http://news.ft.com/ft/gx.cgi/ftc?pagename=View&c=Article&cid=FT3PFXQCH9C

Minister attacks critics of e-mail interception
By Jimmy Burns and Robert Shrimsley in London
Published: June 14 2000 20:39GMT | Last Updated: June 15 2000 03:39GMT

        

Jack Straw, the home secretary, on Wednesday hit back at critics of the government's 
bill to allow the interception of private e-mails, claiming that estimates of its 
potential costs in lost business were wildly exaggerated. 

In a forceful public intervention in the deepening debate over the bill, Mr Straw put 
himself squarely behind MI5, the security service, and the police in insisting that 
the bill was strictly a law enforcement issue. 

Mr Straw highlighted the bill - known as the regulation of investigatory powers - as 
an important instrument in the fight against organised crime. 

He said that similar legislation had been adopted successfully in the Netherlands and 
promised that the UK bill would be used sparingly and judiciously. 

In a letter to the Financial Times on Thursday, Mr Straw takes issue with a group of 
academics who warned that the e-mail bill could cost the UK £46bn ($69.5bn) in a story 
published in the newspaper on Tuesday. 

The letter was personally handed by Mr Straw to an FT journalist at a press 
conference, after accusing the newspaper of giving too much credence to a report 
prepared by the London School of Economics. 

"I will wager my next year's salary and multiples of the circulation of the FT that 
the figures are wrong," he said. 

According to the LSE report, the bill was likely to lead to a loss of confidence in 
e-commerce, unacceptable costs to business and to the UK and an "onerous imposition on 
the rights of the individual". 

The LSE argues that the biggest cost will be in e-commerce revenue and investment lost 
to the UK economy due to the bill, which has been criticised by all the main trade 
associations, technology companies and internet service providers. 

But Mr Straw describes the estimate of lost revenue as "literally incredible", given 
that the total contribution of e-commerce to the UK's economy is put at around 0.6 per 
cent of gross domestic product -equivalent to about £5bn. 

He said that individual rights would be better protected from excessive snooping 
because the Government Technical Assistance Centre would handle material intercepted 
under warrant. 

Lord Cope, who is leading Conservative opposition to the bill in the House of Lords, 
the upper chamber, rejected Mr Straw's comments saying the bill imposed "potentially 
huge regulatory and financial burdens on business". 

Mr Straw was speaking during the second government launch in a month of plans to seize 
the assets of crime barons. He emphasised police estimates that criminal activity cost 
about £50bn a year, and that criminals were making use of internet technology to 
launder their proceeds. 

        
        
                

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