Walk down any high street in Britain today and you will instantly
be under surveillance. All around you, lampposts and shopfronts
bristle with CCTV cameras, many of them privately operated and
unregulated. They are watching you in case you are bent on shoplifting
or engaging in violent disorder.
As you pass the Post Office, it is unlikely to occur to you
that the Royal Mail’s investigators have the power to
mount surveillance or intercept operations if they suspect you
of mail theft.
The man on his knees rifling through the pile of rubbish by
the kerb is not, as you might have thought, a tramp but a fly-tipping
investigator from the town hall. He and the officials in the
council offices down the road have the power, should they chose
to use it, to recruit informants to spy on fly-tippers, dodgy
stallholders and housing benefit cheats.
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And the young girl rattling the collection tin on the opposite
pavement might well be under surveillance by the Charity Commission’s
investigation branch, which doubts the validity of her fundraising
activities.
Covert surveillance, once the stuff of John le Carré
novels and the business of the Stasi in East Germany, is a constant
reality in 21st century Britain. The power to spy on the average
Briton is widely held, extensively used and, as the revelations
of the past week have confirmed, sometimes misused.
Whether you are an MP, a lawyer or an ordinary citizen you
can be followed, bugged and watched while your telephone calls
and e-mails are intercepted by an ever-increasing range of public
bodies.
Organisations such as MI5 and MI6, GCHQ and the Serious Organised
Crime Agency use bugging and tapping as everyday tools of their
trade. But surveillance and interception are also increasingly
used by police forces across the country. The rural West Mercia
Constabulary, for example, recently advertised for “substantive
constables” to fill posts in its Covert Authorities Bureau.
In prisons, Category A prisoners routinely have their phone
calls taped and a police intelligence unit is based at Prison
Service headquarters.
As you go about your daily activities, you can be followed
by men or women from the Office of Fair Trading, the Health
& Safety Executive and the Rural Payments Agency. The Charity
Commission, the Food Standards Agency and the Royal Pharmaceutical
Society of Great Britain can seek authorisation to conduct surveillance
operations against those they suspect of wrongdoing.
Every one of the 474 local authorities in the country has the
same right and can seek permission to examine your phone records,
text messages and e-mail history.
Full
article here.