In just over two weeks (15-16 February) Berlin is set to table a formal proposal to transpose the so-called Prüm Treaty into EU law-books, a move that would allow EU states to give one another automatic access to genetic records, fingerprints and traffic offences.
The Prüm Treaty – signed in 2005 - is currently a seven-nation pact between Germany, Austria, Belgium, France, Luxemburg, the Netherlands and Spain, with four other member states (Finland, Italy, Portugal and Slovenia) eager to jump in.
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In just over two weeks (15-16 February) Berlin is set to table a formal
proposal to transpose the so-called Prüm Treaty into EU law-books, a
move that would allow EU states to give one another automatic access to
genetic records, fingerprints and traffic offences.
The Prüm Treaty – signed in 2005 - is currently a seven-nation pact
between Germany, Austria, Belgium, France, Luxemburg, the Netherlands
and Spain, with four other member states (Finland, Italy, Portugal and
Slovenia) eager to jump in.
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.