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European
Union ministers meet today to discuss the security issues arising
from last week’s terrorist attack in Madrid. In advance of
their meeting an ‘action paper’ as been published which
outlines some of the issues and the measures that are being and
will be taken in response.
The following is the full, unedited,
text of the action paper:
The terrorist responsible for the attacks in
Madrid have struck against the fundamental principles of all European
states and on which the Union is built: respect for human dignity,
liberty, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human
rights.
The Commission does not believe that the right
answer to these attacks is proposing new legal instruments or new
institutions. First, because most of the legislative and institutional
framework is proposed or in place and simply needs to be approved
and/or implemented on the ground. Second, because we cannot afford
to wait for long legislative procedures to give answers to such
atrocities. Priority is now on co-ordinating operational action(1).
This paper sets out five types of action which
the Commission should propose that the Union take in response to
these terrorist outrages:
* Declaration of solidarity, to be pronounced solemnly by the Heads
of State and Government at their meeting in Brussels on 25-26 March;
* Better implementation of existing legislative instruments relevant
to the fight against terrorism, and adoption of draft measures already
on the Council table;
* Strengthening the fight against terrorist financing;
* Enhanced operational coordination and cooperation;
* External action;
* Other measures.
Declaration of solidarity
One of the Member States of the Union is the victim of an appalling
terrorist outrage. It is the duty of the Union, its institutions
and all its Member States to act quickly and in a spirit of solidarity
to provide all possible support and assistance to Spain in both
investigating this outrage and bringing the perpetrators to justice,
and in preventing the terrorist threat to Spanish and other EU territory
for the future.
The Commission proposes that the Heads of State
and Government, together with the Presidents of the European Parliament
and European Commission, should, at the meeting of the European
Council on 25-26 March, make a solemn declaration of commitment
to fulfilling this duty.
The declaration would send a visible sign of
solidarity to the people of Spain and a clear message that Europe
as a whole will not tolerate terrorism or those who perpetrate it.
The declaration would be the forerunner of
the formal solidarity clause which the European Convention has proposed
for inclusion in the new Constitutional Treaty.
Draft Declaration of Solidarity
The Heads of State and Government of the European Union, the President
of the European Parliament, and the President of the European Commission,
bearing in mind the formal solidarity clause proposed in the draft
Constitutional Treaty, solemnly proclaim the text below as the Declaration
of Solidarity between the Union and its Member States.
The Union and its Member States shall act jointly
in a spirit of solidarity if a Member State is the victim of a terrorist
attack. All Member States are equally exposed to the threat of terrorism.
The Union shall mobilise all the instruments at its disposal to:
- prevent the terrorist threat in the territory of the Member States;
- protect democratic institutions and the civilian population from
any terrorist attack;
- assist a Member State in its territory at the request of its political
authorities in the event of a terrorist attack.Better implementation
of existing legislative instruments relevant to the fight against
terrorism, and adoption of draft measures already on the Council
table
The Union has already put in place a series
of legislative measures to combat terrorism. But implementation
of these measures is often slow, poor an inadequate. This is unacceptable.
Action is needed to turn political agreements into legal reality.
* The 5 Member States which have not yet taken
the necessary measures to put the European Arrest Warrant(2) into
their national law should do so as a matter of top priority. And
transposition is not enough: the Commission will report at the end
of this year on the measures Member States have taken and on the
operational working of the European Arrest Warrant, a matter which
the Commission and Eurojust are monitoring constantly;
* In the wake of 11 September 2001, the Union
adopted a landmark Framework Decision on the fight against terrorism(3)
to ensure that the definition of terrorist crimes is similar across
the Union and to set common minimum maximum sentences applicable
to these atrocious crimes. Three Member States have not fully reported
on the implementation of this legislation, and for the others it
is not yet clear that national measures fully implement the requirements
of the Framework Decision. In the coming weeks the Commission will
report the failings in no uncertain terms to the Council and will
do all it can to ensure that the Member States take the necessary
measures;
* The 2000 EU Convention on Mutual Assistance
in Criminal Matters and its 2001 Protocol provide for improvements
to the rules on mutual assistance. It includes provisions relating
to cross-border requests for interception of communications and
monitoring of bank accounts. No legal deadline was set for implementation
of this instrument. To date only four Member States have formally
ratified the Convention, although other Member States have adopted
the necessary legislation.
