
Publication
Pride Month 2023
Over one third of LGBTIQ+ people feel they need to hide who they are at work, and a fifth feel that being LGBTIQ+ limits their job opportunities, according to a recent Stonewall survey.
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Luxembourg | Publication | November 23, 2022
Yesterday, the Court of Justice of the European Union issued an important decision with respect to the free and public access to information published in the Register of Beneficial Ownership (RBO).
The Tribunal d'arrondissement de Luxembourg seized the Court of Justice of the European Union with respect to cases brought against the Luxembourg Business Registers, the administrator of the RBO, in the context of decisions which rejected requests for a restricted access to the information published in the RBO.
Referring to the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (the Charter), the Court decided that the provision of the 4th AML Directive requiring the Member States to ensure that the information published on the RBO is accessible in all cases to any member of the general public is invalid.
The Court first acknowledged that the general public’s access to information on beneficial ownership provided for in the 4th AML Directive constitutes an interference with the fundamental rights to respect for private life and the protection of personal data.
Second, one of the questions at stake was to assess whether such interference could be proportionate or not.
Hence, while the Court considered "that access by the general public to information on beneficial owners is suitable for contributing to the attainment of the general interest objective", it made it clear that the access of the public to information on beneficial owners is not limited to what is strictly necessary therefore is not proportionate and does not offer sufficient safeguards enabling beneficial owners to effectively protect their personal data against the risks of abuse.
The European Commission with respect to the 5th AML Directive, the Luxembourg government and the Chambre des Députés with respect to national law, shall now draw the conclusion of this decision. The Ministry of Justice has already declared in the Paperjam that "Of course, Luxembourg will comply with the European case law".
Meanwhile, many requests to limit access to information on beneficial ownership at the RBO and actions against rejections of these requests by the RBO will be instituted.
Norton Rose Fulbright Luxembourg SCS may assist you with those actions and answer any question you may have on the consequences of the above decision.
Publication
Over one third of LGBTIQ+ people feel they need to hide who they are at work, and a fifth feel that being LGBTIQ+ limits their job opportunities, according to a recent Stonewall survey.
Publication
In 2022, we issued a legal update on the case of Tam Sze Leung & Anor v Commissioner of Police [2021] HKCFI 3118 (the CFI Decision), where the Court of First instance (CFI) held that the longstanding practice of the use of “Letters of No Consent” (LNCs) by the Police to informally “freeze” suspicious bank accounts (the No Consent Regime) is unlawful (see here ). As we predicted, the CFI Decision has been challenged by the Commissioner of the Police (the Commissioner) and has now been overturned by the Court of Appeal in [2023] HKCA 537.
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