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an Open Europe
UK: Campaigners
call for amendment to one-sided UK-US extradition treaty The
UK was accused last night of being a "minor 51st state of
America" as over 150 people packed into a hall in London
to hear the stories of individuals facing extradition to the
United States, two of whom have been detained for a total of
14 years despite never facing trial in the UK. In front of a
screen bearing the slogan "British justice for British citizens",
speakers urged the crowd to step up the campaign to amend the
Extradition Act 2003, under which no prima facie evidence is
required for extradition from the UK to the US to be approved.
UK: First
ever Big Society Audit warns of the need to bridge the "Big
Society gap" and calls for government to work with voluntary
sector The
Audit highlights that the Big Society has failed to strengthen
the voluntary sector over the last two years and that it will
face an estimated £3.3 billion of cuts in public funding
up to 2016. Small, local voluntary and community organisations
struggle to gain Government contracts, and tendering practices
appear to have an implicit bias toward private sector organisations.
EU: MEPs
water down ethics rules
(european voice website, link) Parliament's leadership exempts
hotel rooms costing less than 300 a night from transparency
requirements. See also: Greens-EFAs press releases: European
Parliament transparency - Centre right MEPs vote to keep details
of industry-funded jollies opaque (link) The European
Parliament's bureau last night voted to overturn the essence
of provisions in the MEP code of conduct aimed at ensuring full
transparency when MEPs accept gifts in the form of travel, accommodation
and subsistence expenses from third parties. The outcome, which
was determined by a centre right majority on the EP's bureau,
ignored the advice of the EP's ethics committee, which had recommended
full transparency for such trips.
EU: European Parliament: European Investigation Order: Orientation
vote result on the adoption of a Directive of the European Parliament
and of the Council regarding the European Investigation Order
in criminal matters (pdf)
EU: No
compromise in sight on EU document secrecy (euobserver, link) Jakob
Alvi, the Danish EU presidency spokesman, told EUobserver on
Tuesday (22 May) that member states and the European Parliament
rapporteur on the dossier, British center-left MEP Michael Cashman,
remain poles apart after initial talks, set to continue on Wednesday.
EU: Statewatch Analysis: The Revised Asylum
Procedures Directive: Keeping Standards Low (pdf) by Steve Peers,
Professor of Law, Law School, University of Essex.
Offers a thorough
legal analysis of the Council's current position on the revised
asylum procedures directive and concludes:
- The proposed Council draft would provide for a fairly modest
increase in standards relating to asylum procedures with the
most important improvements from the June 2011 revised proposal
removed or watered down.
- There are some disturbing reductions of current standards as
regards (surreally) the possibility to consider an application
as withdrawn even though it was never made (if it is not made
as soon as possible), and the power to reintroduce a 'super-safe'
third country rule allowing for no consideration of an asylum
application at all - a manifest breach of the Geneva Convention,
international human rights law, and the EU Charter of Fundamental
Rights.
- Member States would still be able to accelerate the consideration
of a significant number of applications and in so doing could
deny the applicant legal aid, access to the information used
against him or her and a copy of the report of the interview
during first-instance proceedings; and they could then prevent
the applicant from staying on the territory during the appeal.
The net result would be a grossly unfair procedure.
EU: Statewatch Analysis: Access to EU documents:
Article-by-Article commentary, Red Lines for the
negotiations, and the undemocratic recast procedure (pdf) by Steve Peers,
Professor of Law, Law School, University of Essex.
On 10 May 2012, the Danish Presidency of the Council put on the
agenda of Coreper (the EU body consisting of Member States' representatives
to the EU) a draft deal on the proposed Regulation on access
to documents. This deal, if agreed, would constitute the Council's
position for negotiations with the European Parliament (EP),
which has joint decision-making powers on this proposal. This
analysis examines the draft deal on an article-by-article basis
and concludes:
- The draft position of the Council constitutes a significant
overall reduction in the level of access to documents.
