DutchNews.nl Get the DutchNews.nl newsletter in your mailbox: Click here to subscribe
It is about time that The Netherlands respected basic democratic principles about not tapping journalists phones. Now if they would just stop tapping the average citizens telephone and e-mails, we might really be getting somewhere. By Quest | October 13, 2009 2:23 PM Place your comments: |
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State snoops normally appall me but those people who tricked the country into joining the illegal occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan should be hung from street lamps.
By praxis | October 13, 2009 11:36 AM