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UNITED NATIONS – The United Nations said Thursday that alleged British spying on Secretary-General Kofi Annan's office, if true, was illegal and must be stopped.
It was the world body's first official reaction to the charge by a former member of Prime Minister Tony Blair's Cabinet that Britain spied on Annan in the run-up to last year's Iraq war when Washington and London tried unsuccessfully to get U.N. authorization to attack Saddam Hussein.
U.N. spokesman Fred Eckhard said the United Nations "would be disappointed" if the allegation by Clare Short were true.
"Such activities would undermine the integrity and confidential nature of diplomatic exchanges," he said. "Those who speak to the secretary-general are entitled to assume that their exchanges are confidential."
Short, who resigned as Britain's international development secretary shortly after last year's campaign to topple Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, said in a BBC interview that she had seen evidence of eavesdropping and had read transcripts of Annan's conversations.
Blair refused to say whether the allegation was true, but called Short "deeply irresponsible."
Eckhard said Britain's U.N. Ambassador Emyr Jones-Parry, who is in London, called Annan on behalf of Blair, but the U.N. spokesman provided no details about their conversation.
'Stop It'
The United Nations is "not in a position to determine whether this is true or not," Eckhard said. "We are throwing down a red flag and saying if this is true ... stop it."
"The secretariat routinely takes technical measures to guard against such invasions of privacy, and those efforts will now be intensified," Eckhard said.
"We can take certain steps within our power to protect the confidentiality of phone conversations. We can use secure phones, secure faxes ... We routinely check the secretary-general's office and other parts of the U.N. premises for any bugging devices. I don't know that anyone has protection against satellite intercepts," he said.
Asked whether bugging the secretary-general's office was illegal, Eckhard said, "It is indeed considered illegal."
He said there were three relevant international laws, the most important being the 1946 Convention on The Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations, which Britain signed the year it was adopted.
It says U.N. premises "shall be inviolable" and "immune from search ... and any other form of interference, whether by executive, administrative, judicial or legislative action."
The two other laws are the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations and the 1947 agreement between the United Nations and the United States regarding the U.N. headquarters in New York. It contains a provision concerning the inviolability of United Nations premises which is an obligation of the host country.
Eckhard was asked whether Annan planned to speak to the United States about the alleged eavesdropping, because London and Washington worked so closely during the run-up to the war.
"This incident seems only to involve the United Kingdom," Eckhard said. "I don't think the secretary-general intends to speak to anyone else."
The U.N. spokesman stressed that it is the obligation of U.N. member states "to honor their commitments" under international law.