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Statewatch: EU - surveillance extended to internet and satellite phones
EU:
Surveillance extended to Internet and satellite phones Statewatch
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Statewatch bulletin,
vol 8 no 6 (November-December 1998)
The EU is to extend the EU-FBI
telecommunications surveillance plan to the Internet and to new
generation satellite mobile phones (see Statewatch, vol 7 no
1 & 4 & 5; vol 8 no 5). At the same time EU Interior
Ministers are seeking to resolve their differences over the legal
powers they intend to give the "law enforcement agencies"
to intercept all forms of telecommunications
under the new Convention on Mutual Legal Assistance. In the US
the same issues are being openly discussed - the Federal Communications
Commission has deferred a decision on an FBI proposal to extend
surveillance to the Internet. In October 1994 the US Congress
passed an FBI-proposed law, the Communications Assistance for
Law Enforcement Act. On 17 January 1995 the EU adopted a Resolution
on the "Requirements" to be placed on network and service
providers to carry out surveillance of all telecommunications.
These "Requirements" were exactly the same as those
drafted by the FBI. Now these "Requirements" are to
be extended from covering traditional phone networks and GSM
mobile phones to the Internet and to the new satellite-based
mobile phones run by multinational companies like Iridium. Under
the plan telecommunications network and service providers would have to give access to
communications from "mobile satellite services" (provided
by multinationals like Iridium via their "ground station"
in Italy, see Statewatch, vol 8 no 5) and to e-mail sent and
received via ISPs (internet service providers) in addition to
phone calls and faxes sent through the traditional system (land
and sea lines and microwave towers).
The new draft "Requirements"
cover the "realtime" (as it is actually happening)
surveillance of phone-calls and e-mails including where messages
are redirected, voice-mail and conference
calls. They even extend to passing over data when a connection
has not been made for both outgoing and incoming calls/messages.
All details concerning e-mails accounts have to be handed over
by IP providers. "Realtime" is defined as routing the
surveillance in "milliseconds".
Legal
powers
In a parallel development the
EU Justice and Home Affairs Council is discussing the draft Articles
on the "interception of telecommunications"
in a new Convention on Mutual Legal Assistance
in Criminal Matters. This is intended to extend the application
of a 1959 Council of Europe Convention with the same title.
The new "Requirements"
and the new legal powers are being presented as being necessary
to combat organised crime. However, the scope of the 1959 Council
of Europe Convention simply covers any:
"offences the punishment
of which falls within the competence of the judicial authorities
of the requesting Party. Provisions is thus made for minor offences
as well as for other, serious, offences.." (Explanatory
report on the European Convention on mutual assistance in criminal
matters, Council of Europe, 1969, p11)
The issue of police officers
and/or judicial authorities being called on to give what will
in effect be instantaneous authorisations
for intercepts "within minutes" is not addressed by
the draft EU Convention.
Nor is the issue of telecommunications
surveillance by the security and intelligence services - the
new legal powers are only intended to authorise interception
for criminal investigations.
To the embarrassment of EU Interior Ministers the UK has objected
to the draft Convention because in the UK -unlike in other member
states - there is a single law covering the Security Service's
(MI5) surveillance in connection with national security and its
role assisting the police on organised crime. Neither the first
set of "Requirements" not the proposed revised set
of "Requirements" require approval or reference to
parliaments, national or European. The new draft Convention,
when eventually signed by the 15 EU member states has to be ratified
by national parliaments - but they are not allowed to change
or amend anything, even a dot or comma.
In-depth
reportThe
Justice and Home Affairs Council (JHA Council) of the European
Union is to extend the EU-FBI telecommunications surveillance
plan to the Internet and to new generation satellite mobile phones
(see Statewatch, vol 7 no 1 & 4 & 5). At the same time
EU Interior Ministers are seeking to resolve their differences over the legal powers they
intend to give themselves to intercept all forms of telecommunications
under the new Convention on Mutual Legal Assistance. In the US
the same issues are being openly discussed - the Federal Communications
Commission has deferred a decision
on an FBI proposal to extend surveillance to the Internet.
