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European Commission and
Council of Europe kick off joint talks on EU's accession to the
Convention on Human Rights
Press release - 545(2010)
Strasbourg, 07.07.2010 -
Official talks started today on the European Union's accession to the
European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR). Thorbjørn Jagland, the
Secretary General of the Council of Europe, and Viviane Reding,
Vice-President of the European Commission, marked the beginning of this
joint process at a meeting in Strasbourg. They discussed how to move the
process forward so that citizens can swiftly benefit from stronger and
more coherent fundamental rights protection in Europe.
“Today is a truly historic
moment. We are now putting in place the missing link in Europe's system
of fundamental rights protection, guaranteeing coherence between the
approaches of the Council of Europe and the European Union," said
Vice-President Viviane Reding, the EU's Commissioner for Justice,
Fundamental Rights and Citizenship. "The EU has an important role to
play in further strengthening the Convention's system of fundamental
rights. We already have our own Charter of Fundamental Rights, which
represents the most modern codification of fundamental rights in the
world. This is a very good precondition for a successful meeting of the
minds between the negotiation partners."
“The European Convention on
Human Rights is the essential reference for human rights protection for
all of Europe. By accepting to submit the work of its institutions to
the same human rights rules and the same scrutiny which apply to all
European democracies, the European Union is sending a very powerful
message – that Europe is changing – and that the most influential and
the most powerful are ready to accept their part of responsibility for
that change and in that change,” said Thorbjørn Jagland, Secretary
General of the Council of Europe.
The EU's accession to the ECHR
will place the EU on the same footing as its Member States with regard
to the system of fundamental rights protection supervised by the
European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. It will allow for the EU's
voice to be heard when cases come before the Strasbourg Court. With
accession, the EU would become the 48th signatory of the ECHR. The EU
would have its own judge at the European Court of Human Rights in
Strasbourg.
Accession will also provide a
new possibility of remedies for individuals. They will be able to bring
complaints – after they have exhausted domestic remedies – about the
alleged violation of fundamental rights by the EU before the European
Court of Human Rights.
Background
The EU’s accession to the ECHR
is required under Article 6 of the Lisbon Treaty and foreseen by Article
59 of the ECHR as amended by the Protocol 14.
On 17 March, the Commission
proposed negotiation Directives for the EU's accession to the ECHR (IP/10/291).
On 4 June, EU Justice Ministers gave the Commission the
mandate to conduct the negotiations on their behalf. On 26 May, the
Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe gave an ad-hoc mandate
to its Steering Committee for Human Rights to elaborate with the EU the
necessary legal instrument for the EU’s accession to the ECHR.
Next steps
As of today, negotiators from
the Commission and experts from the Council of Europe’s Steering
Committee for Human Rights will meet regularly to work on the accession
agreement. At the end of the process, the agreement on accession shall
be concluded by the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe and
unanimously by the Council of the EU. The European Parliament, which has
to be fully informed of all stages of the negotiations, must also give
its consent. After the agreement is concluded, it will have to be
ratified by all 47 contracting parties to the ECHR in accordance with
their respective constitutional requirements, including by those who are
also EU Member States. Both sides are committed to a smooth and swift
conclusion of the talks, allowing the accession to take place as early
as possible.
For more information :
Homepage of Viviane Reding, Vice-President and
Commissioner for Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship
Homepage of Thorbjørn Jagland, Secretary General of the
Council of Europe.
Council of Europe:
Giuseppe Zaffuto: +33 3 90 21 56 04
giuseppe.zaffuto@coe.int
European Commission:
Matthew Newman: +32 2 296 24 06
Mina Andreeva: +32 2 299 13 82
Council
of Europe Directorate of Communication
Tel: +33 (0)3 88 41 25 60
Fax:+33 (0)3 88 41 39 11
pressunit@coe.int
www.coe.int
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