Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2014-10-21-Speech-2-317-000"
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"en.20141021.20.2-317-000"2
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"During Mr Barroso’s term of office yet more powers have been transferred from nation states to the EU. I would like to highlight one particular area which is both topical and highly dangerous and concerns Europol, the EU's emergent police force. In a recent BBC radio interview, Mr Troels Oerting, the head of Europol’s Cybercrime Centre, revealed that ‘most of the world’s cybercrime originates from Russia’, that he is ‘increasingly happy’ with Europol’s ‘cooperation’ with Russia’s ‘law-enforcement authorities’, and that he recently visited Moscow and agreed to share information with them on a number of ‘interesting cases’. This is an extraordinary statement given that in Russia it is impossible to distinguish between organised crime and the so-called law enforcement agencies. Meanwhile, a respected internet security company iSIGHT has uncovered a massive Russian cyber-espionage campaign against Western governments and NATO. This is at a time when the British Parliament is on the verge of voting to permanently transfer yet more powers to the EU on policing and criminal justice matters. It is utter madness to share sensitive information with Russia, which is a gangster state, and seriously puts at risk our security and the protection of our citizens."@en1
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