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  • http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-28237108

    Emergency legislation will be brought in next week to force phone and internet companies to log records of customer calls, texts and internet use.

         Ministers say it is necessary so police and security services  can access the data they need after a legal ruling which declared  existing powers invalid. 
         The proposed law has the backing of Labour and the coalition parties.
         A special cabinet is being held to agree the planned laws, which will only last until 2016. 
         Prime Minister David Cameron and his Lib Dem Deputy Prime  Minister Nick Clegg will tell a special cabinet meeting on Thursday that  emergency legislation is necessary to keep the country safe. 
         A recent ruling of the European Court of Justice has removed  the obligation on telecoms companies to retain records of when and who  their customers have called, texted and emailed. 
         Without a new law Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg will claim that  that information could be destroyed within weeks by companies fearing  legal challenges. 
         Labour is backing emergency legislation after all-party talks  agreed that this law would enshrine existing rights and not be used to  extend them by re-introducing the so-called "snoopers charter". 
         It will also bring in so-called safeguards including: 
    
    • The creation of a new Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board to examine the impact of the law on privacy and civil liberties
    • A review of the controversial RIPA - Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act
    • Annual government transparency reports on how these powers are used
    • The law will include a so-called sunset clause - ensuring that these powers will die in 2016 - so there will be a longer and wider debate about what replaces them.

      Critics will no doubt argue that the time for that debate is now. To pass any new law in just a week is rare. So too is it to have the backing of all three main parties even before it is published.

       On a subject as sensitive as giving the police and security  services access to phone and internet data this is bound to be  controversial. 
       **Update 08:45 BST: **The emergency legislation  will oblige telecom firms to retain data for 12 months. Under the  European law which it replaces companies could be asked to retain data  for 24 months.
       More controversially the new law will also produce what is  being described as a "clearer legal framework" to allow access to the  content of calls, texts and emails after a warrant is signed by a senior  government minister. Telecoms companies are said to have warned  ministers that after the Edward Snowden revelations they are vulnerable  to legal challenge by their customers.
       The Labour MP Tom Watson has condemned the plans as a "stitch up" which prevent MPs from considering the legislation properly.
      
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