----- Original Message ----- 
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2000 7:51 AM
Subject: French to sue US/UK over Echelon spying


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http://www.the-times.co.uk/news/pages/Times/frontpage.html?999
The Times of London 
February 10 2000  EUROPE 
 
 
French to sue US and Britain over network of spies

FROM ADAM SAGE IN PARIS


 
THE British and US Governments are to be sued in
France after claims that they have spied on French
companies, diplomats and Cabinet ministers. Lawyers
are planning a class action after confirmation last
week that a global anglophone spy network exists. 
Codenamed P-415 Echelon, the world's most powerful
electronic spy system was revealed in declassified US
National Security Agency documents published on the
Internet, and is capable of intercepting telephone
conversations, faxes and e-mails. 

The system was established in the 1980s by the UKUSA
alliance, which unites the British, American,
Australian, New Zealand and Canadian secret services.
In Europe, its listening devices are at Menwith Hill
defence base in Yorkshire. French MPs claim to have
evidence that the European Airbus consortium lost a
Fr35 billion (3.5 billion) contract in 1995 after its
offer was overheard and passed to Boeing. Georges
Sarre, a left-wing MP, said: "The participation of the
United Kingdom in spying on its European partners for
and with the US raises serious and legitimate concerns
in that it creates a particularly acute conflict of
interest within the European Union." 

The European Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee
will study a report on the Echelon network on February
23. The debate is certain to fuel criticism of
Britain's role. 

Until this month, the network was an official secret
recognised by none of the members of the UKUSA
alliance. But the documents published by the George
Washington University prove its existence and its
capacity to intercept civilian satellite
communications. 

Jean-Pierre Millet, a Parisian lawyer, said that
Echelon tracked every mobile and satellite call, but
only decoded those involving a key figure. "You can
bet that every time a French government minister makes
a mobile phone call, it is recorded," he said. 

M Millet said that Echelon's system leaves it open to
legal challenge under French privacy laws. "The simple
fact that an attempt has been made to intercept a
communication is against the law in France, however
the information is exploited." Yesterday he said that
he would bring an action on behalf of French civil
liberty groups. 


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