[kictanet] Track, Capture, Kill: Communication Surveillance in Kenya

Ali Hussein ali at hussein.me.ke
Wed Mar 15 12:13:40 EAT 2017


Moses

I'm really not surprised. It would be folly for us to think there's no
widespread surveillance going on the world over - Not after Wikileaks and
Snowden. America, that country that is supposed to know better is at the
vanguard of this new widespread and impunity minded surveillance. So what
makes us think our Government will be immune to this virus spreading the
world over?


*Ali Hussein*

*Principal*

*Hussein & Associates*



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On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 11:15 AM, Mose Karanja via kictanet <
kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:

> Privacy International just released a chilling report on how Kenya’s
> National Security organs, and especially the Intelligence office, carries
> out unregulated communication surveillance with the aid of
> telecommunication companies and shares this with units of law enforcement
> outside the legal procedures.
>
> -----
>
> *Key Revelations:*
>
>    - Communications surveillance is being carried out by Kenyan state
>    actors, essentially without oversight, outside of the procedures required
>    by Kenyan laws. Intercepted communications content and data are used to
>    facilitate gross human rights abuses - to spy on, profile, locate, track
>    and ultimately arrest, torture, kill or 'disappear' suspects.
>    - Intelligence gained by intercepting phone communications, primarily
>    by the National Intelligence Service (NIS), is regularly shared with units
>    of the police to carry out counter-terrorism operations, particularly the
>    GSU-Recce company and Anti-Terrorism Police Unit (ATPU). These police units
>    have well-documented records of abuses including torture and extrajudicial
>    killing
>    - Despite constitutional and other privacy protections,
>    telecommunications operators regularly hand over customer data to both
>    intelligence and law enforcement agencies. Sources who spoke with PI feel
>    that they cannot decline agencies’ requests.
>    - The NIS appears to have direct access to communication networks
>    across Kenya. Direct access means an actor has backdoor access the phone
>    communications that flow through service providers. In this case, it is
>    unlikely that the network operators had knowledge of the state's
>    interception.
>    - NIS officers use various techniques to access both call content and
>    call data records, including using mobile interception devices. Further
>    methods are documented in the report.
>    - Law enforcement agents are present within telecommunications
>    operators’ facilities with the providers’ knowledge. NIS are also
>    informally present in the telecommunication operators’ facilities,
>    apparently undercover, according to current and former telecommunications,
>    Communications Authority and NIS staff interviewed by Privacy
>    International. This investigation details both the 'above the board' and
>    informal practices. Agency and company responses to requests for comment by
>    Privacy International are included in the report.
>    - In advance of the August 2017 Presidential elections, the
>    Communications Authority has launched several disturbing initiatives,
>    including a project to monitor social media content, whose potential
>    capacities are discussed in this report.
>
> ——
>
> You can read the full report here: https://privacyinternational.org/
> reports
>
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