- In particular, the council's definition of a 'document' is
of doubtful legality and would exclude massive numbers of documents
from the scope of the rules.
- The EP should not accept the Council proposal in its present
form, or any variation thereof which would significantly reduce
current standards.
- In particular, the EP should make clear to the Council that
it cannot in any circumstances accept the proposed definition
of a 'document'. If the Council is adamant on including this
definition, the EP should instantly veto the proposal.
- The Commission's decision to present negotiations in the form
of a 'recast' - a profoundly undemocratic and indeed surely illegal
procedure - has prevented the EP from pressing for most of the
changes it has unanimously voted for.
- The EP and the Council should immediately denounce the pernicious
and illegal Inter-institutional Agreement on the recasting of
EU Acts.
EU: A
drop of fundamental rights in an ocean of unaccountability: Frontex
in the process of implementing Article 26(a) (link). On 27 April,
Frontex presented a tentative timeline in view of the establishment
of the controversial Consultative Forum on Fundamental Rights
which comes as a result of negotiations between the Council and
the European Parliament in November 2011. [1] While European
borders remain some of the most murderous in the world, details
of the establishment process of this new body confirm the pre-eminence
of the Management Board and Member States in the functioning
of Frontex, and the leaving aside of any democratic oversight
and independent monitoring mechanism.
SPAIN: Less-lethal
weapons and public order: Athletic Bilbao fan killed by a plastic
bullet
(link). An Athletico Bilbao football fan celebrating his team's
win on 5 April 2012 became the latest victim of the Basque police
force's use of plastic bullets. The death sparked fresh debate
over the legitimacy of the practice.
EU: REGULATION ON PUBLIC ACCESS TO DOCUMENTS: Council seeks to re-write the definition
of a "document" after 19 years: Recast
of Regulation (EC) No 1049/2001 regarding public access to European
Parliament, Council and Commission documents (first reading)
- Preparation of informal trilogues (pdf). Since 1993 the definition of
a "document" has been that a: "document shall
mean any content whatever its medium" and this is in
the current Regulation. However, the Council intends to keep
this general definition (Article 3) but to add Article 3a: "Documents
subject to this Regulation": which says a document becomes
subject to this Regulation (ie: the whole Regulation) when: "it
has been drawn up by an institution and either formally
transmitted to one or more recipients, submitted for filing or
registration, approved by the competent official, or otherwise
completed for the purposes for which it was intended"
(emphasis added) In simple terms a "document" is
only really a "document" when it is finalised (all
the drafts and discussion prior to this are not "documents")
- this is the same definition, which was widely criticised, first
put forward by the Commission in 2008. .
The double-faced
language of the Council position means also that while it appears
in Article 12 that documents concerning legislative and non-legislative
acts: "shall, subject to Articles 4 and 9, be made directly
accessible to the public" they are still subject to
the general rule in Article 3a above. It would thus negate Articles
15.1 and 15.3 para 5 of the Lisbon Treaty.
Tony Bunyan,
Statewatch Director, comments: " In 1997 the Amsterdam
Treaty promised to "enshrine" the public's right of
access to EU documents but in 2001 we only got half the cake.
If the Council and the Commission get their way we will be left
with just a few crumbs [small fragments]. Access to documents
is the life-blood of a healthy, vibrant, democracy which encourages
informed consent and dissent. Instead the Council wants an unaccountable
democracy bereft of content and meaning."
EU: REGULATION ON PUBLIC ACCESS TO DOCUMENT: Statewatch challenges
Council secrecy on access to EU documents on the revision of
the Regulation:
Letter
from the Council refusing access to three documents concerning
the Council's discussions on revising the Regulation on access
to EU documents (pdf) in response a: Confirmatory
application by Tony Bunyan, on behalf of Statewatch (pdf)
The Council had
hidden three crucial documents and claimed that access could
not be given because 1) It would "prejudice Council's capacity
to conduct frank and candid discussions". In other words
to meet in secret as a legislature under the so-called "space
to think" (under Article 4.3 of the Regulation on acces
to documents) see: The
case for the repeal of Article 4.3 2) The Council then claims that there
was an "absence of any element suggesting an overriding
public interest" in dislcosure - it is hard to think
of an issue on which the public's right to know what is being
discussed manifestly outweighs the need for secrecy. 3) The Council
concludes by saying that access may to given "after the
the final adoption of the act" - subject still to Article
4.3 para 2.
