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Report: US, EU, near deal on private data exchange

Other News Materials 28 June 2008 10:33 (UTC +04:00)

The United States and the European Union were near to completing a controversial agreement that would allow the exchange of a wide-array of private, personal data among law enforcement and security officials, the New York Times reported Saturday.

The negotiators have agreed on most of the draft language on 12 major issues for a "binding international agreement," the newspaper reported, citing an internal report it had obtained.

The agreement would allow officials to obtain private information including credit card transactions, travel histories and Internet browsing habits, from opposite sides of the Atlantic, the dpa reported.

Guarantees of privacy and redress for violation of privacy rules were however sticking points in the deal, the Times wrote.

The negotiators included officials from the US Homeland Security, Justice and State Departments, and their European Union counterparts.

In March, the United States and Germany sealed a bilateral deal to facilitate the automatic exchange of data on suspected terrorists.

The groundbreaking agreement, seen as a blueprint for similar accords between the US and other European countries, applied to a wide-ranging exchange of information, including the fingerprints and DNA of suspects.

Last year, The EU and US strick a hard-fought and controversial deal to share key international passenger data. Washington required the information as part of heightened security measures after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

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