The Federal Minister for Justice, Heiko Maas, has called on the Federal Prosecutor General Harald Range to step down from his post after he ordered the investigation.
"I have told federal prosecutor Range that my trust in his ability to fulfil the office has suffered lasting damage and therefore, in agreement with the chancellery, I will request his retirement today," Maas said.
But critics have lashed out, saying Range is being used as a paw and that Maas himself should resign over what has been described as a "glaring failure".
The scandal broke out last week when it was revealed that Federal Attorney General had launched a treason investigation into the digital rights group Netzpolitik.org for the organization’s role in exposing the role of the German secret service in the mass surveillance of its citizens.
In February 2015, Netzpolitik.org reported on the German government’s plans to collect and monitor huge volumes of Internet data, mimicking the mass data acquisition by the NSA. The report included the full text of a leaked secret surveillance budget from 2013. A second article exposed the "Erweiterten Fachunterstützung Internet" or "Extended Specialist Support Internet" department of Germany’s intelligence agency.
We've published (@ioerror/@shiromarieke) an open letter in defense of @netzpolitik signed by the press: http://t.co/iqfPuuamda #Landesverrat
— Jacob Appelbaum (@ioerror) August 5, 2015
Netzpolitik.org announced that it had received a letter from the Federal Attorney General and the President of the German Domestic Security Agency, stating that two of its reporters and an unknown party were under investigation for "treason" and could face two years in jail. The letter confirmed the agency was investigating reporters Markus Beckedahl, Andre Meister and, it is understood, their source.
Political Ball Games
There was a public outcry against the investigation, with many saying is was patently in the public interest that the extent of mass surveillance by the state on German citizens should be known about and that the investigation amounted to a witch hunt on whistle blowers.
Range was accused of political interference in the judicial process. The CSU Party home affairs spokesman Hans-Peter Uhl said that the justice ministry must have known about the Attorney General’s investigation over the past three months.
"During this time, the Minister of Justice apparently made no use of his authority over Range" Uhl told the Handelsblatt newspaper. "The sudden dismissal [of Range] was strange. I think this is excessive and therefore also wrong," he added.
Maas hit back saying: "The statements and the procedure selected by Attorney General Range procedure are incomprehensible and give the public a false impression."
However, some politicians have accused Maas of playing politics. "The little war between the Federal Prosecutor's Office and the Justice Ministry cannot continue like this," Thomas Strobl, a Christian Democrat deputy chairman, told the newspaper Die Welt.
"People are not sympathetic to this kind of internal preoccupation," he said.