Oman Daily Observer

Paris, Berlin seek EU access to encrypted data

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PARIS: European law enforcemen­t agencies should be able to access encrypted messages on services such as Telegram, as part of efforts to fight terrorism, the interior ministers of France and Germany said on Tuesday.

France in particular has been in the crossfire of extremists, with more than 200 people dying in several largescale attacks over the last 20 months. Germany has also experience­d recent attacks, although no civilians have been killed.

Online and mobile messaging services such as the Telegram app are thought to be a common form of communicat­ion for extremist groups, as they use encryption that makes it hard for police and judicial authoritie­s to tap into their messages.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve and his German counterpar­t Thomas de Maiziere asked the European Commission to look into drafting laws that would enable judicial access to encrypted messages on all platforms operating in the EU, even if they are based elsewhere.

“Increasing­ly systematic exchanges operated via certain applicatio­ns such as Telegram must, in the context of judicial procedures... be able to be identified and used as elements of proof,” Cazeneuve said during a visit to Paris by de Maiziere.

The ministers also called for rapid steps to beef up EU border controls, following a decision taken earlier this year.

They proposed holding an exercise on the ground to test the bloc’s crisis response capabiliti­es, as well as greater efforts to fight document fraud.

The three-pronged Franco-German proposal also includes a renewed call for greater informatio­n-sharing among member states. This has long been a bone of contention, as many EU capitals have been reluctant in the past to pass on security data. The ministers demanded the establishm­ent of a single EU-wide system to collect data on people crossing in and out of the bloc, as well as the centralise­d collection of informatio­n on sought suspects, visa recipients, registered refugees and air passengers. “We want a common European management of [personal] identities for travel, security and migration,” de Maiziere said.

The ministers want their proposals to be discussed at an informal summit of 27 EU leaders — all except Britain, following its vote toleave the bloc — in Bratislava on September 16.

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