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Oz [puppet] Senate votes against 'Trapwire' Disclosure
by circe Friday, Aug 24 2012, 1:09pm international /
prose /
post
An indirect admission of Guilt
Voting no to a motion that would force the government to simply disclose whether or not it is using Orwellian surveillance technology, 'Trapwire,' is a clear indication that it is; it is also well known that both major Oz political parties have been captured by corporatists and elites. The extraordinary Senate decision also brands the majority of Oz senators as UNREPRESENTATIVE US corporate lackeys and servants to the plutocrats. Who would have thought?
Senate votes no on TrapWire motion
by Adam Bender
The [Australian] Senate voted down a motion asking the government whether the US surveillance system TrapWire is being used in Australia. The measure by Greens Senator Scott Ludlam was rejected by voice vote on Wednesday.
After the vote, Ludlam said he didn’t understand why the government opposed the motion. “It simply asks, yes or no, whether or not these systems are deployed anywhere in Australia,” Ludlam said after the vote. “It doesn’t make any accusations.”
Ludlam said Labor should explain “exactly why the government is voting against a fairly straightforward motion …”
Recently leaked documents by Wikileaks revealed the TrapWire program, a surveillance system that uses data from surveillance cameras to predict potential criminal activity.
"TrapWire is operating in parts of the UK, Canada and the USA,” Ludlam said in a statement yesterday. “Its features are reputed to include the ability to centralise and aggregate data from public surveillance cameras and share information across networks. Is it being used in Australia?"
The motion called on the government to "Confirm whether the TrapWire system is deployed anywhere in Australia"; "Confirm if Australian law enforcement and intelligence agencies have access to, or have in the past used, information provided by foreign law enforcement and intelligence agencies using the TrapWire system"; and "Confirm if the Australian government or its law enforcement and intelligence agencies have held discussions about acquiring the TrapWire system for use by government entities here."
Ludlam told Computerworld Australia that he plans to send formal questions to the Federal Police, ASIO, the Quarantine and Inspection Service, the Department of Defence and Customs and Border Protection. They are "the agencies that we thought are the most likely to be deploying or contemplate deploying the system."
Ludlam planned to send the questions this afternoon, he said. By convention, responses are due in 30 calendar days. "During the September sittings, we should have some answers back."
"I'm disappointed that the Senate has voted to keep itself ignorant, particularly the Opposition," Ludlam told us. "I mean, the government may have something to hide—we don't know that yet—but I would have thought the Opposition" would be more supportive, he said.