Opponents file suit against German use of phone data 01/01/2008 00:00
German leftists and liberals who oppose police access to telecommunications records demonstrated and said they had filed a petition by 30,000 people for a constitutional-court review of the practice.
1 January 2008
Hamburg (dpa) - German leftists and liberals who oppose police access to telecommunications records demonstrated Monday and said they had filed a petition by 30,000 people for a constitutional-court review of the practice.
The protests were held a day before new legislation comes into force requiring companies to retain records for six months of the to and from addresses of e-mail, time spent on the internet and phone numbers dialled by customers.
Police require a judicial warrant to search the files during inquiries into terrorism and serious crime.
Libertarian groups, citing the telephone snooping in totalitarian states, angrily opposed the data-retention legislation when it was passed. Unlike many countries, Germany has not let police use such data for decades.
At a rally Monday in the northern city of Hamburg, opponents held a mock funeral for "the death of privacy." Police said the demonstration by 200 people passed off without violence. Organizers claimed 500 attended.
In the southern justice capital of Karlsruhe, the Working Party on Data Retention filed for an urgent injunction to stop the legislation on the grounds that it was "obviously unconstitutional."
They said the 150-page application against "surveillance without suspicion" was initially by eight people, but was backed by 30,000 who had signed petitions.
Their names would be joined to the suit after processing by a Berlin law office, making it the largest such appeal in modern German history.
"We are hoping for a quick ruling," said lawyer Meinhard Starostik leading the group. But a court spokesman said judges would not sit on the case Monday.
The activists said they would also seek to overturn the March 2006 European Union data-retention directive that required Germany to pass the legislation.
Best summer photo: Ethnic beauty at T’nalak festival
Expatica reader Ronald de Jong captured this image at the T’nalak festival in the Philippines.
Advertisement
top3
- Expatica Book Top 3
- Nigella Express: 130 Recipes for Good Food, Fast
- The Secret
- The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
- Just launched on Expatica!
- Meet other internationals in our brand new online community
- Expatica Yellow Pages
- Share your questions and experiences with fellow internationals
- Expatica's gift ideas
- Black Cashmere by Donna Karan
- Virgin Island Water by Creed
- Cruising and Bruising in Cyberspace: A Guide to Online Dating After 40
internaxx
| Index | Last | Var.(%) |
|---|---|---|
| BEL 20 | 3066.15 | -3.13 |
| DAX | 6279.57 | -2.91 |
| IBEX 30 | 11480.1 | -3.11 |
| CAC 40 | 4304.01 | -3.22 |
| FTSE 100 | 5362.1 | -2.50 |
| AEX | 397.17 | -2.25 |
| DJIA | 11188.23 | -2.99 |
| Nasdaq | 2259.04 | -3.20 |
| MIB 30 | 28833 | -2.82 |
| TSX Composite | 12814.14 | -2.46 |
| ASX | 4938.8 | -2.22 |
| Hang seng | 19752.65 | -3.12 |
| Straits Times | 2574.55 | -1.96 |
also on expatica
- Join the Expatica community Meet, make friends and network with other internationals just like you
- What is your life like as an “expat”? Share your expat experience as a panel member of the European Expat Panel
- Expatica’s 2008 Expat Survey Expatica is conducting an audience survey to better understand our readers.Take the survey here.





















