« Home | Malta INDEPENDENT online: Let’s make Europe happe... » | ITAR-TASS: 5 Eastern European presidents discussin... » | FrontPage magazine.com: Turkey - Kemalism on the L... » | Helsingin Sanomat - Eastern European countries amo... » | EUobserver.com: Voting an Veto issues to dominate ... » | IHT: ECB signals higher rates ahead - by G. Thoma... » | IHT: Euro becomes currency of choice for cocaine t... » | Bloomberg.com: U.S. Economy: Trade Deficit Widens ... » | Kristoffer Larsson: The so-called Islamic Threat t... » | Autos Insider:Bio Fuels - Rash claims, poor fuel ... » 

May 12, 2007 

SeattlePi: U.S. pushing Europe for flight data deal-by Colleen Barry

For the complete report from SeattlePi click on this link

U.S. pushing Europe for flight data deal-by Colleen Barry

The United States is hoping to make progress this weekend on a new agreement with European countries to share airline passenger data for terrorism investigations, a U.S. official said Friday.The two sides disagree on how long U.S. authorities can use the data, when it should be destroyed and which agencies should have access to the information. The United States also wants the authority to pull data directly from airline computers, but European countries insist airlines must transmit the information to U.S. authorities.

European governments are worried about violating their strict privacy laws - a legacy in some countries of overcoming dictatorships.

The current deal allows the Customs and Border Protection agency to disclose passenger data to other U.S. law enforcement agencies for anti-terror investigations "if those agencies have protection standards comparable to those of the EU" (which is nearly impossible to figure out).

Note EU-Digest:"The present agreement between the US and the EU which already contains numerous European concessions should remain in force. The EU should screen its own citizens traveling to the US and stop those it considers potential threats to society. The US, however, must not be allowed to obtain sovereign European computer data on its own accord (which it is probably already doing anyway). In the meantime it would be recommended that this Privacy Law issue be discussed once again in the European parliament and dumped for good. For the time being European tourists probably are better served to avoid visiting the US."

Labels: , ,

|

Links to this post

Create a Link

About us

EU-Digest, a free service of Europe House, provides news highlights and links to European related news reports on economic, social and political issues. Europe House reserves the right to deny any comments or articles it finds irrelevant. The information published in EU-Digest does not necessarily reflect the viewpoint or the opinion of Europe House.

Subscribe

To subscribe enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz

Tell a friend


Eurobarometer

European Weather - Amsterdam

Click for Amsterdam, Netherlands Forecast

For information on placing your advertising link click here.

Official PayPal Seal

Search

Google



Archives

Powered by Blogger
and Blogger Templates



Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Add to GoogleAdd to My AOL
Subscribe in BloglinesSubscribe in FeedLounge
Add EU-Digest to Newsburst from CNET News.com
BLOGGER


Get Firefox!