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To: All

Europeans Urge Swifter Anti-Terror Response

By Mark Trevelyan

WIESBADEN, Germany (Reuters) - European investigators need sharper tools and better intelligence-sharing to be able to intercept suspected terrorists faster, French and German officials said Thursday.

"We must act in real time," French investigating magistrate Jean-Louis Bruguiere told a terrorism conference in the German city of Wiesbaden.

"Very often it takes much too long for appropriate action to be taken. We must position ourselves so a house search can be carried out within the hour."

Europe has been seeking ways of sharpening anti-terrorism cooperation since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 in the United States, a task made still more urgent after suspected al Qaeda-linked bombers killed 191 people in Madrid in March.


But it has been hampered partly by the reluctance of security services to circulate intelligence information in a European Union of 25 countries for fear of compromising sources.


"We cannot deal with this threat on a local or national level ... It's about pooling and sharing intelligence on a cross-agency basis," Bruguiere said.


Agencies like the EU police body Europol -- had "not reached their full potential yet," he added.


-- which has been under an acting director since the summer because member countries are arguing over a successor


GERMAN TENSIONS


In Germany, the biggest EU member, reform of the security services has been complicated by tensions between the federal government and the 16 states, each of which has its own police and intelligence services.


Interior Minister Otto Schily, addressing the conference on Tuesday, said he was confident of forcing through constitutional changes to give the Federal Crime Office -- the Bundeskriminalamt or BKA -- more "preventive powers," for example to tap suspects' telephones.


BKA chief Joerg Ziercke voiced frustration with the current situation where the agency is often forced to take a back seat to police forces in the federal states.


"If we receive highly sensitive threat information, we don't want to get into long discussions with the states on whether they have the resources to launch surveillance if I have the resources to do that myself," he told journalists.


Germany is especially sensitive to the threat of Islamist militancy because three of the Sept. 11 hijackers had lived and studied for years in the northern port of Hamburg.


In a drive to improve coordination between the federal police and intelligence services, the government is moving their headquarters to Berlin and setting up a joint database into which they can pool information on Islamist suspects.


But this too is controversial, both with Germany's more than 3 million Muslims and with privacy watchdogs.


Federal Data Protection Commissioner Peter Schaar told the conference Muslims considered to be "extremists" must not be listed in such a database unless there was concrete evidence of links to terrorism.


Top intelligence officials countered that view, saying suspects could always be removed later if terrorist involvement was ruled out. "We shouldn't let (militants) exploit our freedom and data protection rules," said Ruediger von Fritsch, deputy head of the foreign intelligence agency.

11/04/04 13:41

http://cnn.netscape.cnn.com/ns/news/story.jsp?floc=ne-world-12-l11&flok=FF-RTO-roitz&idq=/ff/story/0002%2F20041104%2F1341781998.htm&sc=roitz


434 posted on 11/04/2004 11:55:18 AM PST by Donna Lee Nardo
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To: All

Another off topic:

Bush Makes Not-So-Good Headlines in Europe

LONDON (AP) - The re-election of President Bush dominated British newspapers Thursday, and many cast impartiality aside in reporting the result.

``How can 59,054,087 people be so DUMB?'' the liberal Daily Mirror asked in a Page One headline. Inside, several pages of coverage were headed ``U.S. election disaster.''

The Independent bore the front-page headline ``Four more years'' on a black page with grim pictures including a hooded Iraqi prisoner and an orange-clad detainee at Guantanamo Bay.

The left-leaning Guardian led its features section with a black page bearing the tiny words, ``Oh, God.'' Inside a story described how Bush's victory ``catapaulted liberal Britain into collective depression.''

Across Europe, many newspapers expressed dismay at the prospect of another term for Bush, a president often regarded as inflexible and unilateralist.

``Oops - they did it again,'' Germany's left-leaning Tageszeitung newspaper said in a front-page English headline. The cover of the Swiss newsmagazine Facts called Bush's re-election ``Europe's Nightmare.'' ``Victory for the hothead: how far will he go?'' asked another Swiss weekly, L'Hebdo.

A few British papers welcomed the U.S. election result. ``The world is a safer place with George W. Bush back in the Oval Office,'' the tabloid Sun said in an editorial.

All agreed the result reflected a sea-change in U.S. politics, a victory for neo-conservatives and the religious right.

``March of the Moral Majority'' said the conservative Daily Mail, above a photo of Bush with his wife and daughters. ``America's moral majority sweeps Bush back into the White House,'' The Daily Telegraph said.

The Times said Europe ``must come to terms, not only with Mr. Bush, but with the nation that has elected him. This is a president who really can speak for America.''

11/04/04 13:56

http://cnn.netscape.cnn.com/ns/news/story.jsp?floc=ne-world-12-l9&flok=FF-APO-1103&idq=/ff/story/0001%2F20041104%2F1357782810.htm&sc=1103


436 posted on 11/04/2004 11:58:25 AM PST by Donna Lee Nardo
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