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| Subject: EU Ready To Give U.S. Access To Police Data Fri Apr 18, 2008 5:40 am | |
| BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union executive signaled on Thursday the bloc could give the United States limited access to its police databases in a bid to resolve a long-running visa row with Washington.
The offer, likely to stir up European concerns about data privacy, would be an attempt to get all 27 EU member states into the U.S. visa-free system. But it would apply only if the EU received similar data from Washington, a senior EU official said.
"We are prepared to sit down with our American friends and discuss on a strictly reciprocal basis what information may be needed to be shared to include our member states in the visa waiver system," Jonathan Faull, the EU executive's director for justice and home affairs, told a news conference.
Among its databases, the EU stores asylum seekers' fingerprints and plans to do the same with visa applicants. Countries in its Schengen border-free area also have a database for people searched by police and for stolen vehicles.
On Friday, EU justice and interior ministers are expected to give the European Commission a formal mandate to negotiate on visas and database access with the United States.
At the same meeting, ministers are set to agree on an EU law to punish public incitement to terrorism, especially on the Internet, and recruitment and training for terrorism, EU diplomats said.
Germany is likely to raise during the meeting the possibility of taking in more Christian refugees from Iraq, an EU diplomat said.
"We must help here and offer them a home in European countries until they can return to their home," Germany's interior minister Wolfgang Schaeuble wrote in Bild am Sonntag newspaper on Sunday.
VISA WAIVER
Faull said the EU would not give full access to its databases but needed to confer with the United States to see what data it wanted.
Most old EU states are part of the U.S. visa waiver program, which allows their citizens to travel without visas. But Greece and 11 of the 12 mostly ex-communist countries that joined the bloc in 2004 and 2007 are not.
Washington this year pressed those countries to give it access to police data in return for scrapping visas, but had not offered to give any of its police data in return, Faull said.
The Bush administration's decision to sign separate, preliminary visa deals in recent weeks with several ex-communist central European countries instead of with the EU as a whole has caused tensions within Europe and with Washington although those deals did not include access to EU databases.
The EU and the United States agreed last month to defuse the crisis for now by allowing talks between Washington and individual EU states to run in parallel with EU-U.S. talks.
Faull said that would include the issue of access to databases as well as a planned U.S. electronic travel authorization system, which would require travelers to fill in a form on the Internet before departure.
Countries like the Czech Republic, which signed preliminary deals with the United States, have said they will go ahead with their own talks and do not want EU-U.S. talks to delay their entry into the visa waiver system.
Faull said the EU was not holding things up.
http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSL1778910820080417?sp=true _________________ Anarcho-Capitalist, AnCaps Forum, Ancapolis, OZschwitz Contraband “The state calls its own violence law, but that of the individual, crime.”-- Max Stirner "Remember: Evil exists because good men don't kill the government officials committing it." -- Kurt Hofmann |
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