The former head of MI6 has hit out at 'striking and disturbing' invasions
of privacy by the Big Brother state.
Sir Richard Dearlove, who led the Secret Intelligence Service from
1999 to 2004, claimed some were an 'abuse' of the law.
He attacked the 'loss of liberties' caused by expanding surveillance
powers and described some police operations as 'mind-boggling.'
The former spy chief joins a growing number of high-profile critics
warning that individual freedom and privacy are being seriously eroded
by the Government's disproportionate efforts to guard against terrorism.
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Sir Richard was particularly critical of what he claimed were inadequate
laws to regulate some surveillance powers.
Commenting on the massive surge in police use of stop-and-search powers
in London, he highlighted the fact that Scotland Yard officers have
carried out more than 150,000 searches since 2007.
This compared with fewer than 300 in Manchester. Sir Richard said:
'That is a mind-boggling statistic. That may well be an abuse of the
law.









