Sunday, August 16, 2015

TTIP controversy: Secret trade deal can only be read in secure 'reading room' in Brussels...

The European Commission is making the secret Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) trade deal even more secret, introducing a new rule that means politicians can only view the text in a secure 'reading room' in Brussels.

An investigation by German news site Correct!v has revealed that the Commission is cracking down on TTIP security following a series of leaks, purportedly by EU member states who had accessed information on the deal electronically.

EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmström has said that no more reports on TTIP negotiations will be sent to Member States because of "important vulnerabilities in the last rounds of negotiations".

Officials were told of this change in policy on July 24th at a meeting in Brussels in which the Commission explained that the documents had "been submitted to databases of [member states'] national parliaments" meaning that "hundreds of people have actually uncontrolled access". Full story...

Related posts:
  1. Canada claims it will back out of TPP to protect its sovereignty...
  2. Belgium leaves TTIP... One town at a time...
  3. Australian politicians slam TPP for ‘excessive secrecy’
  4. 'Blind agreement' and closed-door deals: Report slams TPP negotiations...
  5. European Parliament TTIP vote cancelled ‘because of huge public pressure’
  6. Why artists are saying no to TTIP ...
  7. Two million petitions delivered to Congress to stop TPP...
  8. TPP, the secret corporate takeover...

No comments:

Post a Comment