* In relation to tackling the means by which
terrorist organisations finance their activities, it is essential
that Member States take the necessary measures to implement the
Framework Decision on money laundering, the identification, tracing,
freezing, seizing and confiscation of instrumentalities and the
proceeds of crime(4) which limits Member States' reservations in
respect of the 1990 Council of Europe Convention on laundering,
search, seizure and confiscation of the proceeds of crime and approximates
penalties for money laundering offences. The deadline for implementation
of this instrument was 31 December 2002, and although all but one
of the Member States have informed the Commission of the measures
taken to implement it, in some cases the information provided was
not complete.
* The Framework Decision on joint investigation
teams(5) provides an essential operational tool for allowing investigators
from two or more Member States to work together to tackle cross-border
criminal activities. The instrument should have been implemented
by Member States by the start of 2003; however, to date only nine
Member States have notified transposition measures to the Commission;
* Furthermore, attention should be given to
ensuring that the full use is made of the tools set up by two Council
Decisions relevant for the fight against terrorism, namely the Decision
establishing Eurojust(6) and the Decision on the implementation
of specific measures for police and judicial cooperation to combat
terrorism(7). Under this latter instrument all Member States are
required to establish national contact points responsible for collecting
all relevant information concerning and resulting from national
criminal investigations and prosecutions with respect to terrorist
offences involving listed individuals, groups or entities, and for
passing that information on to Europol and Eurojust. But two Member
States have not yet established their national contact points to
exchange information on terrorism with Eurojust and Europol.
* Looking to the future, the Commission urges
all Member States to demonstrate their compliance with the Framework
Decision on the execution in the European Union of orders freezing
property or evidence(8) by the deadline of 2 August 2005;
* The Commission calls on Member States to
rapidly implement the existing legislation on maritime and aviation
security, in particular Regulation 2320/2002 on civil aviation security,
Regulation 1486/2003 on procedures on Commission inspections in
the field of civil aviation security and the not yet published Regulation
on enhancing port and ship facility security.
Furthermore, Justice and Home Affairs Ministers
should overcome bureaucratic and technical blockages to ensure that
the draft instruments on terrorism currently before it are adopted
as a matter of priority.
Draft instruments relevant to the fight
against terrorism which the Justice and Home Affairs Council should
adopt as a matter of priority:
Draft Framework Decision on the confiscation
of crime-related proceeds, instrumentalities and property, which
seeks to ensure that all Member States have effective rules governing
the confiscation of proceeds of crime, including extended powers
of confiscation. The Council reached political agreement on this
instrument on 19 December 2002, but formal adoption has to await
the lifting of constitutional and parliamentary reservations by
two Member States;
Draft Framework Decision on attacks against
information systems, which responds to the increasing concern at
the potential threat posed by cyber-terrorism. Political agreement
was reached on 28 February 2003 but parliamentary reservations are
still pending by three Member States;
Draft Framework Decision on the application
of the principle of mutual recognition to confiscation orders. Discussions
on this instrument are nearing completion and the Justice and Home
Affairs Ministers should be urged to find agreement on it at their
meeting of 30 March 2004;
Draft Framework Decision on the European Evidence
Warrant for obtaining objects, documents and data for use in proceedings
in criminal matters(9). This proposal applies the mutual recognition
principle to obtaining certain types of evidence and thereby replaces
the existing mutual assistance regime in this area.
The Commission is going soon to put forward legislation on cross-border
hot pursuit. It is increasingly outdated to continue to work on
a basis that national police forces can only act on limited circumstances
beyond the borders of their Member States. There can be no explanation
for allowing a terrorist atrocity to occur just because the police
forces of a Member State had no possibility to cross an internal
border.
Strengthening the fight against terrorist
financing
The EU and the Member States have made great progress in a range
of areas, but the persistence of the terrorist threat and the complexity
of the fight against the phenomenon raise the need to come up with
innovative solutions. To eradicate the phenomenon, and above all
to attack terrorism as close as possible to its foundations, action
must be taken on the sources of financing of terrorist organisations.
