Thousands
of Hillary Clinton's emails while US secretary of state have been
released, including many that have been censored after being deemed
classified.
Mrs Clinton, who is
seeking the Democratic nomination for the 2016 presidential election,
has been under fire for using a private computer server for work emails
while in office.
But she says no classified information was sent or received.
However, 125 emails were deemed confidential by the State Department.
The State Department
disclosed that Mrs Clinton used a private server during her time as
Secretary of State (2009-13) after journalists requested copies of her
government emails.
Mrs Clinton's opponents have accused her of putting US security at risk by using an unsecured computer system.
The presidential hopeful has admitted that her decision to use a private email server at her New York home was a mistake.
Ratings affected
The State Department released 4,368 emails - totalling 7,121 pages - late on Monday.
On Monday, the state
department said about 150 of the messages had to be censored because
they contained information considered to be classified. On Tuesday, it
revised the figure to 125 messages.
One of the emails -
sent in November 2013 by Mrs Clinton's then foreign policy adviser Jacob
Sullivan - was published heavily redacted and marked classified until
2025.
Mr Sullivan, who is
now a policy adviser for Mrs Clinton's presidential campaign, forwarded
her boss the email with the subject line: "No go on Burma (Myanmar)
travel."
In another email -
from September 2010 - Britain's David Miliband admitted that losing the
Labour leadership race to Ed Miliband was "tough", adding: "When it's
your brother..."
State Department
spokesman Mark Toner was quoted by AFP as saying the process of
re-evaluating the remaining unreleased emails was continuing.
The emails were not
marked as classified at the time Mrs Clinton sent or received them. The
vast majority of the correspondence concerned mundane matters of daily
life at workplace, including phone messages and relays of daily
schedules.
One particular email
eliciting laughs among the US political reporter set is an email about
Gefilte fish, a traditional Jewish food eaten on the holiday Passover.
The Washington Post
explains that the Gefilte fish email was about a shipment of the product
to Israel from the US Mrs Clinton was trying to save from a high tax.
Many of the emails
show the influence of Sidney Blumenthal, an outside Clinton adviser. In
one email, Mr Blumenthal describes former UK Liberal Democrat leader
Nick Clegg as having "misplayed almost every turn" and being full of
"inbred arrogance."
Associated Press says
the emails revealed that Mrs Clinton and her aides were acutely aware of
the need to protect sensitive information.
It says Mrs Clinton
also expressed frustration with the State Department's treatment of
certain ordinary documents as classified.
In one email, a State Department IT staffer is trying to determine why Mrs Clinton's non-governmental email is bouncing back.
More than a quarter of
Mrs Clinton's work emails have now been released, after she provided
the State Department with 30,000 pages of documents last year.
Polls indicate that
the email scandal has affected Mrs Clinton's ratings, though she remains
the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination.
Source: BBC

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