Tony Bunyan,
Statewatch Director, comments: "The
notion that the wish of a legislature to meet in secret (by failing
to release the documents being discussed) outweighs the public
interest of the citizens on such a fundamental issue, namely
the right to know what is being discussed and proposed in a legislative
process in order to know and allow for public debate, has no
place in a democracy worthy of the name."
EU: ACCESS TO EU DOCUMENTS: Presidency criticised: Even worse
than the Commission: The
Danish EU-presidency has failed to unite member states on new
access rules for the EU-institutions. Sweden, Finland and possibly
others will refuse to back a mandate to negotiate a new regulation (Wobbing.eu,link)
"Its no
secrecy that member states have different opinions on access
rules. But now the split comes out in the open. Swedish minister
of justice Beatrice Ask (conservative) has instructed the Swedish
EU-ambassador not to endorse a negotiating mandate proposed by
the Danish presidency.
Minister Ask explains why in a comment to this website: If
the mandate would give space for improved openness I would be
the first to vote yes, but I believe that would be wishful thinking
as things stand right now. The mandate will pull in the opposite
direction, and there is even a risk that it is worse than the
Commission's proposal from 2008.
See Statewatch's
Observatory: Regulation
on access to EU documents: 2008-ongoing
EU: Visits campaign : Obstacles
to the right to know: Migrant Camps in Europe : Open the doors
! We the right to know ! (link):
"The
reality of administrative detention of foreigners, a familiar
instrument of European migration policies, is hidden from civil
society and to the media. Such secrecy makes abuses and attacks
on human rights both more likely and harder to combat [1]. European
citizens have the right to know the consequences of the policies
which are put in place in their names."
EU-EAW: Council of the European Union: Replies
to questionnaire on quantitative information on the practical
operation of the European arrest warrant Year 2011 (pdf). A strange report
for the use of EAWs in 2011 which shows that only 5 out of 27
Member States have responded to the annual report. It shows that
these five Member Sates have issued over 3,000 EAWs with Germany
responsible for 70%.
EU: Amnesty International and European Council on Refugees and
Exiles (ECRE) Letter on behalf on 166 NGOs:Appeal
to EU institutions: Ensure respect for asylum-seekers' right
to liberty in recast reception conditions Directive and Dublin
Regulation
(pdf) and Not
crossing red line: A negotiators' checklist on minimum detention
safeguards
(pdf)
EU-ECJ: SCHENGEN BORDERS CODE: ECJ General Advocates
opinion on sea surveillance and the Schengen Borders Code: reasserting
the Parliaments legislative role, re-opening the Frontex
debate?
(pdf): "The European Court of Justices General
Advocate Paulo Mengozzi on 17 April 2012 recommended that the
Councils decision amending the Schengen Borders Code (SBC)
for it to cover and regulate EUs surveillance at sea external
borders should be annulled.
In July 2010, the European Parliament had lodged an action for
annulment before the European Court of Justice against Council
Decision 2010/252 supplementing the Schengen Borders Code. It
was argued that the Decision was illegal because the followed
procedure to adopt it (comitology procedure) was not appropriate
given the impact the contested decision had on the SBC and on
Frontex Regulation."
