ID Cards Are de Rigueur Worldwide

Published: 26 September 2001 y., Wednesday
Although renewed calls for a national identity card have sparked a heated debate in the United States in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, such cards are the norm in most of the world. "It's hard to find countries without ID cards," said Simon Davies, the director of Privacy International, which is based in England. "It's safe to say that the majority of countries have some kind of national identification system." Civil liberties groups oppose national identification cards on the grounds that they substantially increase police power and facilitate information-sharing among government agencies. Proponents, including law enforcement officials, say the cards help streamline government interactions with the public by providing tamper-resistant proof of identification.
Šaltinis: wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Kazakhs vote in general election

Polling stations have opened in the central Asian republic of Kazakhstan for the election of a new parliament more »

More Than 30,000 Rally for Ukrainian Opposition Candidate

Thousands of Ukrainians have rallied in Kiev in support of opposition presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko more »

Ukraine opposition leader poisoned

A Ukrainian opposition leader and presidential candidate is in a Vienna more »

In Estonia, e-banking, e-commerce, e-government

The government promotes this Baltic nation as E-stonia, and it has a point more »

Majority of Belarusians are against changes in Constitution

Lukashenka will face problems with getting support of majority in changing Constitution more »

Italians shocked by aid workers' capture

Just last month Islamist guerrillas kidnapped and murdered the Italian journalist Enzo Baldoni in Iraq, while security guard Fabrizio Quattrocchi met a similar fate in April more »

No Improvement on German Job Market

The number of people looking for work in Germany rose in August more »

Macedonians to vote on rights law

Macedonia's parliament has ordered a referendum to be held in November on a law seen to favour ethnic Albanians more »

Russia counts cost of bloody end to school siege

Russia began counting the cost today at the end of siege of a school captured by Chechen gunmen more »

Moscow 'suicide blast' kills 10

The blast happened at the end of the evening rush hour more »