The
secret making of policy
Within the formal structures
of the EU, under the Justice and Home Affairs Council, the work
on the interception of telecommunications
is carried out by the Police Cooperation Working Party (Interception
of telecommunications). This Working Party in turn is represented
on three non-EU "technical expert groups" - ILET (International
Law Enforcement Telecommunications),
STC (Standards Technical Committee) and the IUR (International
User Requirements). The findings on these non-EU groups are in
turn brought back within the EU structures through the Police
Cooperation Working Party and presented to the K4 Committee,
COREPER and the JHA Council as being:
"agreed by the law enforcement
agencies as an expression of their joint requirements"
Meetings in Rome on 14, 15 and
16 July of the IUR and STC were reported back to the meeting
of the EU's Police Cooperation Working Party on 3-4 September
in Brussels. Further meetings of the IUR in Vienna on 20-22 October
and in Madrid on 27-28 October led to a draft Resolution from
the Austrian Presidency to the Police Cooperation Working Party,
dated 4 November, on the "interception of telecommunications
in relation to new technologies".
The effect will be to extend
the Requirements to be placed on network and service providers
adopted by the EU as the Resolution of 17 January 1995 (see Statewatch,
vol 7 no 1). Under the plan telecommunications network and service
providers would have to give access to communications from "mobile
satellite services" (provided by multinationals like Iridium
via their "ground station" in Italy, (see Statewatch,
vol 8 no 5) and to e-mail sent and received via ISPs (internet
service providers) in addition to phone calls and faxes sent
through the traditional system (land and sea lines and microwave
towers).
The EU's plans for the surveillance
of all forms of telecommunications
is being determined by non-EU bodies - ILETS, STC and IUR - on
which the major players are: the EU (represented by the Police
Cooperation Working Party and other experts), the USA (the FBI),
Canada and Australia (New Zealand and Norway are also involved).
The stakes for these governments are enormous. Just as important
as the "law enforcement agencies" being able to set
down the "Requirements" for intercepting every form
of communication are the commercial profits to be made out of
"agreed" standards, equipment and service provision.
Once adopted, EU-US standards, are set to become "global".
For example, Iridium, the first multinational to open a "ground
station" in Italy to serve the EU with a global earth-satellite,
"mobile satellite service" (MSS, or "Satellite
Personal Communications System,
SPCS) is using Motorola and Kyocera to make Iridium handsets.
The initiative for creating Iridium came from Motorola. Moreover,
the EU market is critical to Iridium's initial success because
AT & T dominates the US with traditional land bases systems.
Spelling
out "law enforcement" demands
Underneath the draft Resolution
amending the 17 January 1995 EU Council Resolution is a detailed
report ("Interception of telecommunications: recommendation
for a Council Resolution in respect of new technology")
explaining the need for "supplementary
requirements and supplementary definitions in respect of new
technologies including SPCS, the Internet..." This report
was discussed at the Police Cooperation Working Party in Brussels
on 3-4 September.
The report opens with the statement
that the Resolution of 17 January 1995 - which was never even
discussed by the JHA Council but adopted by "written procedure"
(signed by the Brussels-based Permanent Representatives of each
EU member state) - has to be changed to be:
"suitable for new technologies,
especially satellite communication,
Internet, cryptography, pre-paid cards etc"
Throughout the report distinguishes
between the new "international
requirements for surveillance.. developed by the law enforcement
agencies" for: i) SPCS ("Satellite Personal Communications
Systems") and ii) the Internet.
Introducing the "law enforcement
agencies" needs for SPCS the report says:
"Operational scenarios comprise
the following connections: mobile to mobile (via satellite),
mobile to mobile (terrestrial), mobile (via satellite or terrestrial)
to the public switched telephone network (PSTN) and PSTN to mobile
(via satellite or terrestrial). Interception of such satellite
based services is subject to the national laws of the requesting
law enforcement agency as well as those of the state providing
the gateway."