EU: Updated: Statewatch European Monitoring and Documentation
Centre (SEMDOC) Justice and Home Affairs "e-library"
archive (1976 - 2000): Weekly Highlighted documents: Update including:
- 9299/1/98 REV
1 - External frontier strategy - Guide for the application
of risk analysis in combating smuggling in the field of general
aviation under the 3rd pillar
- 13269/98 ADD 1 - Comprehensive Action Plan for EU/Latin
America Counter-Drugs Assistance, including interregional
Cooperation with the Caribbean: Annexes: An extensive annex to
document 13269/98 outlining the actions taken by the EU in Latin
American and the Caribbean in an attempt to disrupt the production
of drugs.Includes details on Member States involved, duration,
and funding. See also 13269/2/98 REV 2 and 13269/3/98 REV 3.
- 13310/98 - CIREFI Statistics for the second quarter of 1998:
A 132-page document providing statistics from a wide number of
Member States on "refused aliens"; "aliens illegally
present"; "aliens who entered illegally"; "facilitators
apprehended"; "facilitated aliens"; "removed
aliens"
- 14436/98 - System of reference codes precisely defining
the signs of falsification revealed during the examination of
false documents: A document demonstrating the way in which
false documents were/are analysed and categorised.
- 5045/99 - Electronic surveillance and video surveillance
- Summary of replies to questionnaire 11073/97 ENFOPOL 194:
"New technologies provide the public with additional security
tools, whether used privately or by the police. As a follow-up
to the Noordwijk seminar on crime prevention (Netherlands, 11
to 14 May 1998), the French delegation proposed that the Police
Cooperation Working Party launch a debate on video and electronic
surveillance, on the basis of a survey of legislation and practice
in the Member States of the EU. Fourteen Member States replied
to the questionnaire"
- 14330/98 - Transparency: list of topics on which there could
be open debates at meetings of the Council: The Presidency
offers a rather limited list of topics on which the Council "could"
have open debates in the name of transparency.
Search JHA
archive - EU Justice and Home Affairs documents from 1976-2000: (currently holds 5,846
documents)
European Parliament: Updated: Draft Report
on alleged transportation and illegal detention of prisoners
in European countries by the CIA: follow-up of the European Parliament
TDIP Committee report (pdf). Being presented in the LIBE Committee 8
May, deadline for amendments: 24 May.
EUROPOL: LEGAL BASIS: Commission note on meeting with the LIBE
Committee in the European Parliament: Summary
report of discussions between the Directorate General for Home
Affairs, with representatives of national parliaments and of
the LIBE Committee on the revision of Europol legal basis (pdf) and see also:
Commission document: Revision
of Europol's legal basis (pdf)
ECCHR-UN: European Centre for Constitutional and Human Rights:
ECCHR
succeed in removing client from the UN Security Council 1267
Al-Qaida blacklist (pdf): "Berlin, 8 May 2012 - The United
Nations Security Council 1267 Sanctions Committee yesterday formally
announced the removal of one of ECCHRs clients (Mr Kamel
Darraji) from the Al-Qaida terrorism blacklist. He had been kept
on the list (at the request of the Italian and US governments)
for almost eight years, on the basis that he was allegedly associated
with an Italian Al-Qaida terrorist cell an allegation
that Mr Darraji has consistently denied."
EU-ACTA: European Parliament: LIBE Committee: Draft
Opinion: on the compatibility of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade
Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, Australia,
Canada, Japan, the Republic of Korea, the United Mexican States,
the Kingdom of Morocco, New Zealand, the Republic of Singapore,
the Swiss Confederation and the United States of America with
the rights enshrined in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of
the European Union (pdf)
EU-ACTA: European
Commission written response on ACTA (pdf) to the Opinion of the European
Data Protection Supervisor: European Data Protection
Supervisor Opinion on the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA, pdf) Press release:
ACTA
measures to enforce IP rights in the digital environment could
threaten privacy and data protection if not properly implemented (link)
European Parliament: Orientation
Vote Result on the proposal to amend Regulation (EC) No 562/2006
in order to provide for common rules on temporary reintroduction
of border control at internal borders in exceptional circumstances
(pdf).
"Orientation" is the adoption of the parliament's negotiating
position with the Council in trilogues.
