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WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe : Germany
Germany: new law allows more extensive government monitoring of phone calls and
email
By Alexander Boulerian
20 February 2001
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The Social Democratic Party (SPD)-Green Party coalition government in Germany has
agreed on a new law governing state organised wiretaps, bugging and the interception
of e-mail.
The Gesetz zur Beschränkung des Brief-, Post- und Fernmeldegeheimnisses (law
restricting postal and telecommunications secrecy) will regulate
the ability of the
German secret services to listen in on telephone calls and intercept faxes and e-
mail. The law is a crucial step in strengthening the state's powers and a further
restriction of fundamental democratic rights, whereby the SPD-Green federal
government is continuing the work of i s conservative predecessors.
The new regulation is known as the “G-10” law, named
after Article 10 in the German
constitution: “The secrecy of the mail and telecommunications is inviolable.
However, legal restrictions may be imposed.” The new regulations became necessary
when, in 1999, the Supreme Court ruled sections of the 1994 law dealing with these
issues to be unconstitutional and
called for juridical clarity, particularly in
relation to the handling of personal data.
SPD Prime Minister Schroeder has used the Supreme Court ruling to greatly expand the
powers of the secret services. Although the regulations dealing with personal data
are more strictly drawn in the new bill—the authorities must now inform each person
who is subject to a “bugging” order as soon as the data relating to him has been
stored, whereas previously such data could be used secretly for three months—the
regulations covering
the monitoring activities of the G-10 Commission have been
extended.
In future, the secret service can begin bugging if suspicion to commit racial
incitement exists and “other ways to inv stigate
the facts offer no prospects or
would be substantially more difficult”.
The monitoring of persons under suspicion is
to be simplified.
While previously someone could only be bugged if he were suspected
of belonging to a terrorist organisation—which required the involvement of at least
three alleged culprit —in future,
one suspect is enough. The government sees the
danger coming particularly
from “extremist individuals or small groups” who
might
employ “explosives or firearms”.
Moreover, the secret services now have per ission to spy on
telephone calls and e-
mails that are carried over optical fibre
cables (apparently, the most frequently
used transmission technology
today). Previously, they were only permitted to listen
in on satellite
and radio relay links.
The powers of the secret services are further expanded, in that they can listen in
where suspicion exists of terrorism, drug dealing, illegal arms exports or hostage-
taking abroad, if “the interests of the Federal Republic o  Germany are directly
affected”.
According to an article in Der Spiegel magazine, a special
task force
designed to act in the event of a crisis has already
been formed within the secret
services.
For the first time, with this law, a new statute came into
effect before being
formally passed by the federal parliament (Bundestag). In the case of the German
Wallert family, who had been kidnapped by Muslim rebels on the Philippine island of
Jolo,
the Bundestag Committee for Intelligence Services listening operations
rapidly
approved a bugging operation because of the “danger
to life and limb of the
hostages”.
In addition, the results of telephone monitoring will expressly become acceptable as
proof in “procedures to prohibit unconstitutional parties and extremist
associations.” Previously this was the case only in criminal proceedings. This means
that secret,
classified telephone logs and reports of undercover agents can in the
future play a crucial role in court actions.
The intention to use such logs in pending Supreme Court proceedings against the neo-
Nazi Nationale Partei Deutschlands (NPD) has caused particular concern on the part
of the Green party, which does not want to give the impression that a “Lex NPD” is
being established. In reality, the initiators of the law only distanced themselves
because the special committee dealing with the preparation of an NPD ban complained
that such dossiers were
not necessary for a prohibition.
Those pushing for the new law included Guenther Beckstein, interior minister in
Bavaria's Christian Social Union state gov rnment,
who for some time has agitated
for such provisions. His proposals
now appear almost word for word in the legal
text. This right-wing
political hard-liner, renowned for his draconian actions
against asylum-seekers, immigrants and supporters of minority religions, was also
the first to push for an NPD ban. Beckstein and Federal Interior Minister Otto
Schily (SPD) have from the start been passing the ball back and forth between one
another.
The law is primarily being justified with reference to the “fight against the
extreme right”. This justification is being used to gain the agreement not only of
parliament, but
also of broad layers of the population. This exemplifies the
unscrupulous manner in which the powers of state organs of coercion are being
expanded in the name of a more aggressive posture against the extreme right. For
those in charge of the state and politics, it is less a matter of the fight against
the right wing—as witnessed by the use of so-called undercover secret service
investigators as agents provocateurs in the neo-Nazi scene (a recent article in the
Frankfurter Rundschau was headlined “The undercover policeman as model Nazi”)—than
of creating new means
for spying and monitoring the general population.
Even though a substantial social protest movement does not exist at present, social
tensions are unmistakably growing. With wealth concentrated in ever fewer hands,
living c nditions for
broad social layers are becoming increasingly intolerable.
