US defends surveillance before UN rights panel

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GENEVA: The United States defended its controls on mass surveillance on Friday before a UN watchdog body amid a sweeping review of Washington’s record on civil and political rights.

The US government has faced a cascade of scandals over online and telephone snooping around the globe by the US National Security Agency (NSA) since fugitive former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden went public in 2013.

During a session of the United Nations Human Rights Committee, experts from the 18-member panel repeatedly quizzed Washington’s delegation about the scale and scope of spying.

Bruce Swartz, deputy assistant attorney general for the criminal division at the US Department of Justice, underlined that the intelligence programmes in the spotlight were “lawful under the law of the United States”.

“The intelligence collection in question is only for a valid purpose, and that is for foreign intelligence for counter-intelligence purposes,” Swartz insisted.

“The collection does not intend to, or have the effect of, changing or challenging freedom of expression. Nor is it designed to or does it have the effect of disadvantaging people based on their ethnicity, on their race, on their gender, on their sexual orientation,” he added.

In addition, Swartz said, there was “rigorous oversight” by a host of authorities and the courts.

And he underlined that the government had over the last year conducted an extensive review of its intelligence practices.

President Barack Obama has announced a range of new safeguards, Swartz told the panel, saying the goal was to protect the personal information “all citizens from around the world regardless of their nationality”.

“Progress is being made,” he said.

Earlier Friday, Yuji Iwasawa, a Japanese international lawyer who sits on the UN committee, had along with other members raised concerns about surveillance.

Pressing the delegation, he asked: “Is NSA surveillance to achieve legitimate objectives? Is it proportionate to those aims?”

He also spotlighted intelligence gathering at home, under the USA Patriot Act, crafted by the administration of president George W. Bush after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

“I understand that the US government maintains that the programme has contributed to disrupting potential terrorist plots. But is it truly necessary to collect numerous telephony metadata at the expense of US citizens’ privacy?” Iwasawa said.

On Tuesday, Vice Admiral Michael Rogers, the nominee to head the NSA, had defended the use of bulk data collection in order to thwart attacks but also said he wanted more transparency about the secretive spy service.

During a two-day session which wrapped up Friday, the UN committee also probed other areas of the rights impact of the “war on terror”.

Pressed on its treatment of minors, the US delegation said that approximately 2,500 individuals who were under the age of 18 at the time of their capture had been held in Iraq, Afghanistan and at Guantanamo Bay. — AFP