Secretary General welcomes release of prisoners by Russia and Ukraine

Secretary General 7 September 2019 Strasbourg

Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland made the following statement today: “The Council of Europe welcomes the release of prisoners by Russia and Ukraine today. This is an encouraging step towards the reconciliation of the two member states of the Council of Europe and an important element of the...

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Statement by Thorbjørn Jagland on the International Day Commemorating the Victims of Acts of Violence Based on Religion or Belief

Secretary General 21 August 2019 Strasbourg

Following Resolution A/RES/73/296, proposed by Poland and adopted at the 73rd UN General Assembly on 28 May 2019, 22 August of this year will be the first annual International Day Commemorating the Victims of Acts of Violence Based on Religion or Belief. In support of this important initiative,...

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Revised Private Office procedure on human rights defenders interacting with the Council of Europe

Secretary General 1 August 2019 Strasbourg

The Secretary General has announced changes to the procedure for investigating alleged reprisals against human rights defenders as a consequence of their interaction with the Council of Europe. From now on, the procedure will: Allow external direct reporting (e.g. by human rights defenders and...

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Council of Europe honours Roma Holocaust victims

Secretary General 2 August 2019 Strasbourg

Seventy-five years ago, the remaining Roma of the so-called “Zigeunerlager” (Gypsy camp) – 2,897 men, women and children – were exterminated in the gas chambers of Auschwitz-Birkenau. The liquidation of the camp on 2 August 1944 was a particularly dark chapter of the Roma Holocaust: an attempt by...

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Moscow elections: Secretary General urges all sides to cooperate amid violence fears

Secretary General 31 July 2019 Strasbourg

Council of Europe Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland has held a phone conversation today with Ms Ella Pamfilova, Chairperson of the Central Electoral Commission of the Russian Federation. Secretary General Jagland had previously expressed his concern over the organisation of the elections to the...

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Statement by Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland, on the pre-electoral situation in Moscow

Secretary General 28 July 2019 Strasbourg

“I have been following recent events in the run up to elections in Moscow with concern. Opposition candidates have reportedly been not able to stand for election. I intend to raise this with the Head of the Russian Central Electoral Commission, Ella Pamfilova. All legitimate candidates should be...

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Secretary General welcomes French law banning parental violence against children

Secretary General 3 July 2019 Strasbourg

Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland welcomed today the adoption of a law in France banning the use of violence against their children by their parents. The law prohibiting educational violence, unanimously adopted yesterday by the Senate, bans cruel and degrading treatment, including all recourse...

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Local elections in Albania: Statement by the Spokesperson

Spokesperson of the Secretary General 27 June 2019 Strasbourg

We closely follow the situation ahead of the 30 June local elections in Albania, which should be conducted in line with all the relevant international obligations and standards for democratic elections, as well as with national legislation. In this context, we recall the Council of Europe’s...

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Statement of the Secretary General on the situation in the Republic of Moldova and the Venice Commission

Secretary General 9 June 2019 Strasbourg

I am extremely concerned by the latest developments in the Republic of Moldova. I call on the democratically elected Parliament, the legitimate Government and all political forces to act with restraint and responsibility. Recent decisions of the Constitutional Court are difficult to understand...

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Statement concerning Russian investigative journalist Ivan Golunov

SECRETARY GENERAL 8 June 2019 Strasbourg

The Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Thorbjørn Jagland, has made the following statement with regard to the situation of investigative journalist Ivan Golunov in Russia: “I am very much concerned and saddened by reports coming from Moscow alleging that investigative journalist Ivan...

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Council of Europe to send experts to Yerevan

Secretary General 22 May 2019 Strasbourg

Telephone conversation between Secretary General Jagland and Armenian Prime Minister Pashinyan

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Ground-breaking international treaty on match-fixing to enter into force in September

Council of Europe 16 May 2019 Strasbourg/Helsinki

The Council of Europe Convention on the Manipulation of Sports Competitions, also known as the Macolin Convention, will enter into force on 1 September. Switzerland today became the fifth Council of Europe member state to ratify the convention – following Norway, Portugal, the Republic of Moldova...

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All lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and intersex persons must be protected from discrimination in law and practice

Council of Europe 15 May 2019 Strasbourg

Ahead of the International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia marked on the 17th of May, Council of Europe Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland urged for justice and full protection against discrimination for all persons, irrespective of their sexual orientation, gender identity and...

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Secretary General Jagland: statement on Turkish Supreme Election Council’s decision on re-run of local elections in Istanbul

Secretary General 6 May 2019 Strasbourg

“With regard to the Turkish Supreme Election Council’s decision on a re-run of the local elections in Istanbul, I refer to the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe, the only international body who had been invited to observe the local elections on 31 March. We...

