Top staff at nuclear
energy giant Electricite de France (EDF) have been charged on suspicion of spying on
Greenpeace.
Two security chiefs at
the French government-owned company are accused of conspiring to hack into
Greenpeace computer systems in France. Three others have also been
charged, including a computer expert and the head of a private investigation
firm. The computer expert has already admitted the
charge.
The head of Greenpeace
UK is today seeking
assurances that EDF, who are the front-runners to build new nuclear reactors in
Britain, have not been spying
on staff at Greenpeace's London offices.
EDF confirmed yesterday
that authorities had searched their premises and an investigation had been
opened for "fraudulent intrusion into computer
systems".
EDF have recently bought
British Energy, owners of almost all of the UK's nuclear power sites, and have an intense
interest in shifting the nuclear debate in Britain.
John
Sauven, head of Greenpeace UK,
said: "We want to know if EDF have been spying on
us.
"Their staff are already
facing spying charges in France, and they've got a very obvious stake in
the future of nuclear power in the UK.
"We back cutting-edge
renewable energy projects, while EDF openly admit that such schemes would
scupper their nuclear plans.
"So it's now very much up
to EDF to say if they've been using underhand tactics in this
country."
The spying revelations
have already caused a furore in France, with national media covering
the story widely. In 1985 the French government accepted responsibility for the
bombing of the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior, in which one crew member
died.
Gordon Brown's brother,
Andrew, is head of media relations at EdF.
ENDS
Greenpeace press office:
020 7865 8255
Romain Chabrol,
Greenpeace France: +31 6 88 88 18 27
Coverage in Le Monde
Coverage on AFP
Notes:
In 2008,
Gordon Brown's public consultation
on nuclear power was found to be fixed by the market research company which
carried out the polling, according to the official trade
body.
The previous year, Greenpeace won a
High Court ruling which overturned an earlier consultation on nuclear power. Mr
Justice Sullivan called the first consultation "manifestly unfair" and
"unlawful", adding that it was "seriously flawed" and "manifestly inadequate"
because insufficient information had been made available by the Government for
participants to make an "intelligent response".