The report's introduction on
the Internet is altogether simpler: "This explanatory memorandum
refers to requirements of law enforcement agencies to the interception
of ISP-based Internet services."
The report then looks at each
of the already agreed "Requirements" and proposes new
ones.
First, under "Requirement
1" the "law enforcement agencies require access to
the entire telecommunications transmitted..". Traditional
means of communications are simple and provide the "locations"
of the two parties but this is not so for calls between two mobile
phones (SPCS). However, a solution is provided by "a single
terrestrial gateway [which] serves many countries from one site"
(such as the Iridium ground station in Italy covering the whole
EU). For the Internet access is required to:
"ISP address, customer's
account number, logon-ID/password, PIN number, E-mail address."
Second, is the "Requirement"
that "law enforcement agencies require a real-time, fulltime
monitoring capability" as well as "call associated
data". "Real-time" is defined: "100 milliseconds
to 500 milliseconds are desirable".
Third, network operators and
service providers are required to provide "one or several
interfaces" for the new Iridium-style SPCS mobile phones
and, of course, Iridium by offering the use of its facilities
meets this need - "Interception can be planned as a MSS-gateway
which serves several countries.." Equally, "Several
countries can carry out interceptions of the same mobile subscriber
who is served by a gateway."
Fourth, the need for immediate
interception, "in urgent cases within a few hours or minutes"
where "questions of sovereignty can cause further delays
if cooperation of law enforcement agencies from different countries
is required".
The "Supplementary requirements"
state that network and service providers have to hand over full
details of any customer:
"the complete name and complete
address of the monitored person...
the person who pays the bill for the services available to the
monitored person.. sufficient credit card details to identify
the customer account..."
Together with details of all
the services used by the "customer", for example, conferencing,
voice-mail, ISDN, telex, internet domain names, "roaming"
permissions (for mobile phone users).
Network and service providers
will have to provide their own secure means of ensuring the "security"
of the intercepts. One reason given for this "security"
is the comforting thought that the rights of the individual are
to be protected:
"Protection of the interests
of an interception subject from revelation of its telecommunications
to other parties that the intercepting authority".
On the other hand, another "requirement"
is that "neither the interception target nor any other unauthorised
person is aware of.. the interception order."
The
MLA "debate"
The draft Convention of Mutual
Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters is still under discussion
in the Justice and Home Affairs Council. The "outstanding"
issues are whether or not data protection provisions should be
included (only Italy, Austria, Belgium and the Commission are
in favour), the role of the Court of Justice, its jurisdiction
(the usual dispute between the UK and Spain over the status of
Gibraltar) and the Articles on the interception of telecommunications.
It should be remembered that
the primary purpose of this new Convention is to "supplement
the provisions and facilitate the application" of the 1959
Council of Europe Convention on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal
Matters. The Schengen Agreement (1985 and 1990) and the Benelux
Treaty (1972) have been added. The 1959 Council of Europe Convention
is not limited to "serious crime" or "organised
crime", it simply concerns any punishable offence however
minor. New powers contained in this new EU Convention on mutual
assistance are, therefore, applicable also to any punishable
offence (see Statewatch, vol 7 no 4 & 5). The draft Convention
thus places no limits on the use of the proposed new powers of
intercepting telecommunications - this is solely regulated by
each member states' national law.
In the latest draft of the new
Convention the Articles on the "Interception of telecommunications"
are in Title III, Articles 11-14 and represent the third substantial
revision. The major areas of "discussion" in the secret
conclaves of the EU member states are as follows.
