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			 The United States and Britain both came in for global scrutiny and 
			criticism after Edward Snowden, a former contractor with the U.S. 
			National Security Agency (NSA), disclosed their vast phone, email 
			and internet surveillance operations. 
 But Vodafone <VOD.L>, which has 400 million customers in countries 
			across Europe, Africa and Asia, said in its "Disclosure Report" on 
			Friday that countries in its reach are using similar practices.
 
 While most governments needed legal notices to tap into customers' 
			communications, there were six countries where that was not the 
			case, it said.
 
 "In a small number of countries the law dictates that specific 
			agencies and authorities must have direct access to an operator's 
			network, bypassing any form of operational control over lawful 
			interception on the part of the operator," Vodafone said.
 
 Vodafone did not name the six for legal reasons. It added that in 
			Albania, Egypt, Hungary, India, Malta, Qatar, Romania, South Africa 
			and Turkey it could not disclose any information related to 
			wiretapping or interception.
 
            
			 
			The Vodafone report, which is incomplete because many governments 
			will not allow it to disclose requests, also linked to 
			already-published national data which showed Britain and Australia 
			making hundreds of thousands of requests.
 It showed that of the countries in which it operates, EU member 
			Italy made the most requests for communication data.
 
 Germany, which expressed outrage when it was revealed last year that 
			U.S. intelligence services had listened into the calls of Angela 
			Merkel, also made requests to listen in to conversations and collect 
			the data around them, such as where the calls were made and how long 
			they lasted.
 
 Vodafone received no requests from the government of the United 
			States because it does not have an operating licence there. It 
			exited a joint mobile venture with Verizon last year.
 
 The extent of U.S. and British surveillance was laid bare when the 
			NSA's Snowden passed stolen secret documents to newspapers, 
			triggering a spy scandal that caused a standoff between U.S. 
			President Barack Obama and the Kremlin and led to calls for greater 
			scrutiny of Western agents.
 
 ACCESS AT THE FLICK OF A SWITCH
 
 In the cases of the six countries, the company said government 
			agencies had inserted their own equipment into the Vodafone network, 
			or diverted Vodafone's data traffic through government systems, to 
			enable them to listen into calls, and determine where they were 
			made.
 
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			"For governments to access phone calls at the flick of a switch is 
			unprecedented and terrifying," said Shami Chakrabarti, Director of 
			human rights group Liberty. 
			"Snowden revealed the internet was already treated as fair game. 
			Bluster that all is well is wearing pretty thin – our analogue laws 
			need a digital overhaul."
 Western security services say they are fighting a silent war with 
			extremists who are trying to kill their citizens and the head of 
			Britain's MI5 Security Service has said Snowden's revelations were a 
			gift to terrorists.
 
 Vodafone runs mobile and some broadband operations in 27 countries 
			and works with partners in 49 more. It also has a small number of 
			local operator businesses in other countries through its acquisition 
			of the Cable & Wireless worldwide business.
 
 It said it had received requests in 29 countries.
 
 Vodafone linked to data released by national governments, covering 
			either 2013 or the most recent year available. It noted that each 
			country, agency and operator counts requests in different ways and 
			therefore it was difficult to compare them.
 
 According to the most recent national reports, which were collated 
			by the Guardian newspaper, Australia made 685,757 requests for 
			details about calls, such as where they were made and to whom. It 
			intercepted 3,389 calls.
 
 Britain had similar statistics, with 514,608 requests for details 
			and 2,760 interceptions. Germany made 18,026 requests, with 23,687 
			interceptions in 2012, the last time data was given.
 
 Vodafone is the world's second largest mobile operator in terms of 
			customer numbers, behind China Mobile <0941.HK>.
 
 (Editing by Sophie Walker)
 
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