German intelligence spied on Fabius, FBI
BERLIN: Germany’s foreign intelligence service spied on targets including French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, the FBI and the UN children’s fund, a media report said on Wednesday. The latest news report on the BND spy service fuels a debate in Germany about state surveillance that was kicked off by the
By our correspondents
November 12, 2015
BERLIN: Germany’s foreign intelligence service spied on targets including French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, the FBI and the UN children’s fund, a media report said on Wednesday.
The latest news report on the BND spy service fuels a debate in Germany about state surveillance that was kicked off by the revelations of fugitive US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden.
The claims are awkward for Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose office oversees Germany’s intelligence activities, after she angrily told Washington in 2013 that "spying among friends isn’t on" following reports the US National Security Agency (NSA) had bugged her cellphone.
The latest report, by Berlin public radio, adds to the list of targets the BND has allegedly spied on, citing the BND’s "selectors" -- phone numbers, email and IP addresses -- for surveillance which has been handed over to a parliamentary oversight panel.
According to RBB Inforadio, which did not name its sources, the service has spied on Fabius, the International Court of Justice in The Hague, the US Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United Nations bodies Unicef and the World Health Organisation.
Also on the list were "many European and American companies, including weapons makers such as Lockheed of the United States," said the report.
The list also included a German diplomat who had from 2008-11 served as head of the EU observer mission in Georgia, followed by senior EU postings in Brussels and Turkey.
German media have previously revealed that the BND had spied in cooperation with the NSA on the French presidency and foreign ministry, the European Commission and other targets.
The latest news report on the BND spy service fuels a debate in Germany about state surveillance that was kicked off by the revelations of fugitive US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden.
The claims are awkward for Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose office oversees Germany’s intelligence activities, after she angrily told Washington in 2013 that "spying among friends isn’t on" following reports the US National Security Agency (NSA) had bugged her cellphone.
The latest report, by Berlin public radio, adds to the list of targets the BND has allegedly spied on, citing the BND’s "selectors" -- phone numbers, email and IP addresses -- for surveillance which has been handed over to a parliamentary oversight panel.
According to RBB Inforadio, which did not name its sources, the service has spied on Fabius, the International Court of Justice in The Hague, the US Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United Nations bodies Unicef and the World Health Organisation.
Also on the list were "many European and American companies, including weapons makers such as Lockheed of the United States," said the report.
The list also included a German diplomat who had from 2008-11 served as head of the EU observer mission in Georgia, followed by senior EU postings in Brussels and Turkey.
German media have previously revealed that the BND had spied in cooperation with the NSA on the French presidency and foreign ministry, the European Commission and other targets.
-
Prince William Warned His Future Reign Will Be Affected By Andrew Scandal -
Amy Madigan Reflects On Husband Ed Harris' Support After Oscar Nomination -
Is Studying Medicine Useless? Elon Musk’s Claim That AI Will Outperform Surgeons Sparks Debate -
Margot Robbie Gushes Over 'Wuthering Heights' Director: 'I'd Follow Her Anywhere' -
'The Muppet Show' Star Miss Piggy Gives Fans THIS Advice -
Sarah Ferguson Concerned For Princess Eugenie, Beatrice Amid Epstein Scandal -
Uber Enters Seven New European Markets In Major Food-delivery Expansion -
Hollywood Fights Back Against Super-realistic AI Video Tool -
Pentagon Threatens To Cut Ties With Anthropic Over AI Safeguards Dispute -
Meghan Markle's Father Shares Fresh Health Update -
Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2026: What To Expect On February 25 -
Travis Kelce Takes Hilarious Jab At Taylor Swift In Valentine’s Day Post -
NASA Confirms Arrival Of SpaceX Crew-12 Astronauts At The International Space Station -
Can AI Bully Humans? Bot Publicly Criticises Engineer After Code Rejection -
Search For Savannah Guthrie’s Abducted Mom Enters Unthinkable Phase -
Imagine Dragons Star, Dan Reynolds Recalls 'frustrating' Diagnosis