Israeli imposes privacy limits on coronavirus surveillance

The Israeli cabinet limited on Sunday the involvement of the Shin Bet security service in the cellphone-tracking of people infected by the coronavirus, saying the measure would be a last resort where epidemiological investigation proves insufficient.

Circumventing parliament in March, as the coronavirus spread, the cabinet approved emergency regulations that enabled the use of the technology, usually deployed for anti-terrorism. Privacy watchdog groups have challenged the practice in court.

Citing waning contagion rates in Israel, the cabinet amended regulations so that the phone tracking is warranted “in specific and special cases only, where location ... cannot be completed with epidemiological investigation using other methods”.

But, a cabinet statement said, the reduced scope of Shin Bet involvement could be reviewed if a coronavirus surge is feared.

Israel - with a population 9 million - has reported 16,712 coronavirus cases and 279 deaths. Schools and businesses have been reopening amid cautious optimism about health policies.

A parliamentary oversight panel and the cabinet have been conferring on legislation that would regulate the Shin Bet involvement.

Sourc: Reuters

 

The Liberum

Vox Populi, Vox Dei
See full bio >
The Liberum runs on your donation. Fight with us for a free society.
Donation Form (#6)

More articles you might like

Yaha Sinwar: the spectacle and the illusion of struggle

Somewhere in a nearly collapsed room where walls were riddled with cracks and rubble piled […]

The enigmatic demise of Iran’s proxy empire

When a progressively secular nation that once bore the seeds of Persian history and culture […]

The Future of the Abraham Accords in Donald Trump’s second term

The Abraham Accords (2020) marked a strategic shift in Middle Eastern diplomacy by establishing formal […]

Who saves the new Syrian President Ahmad al Sharaa?

Iran emerged from its eight-year war with Iraq (1980-1988) battered: its economy in shambles, no […]
- by Arthur Blok on 20/01/2025

Biden mumbles and stumbles farewell while Trump gears up for his second term in office

The world can breathe a sigh of relief. Donald Trump returns to the White House […]

The new Middle East starts in Beirut

In his address to the United Nations (2023), Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu unveiled the […]