Posted on 11/26/2004 12:07:57 PM PST by David Hunter
- Is an "urgent" decision justified?
- Why does the European Parliament not question the legal basis of the measure?
- Why does the Parliament's draft report accept the need for biometric passports?
Statewatch has learnt that the European Parliament has been asked by the Council of the European Union (the 25 EU governments) to use its "urgency" procedure to rush through the measure on mandatory fingerprinting and biometric passports for all EU citizens at its plenary session next week (1-2 December).
The Council's letter to the parliament (Piris letter, pdf) making the request encloses the latest version of the draft proposal (Draft Regulation on biometric passports, dated 23.11.04, pdf). The letter seeks to emphasise that the original proposal was sent to the parliament in February and that the Action Plan adopted on 25 March called for the measure to be adopted by the end of the year - this is a bit rich as the Council itself substantially changed the measure on 25 October (making facial images and finger-prints mandatory). The Conference of Presidents in the European Parliament (the group leaders) will decide on Thursday 25 November, how to respond.
The European Parliament's Committee on Citizens's Freedom and Rights has agreed a report on the subject which is based on an old version of the proposal from the Council of the European Union - that is before the Council decided to change the scheme from mandatory facial images and optional fingerprinting to making both mandatory. In such circumstances, where a proposal is substantially changed, it is normally taken for granted that the Council would re-submit the revised proposal to be considered again at Committee level.
However, it is understood that "behind the scenes" the the Dutch Presidency of the Council of the European Union (the 25 governments) are pushing hard for a decision at its plenary session in Brussels on 1-2 December on the grounds that a decision is urgently needed to meet the deadline set by the USA under its Visa Waiver Programme for:
"authentication idendifiers that comply with applicable biometric identifying standards established by the International Civil Aviation Organisation"
This begs a fundamental question as the ICAO standard says:
"Facial recognition was selected as the globally interoperable biometric for machine-assisted identity confirmation with MRTDs [Machine Readable Travel Documents]"
"Facial recognition" can be met by the simple digitisation of current passport photos - this is not a biometric. "Facial recognition", or "facial image" in the Council's draft, can refer either to simple digitisation or to a "facial scan" which is a biometric (the scan collects up to 1,820 characteristics from each individuals face). "Facial recognition" not fingerprints were selected as the global standard by the ICAO.
US demands can be met by the Council's old draft - mandatory facial image and optional fingerprinting - so how can the decision be termed "urgent"? The USA does not require fingerprints to be used in foreign countries' passports.
More importantly the purported legal basis for the measure concerns control of the EU's external borders not the demands of a non-EU state.
Under the European Parliament's rules it is possible to take the current draft report from the Committee as a matter of "urgency" either at the request of the President of the parliament (following a request from the Council), a committee, a political group or at least 37 member of the parliament. The "debate" on an "urgency" measure is not a debate at all - it is limited to the mover, one speaker in favour, one speaker against and the chair of the committee/or the rapporteur. The decision to pass the measure under the "urgency" procedure could be announced on Wednesday 1 December and voted on the next day.
A previous decision of the Council to stick to a mandatory facial image and optional finger-printing was overturned at the Justice and Home Affairs Council on 25 October. Two governments - Austria and Finland - put down a scrutiny reserve. The Austrian reserve was almost immediately withdrawn and the Finnish reserve taken off by a vote in the Grand Committee of the Finnish Parliament on 11 November.
European Parliament report - a hostage to fortune?
The report by the Committee on Citizens' Freedoms and Rights on biometric passports has a fundamental flaw. The Committee agreed with the rapporteur's view that:
"the rapporteur supports the introduction of biometrics, provided that citizens' rights and freedoms are always upheld"
which is of course quite impossible to reconcile, guarantee or enforce under the EU data protection regime.
Having accept, in principle, the need for biometric passports the report then makes a series of very good recommendations on how to protect "citizens' rights and freedoms" - but as the parliament was only being "consulted" on the measure its views will be completely ignored by the Council (as they are on every other issue under "consultation").
What is quite extraordinary about the Committee's report is that there is no consideration whatsoever of the legal basis of the measure - indeed if the parliament wanted to have any impact on the measure this should have been its strongest card. Article 18(3) EC (Nice Treaty) provides expressly that the ECs powers to adopt legislation to facilitate the free movement rights of EU citizens:
"shall not apply to provisions on passports, identity cards, residence permits or any other such document"
A Statewatch legal analysis (see full-text below) concluded that:
"no powers conferred upon the EC by the EC Treaty, taken separately or together, confer upon the EC the power to adopt the proposed Regulation"
Tony Bunyan, Statewatch editor, comments:
"The excuse offered for rushing through biometric passports under the European Parliament's urgency procedure is that USA demands for biometric passports have to be met. But the US rules do not require fingerprinting only "facial recognition".
For the European Parliament to fail to even raise the legal basis of the measure in its report is negligent. If it were to rush through such a far-reaching means of surveillance at the behest of EU governments to meet the demands of a non-EU state, the USA, without insisting on the time to consider the new mandatory finger-printing provision it would be a move they will be held accountable for - now and by future generations"
Britain is unusual in Europe for not having ID cards. What ID supporters often "forget" to mention is that only four - Belgium, Germany, Greece and Spain - have compulsory schemes. The future French electronic ID card will also include two biometrics and Sweden will start issuing biometric ID cards in 2005. The European Parliament wishes to standardise ID cards across Europe. In order to make Britain part of the European super-state the British Government must bring us into line with European security requirements. However, unlike the Europeans the British have a proud record of respecting an individual's freedom, (well, until recently). We should not throw our liberty away just to be part of a future United States of Europe.
biometrics ping
The "EU" treats the "EP" like the SCOMA treats the Mass. legislature! The proper response by any supposed "co-equal" body is to give the Hon. court the finger. (And if they don't... why have a legislature?)
The reason I posted it is to demonstrate that if the UK continues along the road of political integration with the EU then the British will lose much of their privacy and many of the rights that they have had for centuries. The useless Labour Government will go along with the socialists and statists in Brussels, Luxembourg and Strasbourg, while simultaneously misleading the British people about their motives for doing so. Surely that is a good enough justification.
Doomed I tell you....we are all....
Dooooooooooooomed
:o(
"We should not throw our liberty away just to be part of a future United States of Europe"
I wouldn't mind so much being part of the United States of Europe.
It's the thought of being assimilated into the Union of Socialist States of Europe that makes me cringe.
Yes, that would be a more accurate title given the dominant political culture in continental Europe.
but it's the Union of Socialist States of Europe that we got - plain evil.
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