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UK and South African government are tapping sea cables

by on09 September 2019


Serial offenders since 2008

The South African and UK government have been conducting mass surveillance on all communications in the country by tapping sea cables.

A report called Reclaim the Net:, citing a report from Privacy International and recently-revealed affidavits and other documents from former State Security Agency (SSA) director-general Arthur Fraser: Interestingly, the mass surveillance has been happening since 2008...

 The surveillance was supposedly designed to cover information about organised crime and acts of terrorism. But since no one knew about it, it has widened its remit to include  surveillance on food and, water security, and illegal financial flows.

The South African government has done bulk interception of Internet traffic by way of tapping into fibre-optic cables under the sea. The SSA said that the automated collection of data was geared for foreign communications that pose threats to state security only.

However, even the SSA admits to the fact that it will require human intervention to determine whether any communications that pass through the fibre cables are foreign or not and it would  be difficult to distinguish between foreign and local communications.

The iAfrikan site interviewed a digital rights researcher at South Africa's amaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism, whose legal filings helped bring this information to light. "We had details of the state's mass surveillance activities at least as early as 2006...." he tells the site, adding later that "The government has been quite upfront that it's collecting data from a vast number of people who are not suspected of any wrongdoing... Essentially, the State Security Agency is collecting as much haystack as it can, just in case it needs to look for a needle."

Privacy International reports that the U.K. government has been carrying out "bulk interception of internet traffic by tapping undersea fibre optic cables.

" The site describes the work of the two countries as "some of the most pervasive surveillance programmes in human history."

Last modified on 09 September 2019
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