Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
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Lead | LIBE | REDING Viviane (PPE) |
Legal Basis RoP 052
Activites
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1997/02/24
Final act published in Official Journal
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1997/01/30
Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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T4-0028/1997
summary
The European Parliament adopted, by 294 votes to 19 with 4 abstentions, the own-initiative report of Mrs Viviane REDING (PPE, L) on combating terrorism, calling in particular on the IGC to include in the Treaty 'concrete and effective principles for ensuring close collaboration on judicial matters' and advocating that this cooperation should constitute an essential pillar in the fight against terrorism and any other form of organised crime. The basic premise is clear: a total rejection of all acts of terrorism or recourse to violence as a means of pursuing political or ideological objectives in the European Union, whether these be motivated by religious fanaticism or based on irrational motives. The democratic constitutional structure of the Member States makes the recourse to such practices even more unjustifiable. Such acts should never be considered as political offences, but should always be regarded as criminal actions to be prosecuted in the criminal courts, under the rule of law, without recourse to exceptional procedures. This approach does not however rule out the call for democratic dialogue in the attempt to find a political solution to ethno-national, social and ecological conflicts and to prevent such conflicts from being used as an excuse for acts of terrorism. From this perspective Parliament advocated a strengthening of police and judicial cooperation between Member States in order to combat terrorism and to this effect proposed a series of concrete measures for the prevention (for example by airport controls, improved systems for detecting dangerous substances, etc.) suppression and investigation of terrorism. Parliament called in particular for Europol to be granted powers for the prevention and control of terrorism, and for this to be done as soon as possible after the ratification of the Convention. The Member States should classify acts of terrorism in their penal codes as serious offences which are liable for extradition and should cooperate actively within the framework of the new European Convention on extradition. Parliament called in particular on Member States to ratify this Convention (signed 27 September 1996) as soon as possible and hoped that Member States would abandon the reserve clause which allowed them not to proceed with the extradition of their own nationals. The resolution also set out to define the concept of terrorism, affirming that within the EU terrorism must be regarded as a 'criminal act which seeks, under the rule of law, to alter the political, economic and social structures by threatening to use violence or by resorting to violence'. Apologia for terrorism should also be considered as a criminal offence. Parliament stressed that financial and police cooperation should be reinforced and that this should be accompanied by a strengthening of democratic controls and legal restrictions. In the longer term, Parliament called on the Council to strive for the harmonisation, at European level, of the criminal law applying to 'serious cross-border crime'. In addition, the IGC should include in the Treaty the principle that the right of asylum only applies to nationals from non-member countries. At the same time, it called on the Council to take the decisions and measures which were needed to ensure that a national from a Member State, who is accused of a terrorist offence or of collaborating with an armed group, as defined in the resolution, cannot be granted political asylum or refugee status in another Member State. Finally, Parliament considered that it was essential for both material and psychological aid to be given to the victims of terrorism and their families. �
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T4-0028/1997
summary
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1997/01/29
Debate in Parliament
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Debate in Parliament
summary
The rapporteur, Mrs Reding (EPP, LU), expressed her disappointment that the promises of action following each terrorist attack were not being fulfilled. Condemning terrorism as an unjustified criminal act, the rapporteur warned against exceptional laws and procedures which would end up glorifying this violence instead of halting it. Mrs Reding argued for a true prevention policy not only in political and technical terms but also with regard to police cooperation. In this respect, not only did Europol need to get up and running but cooperation and the exchange of information between the various police forces, regardless of the existence of criminal proceedings, needed to be stepped up. The rapporteur then called for the Convention on extradition to be ratified and declared her opposition to political asylum between Member States. Finally, she called for families falling victim to terrorist acts to benefit from public assistance both materially and psychologically. Commissioner Gradin welcomed the results of European police cooperation which had allowed a number of terrorists to be arrested and their networks to be broken up. Cooperation with the Central and Eastern European Countries in the fight against organised crime had also allowed a number of results to be achieved. While stressing the need to better define the causes of terrorism, Mrs Gradin confirmed that she agreed with Parliament’s call to ratify the Europol Convention as quickly as possible and to conclude a Convention on extradition.
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Debate in Parliament
summary
- 1996/11/11 Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
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1996/09/05
Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
Documents
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading: A4-0368/1996
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T4-0028/1997
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