But action on the sources and networks of terrorist funding is particularly
difficult. As in the case of laundering the proceeds of organised
crime, terrorist funding is based on highly secret operations conducted
on an international scale, often using parallel circuits.
As the provisions of the money-laundering directive
begin to bite, criminals and terrorists are likely to turn to cash
as an easier way of moving funds around. The adoption by the Council
of the Commission proposal to introduce customs controls on cash
movements at the external frontier would transform the present fragmented
approach into a common, simple and rapid first defence mechanism.
In order to facilitate the immediate application of freezing measures
decided by the Union, the Commission and the European banking sector
are establishing an electronic database of all targeted persons
and entities. The database will be operational in the summer of
2004.
A qualitative and quantitative improvement
in exchanges of information is crucial in this respect. At the same
time, regard must be had for fundamental rights, and particularly
data protection, and the practicability of measures.
It is essential in the fight against terrorism for the relevant
services to have the fullest and most up-to-date information possible
in their respective fields, including information on convictions.
The Commission will propose by the end of March 2004 a proposal
for a Council Decision aimed at broadening the exchanges of information
on convictions for terrorist offences and cooperation between Member
States, Europol and Eurojust. It represents a major element for
avoiding infiltration of terrorist groups in legal activities in
the objective to fight against financing of terrorism.
* The establishment of a European Register
on convictions and disqualifications for individuals and bodies
corporate should also be envisaged as a real contribution to the
effectiveness of the fight against crime in general, and terrorism
in particular. Direct access to the Register should be given to
the competent. The Commission will issue proposals before the end
of this year in order to establish such a register.
* Work is to be launched in the Forum on Organised
Crime Prevention for the establishment of a database of persons,
groups and entities covered by restrictive measures for the fight
against terrorism or under criminal proceedings for terrorist offences.
This work will be undertaken in partnership with the private sector
and in liaison with Europol.
* Furthermore, in the context of the third
money laundering directive, the Commission will propose that Member
States should be required to have systems allowing holders of bank
accounts to be identified and facilitating investigations into bank
accounts and movements of funds.
* Freezing the funds or other financial assets
and economic resources of individuals, groups and entities involved
in terrorism is a key tool to combat terrorism. Several legal instruments
have been adopted in the wake of September 11 events under the Title
V of the TEU, which provide for the freezing of the funds and other
financial assets or economic resources of persons, groups and entities
involved in acts of terrorism. The lists of terrorist organisations/assets
should become operational and reactive on a "real time"
basis. They urgently need to be streamlined and the Commission is
ready to assist Member States in that regard. Allowing for modification
of the lists under qualified majority voting is an option as is
the replacement of the present three lists by only two, one on suspected
cases/threats, the other one as a record of past terrorist activity.
This last list, to be set up in a form of a court record, should
cover not only decisions on the freezing of assets connected to
terrorism but also all condemnations for terrorist behaviour.
Enhanced operational coordination and
cooperation
Tribute should be paid to all the security forces of the EU that
have avoided attacks such as those planned between 11 September
2001 and 11 March 2004 from materialising. However, more should
be done and real action is needed now. There is no 100% security
proof system but much more could be done in order to prevent the
repetition of an attack as serious as that of Madrid by strengthening
the operational and coordination tools at our disposal. We cannot
go on producing networks and institutions and then refuse to provide
them with the necessary tools to perform their jobs or simply not
using them. Much has been done. Let us use it.
* The Union should put in place a new coordination
mechanism for the exchange of information -a clearing house mechanism
- where law enforcement, judicial authorities and intelligence services
meet to enhance mutual trust and exchange operational intelligence
enabling each to perform its duty properly. Europol and Eurojust
should be fully involved, together with national intelligence and
law enforcement networks. In accordance with the Treaty provisions,
the Commission could be fully associated. The priorities of the
aims of such exchange of information mechanism should be set up
by Council, although one could think of prioritising its activities
on (i) the method of recruitment of terrorist organisations, (ii)
the identification of the sleeping cells, (iii) their financial
powerbases in civil society and (iv) their external connections
The exchange of information among and between national authorities
and at EU level must be dramatically improved. A certain culture
of secrecy, understandable only at first sight, has proven extremely
counter-productive. More than new institutions or bodies, the Union
has to come forward with a comprehensive across the board methodology
for the exchange of information.
