Thu, Feb 09 2012
Photo: Nadezhda Chipeva
Act was not accepted until serious concessions were made.
Party follows ministerial line on major points.
Not two, but 10 hours would be necessary to provide the Interior Ministry with requested mobile communication data, mobile operators said.
After months of sustained criticism, the Interior Ministry appears to be slowly retreating on amendments that passed Parliament in first reading in late December 2009. The move was 99 per cent certain, Bulgarian daily Dnevnik quoted unnamed politicians as saying.
'As a citizen, I would not mind others reading my email, as long as the safety of my family and myself is guaranteed,' Speaker of Parliament Tsetska Tsacheva told journalists.
For the first time, Interior Minister Tsvetanov said the Interior Ministry might agree to drop its demand for permanent, real time access to communication data in amendments to the Electronic Communications Act.
The Interior Ministry was ready to accept far-reaching compromises on its proposed amendments to the Electronic Communications Act, but not right now.
Will the Interior Ministry get its eavesdropping amendments through before the end of the holidays?
A closed-doors 40-minute meeting was all the Interior Ministry needed to get a proposal that would increase the powers of the police to access communication data through the parliamentary committee on internal security.
New law grants Interior Ministry greater snooping powers as privacy advocates protest
Opposition parties and environmental protection NGOs argued that this and other provisions were the result of lobbyist pressure from ski resort operators.
Ferry-boat service between the Bulgarian and Romanian banks of the river may continue if the ferry captains decide that the weather conditions allow the safe passage of the boats.
Bulgaria shut down two 440MW units at its Kozloduy nuclear power plant in 2004 and two more units with the same installed power in 2006.
We hope this donation can assist those communities which are suffering, and especially those who have lost their homes, James Warlick says.
February 8 EC report notes a number of developments in Bulgaria’s progress in judicial reform, the fight against corruption and organised crime, but points to need for stronger action in a number of areas.
People willing to trade their freedom for temporary security deserve neither and will lose both.