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Last year French drivers killed {{U}}(56) {{/U}} than
5,000 people on the roads for the first time in decades. Credit goes
largely {{U}}(57) {{/U}} the 1,000 automated radar cameras planted on
the nation's highways since 2003, which experts reckon {{U}}(58) {{/U}}
3,000 lives last year. Success, of course breeds success: the government
plans to install 500 {{U}}(59) {{/U}} radar devices this year.
So it goes with surveillance these days. Europeans used to look at
the security cameras posted in British cities, subways and buses {{U}}(60)
{{/U}} the seeds of an Orwellian world that was largely unacceptable in
Continental Europe. But last year's London bombing, in which video cameras
{{U}}(61) {{/U}} a key role in identifying the perpetrators, have helped
spur a sea change. A month {{U}}(62) {{/U}} the London attacks,
half of Germans supported EU-wide plans to require Internet providers and
telecoms to store all e-mail, internet and phone data for "anti-terror"
{{U}}(63) {{/U}} In a British poll, 73 percent of respondents said they
were {{U}}(64) {{/U}} to give up some civil liberty to improve
{{U}}(65) {{/U}}