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PM guarded on data protection questions

Watching you? The PN denies any intent to breach data protection laws in requesting information from the government about complainers. But the Prime Minister will not say whether he will publish all correspondence related to the matter. Photo: Matthew Mirabelli

The Prime Minister yesterday did not say whether he intends publishing correspondence bet-ween the PN general secretary and government ministers, which ended up at the centre of serious allegations concerning potential breaches of data protection.

"What is important is the answer that we gave... our official position," Lawrence Gonzi told The Times when asked whether the e-mails will be published.

The matter was first raised during the Opposition Leader's parliamentary speech on the budget last Monday. Dr Muscat had asked if the PN had received personal information about people who visited government ministries, departments and secretariats.

Dr Gonzi replied to his questioning with "absolute silence", Joseph Muscat said yesterday, as an article in Malta Today reported that PN general secretary Paul Borg Olivier sent an e-mail requesting government ministries to send the party confidential information about people who approached ministries with complaints.

In a press release sent yesterday, Dr Borg Olivier said the e-mail revolved around better "customer care" coordination, and that the exercise always intended to respect data protection.

"I regret if this could have given the wrong impression, but assure that the PN's work is always within the parameters of the law, including the Data Protection Act," he said.

Similarly, Dr Gonzi said a "crystal clear" explanation had already been published in Maltatoday, together with a reply e-mail by his head of secretariat, Edgar Galea Curmi.

The e-mail by Mr Galea Curmi said that under no circumstance should any information about those who seek services from ministries be shared, unless the Data Protection Act is respected.

But the original one by Dr Borg Olivier or any other potential correspondence connected to this matter was not published. When asked whether he intended publishing this material to clarify the matter, Dr Gonzi simply made reference to the reply of his head of secretariat.

Several attempts to contact Dr Borg Olivier yesterday proved futile.

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Comments

lgalea (on 17/11/08)
J Farrugia
Little blue elf, that data is officially given to all the political parties who contest the election by the Electoral Commission.
J Farrugia (on 17/11/08)
@ Ronald Cauchi - I wonder how come the MLP knew that I did not vote? Who told them? When? Where? I surely did not tell them! How's date for data protection red elves?
lgalea (on 17/11/08)
Big brother wants to watch us in every move we make.
Telephones, internet, e-mails, post
V Fenech (on 17/11/08)
This is just the same as having ministers and the Prime Minister himself last March sending partisan materials from ministries' resources paid from our taxes.

The same as last years' budget campaign which served as a PN propoganda and funded from the Castille coffers!
Raphael Vassallo (on 17/11/08)
Ramon - political parties are not exempt from the data protection act. The only exception, which also holds for the church and other institutions, is that they can process data pertaining to their own members. Otherwise, they need consent to keep, manage, and use data, and even then, only for the specific purpose for which the data was collected in the first place. And a government ministry would DEFINITELY need the citizen's consent before transferring private data to third parties, including the PN.
Ronald cauchi (on 17/11/08)
...I wonder how Castille got my ex-directory telephone number to invite me to a meeting the Prime Minister was holding for disgruntled voters before the last election???
Ramon Casha (on 17/11/08)
It is time for the Data Protection Act to be updated so that political parties are bound by its conditions too.
Nigel Lawrence (on 17/11/08)
Becoming more of a dictatorship on a daily basis.

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