28 March 2012
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EU
Commission
reports that SIS II is "on track" to come into operation
in early 2013
23.10.2012
A report from the Commission on
the development of the second generation Schengen Information
System (SIS II) says that tests undertaken in the first half
of 2012 have had mostly positive results, and the system is "on
track for the planned go-live in the first quarter of 2013."
[1]
SIS II will add a number of new features to the current Schengen Information System that may "have serious consequences for fundamental rights," according to analyst Joanna Parkin. [2]
These include the insertion of biometric data into the system; interlinking of alerts on people and/or objects; and potential interoperability with other European databases such as the Visa Information System (VIS).
A previous Statewatch analysis noted that SIS II, along with the VIS and Passenger Name Record (PNR) systems, will "introduce the surveillance of the movement of everyone in the EU - citizens, legally resident third-country nationals, visa entrants and irregular migrants - and the storage of their personal data on an unprecedented scale." [3]
The Commission and numerous European and national working groups responsible for the development and testing of SIS II have, however, moved far beyond fundamental rights and privacy issues, and have long been concerned with the technical side of things. Currently, this involves a barrage of tests designed to ensure that the system can cope with a massive increase in data.
The Commission's latest report covers the period January to June this year, noting that "the highlight of the reporting period was the execution of the second Milestone test," undertaken following a request made by the Council in 2009. [4]
The "Milestone test" gives some impression of the amount of data that will be transferred via and stored in the SIS II database. It took place in early May and involved 11 Member States, whose national systems "exchanged uninterruptedly over two million standard transactions" with the central system.
This number exceeded "in five days the load of SIS I over an entire month."
Other tests aimed to verify "the compliance of the national system with the SIS II specifications. By mid-June, the majority (26) of the Member States had successfully completed their national [compliance] campaign," although "four Member States still faced technical issues."
These were expected to be resolved by August 2012 "at the latest." No Member States are referred to by name.
The Commission has so far set aside over 149 million for the development of SIS II, of which nearly 110 million had been spent by the end of June 2012.
Two contractors are listed in the Commission's report - HP/Stéria, who have so far received almost 67.5 million, and Atos, who have nearly 5 million.
Three further actions
are planned for 2012 in order to ensure that SIS II can come
into use in the first quarter of 2013, by which time it will
be administered by the new Agency for Large-Scale IT Systems.
These are "the completion of the comprehensive test";
the "SIRENE test", which covers the system used by
law enforcement authorities to exchange messages; and "the
adoption of the migration instruments", which will ensure
that transferal of data from the current system to SIS II will
take place using the correct legal basis.
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