Europeans back plan to profile mosques

23 May 2007

http://www.expatica.com/actual/article.asp?subchannel_id=26
<http://www.expatica.com/actual/article.asp?subchannel_id=26&story_id=40126>
&story_id=40126

 

VENICE, Italy (AP) _ Security officials from Europe's largest countries have
thrown their weight behind the EU Commission's plans to map out mosques on
the continent to identify imams who preach radical Islam that raises the
threat of homegrown terrorism.

The project, to be finished by the fall, will focus on the roles of imams,
their training, their ability to speak in the local language and their
source of funding, EU Justice and Home Affairs Commissioner Franco Frattini
told a news conference.

 

Europe had ample experience with the ''misuse of mosques, which instead of
being places of worship are used for other ends, Italian Interior Minister
Guiliano Amato said Saturday.

Click here!

 

''This is bringing about a situation that involves all of our countries and
involves the possibility of attacks and developing of networks that use one
country to prepare an attack in another,'' Amato said, after a meeting in
Venice of interior ministers and security officials from six European
countries and the United States.

 

Frattini also emphasized the need of strengthened dialogue with the Islamic
communities ''to avoid sending messages that incite hate and violence.''

 

Security officials from Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Poland also
expressed concern about drug-trafficking, and said they would work with
African nations to interrupt a new cocaine route from Colombia across Africa
into Europe.

 

''They have created bases in Europe and we need to have our counter-bases,''
Amato said, noting that the Spaniards have seen an influx of cocaine in the
south and east of their country beyond the traditional Atlantic route.

 

The officials proposed setting up drug-fighting bases in Lisbon to monitor
sea traffic and Gibraltar to monitor land.

 

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff used the opportunity to
discuss with his counterparts ways to reach a new agreement to share airline
passenger data for terrorism investigation.

 

''I think the value of this data perhaps is not widely understood. You can't
have an informed discussion on how to handle it unless you know what it is
that it provides,'' Chertoff said in an interview.

 

Chertoff will continue making his case in meetings with EU parliamentarians
in Brussels next week.

 

''What I hope to do in that visit is to explain, with some detail how
valuable that information is to us, using examples of cases in which we have
stopped people or intercepted people coming into the country who are
terrorists or drug traffickers,'' he said.

 

One example Chertoff has cited is the case in June 2003 of an agent at
Chicago's O'Hare airport who, unsatisfied with a foreign traveler's
responses, refused entry and sent him back to where he had come from _ first
taking his fingerprints.

 

Those fingerprints, according to Chertoff, turned up later on the steering
wheel of a suicide truck bomb detonated in Iraq.

 

Europe and the U.S. disagree on how long U.S. authorities can use the data,
when it should be destroyed and which agencies should have access to the
information. The United States also wants the authority to pull data
directly from airline computers, but European countries insist airlines must
transmit the information to U.S. authorities.

 

European governments are worried about protecting their strict privacy laws
_ a legacy of the continent's history with totalitarian and authoritarian
regimes.

 

The current deal, which expires in July, allows the U.S. Customs and Border
Protection agency to disclose passenger data to other American law
enforcement agencies for anti-terror investigations if those agencies have
protection standards comparable to those of the EU.

 

 

 

Benjamin Kuperberg

Analyst

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