This new coordination mechanism should neither
be a European CIA not just a second pillar instrument. Terrorism
is first and foremost an internal security matter and therefore
the mechanism we suggest to establish should exchange information
mostly within a third pillar umbrella. In this way, we put existing
Community, Union, international and national - networks in dialogue
among themselves rather than losing time destroying existing and
creating new procedurally time-consuming institutions and bodies.
* The Union should work towards the implementation
of a European information policy for law enforcement purposes. Intelligence-led
law enforcement and effective national criminal intelligence systems
which are compatible at EU level and allow for the effective access,
analysis, and use of data should be developed. Such an information
policy should aim at facilitating the detection of threats to public
order and security, to avert security risks, and to fight organised
crime and terrorism throughout the Union, including through enhanced
access to data not produced for law enforcement purposes.
* We are working with major partners to enhance
controls to prevent goods linked to terrorist actions from entering
the Community. The EC-US negotiations and follow up actions on the
Container Security Initiative (CSI) provide an example of concrete
co-operation to combat terrorism and it will be important that any
recommendations resulting from the follow-up actions should be quickly
implemented and possibly extended to other regions
* The Commission will pursue as a matter of
priority the discussions that have been started with Member States
and other relevant parties, e.g. Europol, with a view to making
a first proposal by the middle of 2004 outlining an EU approach
to the use of travellers' data for border and aviation security
and other law enforcement purposes. Such a policy framework will
need to strike a balance between security concerns on the one hand
and data protection and other civil liberties concerns on the other.
* Comprehensive and interoperable European
Information Systems should be developed. The Commission is prepared
to explore the creation of synergies between existing and future
information systems (SIS II, VIS and EURODAC) in order to exploit
their value added in the fight against terrorism within their respective
legal and technical frameworks.
* Traceability and control of the weapons of
terror and precursors. We need to urgently review whether we have
adequate measures in place to allow us to monitor and trace bomb-making
materials such as explosives, detonators, and radioactive sources
as well as precursors. Detection and traceability should become
our key words here. The tracing and checking of dangerous goods
and explosives should be made possible by creating new databases
or upgrading existing databases such as SIS II with new functionalities,
as well as making full use of advanced technologies such as satellite
enhanced (GALILEO) RFID (Radio Frequency Identification Device)
tracking. All this action needs to be underpinned by a re-prioritisation
of our research resources by fostering their increasing dedication
to security matters, in particular inter-operability. The present
amount of 65M€ devoted to security-related research is woefully
inadequate.
* The Member States must strengthen the identification,
control and interception of illegal trafficking in WMD materials.
This should include (i) Member States' support for international
initiatives aimed at disrupting WMD networks, (ii) the interception
of illegal WMD shipments, as well as measures aimed at enhancing
controls on WMD related material in the EU, including the transit
and transhipment of sensitive materials and (iii) the development
of common policies related to criminal sanctions for illegal export,
brokering and smuggling of such material.
* Member States and the European Community
should ensure that they are able to ratify the Protocol to the United
Nations Transnational Organised Crime Convention on trafficking
of illegal firearms as soon as possible.
* As regards visa policy, border management
and documents security, the possibility to adjust the pending Commission
proposal on EU passports by making fingerprints mandatory and to
extend it to Identity Cards and other travel documents should be
considered together with the creation of a European Registry for
issued travel documents. Extended use by different law enforcement
and security authorities of data available in the visa consultation
process should be foreseen.
* Europol, which already has a clear anti-terrorism
mandate, should be used more and better. Member States need to provide
Europol with the information and intelligence it needs to do its
job properly, in particular in the area of prevention and investigation
of terrorist attacks. Member States should consider it their duty
to give the Europol Terrorism Task Force with all operational information,
not just limited and filtered strategic and technical intelligence.