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Secretary General Jagland meets President Emmanuel Macron

Secretary General 6 May 2019 Paris

Secretary General Jagland today met with President Emmanuel Macron for an exchange on the current challenges facing the organisation ahead of the French presidency of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, which begins on 17 May. Addressing the press alongside President Macron,...

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70th Anniversary of the Council of Europe

Council of Europe 3 May 2019 Strasbourg

Joint statement by Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland, the President of the Parliamentary Assembly Liliane Maury Pasquier and the Chairman of the Committee of Ministers Timo Soini

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The Council of Europe at 70: Milestones and achievements

Spokesperson of the Secretary General (Directorate of Communications) 2 May 2019 Strasbourg

On the occasion of the Council of Europe’s 70th anniversary on 5 May 2019

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Secretary General Jagland’s meeting with Federica Mogherini, EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy

Secretary General 17 April 2019 Strasbourg

Secretary General Jagland today met with High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Vice-President of the European Commission, Federica Mogherini at the Council of Europe in Strasbourg. They discussed the increasing cooperation between the Council of Europe...

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Secretary General: Decision by Turkey’s Supreme Electoral Board (YSK) to bar elected candidates from taking office raises questions of rule of law

Secretary General 16 April 2019 Strasbourg

Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland has written to the President of the Supreme Electoral Board of Turkey, Mr Sadi Güven Letter

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Ready for future challenges: Thorbjørn Jagland urges member states to reinforce the Council of Europe

Secretary General 5 April 2019 Strasbourg

In his last annual report after ten years as Secretary General, Thorbjørn Jagland has urged the Council of Europe’s 47 member states to reinforce the organisation, to make sure that it is properly financed and to develop new legal standards on emerging challenges to human rights and democracy....

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Showing 1 - 20 of 32 results.
Speeches

Back Conference of Presidents of Supreme Courts

Paris , 

Check against delivery

Minister,

Supreme court presidents,

President of the European Court of Human Rights,

Ladies and gentlemen,

 

This is my last external event as Secretary General of the Council of Europe – and I am glad that it is with this particular audience.

 

Over the past ten years I have worked with a range of supreme court presidents from across our member states, and sometimes in the context of difficult political situations.

 

Time and again I have been impressed by the ability of these people – and other judges – to play their unique role in preserving the democratic security of our continent.

Among other things, you protect individuals against the arbitrary action of the state;

You provide a check on the separation of powers and prevent boundaries being crossed;

And in doing so you maintain the vital and independent role played by the judiciary in any healthy democracy.

You will all be aware that in some parts of Europe today there are attempts to undermine these principles and values.

In my annual report, published earlier this year, I pointed out some worrying trends in this respect.

More often than before, Council of Europe standards are called into question, along with the institutions that underpin them – from national judiciaries to the European Court of Human Rights itself.

For some, international courts and multilateralism are now the subject of suspicion and the international rule of law regarded as an obstacle to action, rather than the guarantor of individuals’ rights.

And we also see attempts to bring courts under political control.

At the national level, some politicians publicly target the judiciary, arguing that it is corrupt or politicised – elite or remote.

Legislative acts have granted broad powers to the executive at the expense of the judicial branch.

And there have been instances of judges being fired, replaced, or superseded by new structures.

Some have even been imprisoned.

These things weaken judicial independence.

We can see this, for example, in cases of ordinary courts refusing to execute the judgments of the national constitutional court.

Council of Europe bodies have reacted to such cases, in line with their respective mandates.

But the European Convention system too is facing political and legal challenges.

The precedence of both the European Convention on Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights have been challenged.

This trend has taken several forms, including constitutional change, judicial reform and referendums – all of which can be sparked by the controversy generated by a small number of the Court’s judgments.

This is wrong.

The European Convention is the constitutional instrument of European public order and has become a fundamental feature of the European judicial community:

A common legal language in which Europe’s judicial community can communicate despite the differences between their domestic legal traditions.

The Convention’s word is law and it is the role of national and supreme courts to be its “natural judge”:

The Strasbourg Court is of course there as a last resort.

But the primary responsibility for applying the European Convention rests at national level.

To be the first port of call for remedy where the terms of the Convention have been breached, and to implement judgements of the Strasbourg Court too.

And every time a constitutional court or a court of cassation decision achieves this, it gives further concrete effect to our shared legal space:

A shared legal space in which common fundamental rights and liberties prevail.

