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http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/apr2004/euro-a13.shtml
After the Madrid bombings
Moves toward European-wide police-state methods
By Martin Kreickenbaum
13 April 2004


Coming just a few weeks after the train bombings in Madrid, the "war on
terror" moved to centre stage at the recent European Union (EU) spring
summit, which took place in Brussels March 25-26. According to the European
media, the meeting was a milestone for the further integration of Europe.
The Frankfurter Rundschau newspaper, for example, saw the terror attacks as
a "permanent catalyst" for continued European integration.

According to these arguments, the attacks have made possible a yielding of
national interests in favour of joint action. The voting out of office of
the conservative Aznar government in Spain and the resignation by the Polish
prime minister Leszek Miller have eased the path for the possible adoption
of the European constitution by June. Where only a short time ago a rift had
developed between "old" and "new" Europe, the media is now evoking the
unification of Europe.

However, what this integration means in the first instance is the
integration of the different security apparatuses in Europe to better
coordinate their activities. Consequently, the same process is taking place
in Europe as in the US, where the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, were
used as a pretence for a dramatic onslaught against the democratic rights of
the population.

Within the space of only 10 days between the Madrid bombings and the
Brussels meeting, the European governments and the EU Commission have given
their blessings to an entire range of measures without any substantial
discussion. The commission rushed to produce a draft proposal, entitled
"Declaration on the Struggle against Terror," which served as the basis for
discussion on the first day of the summit.

At first glance, the declaration does not appear all that significant:
current laws should be enforced, an EU security coordinator appointed and
the exchange of information between nations improved. In reality, however, a
series of security policies will be enacted that incorporate a previously
unheard of level of surveillance and intrusion into the privacy of the
entire populace, placing practically everyone under general suspicion as
well as advancing the militarisation of domestic policies. These measures
also allow for the suppression of protests and dissenting opinions.


The abolition of data privacy

Using the specious justification that a better exchange of security
information between the EU states could have possibly prevented the Madrid
bombings, the government heads agreed to increase the exchange of
information on these matters.

However, this exchange does not just apply to that information which already
exists, but to what must also now be collected-above all, biometric data.
This includes the gathering of information about facial characteristics as
well as fingerprints. These are to be digitised and recorded on special
computer chips, together with other identity features. Currently,
fingerprints are already taken for many visa applications and saved in the
European EURODAC database. Using this method, deported foreigners can be
identified for future visa requests and prevented from attempting renewed
attempts to enter the EU.

In future, applicants will only be able to receive visas if they can produce
identity papers containing biometric data. This data will then be saved in
the central visa information system VIS and made available to all border
checkpoints and police departments. Through this ambitious project, the EU
wants to create the largest collection of biometric data in the world. The
aim is to gather around 70 million records, which will remain in the system
for up to five years.

EU citizens will not be exempted. From 2006, one year earlier than initially
planned, every passport issued in the EU will also contain biometric data.
The central storage of this data will enable governments to track the
movements of every person.

Future identification cards will contain such data as well. This means that
the entire population will be placed under general suspicion, with a
complete collection made of fingerprints and facial characteristics of every
resident in the EU. Every surveillance camera connected to this data could,
through a facial recognition system, detect where a person is at any
particular moment. Such a system is envisioned for airports and train
stations.

Further inroads will be made into the protection of data privacy. In future,
airlines will have to make data available to the authorities for passengers
taking EU flights, including the most sensitive of information. Alongside
travel particulars, this will include credit card details, previous travels
and, if required, health problems. At present, the US requests this
information from European airlines for passengers taking transcontinental
flights. Soon, the authorities in the US and Europe will even have direct
access to the reservation systems of the airlines, which would allow all
flights to be monitored.

Fingerprint data and DNA profiles drawn up through saliva tests carried out
across entire regions, which have up until now been collected by individual
countries, will be brought together and matched. Since 1997, EU member
states have already been required to connect their databases containing DNA
profiles. In doing so, no list of offences has been drawn up nor any
limitations on the use of data, so that DNA profiles could be assembled and
maintained virtually unhindered.

Acting on the proposal by British Home Secretary David Blunkett, the
commission will draw up recommendations by June 2005 that would force
telecommunications carriers and Internet providers to save customer usage
data for a five-year period. Whereas mobile phones are alleged to have
played a significant role in the Madrid terror attacks, the EU wants to
permit the complete surveillance of their usage, as well as that of e-mail
accounts and visited web sites.

The existing personal data management system, SIS I, will be upgraded to a
newer version (SIS II) to accommodate the increased data arising from the
expansion of the EU in May. The SIS system was originally implemented to
assist in the tracking down of stolen goods such as automobiles, but has
since mutated increasingly into a personal information database.

