Having co-signed an Open Rights Group coordinated letter to EU Commissioners Frans Timmermans, Věra Jourová, and Tiina Astola about the proposed immigration exemption in UK Data Protection Bill, I have now written to my local MP, Layla Moran, on the matter. Copies of both communications below.
Dear Layla,
The UK government are
proposing to incorporate an unconscionable clause in the Data Protection Bill,
currently going through parliament, relating to immigrants. The immigration
exemption provision removes individuals’ right to data protection if it is
likely to prejudice “effective immigration control”. This will remove the right
of individuals to receive information from a subject access request: a core
mechanism in any immigration dispute.
According to the Chief
Inspector of Borders and Immigration 10% of immigration dispute cases involved
administrative errors, errors that can throw people’s lives into disarray. The
Guardian is one of the few mainstream media outlets making any effort to report
on the devastating impact of the government’s destructive approach to
immigration and has covered stories of numerous people who have been in the UK
for, in some cases, decades being deported or threatened with deportation. Some
of these have been able to challenge the bureaucratic brutality of Home Office
mistakes affecting them. If the proposed immigration exemption clause passes
into law in the new data protection legislation it will callously derail the
capacity of future victims of Home Office errors to defend themselves.
Along with a number of other
concerned academics I have co-signed a letter, co-ordinated by the Open Rights
Group, to EU commissioners, Frans Timmermans, Věra Jourová, and Tiina Astola
asking that they intercede with the UK government on this matter. Copies have
also been sent to Guy Verhofstadt, chief Brexit representative of the European
Parliament, and the European Data Protection Supervisor, Giovanni
Buttarelli. I include a full copy of the letter below. It is also available at https://www.openrightsgroup.org/ourwork/correspondence/letter-to-eu-commissioners.
The immigration exemption
does not belong in the Data Protection Bill. Please use your voice in
Parliament to encourage your fellow MPs to ensure it is removed from the Bill.
Regards,
Ray Corrigan
Concern over United Kingdom’s proposed ‘immigration
exemptions’ from Data Protection Bill
Dear Frans Timmermans, Věra Jourová, and Tiina
Astola
We, the undersigned, write to express our concern
regarding the UK Government’s incorporation of the General Data Protection
Regulation into domestic law. Setting aside other areas of concern, the UK’s
Data Protection Bill proposes an exemption that would remove individuals’
fundamental right to data protection if it is likely to prejudice “effective
immigration control”.
This proposed exemption (‘the immigration
exemptions’) will remove the right of individuals to receive information from a
subject access request: a core mechanism in any immigration dispute. Further
restrictions would remove the government’s responsibility to process an
individual’s data in accordance with the principles of data protection
including lawful, fair and transparent processing. The exemption would allow
data to be shared across UK government institutions without accountability or
opportunity for recourse.
The immigration exemptions would potentially leave
EU citizens applying for residency post- Brexit without access to their
personal data at the most crucial time. As a result, decisions taken about a
person’s right to remain which may be based on incorrect information would not
be rectified, because individuals would be unable to see that the personal data
held is incorrect.
EU citizens could be mistakenly forced to leave the
United Kingdom as a result of the immigration exemptions.
Further, the proposed immigration exemptions would
appear to violate both the General Data Protection Regulation and the Charter
of Fundamental Rights:
- The General Data Protection Regulation Article
23(1) stipulates that any restrictions underthe clause must “respect the
essence of the fundamental rights and freedoms and [must be] a necessary and
proportionate measure in a democratic society...”.
- Under Article 8 of the Charter of Fundamental
Rights every individual in the European Union is entitled to the protection of
personal data concerning him or her. This includes the right of access to data
which has been collected concerning him or her, and the right to have it
rectified.
The blanket immigration exemptions go beyond the
necessity and proportionality of restrictions under Article 23 of the GDPR and
directly interfere with an individual’s right of access to data, and for their
data to be processed fairly under Article 8 of the Charter of Fundamental
Rights.