EU-ACTA:
Kroes
Throws in Towel on ACTA (link)
ECJ: ACCESS TO DOCUMENTS: Press release: General
Court ruling on In t Veld vs Council strengthens transparency
in EU
(pdf):
"Sophie
in t Veld, MEP (ALDE, NL), welcomes todays ruling
of the General Court of the EU on her request for access to the
opinion of the Council Legal Service on the so called EU-US 'Swift
agreement' on the transfer of bank data. "I am pleased the
Court largely supported our claim, and puts the interest of the
citizen before institutional interests. The Council will have
to publish the document, with the exception only of those parts
that could reveal the directives that might reveal the strategic
objectives pursued by the EU in the negotiations, or the specific
content of the agreement envisaged. It is a step forward for
transparency in Europe, that the General Court makes it clear
that negotiations on international agreements are not automatically
exempt from EU transparency rules".
and European
Court of Justice: Advocate General Opinion: Full-text:
Sophie in t Veld v Council of the European Union (pdf)
EU
austerity is feeding racism, report says (euobserver, link):
"EU austerity measures are helping to feed racism and
intolerance, according to a report by the Strasbourg-based human
rights watchdog, the Council of Europe." See:
ECRI
Annual Report
(pdf)
EU: European Commission: Security Research:
Protecting Europes homeland and its future (pdf) and see: NeoConOpticon
- The EU Security-Industrial Complex by Ben Hayes (pdf)
EU-SIS II: European Commission: Proposal
for a Council Regulation on migration from the Schengen Information
System (SIS 1+) to the second generation Schengen Information
System (SIS II) (recast) (pdf)
EU: European Parliament: Orientation
Vote Result: on the proposal for a regulation amending Council
Regulation (EC) No 539/2001 listing the third countries whose
nationals must be in possession of visas when crossing the external
borders and those whose nationals are exempt from that requirement (pdf): Vote on the EP's
negotiating position before entering trilogue with the Council.
And EIO: Draft
Report: on the adoption of a Directive regarding the European
Investigation Order in criminal matters (pdf) see: Statewatch: Analysis: Update
The Proposed European Investigation Order
EU: Revising
the Access to documents Regulation saga - The beginning of the
endgame
- "Now is not
the time to compromise on transparency" (Michael
Cashman MEP)
- Danish Council Presidency invokes "the space to think"
- Council and Commission question the definition of a "document"
- Council seeks to restrict access to legislative documents
- "The outcome of the process now being embarked upon
will determine the future of democratic accountability on the
EU" (Tony
Bunyan, Statewatch Director)
EU: Statewatch: Targeted issues:
- Observatory:
EU Internal
Security Strategy
- Observatory: Regulation
on access to EU documents: 2008 - 2011
- Observatory: European
Investigation Order
- Observatory: EU-PNR
(Passenger Name Record)
- Observatory: UK:
Government's Civil Liberties Programme
- Observatory: EU-USA
general agreement on data protection and the exchange of personal
data
-
Observatory: European
Security Research Programme (ESRP)
- Observatory: The surveillance of telecommunications
in the EU
- Full
contents of Statewatch News online with news, analysis
and documentation
- In the News carries
links to news coverage from across the EU
- What's New covers all new
items on the website
- Statewatch Sitemap
Top reports and
services 2004-2012
NEW: TNI - Statewatch: Counter-terrorism,
'policy laundering' and the FATF - legalising surveillance, regulating
civil society
See: Resources for researchers: Statewatch
Analyses: 1999-ongoing
Free access to two unique
resources on civil liberties in Europe: 1) The Statewatch
database with 27,000+ articles on civil liberties in
Europe. 2) SEMDOC website: Statewatch
European Monitoring and Documentation Centre on EU Justice
and Home Affairs policy. Download Press
Release
Statewatch publication:
Guide
to EU decision-making and justice and home affairs after the
Lisbon Treaty
(pdf) by Steve Peers, Professor of Law, University of Essex,
with additional material by Tony Bunyan
Statewatch Analysis:
Case
Law Summary: EU access to documents Regulation (142 pages, small pdf).
