©Reuters/Mark Blinch
Canada allowed America's National Security Agency to spy on G20 talks in Toronto in 2010 and at the G8 summit days earlier, according to documents cited by public broadcaster CBC, AFP reports. The NSA briefing notes provided by Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor who is now a fugitive in Russia, reportedly detail a six-day spying operation run out of the US embassy in Ottawa. The documents say the monitoring -- conducted while American President Barack Obama and 25 other foreign heads of government met on Canadian soil in June 2010 -- was meant to "support US policy goals." The G20 summit in Toronto focused on how to rouse a global economic recovery and prevent another financial crisis. One proposal included a global tax on banks, an idea strongly opposed by both Washington and Ottawa, and which was eventually scratched. G8 leaders met in Huntsville, 220 kilometers (137 miles) north of Toronto, before the G20 meeting took place. The documents cited by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation say the US spying operation was "closely coordinated with the Canadian partner," the Communications Security Establishment Canada. By law, the CSEC cannot target anyone in Canada without a warrant, and is prohibited by international agreement from getting the NSA or others to spy on its behalf in this country. A CSEC spokeswoman told AFP that the agency "does not target Canadians anywhere or any person in Canada," nor "ask our international partners to act in a way that circumvents Canadian laws." The official noted that CSEC activities are reviewed by an independent commissioner who for the past 16 years has reported that the agency "continues to act lawfully in the conduct of its activities." The CSEC and the government declined to comment on the operations or capabilities of Canada's allies. The statements were echoed by the CSEC chief John Forster and Defense Minister Rob Nicholson, but that did not satisfy the opposition. "We know it is prohibited. The question is did they do this, yes or no?" opposition New Democratic Party Leader Tom Mulcair said in Parliament. "Did (the CSEC) help the Americans to spy on us in Canada during the G20 summit?" US officials in Washington were not immediately available for comment. Australia, Britain, Canada, the United States and New Zealand are party to a decades-old signals intelligence sharing agreement known as the Five Eyes. Documents previously released by Snowden exposed its spying on world leaders, which has caused diplomatic rifts between the United States and its Western allies. Data protection has suddenly become a hugely sensitive topic, as highlighted by the reported US tapping of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile phone. An uproar over the mobile phone tapping prompted the European Parliament to call for talks on a massive free trade deal with the United States to be scrapped. The talks resumed earlier this month after US Secretary of State John Kerry said that in some cases, US spying had gone too far. "I assure you, innocent people are not being abused in this process, but there's an effort to try to gather information," Kerry said. "And yes, in some cases, it has reached too far inappropriately." On Tuesday, a UN rights committee passed a "right to privacy" resolution pressed by Germany and Brazil, which have led international outrage over reports of US spying on their leaders. French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault has said he was "deeply shocked" by claims that the United States intercepted millions of telephone calls in France. Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto also made hay from claims the NSA delved into his personal email. The Guardian newspaper has said Britain snooped on delegates of the Group of 20 during two gatherings in London in 2009, hoping to get an unfair advantage in negotiations or policy debates.
Canada allowed America's National Security Agency to spy on G20 talks in Toronto in 2010 and at the G8 summit days earlier, according to documents cited by public broadcaster CBC, AFP reports.
The NSA briefing notes provided by Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor who is now a fugitive in Russia, reportedly detail a six-day spying operation run out of the US embassy in Ottawa.
The documents say the monitoring -- conducted while American President Barack Obama and 25 other foreign heads of government met on Canadian soil in June 2010 -- was meant to "support US policy goals."
The G20 summit in Toronto focused on how to rouse a global economic recovery and prevent another financial crisis. One proposal included a global tax on banks, an idea strongly opposed by both Washington and Ottawa, and which was eventually scratched.
G8 leaders met in Huntsville, 220 kilometers (137 miles) north of Toronto, before the G20 meeting took place.
The documents cited by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation say the US spying operation was "closely coordinated with the Canadian partner," the Communications Security Establishment Canada.
By law, the CSEC cannot target anyone in Canada without a warrant, and is prohibited by international agreement from getting the NSA or others to spy on its behalf in this country.
A CSEC spokeswoman told AFP that the agency "does not target Canadians anywhere or any person in Canada," nor "ask our international partners to act in a way that circumvents Canadian laws."
The official noted that CSEC activities are reviewed by an independent commissioner who for the past 16 years has reported that the agency "continues to act lawfully in the conduct of its activities."
The CSEC and the government declined to comment on the operations or capabilities of Canada's allies.
The statements were echoed by the CSEC chief John Forster and Defense Minister Rob Nicholson, but that did not satisfy the opposition.
"We know it is prohibited. The question is did they do this, yes or no?" opposition New Democratic Party Leader Tom Mulcair said in Parliament.
"Did (the CSEC) help the Americans to spy on us in Canada during the G20 summit?"
US officials in Washington were not immediately available for comment.
Australia, Britain, Canada, the United States and New Zealand are party to a decades-old signals intelligence sharing agreement known as the Five Eyes.
Documents previously released by Snowden exposed its spying on world leaders, which has caused diplomatic rifts between the United States and its Western allies.
Data protection has suddenly become a hugely sensitive topic, as highlighted by the reported US tapping of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile phone.
An uproar over the mobile phone tapping prompted the European Parliament to call for talks on a massive free trade deal with the United States to be scrapped.
The talks resumed earlier this month after US Secretary of State John Kerry said that in some cases, US spying had gone too far.
"I assure you, innocent people are not being abused in this process, but there's an effort to try to gather information," Kerry said. "And yes, in some cases, it has reached too far inappropriately."
On Tuesday, a UN rights committee passed a "right to privacy" resolution pressed by Germany and Brazil, which have led international outrage over reports of US spying on their leaders.
French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault has said he was "deeply shocked" by claims that the United States intercepted millions of telephone calls in France.
Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto also made hay from claims the NSA delved into his personal email.
The Guardian newspaper has said Britain snooped on delegates of the Group of 20 during two gatherings in London in 2009, hoping to get an unfair advantage in negotiations or policy debates.