The issue starts with the question
as to whether "where a Member State intercepts or intends
to intercept a target present in another Member State.. and does
not need any assistance from that Member State" it should
tell the other Member State. As presently drafted Article 13
provides that: the "intercepting Member State" will
inform the "visited Member State", that the "visited
Member State" may "require that the interception not
be carried out or be interrupted", and that the "visited
Member State may lay down conditions on the use of material already
intercepted". This issue particularly arises if the Iridium's
EU ground station in Italy is able to provide access to call
contents (for SPCS mobile phones) in different countries
instantaneously.
Due to the different legal powers
to authorise interception in EU states a discussion has emerged
over the role of security and intelligence agencies. Fourteen
EU member states believe that the new Convention only refers
to "criminal investigations" and therefore excludes
interceptions by security and intelligence agencies. In these
countries interception by these agencies takes place either through
administrative authorisation (for example, from an Interior Minister)
or through a judicial warrant. In the UK the Security Service
(MI5) is issued with warrants by the Home Secretary for both
matters of national security and for criminal investigations
(where they are working on serious organised crime). As presently
drafted the UK would be obliged to inform other EU states when
MI5 is intercepting communications in another member state.
What has been highlighted by
this discussion between EU member states is that there is no
existing or proposed regulation of the interception of telecommunications
when carried by security and intelligence agencies. It also demonstrates
that there is not a simple distinction between "criminal
investigations" and "national
security". One of the questions asked in the latest draft
is whether there should be an obligation by a member state to
inform other member states where "it would be likely to
prejudice its security, ordre public or other essential interests?"
Another issue is whether other
EU member states should be informed when the surveillance (of
GSM mobile phone networks) is for less than 24 hours and may
involve, in border areas, several EU member states.
The member states are also divided
over whether the "visited Member State" should have
the power to "require the interception not to be carried
out or to be interrupted" and the power to "impose
restrictions on the use of the already intercepted material".
At the JHA Council on 3-4 December
the Ministers were asked to consider the following question:
"Which of the following
reasons should be regarded as a basis for requiring interception
not to be carried out or to be interrupted:
- national law of the visited
Member State?
- fundamental principles of national
law of the visited Member State, and/or ordre public?"
A new Article (no 14a) has now
been included "to ensure an appropriate legal basis for
the purpose of agreements on the use of the service provider
solution [Iridium] regarding satellite telecommunications".
The new Article states, in full:
"Nothing in this Title shall
preclude any bilateral or multilateral
arrangements between Member States for the purpose of facilitating
the exploitation of present and future technical possibilities
regarding the interception of telecommunications".
A proposal which, potentially,
could drive a "coach and horses" through any provisions
in the new Convention. The so-called "service provider"
for the interception of telecommunications carried out through
Iridium's EU ground station in Italy would mean that if a "target"
moved from one country to another the surveillance would simply
be "switched" from one country to another.
There is no provision in this
new Convention for it to only come into effect when all 15 EU
member states have ratified it. Under Article 18.4 it can come
into effect between any two or more member states who declare
that it should do so.
In
the USA
In the US the Federal Communications
Commission has invited public comments on FBI-proposed requirements
that would enable law enforcement agencies to be given the location
of people using cellular phones without a warrant and has deferred
a decision on another request to place the Internet under surveillance.
Conclusion
The new powers to intercept telecommunications
is by no means limited to any common perception of "serious
crime". By including the interception Articles in a new
Convention on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters the
limits are simply those set out in the 1959 European Convention
on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters which refers to any
punishable offence however minor. Once in place to "combat
organised crime" these powers can be infinitely extended
to all forms of offence including public order or "national
security".
Sources: Council Resolution
of 17 January 1996 on the lawful interception of telecommunications;
Interception of telecommunications: recommendation for a Council
Resolution in respect of new technology, ENFOPOL 98, 10951/98,
3.11.98 and ENFOPOL 98 REV 1, 10951/1/98, 4.11.98; Draft Convention
on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters between the Member States
of the European Union, JUSTPEN 108, 13144/98, Limité,
19.11.98; PC Magazine, January 1999.
Source: Statewatch bulletin
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