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Former chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix said on Saturday he suspected the United States bugged his office and home in the run-up to the Iraq war, but had no hard evidence.
Describing such behaviour as "disgusting", Blix told Britain's Guardian newspaper in an interview: "It feels like an intrusion into your integrity in a situation when you are actually on the same side."
His allegation came on top of a diplomatic row sparked this week when former British minister Clare Short said Britain bugged UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's office as London and Washington tried but failed to win UN backing to invade Iraq.
Blix said his suspicions were raised when he had trouble with a telephone connection at home.
"It might have been something trivial or it might have been something installed somewhere, I don't know," he said.
The Swede said he asked UN counter-surveillance teams to check his office and home for listening devices.
"If you had something sensitive to talk about you would go out into the restaurant or out into the streets," said Blix.
He said US State Department envoy John Wolf visited him two weeks before the Iraq war with pictures of an Iraqi drone and a cluster bomb that the former inspector believed could have been secured only from within the UN weapons office. "He should not have had them. I asked him how he got them and he would not tell me," Blix said.
"It could have been some staff belonging to us that handed them to the Americans. It could also be that they managed to break into the secure fax and got it that way," he said.
Short, in government before and during the Iraq war, said on Thursday she had seen transcripts of what she said were bugged accounts of Annan's conversations. She resigned after the war.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair accused her of being irresponsible and of undermining intelligence services at a time when Britain faced a threat of attack from Islamic militants.

Copyright Reuters, 2004

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