An aerial view of the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv's Sde-Dov airport.(AFP Photo / Jack Guez)
Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein defended the practice in a statement, saying that such searches“are performed only in exceptional instances, after other relevant incriminating indications are found.”Israel’s attorney general says security officials can continue to access emails of foreign tourists landing at Ben-Gurion Airport. If they refuse, they can be denied access to the country.
He added that travelers were not required to give security officers their password, but instead open the accounts on their own.
But Marc Grey, an attorney for the Association of Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), said the situation has little to do with passwords.
"Passwords are not the issue, email accounts are about as private as it gets," he told Reuters.
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