Former S. African spy chief dies. Mike Louw former head of South Africa’s apartheid-era National Intelligence Service (NIS) and later the South African Secret Service (SASS), has died. As deputy director general at NIS, Louw helped facilitate some of the very first meetings between the government of F.W. De Klerk and Nelson Mandela, the then imprisoned leader of the African National Congress.
Kiwi spies get augmented cyber-surveillance powers. Reports from New Zealand indicate that new “cyber-monitoring measures have been quietly introduced”, giving the country’s law enforcement and intelligence services increased online surveillance powers. Veteran intelligence observer Nicky Hager describes the changes as “the largest expansion of police and [intelligence] surveillance capabilities [in New Zealand] for decades”.
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News you may have missed #0244
January 6, 2010 by intelNews Leave a comment
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Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with ANC, F.W. De Klerk, Internet, Mike Louw, National Intelligence Service (South Africa), Nelson Mandela, New Zealand, News, news you may have missed, Nicky Hager, NZSIS (New Zealand), South Africa, South African Secret Service, surveillance