Surveillance warrants: up again

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Surveillance warrants: up again
artdoc July=1994

The number of warrants issued for telephone tapping and mail-
opening in 1993 was one of the highest since records began in
1937. A total of 998 warrants were issued in England and Wales
(covering telephone tapping and mail-opening) to the Metropolitan
Police Special Branch, the National Criminal Intelligence Service
(NCIS), and HM Customs and Excise.
The figure allegedly also includes those issued to the
Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in Cheltenham but
the number of warrants issued by the Foreign Secretary - who is
responsible for GCHQ - are not published this is misleading. Past
evidence of massive trawling by GCHQ suggested that they monitor
over 35,000 communications a year (telephone, faxes etc). Nor are
the figures for warrants issued by the Northern Ireland Secretary
of State published.
The figures for 1993 published in the annual report of the
Commissioner for the Interception of Communications Act 1985, Sir
Robert Bingham, show that 893 warrants were issued for
telecommunications tapping and 105 for mail-opening - as these
figures relate to `warrants' these may refer to an individual or
an organisation (through which many individuals may be
surveilled). The table below gives the figures for the past five
years and the past top numbers for warrants. This shows that the
1993 total was the highest outside of the Second World War (1939-
1941) and the 1948 dock strike.

1939: 1002
1940: 1682
1941: 1042
1948: 973
1989: 458
1990: 515
1991: 732
1992: 874
1993: 998

The figure for Scotland was an all-time high since the number of
warrants issued was first published in 1967. The number of
warrants issued by the Secretary of State for Scotland in 1993
was 112 for telecommunications and 10 for mail-opening, a total
of 122 warrants. This surpasses not just the 92 warrants in 1992
but also the post-1967 high of 75 during the 1984/5 miners
strike. The figures for Scotland are:

1984: 75
1985: 68
1989: 64
1990: 66
1991: 82
1992: 92
1993: 122

The Commissioner reports states that there had been in the `past
a reluctance on the part of some [Scottish] police forces to
apply for warrants' - this has, the report says, now been
rectified. The Secretary General of the Scottish Trades Union
Council, Campbell Christie, commented: `this report will never
cover interceptions without warrants..[it] does not reflect the
true extent of interceptions taking place'. Mr Christie has begun
a legal action against the UK government in the European Court
of Human Rights after a former official in the Joint Intelligence
Committee (JIC) based in the Prime Minister's office said that
in 1992 he was the target of mail and telex interceptions.
The report states that there has been a significant increase
in the number of warrants issued to HM Customs, the National
Criminal Intelligence Service, MI5 (because of the anti-terrorist
work it has taken over from the Special Branch) and the Northern
Ireland Office. It also says, like the past two years, that no
individuals and `only a very few organisations' are placed under
surveillance on the grounds that they are `subversive' (that they
are a threat to `parliamentary democracy or national security').
A disturbing omission from the report is that, for the first
time since the Commissioner was appointed, no figures are given
for the number of complaints made to the Tribunal by the public
are given.
Report of the Commissioner for 1992, Cm 2522, HMSO, March 1994;
Tapping the Telephone, POEU pamphlet; Interception of
Communications in the UK, Cmnd 9438, 1985; State Research, no 18,
June/July 1980; see also Statewatch, vol 1 no 4, vol 2 no 5, vol
3 no 5.

Statewatch, vol 4 no 3, May-June 1994

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