Belgium and the Netherlands have launched probes into claims of widespread espionage by Germany, which is accused of helping the US spy on Berlin's closest allies in Europe, officials said Friday. The separate investigations follow reports that Germany's BND spy agency helped the US National Security Agency amass a trove of data on targets in Europe, including the French government, European Commission and Airbus Group.
"If it should emerge that the reports of wide-scale eavesdropping by the German secret services are correct, Germany will have to provide an explanation," Belgium's Telecoms Minister Alexander de Croo said in a statement. "A probe has been opened," Dutch government spokesman Ward Bezemer told AFP.
The claims - and questions of how much the office of Chancellor Angela Merkel knew about the reported joint spying - have occupied German politics and media for weeks, and are subject to two parliamentary inquests. But the scandal is fast gaining pace across Europe, led by furious lawmakers from countries that reportedly fell victim to German spies. "German authorities should cooperate with their European partners and not with the NSA," Peter Pilz, an Austrian European MP from the Greens party told AFP.
"We have to change Germany's focus in terms of intelligence co-operation, we have to bring them back to Europe." Austria's government earlier this month filed a legal complaint against an unnamed party concerning "secret intelligence to the detriment of Austria".
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