Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff on Thursday criticized alleged U.S. spying on German Chancellor Angela Merkel's phone calls, insisting on clear rules governing the Internet as a way to prevent it.
"Nobody, no democratic nation, will permit this violation of sovereignty and human and civil rights," said Rousseff, adding "there will be a growing reaction" from countries affected by the eavesdropping scandal.
Allegations that the U.S. National Security Agency tapped Merkel's cellphone and monitored millions of phone calls in France has set off a furor in Europe with leaders taking it up at an EU summit.
Leaks from fugitive former U.S. intelligence analyst Edward Snowden had previously disclosed NSA monitoring of Rousseff's Internet communications, as well as those of Mexico's president.
In an interview with Brazilian radio in Belo Horizonte, Rousseff reiterated that spying on Brazilian citizens, companies and government was "a grave violation of sovereignty."
She noted that U.S. President Barack Obama has promised to "evaluate and adopt measures" in response.
But she said the U.S. rationale that the NSA eavesdropping was needed to combat terrorism "does not fit in my case, and neither do I think it fits in the case of the monitoring of (Merkel's) cellphone."
Rousseff, who cancelled a trip to Washington over the spying, spoke out against it in a speech last month to the UN General Assembly.
She said Brazil would take part in an international conference in April on Internet governance.
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