Prepared by Steve Peers
Professor of Law, University of Essex: "The following
summary sets out systematically the case law of the EU Courts
(the Court of Justice and the lower court, the General Court
previously known as the Court of First Instance) concerning
the EUs access to documents regulation (Reg. 1049/2001)."
UK: Statewatch
analysis: Six
months on: An update on the UK coalition governments commitment
to civil liberties (pdf) by Max Rowlands
Statewatch publishes
a follow-up to its June
2010 analysis
of the coalition government's commitment to civil liberties:
Within weeks of its formation in May 2010, the coalition government
announced with much fanfare its intention to restore the
rights of individuals in the face of encroaching state power.
An easy victory over Labours politically bankrupt National
Identity Scheme followed, but since then the governments
approach has been characterised by caution and pragmatism rather
than an unerring commitment to liberty.
EU: Major report
from Statewatch and the Transnational Institute:
NeoConOpticon
- The EU Security-Industrial Complex by Ben Hayes (pdf): 211,180 copies
downloaded. Executive
Summary
(pdf) and NeoConOpticon
blog
SPECIAL STATEWATCH
REPORT: The
Shape of Things to Come - the EU Future Group (Version.1.3) by Tony
Bunyan: 67,134 copies downloaded. The report calls for
a meaningful and wide-ranging debate before it is
too late for privacy and civil liberties. The proposals
set out by the shadowy "Future Group" set up by the
Council of the European Union include a range of highly controversial
measures including new technologies of surveillance, enhanced
cooperation with the United States and harnessing the "digital
tsunami". In the words of the EU Council presidency: "Every
object the individual uses, every transaction they make and almost
everywhere they go will create a detailed digital record. This
will generate a wealth of information for public security organisations,
and create huge opportunities for more effective and productive
public security efforts." This major new report The
Shape of Things to come (60 pages) examines the proposals of
the Future Group and their effect on civil liberties. It shows
how European governments and EU policy-makers are pursuing unfettered
powers to access and gather masses of personal data on the everyday
life of everyone on the grounds that we can all be safe
and secure from perceived threats. The Statewatch
report calls for a meaningful and wide-ranging debate
before it is too late for privacy and civil liberties.
See also ongoing: Statewatch Observatory: The Stockhom
Programme
See: Tony Bunyan's column in
the Guardian: View
from the EU
UK: Statewatch
Analysis: Rolling
back the authoritarian state? An analysis of the coalition governments
commitment to civil liberties (pdf) by Max Rowlands
Statewatch analysis:
Intensive
surveillance of violent radicalisation extended to
embrace suspected radicals from across the political
spectrum: Targets include: Extreme right/left, Islamist,
nationalist, anti-globalisation etc (pdf) by Tony Bunyan.
EU: Statewatch
Analysis: The
proposed European Investigation Order: Assault on human rights
and national sovereignty (pdf) by Steve Peers, Professor of Law,
University of Essex: "the combined abolition of dual
criminality and territoriality requirements represents both a
fundamental threat to the rule of law in criminal law
matters which is required by Article 7 ECHR (legal certainty
of criminal offences) and Article 8 ECHR in this field (invasions
of privacy must be in accordance with the law) and an
attack on the national sovereignty of Member States, which
would in effect lose their power to define what acts are in fact
criminal if committed on the territory of their State."
European Commission:
Stockholm Programme: Statewatch Analysis: Action
Plan on the Stockholm Programme: A bit more freedom and justice
and a lot more security (pdf) by Tony Bunyan
Statewatch Analysis:
The
right to protest: Troublemakers and travelling
violent offenders [undefined] to be recorded on database and
targeted
by Tony Bunyan: "Since the onset of the EUs response
to the war on terrorism the prime targets have been
Muslim and migrant communities together with refugees and asylum-seekers.
Now there is an emerging picture across the EU that demonstrations
and the democratic right to protest are among the next to be
targeted to enforce internal security.