We are concerned about the potential impact the
immigration exemptions will have on the United Kingdom’s adequacy when it
leaves the European Union. The judgment by the Court of Justice of the European
Union in Maximillian Schrems v. Data Protection Commissioner C- 362/14, lays
out at para 74 in no uncertain terms, that the practical requirement for
adequacy requires:
“...protection essentially equivalent to that
guaranteed within the European Union.”
And at para. 95:
“Legislation not providing for any possibility for
an individual to pursue legal remedies in order to have access to personal data
relating to him, or to obtain the rectification or erasure of such data, does
not respect the essence of the fundamental right to effective judicial
protection, as enshrined in Article 47 of the Charter.”
Each of you represent an institution which holds a
mandate to protect the interests of EU citizens and uphold the Charter of
Fundamental Rights. That mandate includes the respect of these rights by member
states.
We believe these proposed exemptions are
particularly significant to all EU citizens currently resident in the United
Kingdom in maintaining the protection of rights guaranteed to them in the
Charter of Fundamental Rights.
We call on you:
- to communicate to the United Kingdom that the
immigration exemptions must be removed to secure the compatibility with the
essence of the fundamental right to data protection, and the Charter of
Fundamental Rights; and
- to examine the exemptions impact on EU citizens’
ability to enforce their residency rights after Brexit under the agreements
currently being brokered.
Yours sincerely,
Douwe Korff, Emeritus Professor of International
Law, London Metropolitan University and Associate, Oxford Martin School of the
University of Oxford
Judith Rauhofer, Lecturer in IT Law, University of
Edinburgh
Dr Andrew A. Adams, Deputy Director, Centre for
Business Information Ethics, Meiji University, Tokyo, Japan
Anna Fielder, Trustee and Chair Emeritus, Privacy
International
Mike O’Neill, Director, Baycloud Systems, The
Oxford Centre for Innovation
Marie Georges, Independent expert and member of the
FREE Group
Prof Andy Phippen, University of Plymouth
Dr Reuben Binns, Department of Computer Science,
University of Oxford
Dr Robin Callender Smith, Professor of Media Law,
QMUL Information Rights Judge and former Immigration Judge
Dr Paul Bernal, Senior Lecturer in IT, IP and Media
Law, University of East Anglia Law School Milena Popova, Digital Cultures
Research Centre, UWE Bristol
Dr. Maureen O. Mapp, Lecturer and Module leader for
Cyberlaw, University of Birmingham Law School
Dr Duncan Campbell, Visiting Senior Fellow (Law and
Sociology), University of Sussex
Dr. Nicholas J. Gervassis, Lecturer in Law,
University of Plymouth
Damian Tambini, Associate Professor, London School
of Economics
Dr Sally Broughton Micova, Lecturer in
Communications Policy and Politics, University of East Anglia
Vian Bakir, Professor in Political Community and
Journalism, Bangor University
Ray Corrigan, Senior Lecturer, Science Technology
Engineering & Mathematics Faculty, The Open University
Lilian Edwards, Professor of E-Governance, Law
School, Strathclyde University Marian Petre, Professor of Computing, The Open
University
Blaine Price, Professor of Computing, The Open
University
Andrew McStay, Professor of Digital Life, Bangor
University
Marian Petre, Professor of Computing, The Open
University
Milena Popova, Digital Cultures Research Centre,
UWE Bristol
Note: This letter was sent in copy to Guy Verhofstadt,
chief Brexit representative of the European Parliament, and the European Data
Protection Supervisor
Update: In the quickest response I have ever had from an MP, Layla Moran says:
Dear
Ray Corrigan,
Thank you for taking the time to email me. In short, I absolutely share your concerns and I am planning on speaking out against them when the Data Protection Bill comes before MPs in a fortnight’s time. I know my Lib Dem colleagues are also in favour of removing this clause.
With
best wishes, Layla
Layla Moran MP
Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament for Oxford West and Abingdon
Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament for Oxford West and Abingdon
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