Draft additional protocol to Convention ETS 108 on Supervisory Authorities and Transborder Data Flows
- Author(s):
- Parliamentary Assembly
- Origin
- Assembly debate on 5 April 2000 (12th Sitting) (see Doc. 8660, report of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights, rapporteur: Mr Bartumeu Cassany). Text adopted by the Assembly on 5 April2000 (12th Sitting).
- Thesaurus
1. The Assembly believes that the protection of
personal data and privacy is of prime importance in this era of the Internet
and the information society.
2. The Assembly supports the draft
additional protocol to the Convention for the Protection of Individuals with
regard to Automatic Processing of Personal Data, aimed at adapting the
convention in view of the new developments in this field, while continuing to
meet the requirements of individual freedom.
3. It considers that in requiring the parties to set up supervisory bodies, if they have not already done so, this text rightly reflects the Council of Europe’s various sector-based recommendations and the positions of the European Union in this field, and in particular
Directive 95/46/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of the European Union.
4. The Assembly is nevertheless of
the opinion that the powers of the supervisory authorities should be broader,
especially given the new forms of information technology and the growing volume
of personal data being transferred. In particular, they should be given
regulatory powers in order to lay down simplified rules so that the more
customary types of data processing which pose a lesser threat to fundamental
freedoms can be subject to less stringent formalities. They could also be
invited to submit opinions on all draft legislation and regulations in this
field.
5. The Assembly also believes that the supervisory authorities,
the nature of which is not specified in the draft protocol, should be
independent authorities, as defined in the case-law of the organs of the
European Convention on Human Rights, bearing in mind the pressure that may be
exerted on them from, for example, public authorities.
6. Lastly, the
Assembly believes that the scope of international co-operation between
supervisory authorities should be broader and that supervisory authorities
should meet together in an appropriate forum under the auspices of the
convention - namely the Consultative Committee of the Convention for the
Protection of Individuals with regard to Automatic Processing of Personal Data
- in order to pool experience, formulate opinions and partake in joint
discussions.
7. The Assembly recommends that the draft protocol
provide for the Consultative Committee to assist the parties, particularly
those states that have ratified the convention most recently,
Note in complying with its basic principles and monitoring
their application more rigorously.
8. In a field so specific and
specialised as this, the Council of Europe’s existing machinery ought to be
strengthened and it ought to be able to call on independent experts and
specialists in new information technologies. The Council of Europe bodies
should also be able to carry out or support projects in partnership with the
private sector.
9. Accordingly, the Assembly recommends that the
Committee of Ministers make the following amendments to the draft protocol:
9.1 in Article 1, paragraph 2, after the word
“intervention” add “as well as the power to deliver opinions on all draft
legislation or regulations in this field, the power to lay down simplified
rules so that the more customary types of data processing which pose a lesser
threat to fundamental freedoms can be subject to less stringent
formalities”;
9.2 Article 1, paragraph 3, should be worded as
follows: “The supervisory authorities shall be independent public
authorities.”;
9.3 Article 1, paragraph 5, should be worded as
follows: “In accordance with the provisions of Chapter IV and without prejudice
to the provisions of Article 13 of the convention, the supervisory authorities
shall co-operate with one another in an appropriate framework within the
consultative committee set up under the convention, to the extent necessary to
carry out their tasks, in particular by exchanging all relevant information”;
9.4 a new article should be included in the draft protocol,
worded as follows: “The consultative committee shall help the parties to comply
with the basic principles of the convention and this protocol and to monitor
their application more rigorously.”
10. The Assembly
also recommends that the Committee of Ministers invite those states that have
not yet done so:
10.1 to sign and ratify the
Convention for the Protection of Individuals with regard to Automatic
Processing of Personal Data, and the additional protocol, without
delay;
10.2 to pass legislation on the protection of personal
data, taking inspiration from the principles enshrined in the convention.
11. The Assembly further recommends that the
Committee of Ministers invite the European Union to accede to the convention in
the interests of a more consistent European constitutional approach to data
protection.
12. Finally, the Assembly recommends that the Committee of
Ministers help those states not yet parties to the Convention for the
Protection of Individuals with regard to Automatic Processing of Personal Data
to introduce appropriate laws and regulations in this field.
13. The
Parliamentary Assembly believes it is also important to ensure effective
protection for the rights enshrined in the convention and the draft protocol
when transferring personal data to third countries, by making sure that these
transfers are accompanied by suitable safeguards. It takes note of the
discussions between the member states of the European Union and the United
States with a view to reaching an agreement containing safeguards for
transborder flows of data between Europe and the United States. It is aware
that such an agreement will have implications for non-EU states which have
ratified the Convention for the Protection of Individuals with regard to
Automatic Processing of Personal Data. It fears that this agreement is not in
keeping with the basic principles of the convention. Accordingly, the Assembly
invites the Committee of Ministers to ask the consultative committee of the
said convention to examine this agreement and to deliver an opinion on its
compliance with the provisions of the
convention.