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The Spy game begins


Coronavirus: Israel enables emergency spy powers


The BBC's Joe Tidy reports that The Israeli government has approved emergency measures for its security agencies to track the mobile phone data of people with suspected coronavirus. The new powers will be used to enforce quarantine, and warn those who may have come into contact with infected people.The temporary laws were passed during an overnight sitting of the cabinet, bypassing parliamentary approval. The Association for Civil Rights in Israel called the move "a dangerous precedent and a slippery slope".Such powers are usually reserved for counter-terrorism operations.Details of how the so-called "cyber-monitoring" will work were not disclosed, but it is understood that the location data collected through telecommunication companies by Shin Bet, the domestic security agency, will be shared with health officials.Once an individual is highlighted as a possible coronavirus case, the health ministry will then be able to track whether or not a person is adhering to quarantine rules.It can also send a text message to people who may have come into contact with them before symptoms emerged.



The head of the justice system said the move will save lives, while Israel's prime minister said it struck a balance between public health needs and civil rights. Israel is still in the relatively early stages of the pandemic that is devastating other countries - and many ordinary Israelis are used to complying with measures they see as important for their security.


But this is a public health threat, not a security one. The ultimate test of bolstering the powers of surveillance agencies will lie in their longer term effectiveness: whether they can slow the spread of the coronavirus. Some are uneasy. In an often tense and divided region, increasingly parts of the security infrastructure are doubling up as tools of public health enforcement by both Israeli and Palestinian authorities. The scale and duration of the health and economic crises may strain that situation.


Israel has confirmed more than 300 cases of the virus and imposed a series of other measures to stop the spread. They include closing schools, shopping centres, restaurants and most places of leisure, as well as limiting gatherings to 10 people. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the new powers will only last for 30 days. Speaking ahead of the vote he said: "Israel is a democracy and we must maintain the balance between civil rights and the public's needs… these tools will very much assist us in locating the sick and stopping the virus from spreading."


Although it's shrouded in secrecy, other countries are believed to collect data from mobile phones to be used in mass-surveillance programmes or in specific criminal investigations which require case-by-case legal permission.

China's sophisticated mass surveillance system is also being used to keep a tab on infected individuals.

Tencent, the company behind popular messaging app WeChat, has launched a QR-code-based tracking feature. The "close contact detector" app notifies the user if they have been in close contact with a virus carrier and enforce quarantines.

In South Korea, similar technology has been criticised for an invasion of privacy as some people were accused of having extramarital affairs based on their location data being made public.


Sourced from the BBC


KJM Today Opinion


Israel may well live under different circumstances from other parts of the world but it is only a matter of time before similar measures are introduced in countries that previously took freedom for granted, including the UK.

Or have such things already happened and without the general population being made aware of it?


The UK already has more CCTV cameras watching our every move (even more than China) so it wouldn't take a great deal to impose a similar measure - and without anybody knowing about it, using existing powers.


The cost of finding a vaccine for Covid-19 and distributing it to every person in the UK will be immense. But the economic fallout to the Covid-19 situation is already being felt and the cost of that will be astonishingly greater.


The cost to liberty and freedom could be higher still.



The threat to freedom is a thread running throughout Kevan James' book,

Comments of a Common Man

Buy your copy from Amazon now - £9.99




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