Britain says head of eavesdropping agency to step down

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LONDON: Britain announced Tuesday that the head of GCHQ, the secret eavesdropping agency that has come under scrutiny following leaks by former US analyst Edward Snowden is to stand down.

Iain Lobban, 53, will leave the agency later this year after serving nearly six years as director, Britain’s Foreign Office said.

It denied that his departure was related to revelations contained in Snowden’s leaked documents that GCHQ was one of the main players in mass telecommunications surveillance.

“Today is simply about starting the process of ensuring we have a suitable successor in place before he moves on as planned at the end of the year,” said a Foreign Office spokesman.

The Government Communications Headquarters – a giant, ring-shaped building nicknamed ‘the doughnut’ – is situated in the spa town of Cheltenham in southwest England.

It is at the heart of Britain’s “special relationship” with the United States when it comes to spying, according to the documents.

They claim the NSA secretly funded GCHQ to the tune of  100 million ( 160 million, 120 million euros) over the last three years.

One of Snowden’s revelations was that Britain was running a secret Internet monitoring station in the Middle East, intercepting phone calls and online traffic, with the information processed and passed to GCHQ. — AFP