EurActiv Logo
EU news & policy debates
- across languages -
Click here for EU news »
EurActiv.com Network

BROWSE ALL SECTIONS

Le Guardian obligé de détruire les documents révélés par Edward Snowden

Printer-friendly version
Send by email
Published 20 August 2013

Un porte-parole de la commissaire européenne en charge de la justice et des droits fondamentaux a refusé de commenter la destruction des documents par les autorités britanniques.

A spokesperson for Viviane Reding, the European Commission Vice President responsible for Justice and Fundamental Rights, avoided questions on the issue at the EU executive's daily press briefing on Tuesday (20 August).

“With regard to media freedom […] the Commission stands for media freedom and there is even an expert group”, said Mina Andreeva, spokesperson for Viviane Reding.

Andreeva added that the Commission could not comment on the application of national security legislation. “I don’t have any particular comment to make,” she said.

Alan Rusbridger, the editor of the Guardian newspaper which spearheaded revelations by US whistleblower Edward Snowden, revealed in a column yesterday that the British authorities forced his newspaper to destroy material leaked by the former CIA employee whose revelations uncovered a massive American eavesdropping programme that shocked the world and triggered angry European reactions.

David Miranda - the partner of Glenn Greenwald, the leading Guardian journalist who wrote articles based on Snowden's leaked documents - was also detained in a “bizarre” way at London's Heathrow airport on Sunday, Rusbriger said, in what British newspapers portrayed as an intimidation attempt on the media.

Rusbridger wrote that a month ago a British official advised him to stop publishing news articles based on Snowden's leaked material. "You've had your fun. Now we want the stuff back," he quoted the official as saying.

The Guardian editor said the paper was threatened with legal action by the government unless it destroyed or handed over the material from Snowden.

After further talks with the government, two "security experts" from Government Communications Headquarters, the British equivalent of the US National Security Agency, visited the Guardian's London offices and oversaw the destruction of computers which had contained material provided by Snowden.

On Sunday, London's Metropolitan Police detained Miranda citing an anti-terrorism law.

The Brazilian, who was in transit on his way from Berlin to Rio de Janeiro where he lives with Greenwald, was questioned for nine hours before being released without charge. His laptop, mobile phone, hard drives and camera were all seized.

“The state that is building such a formidable apparatus of surveillance will do its best to prevent journalists from reporting on it. Most journalists can see that. But I wonder how many have truly understood the absolute threat to journalism implicit in the idea of total surveillance, when or if it comes – and, increasingly, it looks like 'when'," Rusbridger wrote.

EurActiv.com

COMMENTS

  • When will the evidence become public that 9/11 was an attack from the Israeli secret service in cahoots with Bush and Blair?
    Perhaps, once Snowden will have revealed it.
    Notwithstanding many people are getting paid only to generate confusion you certainly knew before that the media definition of "conspiracy theory" is only there to discredit what is already in front of your eyes.

    One Solution.

    The darkest deceit will show its color only in front of its opposite

    http://www.wavevolution.org/en/index.html

    By :
    wavettore
    - Posted on :
    21/08/2013
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Edward Snowden
Background: 

Europeans have reacted angrily to allegations that a US intelligence agency had tapped the servers of internet companies for personal data, saying such activity confirmed their fears about the reach of the government and American web giants and showed that tighter regulations were needed just as the EU and US are about to launch trade talks.

More in this section

Advertising

Videos

Video General News

Euractiv Sidebar Video Player for use in section aware blocks.

Video General Promoted 2

Euractiv Sidebar Video Player for use in section aware blocks.

Advertising

Advertising