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http://story.europesun.com/p.x/ct/9/id/b3c819d640647217/cid/4b6f350e555d4ecd

 

 

October 12, 2005 12:51 PM ET

 

 

EU to Force Telecoms to Keep Records

 

LUXEMBOURG (AP) - The European Union agreed Wednesday to legally

require telecommunications companies to keep records of their phone

and e-mail traffic for at least a year as part of the bloc's

anti-terrorist campaign.

 

The decision by the 25 EU justice ministers comes after years of

European debate over the privacy and cost concerns of data retention.

The ministers agreed phone companies must keep records for 12 months

and Internet access providers must retain data on Web sites visited

and e-mail addresses used for six months.

 

The EU's counterterrorism efforts began taking shape after the Sept.

11, 2001, attacks in the United States. Some have already been enacted.

 

The phone and Internet data retention bill took on added urgency after

the July 7 suicide bombings in London that killed 52 people on the

city's transit system.

 

British Home Secretary Charles Clarke, whose country holds the

rotating EU presidency, said he was pushing hard for a European law by

year's end.

 

He said it will happen with or without the backing of the European

Parliament which has raised privacy concerns. Some of its members have

spoken of " invasive measures. "

 

The EU assembly's approval is crucial, however, if the measure is to

be quickly enacted across Europe. Without it, the law would be much

weaker and the EU's executive office would not be able to pressure

countries that drag their heels in putting it into force.

 

Clarke said the legislation would be flexible and that countries may

require data to be kept for more than a year. Italy and Ireland would

be allowed to continue to require their telecommunications companies

to keep traffic data for three and four years respectively as

currently required by national laws there.

 

In recent months, the telecommunications industry has warned that

keeping traffic data on record for a year or longer would cost

millions of dollars, especially if the industry must also keep track

of calls that received no answer. Law enforcement agencies are

interested in those calls because they can set off remote bombs.

 

Clarke said it would be left up to individual nations to compensate

the industry.

 

© 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may

not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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