Search Results

10 Results

Content

Privacy

contact us through our contact form, and to collect analytics about how our website is used (to help us monitor engagement and improve the site). The data We will process…

12:41, 03 November 2020

Accessibility

…accessibility requirements contact us through our Contact form. Enforcement procedure If you contact us with a complaint and you’re not happy with our response contact the Equality Advisory and Support…

13:40, 15 January 2021

Contact

…to contact the Committee, please write to us at: ISC, PO BOX 76254, LONDON, SW1P 9NJ Alternatively, to contact us via the internet, please complete the form below. Please be…

15:28, 18 November 2020

23 October 2013

23 October 2013


Open Evidence Session

At 14:00 on Thursday 7 November, the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament will be holding an Open Evidence Session with the three heads of the UK Intelligence Agencies:

  • Sir Iain Lobban, Director, GCHQ;
  • Mr Andrew Parker, Director General, Security Service; and
  • Sir John Sawers, Chief, Secret Intelligence Service.

This will be the Committee’s first Open Evidence Session: it will be the first time the three heads of the Intelligence Agencies have appeared in public together to talk about their work.

The session will give an insight into the world of intelligence, and the work the Agencies do on behalf of the UK. It represents a very significant step forward in terms of the openness and transparency of the Agencies. The Committee will question the Agency Heads on the work of the Agencies, their current priorities and the threats to the UK. Among other things it will cover the terrorist threat, regional instability and weapons proliferation, cyber security and espionage. However, since this is a public session, it will not cover details of intelligence capabilities or techniques, ongoing operations or sub judice matters. The Committee questions the Agencies about these details in their closed sessions.

The session will be held on the Parliamentary estate and will last approximately an hour and a half. It will be broadcast on www.parliamentlive.tv.

The session will be broadcast on a short time delay. The time delay is a security mechanism to allow the Committee to pause the broadcast if anything is mentioned which might endanger national security or the safety of those working for the Agencies. A similar process was used during the public hearings for the Iraq Inquiry.

There will be a limited number of seats available in the meeting room itself. For security reasons, the Committee has agreed that for this first Open Session these seats will be available to full Parliamentary pass holders and a small number of print journalists only. A notification of the event has been posted on the parliamentary intranet and pass holders have been invited to apply for a seat, which will be allocated on a ‘first come, first served’ basis.

Media arrangements are being dealt with separately.

11:04, 23 October 2013

6 September 2022

6 September 2022

The Committee has sent its Report, ‘International Partnerships’, to the Prime Minister.

19:20, 6 September 2022

Publications

…classified form) and to Parliament (with sensitive material redacted). However, a small number of reports, which deal with the most highly classified matters, may be made solely to the Prime…

16:07, 05 November 2020

How the Committee works

…ten working days. Once confirmation is received from the Prime Minister, the Committee then determines a date for publication of the report to allow for a number of administrative processes…

09:04, 17 November 2020

Cookies

…view your cookie code, just click on a cookie to open it. You’ll see a short string of text and numbers. The numbers are your identification card, which can only…

12:51, 17 December 2020

14 October 2014

14 October 2014

As previously announced in the ‘Privacy and Security Inquiry – Public Evidence Sessions’ statement, the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament will be holding a number of public evidence sessions this week as part of its Privacy and Security Inquiry. They may be viewed through the links below:

08:19, 14 October 2014