Statewatch Analysis:
EU
proposals to increase the financial transparency of charities
and non-profit organisations by Ben Hayes: "The Financial
Action Task Force (FATF) has strongly promoted the thesis that
terrorist organisations use laundered money for their activities,
and that charities are a potential conduit for terrorist organisations."
Statewatch publication:
Border
wars and asylum crimes by Frances Webber (38 pages, pdf - 4.685 copies
downloaded: "When the pamphlet Crimes of Arrival
was written, in 1995, the title was a metaphor for the way the
British government, in common with other European governments,
treated migrants and especially, asylum seekers. Now, a decade
on, that title describes a literal truth.... There is a frightening
continuity between the treatment of asylum claimants and that
of terrorist suspects. In the name of the defence of our way
of life and our enlightenment values from attack by terrorists
or by poor migrants, that way of life is being destroyed by creeping
authoritarianism, and those values amongst which the most
important is the universality of human rights betrayed."
See also: Crimes
of arrival: immigrants and asylum-seekers in the new Europe (12 pages, 1995, pdf).
To order hard-copy see: Statewatch Publications
EU: The dream of total data collection by Heiner Busch. Status
quo and future plans for EU information systems
Terrorist
lists" still above the law by Ben Hayes
EU:
Secret trilogues and the democratic deficit by Tony Bunyan
EU:
Returns Directive: "Against the Outrageous Directive" speech given by Yasha
Maccanico in EP
Cementing
the European state by Tony Bunyan, New emphasis on internal security
and operational cooperation at EU level
EU-SIS Schengen Infornation
System Article 99 report by Ben Hayes
Policing
protests in Switzerland, Italy and Germany
The
surveillance of travel in the EU where everyone is a suspect by Tony Bunyan
EU: Statewatch
Report: Arming
Big Brother: new research reveals the true costs of Europe's
security-industrial complex by Ben Hayes (pdf, April 2006). The
European Union is preparing to spend hundreds of million on new
research into surveillance and control technologies, according
to Arming Big Brother, a new report by the Transnational Institute
(TNI) and Statewatch. Press
release
(English) Press
release
(Spanish, link) Copy
of full report (English, pdf) Copy
of full report (Spanish, pdf) Hard copies of Arming Big Brother
can be obtained from: The Transnational Institute, please send
an e-mail to: wilbert@tni.org with your request.
EU: "Unaccountable
Europe" by Tony Bunyan (Statewatch editor) in Special
issue of Index on Censorship: "Big Brother Goes Global"
(December 2005)
Europe: Launch
of the European Civil Liberties Network (link) - The ECLN was launched on 19
October 2005 as a long-term project to develop a platform for
groups working on civil liberties issues across Europe. A collection
of "Essays
in defence of civil liberties and democracy" was published
to mark the launch the ECLN
Global surveillance:
Global
coalition launch report and international surveillance campaign: Statewatch, with partner
organisations the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Focus
on the Global South, Friends Committee (US) and the International
Civil Liberties Monitoring Group (Canada) today publishes an
in-depth report: "The emergence of a global infrastructure
for registration and surveillance" (20 April, 2005).
Statewatch report: Journalism,
civil liberties and the war on terrorism (full-report/request
printed copy) - Special report by the International Federation
of Journalists and Statewatch including an analysis of current
policy developments as well as a survey of 20 selected countries
in Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin Amercia, the Middle East and the
USA (published World press freedom day, 1 May 2005)
Statewatch analysis: The
exceptional and draconian become the norm - G8 and EU counter-terrorism
plans
(updated 26 March 2005 pdf)
Statewatch
"Scoreboard" on EU counter-terrorism plans (pdf) agreed in the
wake of the Madrid bombings. Our analysis shows that 27 out of
the 57 EU proposals have little or nothing to do with tackling
terrorism - they deal with crime in general and surveillance:
Analysis
in Spanish
(March 2004)
The road to "1984"
Part II: Everyone
in the EU will have to have their fingerprints taken to get a
passport
(February 2004)
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