Mobile phone calls to be monitored in Latvia
Published:
12 April 2001 y., Thursday
The Latvian government is currently considering stepping up internal spying activities in the country, following a request by the national security commission and the parliament's defense and internal affairs committee to fast-track new legislative changes in the telecommunication law.
The new amendments, if adopted, would allow Latvia's Constitution Protection Office (CPO), the country's top intelligence agency, to start eavesdropping on mobile phone calls via the country's two mobile phone operators, Latvijas Mobilais Telefons (LMT) and Tele2, with phone tapping equipment the agency bought last year.
Dzintars Kudums, chairman of the Defense and Internal Affairs Committee, said the government's decision on using this sort of equipment for information gathering is long overdue.
Last year, the parliament decided Latvia's top intelligence agency should have the opportunity to listen in on the country's mobile phone callers. For this, the CPO was given 819,000 lats ($1.35 million) and permission to purchase phone tapping equipment. There will, however, be additional costs when the gear is incorporated with the two Latvian mobile phone operators' in-house systems.
Šaltinis:
baltictimes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The whale shark is the largest living fish species and is usually found in tropical and warm oceans. This gentle giant is not dangerous to humans but demand for its internal organs is putting it in grave danger.
more »
Land shortages in China and environmental concerns have inspired innovative alternatives at the Asia Funeral Expo in Hong Kong.
more »
Britain's Queen Elizabeth delivers landmark speech of reconciliation during visit to Ireland but stops short of apology.
more »
French climber Alain Robert, known as "Spiderman" scales Turkey's tallest building.
more »
The growth of a tree takes place so slowly that, in real time, it's impossible to observe. Six years ago plant-lover and British film-maker Neil Bromhall decided to speed up the process with time-lapse photography...
more »
Chinese artist Wang Jiang makes portraits of famous faces including U.S. President Barack Obama and Osama bin Laden from nothing but paper torn by hand.
more »
Residents of the southern Spanish town of Lorca stay in makeshift camps and shelters after an earthquake hits the town, destroying buildings and killing at least eight.
more »
The latest technological development in robots is the main focus of the Shanghai International Conference on Robotics and Automation in China.
more »
A rare earthquake rocked Lorca, an ancient town in southeastern Spain, on Wednesday causing houses to collapse, damaging historic churches and public buildings and killing at least 10 people.
more »
A small factory in New York's Brooklyn is doing its best to keep the dying art of making vinyl records.
more »