EU struggles with biometric deadline

Bookmark and Share
30th March 2005

The EU will fail a US deadline on biometric passports with 19 of 25 capitals again falling behind on post-September 11 security requirements.

Brussels is asking Washington for more time and an second extension from October 2005 to August 2006 for the introduction of high-tech travel documents.

Only six EU member states – Austria, Belgium, Finland, Germany, Luxembourg and Sweden - are on track with moves to include digital photographs and fingerprints in passports.

If US Congress fails to give the EU extra time millions of European travellers may have to apply for visas after October - a process that can take weeks.

European Justice Commissioner Franco Frattini has written to Washington appealing for a later deadline as the EU grapples with technology.

“Despite all the progress by the EU member states in reinforcing the security of passports, you are surely aware that critical aspects of the biometric technology, such as date security and interoperability of reading devices, are still being finalised,” he wrote.

“We would urge the Congress to consider a second extension of the deadline, as member states would need until August 28 2006 for the implementation of the facial image in their passports.”

Technical problems have dogged both the EU and the US, America is not expected to implement biometric passports until the end of 2006.

Washington security chiefs are to hold talks with the US Congress amid concerns that visa demands could hit Trans-Atlantic business.

“We are making very dramatic progress but if it does appear that many countries are not going to be able to meet the deadline, clearly we are going to have to discuss this with the appropriate people [in Congress] because the law is in place, said a Department of Homeland Security spokesman.

Bookmark and Share

Have your say...

Please enter your comments below.

Name

Your e-mail address


Listen to audio version

Please type in the letters or numbers shown above (case sensitive)

Related News

MEPs keep up pressure on EU over CIA flights

EU anti-terror supremo steps down

EU governments to come under fire in CIA report

Swift: EU privacy enforcers to open data talks with banks

Europe’s banks dragged into Swift EU data scandal



Latest news

MEPs overwhelmingly back resolution on gay rights

Parliament has overwhelmingly adopted a resolution to condemn homophobic laws and discrimination in Europe


MEP calls for health treatment to switch from 'treatment to prevention'

A conference in Brussels heard that 40 per cent of Europeans aged over 15 have a chronic disease


MEPs call for 'tuna sanctuaries' to help preserve stocks

Parliament has adopted new legislation, implementing internationally-agreed rules on bluefin tuna fishing


EU urged to do more to promote missing children hotline


MEPs hit out at attempts to 'water down' code of conduct


Taiwan steps up campaign to become full WHA member


Parliament endorses EU-wide FTT


EU leaders urged to reject 'failed' austerity measures


More from Dods