More than 1 million people are already recorded in SIS, most of them
refugees and asylum seekers who are due to be deported or to whom future
entry is to be denied. This register will now be expanded to cover any
person who has his or her entry or departure denied, such as protesters who
wish to demonstrate against World Trade Organisation or G8 meetings.

Until now, recorded persons had only relatively small amounts of information
tabulated about them-for example, refusal of entry into a country and the
name of the office issuing the refusal. Data was only kept for a maximum of
three years.

This period will be increased and the kind of data maintained dramatically
broadened. Personal characteristics are to be kept along with biometric data
and personal DNA profiles. The SIS II system will operate on the same
technical platform as that for visa information so that both sorts of data
will be compatible.

What is significant is not just the kind of data that will be saved, but
also how it will be used. On this issue, German Interior Minister Otto
Schily has for years argued that access should be granted on the lowest
possible level. According to Schily's proposal, even traffic police would be
given access and immigration departments also included in data registration.

If any of Schily's colleagues in the EU previously had reservations about
invasion of privacy, these have fallen away after March 11. The previously
agreed-on "Development of Principles for the Protection of Data" has been
put on hold, which means that the unhindered flow and access of information
is now all but inevitable.

Data collected by Europol will also be matched with this new data. The
European police agency is above all an intelligence service that analyses
data in the most varied of branches and whose databases contain up to
100,000 records. They document criminal activities and persons, including
the convicted, suspects, witnesses, victims and contact persons. The
collection of analyses and working data will not be assembled on the basis
of specific instances of criminal activity, but will instead be based on the
strategic and political considerations that Europol regards as relevant to
its work.

Europol works closely with the respective intelligence services in each
country and receives much of its data from them. The integration of SIS with
the Europol computer servers will mean even closer collaboration between the
intelligence services and the police. The separation of these two branches
and the prohibition against using information from intelligence agencies in
courts are to be largely lifted.



A massive attack against due process and the circumvention of many legal
rights will also be brought about through the swift introduction of a
Europe-wide arrest warrant. Although this was agreed upon long ago, five
countries have yet to implement it in their national laws. These warrants
are not just confined to terrorism, but also cover 32 other criminal acts.

Member states will be able to issue arrest warrants that specify the crime
only, carrying with it no juridical proof concerning the guilt of the person
or any facts surrounding the case-both of which are normal in extradition
procedures. In effect, this will make raids and house searches possible
without any form of juridical control, abrogating the basic right of habeas
corpus, according to which no person can be arrested or placed in custody
without an authorised arrest warrant.


The militarisation of European domestic politics

The summit was used, on the one hand, under the cover of the "war against
terror," to make inroads against data privacy; on the other hand, EU
interior ministers used the forum to force through a number of resolutions
that will militarise European domestic politics.

A new position of European security coordinator was created. The post will
be initially occupied by Gijs de Vries, who last sat in the European
parliament as a member of the Dutch liberals. He is to preside over a
so-called "clearing house," in which intelligence about suspected terrorists
and groups will be brought together and the activities of national agencies
coordinated. The decision on which groups are to be classified as
 "terrorist" will no longer be made by unanimous agreement of the European
parliament but by a simple majority.

The security coordinator will be a ministerial post and will support Javier
Solana, who is currently responsible for security and foreign affairs of the
EU. Its staff will therefore belong to the military headquarters of the EU.

This is entirely in line with the premature adoption of the solidarity
clause in the controversial EU draft constitution (which still must be
agreed upon). This clause states that EU member states are, in cases of
terror attacks, obliged to support each other with all necessary means-the
use of language similar to that of NATO is no accident. These "means" mainly
include policing and military measures to protect "democratic institutions
and the civil population." The solidarity clause could then be used to
legitimise Europe-wide police and military operations.

According to civil rights groups such as Statewatch, the definition of a
"terrorist act," which the EU advanced in a resolution for the war on
terror, is broad enough to include mass protests against international
governmental meetings. Military operations against such protests would be
permitted according to the solidarity clause. The positioning of the
security coordinator in the military centre of the EU makes clear that the
ruling elite is deadly serious about this provision.

The measures adopted by the EU Commission will do little to contribute to
the protection of the population against terror attacks like those in
Madrid. Instead, police powers and their surveillance of the entire
population in Europe will be intensified. The ruling class is once again
using recent tragic events to dismantle democratic rights fought by the
working class of Europe. The right to privacy with regard to personal
information, the freedom to travel, the separation of the police from the
secret services and the right to a fair trial are being abolished-all in the
name of security.

At the same time, the police and military are being given a virtual blank
cheque to go ahead with attacks against their own populations. The reaction
by European authorities and police makes clear that for the European ruling
elite, the recent political reaction of the Spanish population, who just a
few weeks ago threw the Aznar government out of office, was even more
significant and shocking than the Madrid terror attacks.





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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substanceâ??not soap-boxingâ??please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'â??with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright fraudsâ??is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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