The Chancellor of Justice says that banking secrecy has been violated unlawfully in Estonia. This is a very important issue. The government must quickly say who is responsible for this and whether it is right. If necessary, the Riigikogu should be convened so they can discuss it.
Reinsalu says that the parliament should convene urgently. This is necessary to provide a legal framework for this issue. The Chancellor of Justice has also recommended this.
Reinsalu says that the reliability of Estonia's digital state and the protection of personal data have been seriously compromised. This requires immediate action. Estonia needs to rewrite the rules that protect people's privacy.
The parliamentary committee overseeing security institutions should quickly check what happened. The heads of institutions must explain what they believed was the legal basis for their actions. Society has no clarity on what actually happened.
Reinsalu says that Estonia needs the parliament's assessment of who controls power and who is responsible for what happened. It is also necessary to know what effective legal remedies are available.
The director of the Financial Intelligence Unit, Matis Mäeker, says he will stop using the data. Reinsalu believes this is not enough. We need to know what data has been used and what its status is.
Reinsalu says there needs to be clarity on whether cross-referencing is currently being done. He reminds us that the next step is the use of artificial intelligence to obtain data.
The public does not know how much data has been downloaded. We need answers now, not by autumn. All institutions responsible for Estonia's reliability should act immediately.
Reinsalu says that the position of the Bank of Estonia is also needed.