Europe wants visitors fingerprinted

LONDON -- Americans and other foreigners entering and leaving Europe would be fingerprinted under a proposal to combat terrorism, organized crime and illegal immigration to be unveiled Wednesday.

The proposal is to be laid out in detail in Brussels by Franco Frattini, the European Commission's vice president in charge of justice and security. It would apply to tourists or business travelers visiting Europe for up to six months, as well as those staying longer on a visa for work or study.

The U.S. government already requires foreigners who need a visa to travel to the USA to provide fingerprints.

The European proposal follows calls from many European ministers to tighten security and improve information sharing following the alleged plot to blow up passenger jets flying from London's Heathrow airport to the USA. On Aug. 10, 2006, British police said they foiled that plot.

The proposal must be approved by the European Parliament before it could take effect, and it could take a year or longer before it could be implemented.

Taking digital fingerprints would allow security authorities to help check travelers' identities against lists of suspected terrorists and criminals, said Friso Roscam Abbing, Fratini's spokesman.

He said it also would be a key element of a major undertaking to identify who is entering the 27-nation European Union and help guarantee they don't overstay their welcome. Illegal immigration is a growing concern across Europe.

"We have 150 million entries and 150 million exits a year, and we have no information on them," Roscam Abbing said.

Roscam Abbing said the collection of biometric information on travelers could be extended to taking digital photographs and iris scans of visitors' eyes and putting the information into a Europe-wide database.

That information also could be used to ease travelers' border crossings in a "fast-track" fashion as they travel from one European country to another once they arrive in the EU bloc, he said.

Some privacy groups already were expressing concerns about the proposal. "It's boys with toys. They want to have the toys the Americans have," Gus Hosein of the group Privacy International told Reuters.

Russ Knocke, spokesman for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, said the U.S. government supports the concept and was waiting to see the details from the European Commission, which is the EU's executive branch.

The EU proposal comes as Homeland Security is moving ahead with plans to tighten entry requirements for travelers from Europe, where citizens of 15 of the 27 EU nations can visit the USA for up to 90 days without a visa.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told the BBC last month that he has become increasingly concerned over "the possibility of Europe becoming a platform for a threat against the United States."