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Journalists in the crosshairs

In 2025, Reporters Without Borders, together with the Society for Civil Rights, filed a complaint with the European Court of Human Rights against the German Federal Intelligence Service (BND) Act. A key issue: the protection of sources in the relationship between journalists and their informants.




Journalist or informant?

The current case involving legendary reporter Peter Scholl-Latour reveals how precarious the situation can be.


Scholl-Latour helped Germans understand the world. As a reporter, he traveled to crisis zones and war-torn regions. He journeyed with Ayatollah Khomeini to Iran—and for two hours, he was officially a “Guardian of the Constitution” of the Islamic Republic of Iran. His assessments of global politics often proved accurate.

But investigative journalist Florian Flade has obtained documents that suggest a striking closeness between Peter Scholl-Latour and the BND. Previously classified files identify Scholl-Latour as a source for the BND.

“It was a give-and-take of information, insights, and impressions from relevant regions—valuable for both Scholl-Latour and the BND,” says the agency today.

So, was this just business as usual?
What role did Peter Scholl-Latour really play for the intelligence service?
Florian Flade comments:

“We’re not auxiliary sheriffs—not for prosecutors, not for the police, and certainly not for intelligence agencies.”



(IN GERMAN)
Additional information
Dates
November 2025
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