UK asked to investigate spyware firm… Spying on activists and bloggers -RT
Shehabi said she welcomed the step to impose some controls on the export of surveillance software, but that stricter controls were needed. “I expect this type of treatment from the Bahrain government, which is reduced to lawlessness and doesn’t believe in human rights, but if they have been serviced by a British company that really angers me,” she said. “There shouldn’t have to be another victim like me to come along before these exports stop.”
Published: 27 December, 2012, 16:34
RT

Privacy rights activists are calling on HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) to investigate spyware firm Gamma International and its exports of surveillance software to repressive regimes, such as Bahrain, calling the transactions “criminal” and “illegal”.
The campaign group Privacy International (PI) confirmed in a press release that Gamma International is selling surveillance technology to regimes with horrific human rights records without a proper license.
The software being sold is powerful enough to intercept text messages, phone and Skype calls, remotely turn on cameras and microphones, log keystrokes and copy files, The Guardian reported.
The activist group sent a 186-page report to HMRC, saying that that technology sold is being used to spy on activists, who are later targeted by repressive regimes and “amounts to criminal conduct”.
In April 2011, Egyptian protesters found documents from Gamma International inside Egypt’s secret police office. One of the documents contained an offer dated June 29, 2010, which said to provide ‘FinSpy’ software, hardware,installation and training for 287,000 euro.
Gamma International denied supplying software to Egypt, but did confirm that it has demonstrated such products to the government.
Bahraini prodemocracy activists also were subjected to Gamma International’s surveillance products.
In spring and summer of 2012 activists received emails containing malware. After the University of Toronto’s CitizenLab investigated the case, it found evidence connecting the malware to FinSpy, which is part of the commercial FinFisher intrusion kit.
Citizen Lab managed to extract ‘digital DNA’, from the infected emails that matched that of FinFisher and published the results.
Activist and writer in Bahrain Ala’a Shehabi, 30, was one of the victims targeted by FinSpy malware emails.
She claims to have received the total of four emails from what looked like authentic email accounts.
She later forwarded them to her colleague Bill Marczak, a computer science doctoral candidate at the University of California, Berkeley, who then connected the malware in the email to an internet address in Manama, Bahrain’s capital, which triggered the rest of the investigation.
Shebani told The Guardian that situation in Bahrain at the time was “very charged”.
“I was banned from traveling and forced to stop work,” she added. “I essentially worked on the assumption that everything I did or said was being watched.”
Facebook and Twitter accounts started disappearing, forcing the opposition to go underground.
Gamma International, on the other hand, stated that it had no knowledge of this.
Bahrain’s human rights situation remains “critical in the wake of the brutal crackdown on pro-democracy protesters that erupted in February 2011,” reports Human Rights Watch.
Police regularly use violence to disperse crowds of protesters, while Bahrainis, led by the country’s Shiite Muslim majority, are continuing to protest, demanding greater rights and freedoms from the ruling Sunni minority. More than 80 people have died in the unrest since the pro-democracy protests begun.
Gamma International’s spy software was also discovered being used in Ethiopia and Turkmenistan, PI reported.
Export deals require disclosure
PI is calling for greater restrictions on export of UK’s surveillance software, arguing that it is not guarded by the same export laws as traditional weapons.
“For years, British companies like Gamma International have had carte blanche to sell incredibly powerful surveillance technologies to any government that can afford them, even when they are subsequently used to target human rights defenders,” head of research at Privacy International, Eric King, told The Guardian.
Gamma International is a British company that offers “world-class offensive techniques for information gathering,” such as FinFisher – a spyware product that can take control of target computers and capture even encrypted data and communications.
The company markets its products in several languages including Arabic, German, English, Portuguese, French and Russian.
Gamma International has stated that it complies with export controls and denied reports of selling to oppressive regimes.
Due to PI’s efforts, the UK’s Department for Business, Innovation and Skills advised Gamma International that the FinSpy products have been controlled by EU legislation since 2000 and “require a license” in order to export outside the EU. This means that the tech firm would have to disclose the names of suppliers is exports to.
In an email revealed by The Guardian, Gamma International executive Martin Muench stated that the company will not provide any details of export licenses for confidentiality and security reasons, repeating that it only exports to legitimate governments and is cooperating with UK, US and Germany’s export controls.
The company also submitted a control list classification inquiry asking which products required a license, but has not applied for any of them.
PI is calling for more government control of surveillance technology.
http://rt.com/news/uk-firm-surveillance-export-916/
The Guardian article is here
26 december 2012
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/dec/26/british-company-gamma-international?INTCMP=SRCH
And UK relevant surveillance info here, nothing newer from The Guardian since the head of MI6 made an impassioned plea to keep the Domestic Extremist Database (now reneamed and under the watchful eye of a non transparent governmental department most likely).
Police spies: watchdog calls for safeguards over ‘intrusive tactic’
Inspector criticises ‘intrusion’ into activists’ lives by undercover officer Mark Kennedy
- Paul Lewis and Rob Evans
- The Guardian, Thursday 2 February 2012
“…The Home Office has poured millions of pounds into a drive to tackle so-called domestic extremism, a term O’Connor said was “pretty wide-ranging” and failed to distinguish between people with genuinely violent intent and others involved in peaceful demonstration. He called for a new definition of domestic extremism, which he said had been conflated with policing big demonstrations. His inspectors concluded that a national database of domestic extremists contained details about protesters that should not be held.
The report also made unexpected criticism of police officers who monitored political activists and then retired to continue their careers “in the security industry, using their skills and experience for commercial purposes”…..”
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/feb/02/police-spies-watchdog-tactic?INTCMP=SRCH
And a bit more UK relevant info here on surveillance on UK activists and bloggers
“..
G4S and SERCO who received over half of Government’s spending on contracted out detention and surveillance services
More than half Government spending on private contractors by the UK Border Agency and the National Offender Management Service during the first year of the coalition government went to just two companies G4S and SERCO, a new report from the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies reveals. The report, UK Justice Policy Review, shows that out of a total of £745 million spent between May 2010 and April 2011 one third went to G4S, who received £229 million. A further £154 million, one fifth of the total, went to SERCO. The contracts covered a range of services including detention, surveillance, prisoner escort and deportation. Be dismayed here:http://www.crimeandjustice.org.uk/ukjpr1pressrelease.html
Amongst a whole range of revelations we find that:
Some charity subcontractors involved in the delivery of the National Citizen Service will lose a quarter of their funding next year as a result of changes to the structure of the programme. One subcontractor told Third Sector magazine it was paid £1,300 per place for delivering the pilot programme in 2012, but it was being offered only about £980 per place by the prime contractor SERCO – a reduction of 25 per cent –to deliver the contract in 2013. The SERCO-led consortium, NCS Network, scooped up six of the 19 regional contracts available for 2013 and 2014. Surprise, surprise….
NCIA Inquiry into Local Activism and Dissent
Over the summer and early autumn of 2012, Penny Waterhouse from NCIA gathered information about activism springing up locally and about the different models of radical support for this action. The results are encouraging: Active Dissent is alive and well – and sometimes works! A summary paper of the Inquiry is available – you can get hold of it on this page of the NCIA website, where you can also see what the Planning Group on the 30th November made of it. Penny is now finishing off the full write up of this piece of work and that will available in the New Year. A lively discussion has also sprung up about the issues on the NatCAN site and you can join in here – http://bit.ly/UhrtbZ – if you’re minded to…”
http://www.indefenceofyouthwork.org.uk/wordpress/?tag=activism-and-dissent
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