By Tom Espiner, 30 October 2008 12:44
NEWS
An incoming Conservative government would curb the abuse of powers granted under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, according to a Tory peer.
Shadow security minister Baroness Pauline Neville-Jones told silicon.com sister site ZDNet UK on Wednesday that the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (Ripa) needs to be addressed to stop the misuse of anti-terrorist powers by local authorities.
Neville-Jones said: "We will clean up Ripa. Look at the number of authorities who have access to information and have powers to investigate what you put in your dustbins and that your children are going to school in the right catchment area. These are powers under Ripa. Are they desirable? Certainly not."
Neville-Jones said that the kinds of agencies that would be permitted access to data, and what information they would be allowed to keep, would be strictly controlled.
Neville-Jones said: "We've gone very quickly from paper records that are not easily transferable to electronic data. Now the issue is the privacy of individuals."
The peer said there was a "catch-up job" to be done, as currently "the powers of the state are greater than the controls over it to prevent the abuse of power". Specific measures would include a revision of Ripa legislation, plus a strengthening of the independent oversight by the surveillance commissioner of the use of powers by local authorities.
The Home Office told ZDNet UK on Wednesday that Ripa itself did not need amending but that it needed to ensure Ripa powers were not abused.
A Home Office spokesperson said: "We need to ensure Ripa powers are used appropriately and are not undermined. We welcomed the chairman of the Local Government Association's recent letter to local authorities, reminding them of the need to consider necessity and proportionality when they carry out surveillance."
The spokesperson added that a review is currently being undertaken of the different public authorities that have access to Ripa powers. On completion, the government will list those that can use these powers and for what purposes. The government is also revising surveillance guidelines.
The spokesperson said: "We are revising the statutory codes of practice on covert surveillance and covert human-intelligence sources. We will continue to work with key partners, including local authorities and the police, to improve appropriate training, guidance and understanding."


Comments
There are 2 comments. Join the discussion
1. Karen Challinor
politicians will say anything to get your vote, however once in office, the issues which burn so brightly for you tend to get pushed onto the back burner in favour of the "more important" issues that the party decides to deal with and you of course have no say in this
but what can you do about this ?
you can try talking to your MP, or to the nearest wall for all the good it will do
or you can wait anything up to 5 years for the next general election and register your displeasure by voting for another politician, who will do the exact same thing
we do not need new politicians
we need a new system of government that makes the government more accountable to the electorate and gives the electorate a lot more say in government decisions
2. Radical Meldrew
Not so sure who's worse, the paranoid MPs who interfere in everything just to make their mark or the back office career civil servants who don't give a toss because they are virtually fire-proof. Whatever their mantra, they both conspire to remove the remaining rights of the public whilst claiming its for the common good....Theirs maybe?
I hope the Tories deliver but they're all from the same mould these days!