Tag Archives: Lisbon Treaty

European Parliament Meeting Offers Update on Review of EU Data Protection Directive

On March 16, 2011, a meeting of the “European Privacy Platform” group of the European Parliament was held in Brussels.  The meeting provided important insights into the likely structure and content of proposed revisions to the European Data Protection Directive 95/46/EC that the European Commission has been working on for the past several months.

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European Parliament Hosts Privacy Platform on Comprehensive Data Protection Framework

On December 1, 2010, the European Parliament hosted a Privacy Platform on the European Commission’s recent Communication proposing “a comprehensive approach on personal data protection in the European Union,” which is aimed at modernizing the current EU data protection framework.

The panel, hosted by European Parliament Member Sophie in ‘t Veld, included:

  • The Head of Cabinet of the European Commission’s Commissioner for Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship, Martin Selmayr (in Commissioner Viviane Reding’s absence);
  • The Chairman of the Article 29 Working Party, Jacob Kohnstamm; and
  • The European Data Protection Supervisor, Peter Hustinx.

The Platform was very well attended, bringing together a wide range of stakeholders from both the public and private sectors.

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European Parliament Rejects the SWIFT Agreement

On February 11, 2010, the plenary of the European Parliament rejected by a vote of 378 to 196 the agreement reached in 2009 between the EU and the U.S. to allow access by U.S. law enforcement authorities to the payment database of the financial consortium SWIFT.  The agreement had been negotiated between the EU Council of Ministers and the European Commission with the U.S. government to allow continued access to the database, a mirror copy of which had been moved by SWIFT from the U.S. to Europe.  With the Lisbon Treaty’s entry into force, the Parliament gained new powers to approve measures affecting law enforcement and civil liberties, and a number of members of the Parliament have expressed concern regarding the level of data protection provided for in the agreement.  According to news reports, several top U.S. government officials (including Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner) had been lobbying the European Parliament to approve the agreement, on the grounds that it was essential to fight terrorism in both the U.S. and Europe.

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Article 29 Working Party Issues Contribution to Consultation on the EU Data Protection Framework

On December 1, 2009, the Article 29 Working Party adopted a contribution (the “Contribution”) to the Consultation of the European Commission on the legal framework for the fundamental right to the protection of personal data (the “Consultation”).  View the full text of the Contribution, which was published today.  The Consultation was launched on July 9, 2009, to explore the challenges to personal data protection presented by new technologies and globalization.  The Consultation was also motivated by the recent adoption by the EU of the Lisbon Treaty, which will necessitate a reworking of structure of the EU legal framework for data protection.  The Contribution’s thoughtful examination of several important data protection issues makes it one of the most significant documents that the Working Party has issued in recent years.

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European Union Agrees to Access by U.S. Anti-Terrorism Authorities to Personal Data in Europe

On November 30, the Council of the European Union agreed to allow U.S. anti-terrorism authorities access to financial data of individuals located in the EU under certain circumstances. Under the agreement, U.S. authorities will continue to have access to data collected by Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication ("SWIFT") after a SWIFT database located in Switzerland becomes active later this year (the data had previously been processed in a database located in the U.S.). The agreement contains restrictions on access to the data that have been negotiated between the EU and the U.S. (e.g., access will be limited to data that relate to individuals with links to terrorist activities; U.S. authorities will not have access to data concerning intra-European transactions; and U.S. authorities seeking access to personal data will have to tailor their requests narrowly and justify their requests to the U.S. Department of the Treasury). The agreement will run until October 31, 2010, after which time a further agreement between the U.S. and the EU would have to be negotiated for the U.S. authorities to continue to have access to the data. The agreement was reached despite the abstention from voting of the governments of Austria, Germany, Greece and Hungary because of data protection concerns. Under the EU’s new Lisbon Treaty (which went into effect on December 1, 2009), any further agreement will require participation by the European Parliament, which has been highly critical of the agreement.

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