So, in this endeavour I pay tribute both to the judges of the Strasbourg Court and to the distinguished presidents of national courts – including many of you here today.

Your work not only helps to resolve tension between national and European case law;

It also plays a vital role in ensuring the quality, coherence and consistency of judicial decisions, providing the legal certainty that is essential for winning public trust.

In view of this shared purpose, it makes perfect sense to foster dialogue and
co-operation between courts, as exemplified by this conference.

The Council of Europe has done a great deal to encourage this.

Our Consultative Council of European Judges has brought senior European judges together regularly for the past twenty years in order to discuss areas of current and important interest.

And the entry into force of Protocol 16 of the European Convention has opened a new avenue for deeper dialogue with national superior courts, the first advisory opinion having been delivered in April at the request of the French Court of Cassation;

And a second one having been requested just a couple of weeks ago by the Armenian Constitutional Court.

Similarly, the Superior Courts’ Network established by the Strasbourg Court is an important initiative for enhancing judicial communication on Convention issues;

And our HELP Programme fosters the exchange of best practice between the national judicial training institutions of all member states.

There is more to be done at the national level of course:

A fact that is underlined by the fact that 60,000 cases are still pending before the Strasbourg Court;

By your presence here today;

And by the impressive range of thoughts and ideas captured a few moments ago in the summary of the workshops that you have undertaken.

For our part, the Council of Europe stands ready to help.

Judicial training is essential in order to give judges the skills, competencies and confidence to act independently – but this remains a challenge in many of our member states.

So, we want to build on our co-operation programmes with superior courts in order to better facilitate the reception of the European Convention.

We want to develop further the HELP Programme, which I call on your courts to exploit to the fullest;

And we want to support the Court’s knowledge-sharing capacity by translating its resources into national languages that are accessible by national judges, and developing co-operation with national courts’ case-law departments;

More broadly, the Council of Europe will continue to place the highest priority on safeguarding the authority of the judiciary.

That means providing further support for member states’ efforts to achieve the genuine separation of powers.

We will do this through co-operation activities and by producing guidelines, recommendations and opinions wherever necessary, issued by the Consultative Council of European Judges, the Consultative Council of European Prosecutors, the Venice Commission and GRECO.

We will also continue to provide advice in real time to ensure that member states have all the relevant information at their disposal when introducing reforms which may affect judicial independence.

And we will work with partners including the EU and the OSCE-ODIHR.

All of which will require ongoing and positive engagement from our member states.

We will also continue to support the work done at national level to ensure public trust in the justice system.

Of course, this trust relies on the  professionalism of you and your colleagues – independent judges issuing properly reasoned decisions following fair consideration of the law.

But trust also requires that judicial decisions are delivered within a reasonable time.

Because – justice needs to be efficient.

That’s why the European Commission for the Efficiency of Justice – CEPEJ – works closely with member states to ensure that they have access to detailed comparative data about the performance of their judicial systems and can introduce tools and remedies to accelerate justice when needed.

And of course, member state judges must meet the highest standards of judicial integrity and ethical conduct.

Our anti-corruption body, GRECO, will continue to help governments put in place the frameworks that help judges to do that.

Lastly, judicial legitimacy requires that judges’ decisions be respected.

After all, judgments mean nothing unless they are enforced:

And over the years, failure to achieve this has resulted in thousands of applications being lodged at the Strasbourg Court.

To this end we have adopted enforcement recommendations and guidelines that help member states address this.

Ladies and gentlemen, we are rightly concerned by the difficulties facing Europe today and by certain steps taken by a small number of member states in respect of their national judiciaries.

But that should not distract us from the very real progress that is also being made.

Judicial co-operation between Europe’s national courts and supreme courts, and with the European Court of Human Rights, has never been closer.

The unity of our common legal space has never been greater, and I am heartened to have seen this progress over the course of the past decade.

Events like this give us cause for optimism even in the political environment we confront today.

With that in mind I want to thank each one of you for your engagement and your dedication.

In particular I want to thank the President of the French Constitutional Council, the
Vice-President of the French Council of State, and the First President and the Attorney General of the French Court of Cassation for taking the initiative to convene this conference.

It takes place as part of the French Presidency of our Committee of Ministers, which has made the consolidation of Europe’s system of human rights protection the first priority of their outstanding work – which will also include next month’s Strasbourg meeting of Justice Ministers, for which I would like to thank you personally, Minister.

This Conference is a powerful demonstration of capacity for the further advancement of human rights and multilateralism in the context of judicial and political will.

This is vital for our common future, and a lesson to take to heart.