In co-operation with the Turkish Chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers (November 2010 – May 2011), Thorbjørn Jagland proposed to create a Group of Eminent Persons in order to prepare a report within the context of the Pan-European project ''Living together in 21st century Europe'', on the challenges arising from the resurgence of intolerance and discrimination in Europe.

The group consisted of 9 high-ranking individuals with a specific expertise and a particular interest in the subject. Joschka Fischer was the Chairman. Edward Mortimer was the rapporteur responsible for preparing the draft report.

The other members were: Timothy Garton Ash (United Kingdom), Emma Bonino (Italy), Martin Hirsch (France), Danuta Hubner (Poland), Ayse Kadioglu (Turkey), Sonja Licht (Serbia), Vladimir Lukin (Russia), Javier Solana Madariaga (Spain).

THE THREAT

In the first part of its report and referring to the principles of the European Convention on Human Rights, the Group highlights eight specific risks to traditional Council of Europe values:

  • rising intolerance
  • rising support for xenophobic and populist parties ;
  • discrimination ;
  • the presence of a population virtually without rights ;
  • parallel societies ;
  • Islamic extremism ;
  • loss of democratic freedoms ;
  • a possible clash between "religious freedom" and freedom of expression.
The response

In the second part of its report, the Group begins by setting out 17 principles which it believes should guide Europe's response to these threats, starting with the statement that "at a minimum, there needs to be agreement that the law must be obeyed, plus a shared understanding of what the law is and how it can be changed".

  • It then goes on to identify the main actors able to bring about the necessary changes in public attitudes: educators, mass media, employers and trade unions, civil society, churches and religious groups, celebrities and "role models", towns and cities, member states, and European and international institutions.
  • The report then concludes with 59 "proposals for action".
MEMBERS

Back Sonja Licht

Ms Licht is an internationally renowned sociologist and human rights and political activist. She had been part of the Yugoslav dissident movement from the late sixties and two decades later she became the founder of many local and international NGOs, including a number of women organisations.

She continued her activism druing the violent collapse of Former Yugoslavia in anti-war or women's rights groups, for which she was nicknamed the "mother of civil society sector in Serbia". Ms Licht managed (George Soros-funded) Open Society Fund in Belgrade, which during her tenure (from 1991 to 2003) supported thousands of projects totalling more than $100 million. Between 1991 and 1995 she co-chaired the Helsinki Citizens' Assembly, a broad coalition of various European and North American civic organisations dedicated to peace, democracy and human rights.

She is the founder and president of the Belgrade Fund for Political Excellence, which has prepared generations of young Serbian politicians for Serbia's transition towards democracy and EU membership. Ms Licht also chairs the Serbian MoFA's Council on Foreign Relations.

High principles and vibrant political dynamism have earned this soft-spoken activist the title of the most influential woman in the Serbian politics as well as many prestigious international prizes for her public work, including France's Légion d'honneur; Hiroshima Award; European Chancellors Club Peace Award; the Swedish Social Forum Peace Award; International Human Rights Award of the International League for Human Rights; Human Rights Award of the Albert Schweitzer Institute for Humanities etc.