Below is a letter to Guy Verhostadt, president of the European Council, 
regarding a proposal before the European Council of Ministers that would 
expand surveillance of electronic communications.

A few dozen nonprofit groups have written a similar letter to Verhostadt:
http://www.politechbot.com/p-02779.html

Some background:

"Europe set to nix Bush request, not require ISP data retention"
http://www.politechbot.com/p-02789.html

"European Confrontation Over Privacy Rights on Internet"
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/30/technology/30DATA.html

-Declan

**********

UE/ PRIVACY: CAPPATO: " VERHOFSTADT AND DAEMS HAVE TO REJECT
GENERALISED AND MASS SURVEILLANCE ON TELEPHONE COMMUNICATIONS AND
INTERNET IN THE EUROPEAN UNION"

Open letter of Marco Cappato, radical MEP and rapporteur of the
European Parliament on the Directive on privacy in electronic
communications, to Mr Guy VERHOFSTADT, President of the European
Council and Prime Minister of Belgium, and to Mr DAEMS, President of
the EU Telecom Council and Minister of Telecommunications of
Belgium.


Brussels, December the 5th, 2001

Honorable President of the European Council,
Honorable President of the EU Telecoms Council,

The EU Telecoms Council of Ministers will meet tomorrow in Brussels
to decide on the directive on the protection of privacy in
electronic communications. The CoRePer (Committee of Permanent
Representatives of EU Member States) will propose to reject European
Parliament amendments that aimed at regulating public authorities'
access to personal datas.

The CoRePer notably proposes to give Member States the freedom to
impose the compulsory storage of all traffic (the content of the
communication is excluded) and Internet surfing data on telephone
and Internet service providers. The European Parliament had on the
contrary approved on 13 November an amendment that referred to the
European Convention of Human Rights and the related jurisprudence.
This amendment prohibited any form of generalised and mass
surveillance, and foresaw that any exception to the respect of the
privacy principles have to be authorised by law and by a judge and
on a case by case basis. These measures have furthermore to be
necessary in a democratic society, proportionate, appropriate and
limited in time.

In my quality of rapporteur of the European Parliament on the
Directive on privacy in electronic communications, I ask you to
intervene in the Council so as to have the EP proposal approved. I
am very conscious of the fact that the fight against terrorism has
priorities that led the President of the United States George Bush
to write to you to ask for a change of the Directive in the section
that provides for the deletion of data at the end of the billing
time. It is necessary to notice, on the one hand, that neither the
federal legislation of the United States provides an obligation for
generalised data retention and that, on the other hand, as the main
experts of the sector say, the weakness of public authorities in the
repression of terrorism does not consist so much in the lack of
collected data, but in the difficulties to make use of it, because
of the lack of "intelligence" on the ground.

In conclusion, the proposal the Council is examining to give to
public authorities the mandate to supervise potentially all citizens
must be rejected as it puts at stake fundamental and constitutional
liberties, granted by the European Convention on Human Rights,
without contributing to a more aimed and effective fight against
criminality.

-------------------------------------

UE/ PRIVACY: CAPPATO: " VERHOFSTADT ET DAEMS DOIVENT REJETER LA
SURVEILLANCE GENERALISEE ET DE MASSE SUR LES COMMUNICATIONS
TELEPHONIQUES ET SUR L'INTERNET DANS L'UNION EUROPEENNE"

Lettre ouverte de Marco Cappato, d�put� europ�en Radical et
rapporteur du Parlement Europ�en sur la Directive sur la protection
de la vie priv�e dans les communications �l�ctronicques, � M. Guy
VERHOFSTADT, Pr�sident en exercice du Conseil Europ�en et Premier
Ministre de la Belgique, et � M. DAEMS, Pr�sident du Conseil Telecom
de l'UE et Ministre des T�l�communications de la Belgique.

Bruxelles, le 5 d�cembre 2001

Monsieur le Pr�sident en exercice du Conseil, Monsieur le Ministre,

Le Conseil des Ministres des t�l�communications de l'Union
europ�enne se r�unira demain � Bruxelles pour examiner la Directive
sur la protection des donn�es personnelles dans les communications
�lectroniques. Comme vous le savez, la proposition du Comit� des
Repr�sentants Permanents (CoRePer) de rejeter les amendements du
Parlement europ�en destin�s � r�gulariser les possibilit�s d'acc�s
des autorit�s publiques aux donn�es personnelles figurera �galement
� l'ordre du jour.

Le texte du CoRePer propose en particulier que carte blanche soit
donn�e aux Etats nationaux pour la conservation obligatoire de la
part des fournisseurs d'acc�s � Internet et des op�rateurs
t�l�phoniques de toutes les donn�es personnelles relatives au trafic
t�l�phonique (except� le contenu des conversations) et � la
navigation en r�seau. Le Parlement europ�en avait, par contre,
approuv� � l'unanimit�, le 13 novembre dernier, un amendement qui,
se r�f�rant � la Convention  europ�enne des droits de l'homme,

interdisait toute forme de surveillance g�n�ralis�e et de masse, et
pr�voyait que les exceptions au respect de la privacy soient
autoris�es seulement au cas par cas, de mani�re appropri�e,
proportionn�e et limit�e dans le temps.

En ma qualit� de Rapporteur sur la Directive, je me permets de vous
demander d'intervenir au sein du Conseil pour approuver la
proposition du Parlement europ�en. J'ai bien conscience des
priorit�s pour la lutte contre le terrorisme, qui ont �galement
conduit le Pr�sident des Etats-Unis, George Bush, � vous �crire pour
demander une modification de la Directive pr�cis�ment dans la partie
qui pr�voit l'effacement des donn�es au terme de la p�riode de
contestation des factures. Il faut cependant noter, d'une part que
la l�gislation f�d�rale des Etats-Unis ne pr�voit pas non plus une
obligation de conservation g�n�ralis�e des donn�es, et d'autre part
que, au dire des plus grands experts du secteur, la faiblesse des
autorit�s publiques dans la r�pression du terrorisme ne consiste pas
tant dans l'insuffisance des donn�es recueillies que dans la
difficult� de les utiliser, en raison des ressources limit�es d'
"intelligence "sur le terrain".

En d�finitive, la proposition en examen au Conseil de fournir aux
autorit�s nationales le mandat pour surveiller potentiellement tous
les citoyens devrait, selon moi, �tre rejet�e car elle met en danger
les libert�s fondamentales et constitutionnelles garanties �galement
dans la Convention europ�enne des droits de l'homme et, en m�me
temps, elle ne contribuerait pas � une lutte plus cibl�e et efficace
contre la criminalit�.

En vous remerciant de l'attention que vous voudrez bien porter � ma
lettre, je vous prie de croire, Monsieurs, � l'assurance de ma haute
consid�ration.




-------------------------------------------------------------------------
POLITECH -- Declan McCullagh's politics and technology mailing list
You may redistribute this message freely if you include this notice.
Declan McCullagh's photographs are at http://www.mccullagh.org/
To subscribe to Politech: http://www.politechbot.com/info/subscribe.html
This message is archived at http://www.politechbot.com/
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to