Yes. The CCF’s procedural rules require notification to the requesting country’s National Central Bureau once a complaint is registered. The NCB is invited to submit observations defending the notice’s compliance with Interpol’s Rules on the Processing of Data. This adversarial element means the requesting country learns of the complaint and the complainant’s general arguments, though not all supporting evidence is automatically disclosed. Some clients consider this strategically — a CCF complaint signals the individual has legal resources and may prompt informal withdrawal of a notice before a formal CCF decision.
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