Germany Rejects Snowden Claim it Bowed to NSA
Germany dismissed a claim by NSA leaker Edward Snowden that it had bowed to U.S. demands to water down privacy rights for German citizens.
Snowden told the European Parliament in a statement published Friday that Germany was pressured to modify its legislation on wiretapping and other forms of lawful telecoms surveillance. The former National Security Agency contractor didn't elaborate on how the laws were changed or when, but suggested it was standard practice for the NSA to instruct friendly nations on how to "degrade the legal protections of their countries' communications."
"Laws are made by the German parliament and it doesn't give in to outside pressure, certainly not from foreign spy agencies, and that's true in this case too," government spokesman Steffen Seibert said.
Snowden's claim is particularly sensitive for Germany. While Chancellor Angela Merkel's government has been among the loudest critics of the NSA's reported surveillance of foreign citizens - including Merkel herself - domestic critics say German spy agencies collaborated closely with their American counterparts in ways that may have breached Germany's strict data protection laws.
Snowden claims the NSA took advantage of different legal systems across Europe to eavesdrop on calls and emails across the continent.
Speaking at the opening of the world's biggest technology trade fair in Hannover late Sunday, Merkel called for European Union countries to harmonize their data protection laws, and make the issue a central part of talks with Washington over a free trade agreement.
Her proposal was backed by Neelie Kroes, vice president of the European Commission, who said Europe could gain a competitive advantage by making digital privacy a priority.
"Snowden gave us a wake-up call," she said. "Let's not snooze through it."