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The Cyprus and other EU court rulings on data retention: The Directive as a privacy bomb
Author(s)
Markou, Christiana
Abstract
This paper discusses the controversy surrounding the Data Retention Directive with an emphasis on the 2011 decision of the Cyprus Supreme Court which has annulled several district court orders that allowed the police access to telecommunications data relating to certain persons relevant to criminal investigations. The annulment has been on the ground that the legal provisions upon which the orders have been issued are unconstitutional. It will suggest that the decision does not entail a direct rejection of the EU Data Retention Directive and that in any event, Cyprus is not a Member State resisting the particular measure. This is because the legal provisions are deemed unconstitutional, though part of the law that has transposed the relevant Directive into national law are provisions that go beyond what the EU legislator intended to regulate through that Directive. Still, the particular Directive sits rather uneasily within the ‘human rights’ regime, in particular the one governing the individual right of privacy.
Part Of
Computer Law & Security Review
Issue
4
Volume
28
Start Page
468
End Page
475
Date Issued
2012-08-01
Open Access
No
DOI
10.1016/j.clsr.2012.05.003
Department
School