Last week, netzpolitik.org was notified by federal prosecutors that the two of its journalists would face treason charges after they posted confidential government papers online earlier this year, revealing how the German government sought additional funding to expand surveillance of social media networks.
“We are worried that this kind of action may actually encourage less democratic countries to do this kind of things, and even worse, and simply defend themselves by saying look – we are doing what even Germany is doing,” the head of the IFJ's Human Rights and Safety Office Ernest Sagaga said.
Following widespread protests in support of the bloggers of of free speech, Germany’s chief federal prosecutor Harald Range canceled the probe.
On Monday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel's deputy spokesperson, said the chancellor fully supported Justice Minister Heiko Maas who expressed doubts the leaked documents constituted a “state secret.”