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EU vows to implement anti-terror measures
European Union officials promised Wednesday to implement several anti-terror measures by year's end, including an expansion of intelligence sharing. In emergency talks called after the London bombings, the justice and interior ministers agreed to speed up measures to pursue and investigate terrorists across borders and to disrupt their planning and funding. "All of us across the European Union are absolutely determined to accelerate our work to make terrorism more difficult," said British Home Secretary Charles Clarke, who chaired the crisis talks. Ministers were warned, however, to carry through on their word. Progress on anti-terrorist measures proposed after last year's Madrid bombings has been slower than EU officials would like, EU Justice and Home Affairs Commissioner Franco Frattini said. "The time has come to name and shame" laggards, Frattini told reporters. "Without true European cooperation, we cannot prove and show to the public and to the terrorists that we are willing and ready to move ahead very quickly." The ministers agreed on a priority to-do list that "focuses around a wide range of different exchanges of data information, whether on stolen explosives or communications data or on operational cooperation between different forces," Clarke said. The ministers also agreed to hold two minutes of silence across the 25-nation bloc at midday Thursday — one week after the deadly bus and subway attacks that left at least 52 people dead and hundreds injured. French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy said the EU had to ensure Europe was not becoming a training ground for terrorists whose goal was attacking their own countries. "We have to find out where they are being recruited and by whom," he said. "It's a question of surveillance." He suggested countries keep closer watch on what goes on in mosques, and on recently released prisoners of war from Iraq and Afghanistan who are returned to Europe. Clarke thanked his counterparts for the help European police and intelligence agencies have given in investigating last week's bombings. He gave no details but thanked Spain especially for sharing expertise gained after last year's deadly attacks on trains in Madrid. The cooperation, he said, proved more could be done to prevent further attacks across Europe.
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