As
a result, the probability increases that discontent with official
policies will
express itself politically.
The extent of concern about this situation with n influential
circles in politics
and the media is revealed in the ongoing debate
about the past of two Green party
ministers in the Schroeder government:
Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer and
Environment Minister Juergen
Trittin. Former street fighter Fischer and ex-Maoist
Trittin, who have both undergone a complete about-face, repudiating the radicalism
of their youth, are the ostensible targets o  this
campaign. In reality, however, it
is directed at anyone who questions
national authority—the real sin of the 1968
protest movement,
in the eyes of the powers-that-be.
In a strict sense, Fischer and Trittin did not really belong to this movement, but
with their boundless opportunism today's thoroughly loyal Green ministers have
provoked certain circles into undertaking a general settling of accounts: any
challenge to state authority is to be pilloried and punished with
excommunication—retroactively and at the same time preventively. Other former left-
wing political
activists are providing their own menial assistance to this
campaign.
Der Spiegel magazine writes: “The anti-authoritarian notions of the 1968 generation,
regarded as a radical-democratic renewal of the republic, degenerated into an attack
on the state
monopoly of force—which was the greatest error of the Apo
[Extra-
parliamentary Opposition], and is why Joschka Fischer is
now feeling the whip.”
Any use of force is the prerogat ve of the state alone! On
this the prominent
protagonists in the debate are united: this
includes those who are demanding that
Fischer and Trittin dissociate
themselves even more expressly from their rebellious
past, and
are calling for the two ministers to resign, as well as Fischer's and
Trittin's defenders, who stress that the two leading Greens' reformation is proof of
the “democratic state's” power of integration. The message is clear: state authority
is inviolable, its strengthening and confirmation a holy “democratic” commandment.
Interior Minister Otto Schily long took over the leading role of strengthening and
confirming this authority. According to Schily, it is no longer a question of
protecting the individual from the
state, but rather protecting him from organised
crime. This is also how Schily explained his point of view when he was merely a
parliamentary deputy—a view that has clearly changed since the days when, as a
lawyer, he defended members of the RAF (Red Army Fr ction).
Schily's state-authoritarian position corresponds to the standpoint
of many
prominent SPD politicians, indicated by their earlier agreement to the introduction
of wire-tapping. But also withi
the Green party, a conception of the state based on
civil liberties
has long since given way to a general affirmation of state
authority.
Even critical Greens like Cem Oezdemir and Hans Christian Stroebele gave
their blessings to the draft bill re orming the G-10 law,
justifying their support
by saying the advantages of introducing
controls and data security would
counterbalance the disadvantages
of the new law.
Since 1968, with the passage of Emergency Laws that, together
with the brutal US war
in Vietnam, inflamed student protests, the state's apparatus of force has been
continuously expanded. At the same time, elementary civil libe ties and fundamental
rights
have increasingly come under attack.
Milestones in this process were Willi Brandt's Radikalenerlass
of 1972, which
introduced the Berufsverbot, banning Communist Party members or others deemed
hostile to the constitution from holding jobs in the public service, and which
affected over 10,000 people by 1988. Another was the prohibition of the multiple
defence in criminal proceedings. With the hunting down of “sympathisers”,
the
Stammheim trial and then the astonishing “suicides” of RAF leaders Meinhof, Baader,
Ensslin and Raspe, the internal strengthening of the state achieved a high point in
the 1970s.
This process continued to intensify in the 1990 : Now the opponents
are no longer
the RAF and left-wing terrorism, but “organised
crime”, “religious sects” and right-
wing violence. They provide the pretext and general justif cation for an ever-
greater
expansion of police and secret service powers at the expense of basic civil
rights.
While the debate on amending the constitution in 1996/1997
to introduce new wire-
tapping and bugging powers found a broad echo in the media, the other measures
strengthening the security authorities hardly gained public notice. In p rticular,
in recent
years, and unnoticed by the public, an abundance of new powers
of
intervention for the security services was created both at
the federal and state
level, in laws governing the police, criminal procedures and the secret services.
Altogether, they evince a continuous tendency to introduce harsher laws, expanding
the latitude of existing regulations as
well as creating new possibilities of state
intervention.
It is characteristic that the measures extending police powers at a state level have
been implemented irrespective of whether the state was ruled by the Christian
Democrats or the SPD. After conservative-ruled Bavaria and Baden-Wuerttemb rg in
western Germany
(and Saxony in the East), the leading role seems now to have
been
taken by SPD-governed Lower Saxony, which has introduced newly
created powers
enabling the police to carry out ID checks in all
public places, regardless of
whether there is any suspicion of
a crime being committed.

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1998-2001
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The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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