It is also imperative that Member State respect the target dates
imposed by the Council for ratification of the three protocols amending
the EUROPOL convention;
* The Task Force of EU Police Chiefs should
be given a stronger role in the operational activities concerning
prevention and fight against terrorism, which should become one
of its priorities for action. The Task Force will meet on 22-23
March and will coordinate operational measures to respond to the
Madrid attacks and work on ways to ensure that similar events do
not occur again.
* Eurojust should be given a stronger role
in the fight against terrorism. The Council should give it a clear
mandate to coordinate the activities of national prosecuting authorities
across the Union in relation to terrorism. We should open an urgent
debate about giving Eurojust an initiating role in this regard too;
Presently, Member States may, provided they come forward with a
justification, refuse to pursue an investigation requested by Eurojust.
This should be abrogated, at least when Eurojust's request would
relate to investigations on terrorism;
* Internal coordination within the Commission
needs to be fostered. A network led by Directorates General JAI
and RELEX, supervised by their Commissioners and the President,
should be in charge of better internal co-ordination of all aspects
of the institution's activities that touch upon directly or indirectly,
on terrorism. Counter-terrorism, besides its core JHA subject matters,
covers matters as diverse as foreign relations, environment, health,
internal market, industry, research, i.e. practically all areas
of public policy dealt with by the Commission. Internal co-ordination
has lacked and needs to be reinforced. The Commission likewise welcomes
any move by Council to improve its own internal co-ordination.
External action
The EU needs to better target its dialogue with third countries
on terrorism, especially those countries where we have evidence
of a terrorist threat or of specific terrorist activity such as
recruitment or training, those who are direct or indirect sources
of terrorist financing etc. We need to use the information we already
have, whether from threat assessments from various sources or the
more general EU Crisis Prevention Watch List exercise to identify
countries representing a potential threat and target our political
dialogue accordingly. The anti-terrorism clauses in agreements with
third countries should be followed up and the related provisions
on co-operation implemented, underpinned by technical assistance
as appropriate. If the clauses are not implemented - or third countries
refuse to include them in agreements - this should have direct consequences
in terms of the EU's willingness to continue to provide assistance
more generally.
The EU should be prepared to offer more and
better targeted technical assistance in co-operation with the United
Nations Counter Terrorism Committee (CTC) and other relevant international
and regional organisations.
The Commission will step up its strategy for mainstreaming counter-terrorism
objectives within relevant programmes as well as continuing to use
the Rapid Reaction Mechanism for specific projects in priority countries.
The aim should be to rapidly agree priority countries where assistance
should be targeted, drawing on all available threat assessment information
and in consultation with the Council. Assistance to help countries
implement the FATF special recommendations on terrorist financing
should be considered a particular priority."
Other measures
* Financial support for victims of terrorism: €1 million is
available in the 2004 budget for supporting the victims of terrorism.
The money will be used to support projects which are intended to
help the victims of terrorist acts and/or their relatives to recover
by means of social or psychological support provided by organisations
and/or their networks, as well as projects which are intended to
mobilise the public against terrorism in all its forms. The Commission
is currently preparing a call for proposals which will be launched
before the end of next month.
* Draft Directive on state compensation to
crime victims: a Commission proposal for a draft Directive on state
compensation to crime victims has been discussed in the Council
at length over the past year. The events of the last days show more
than ever how important it is to ensure that victims of serious
crimes and terrorism can be compensated for the damage and suffering
they are subjected to. Justice and Home Affairs Ministers must think
very seriously about these issues and make every effort to agree
on an instrument with real added value at their meeting on 30 March.
Continuous discussions following the atrocious attacks of last week
is making a mockery of our commitments with public opinion.
* Terrorists are often more innovative in using
legitimate goods for illegal purposes than we might imagine. The
Commission as well as Member States should monitor all its legislative
or standard producing machinery so as to have it subject to "ex
ante" terrorism proofing. No legislation should leave this
institution without first being submitted to a terrorism proofing
scrutiny. For example, it is important to take measures to avoid
that mobile telephones are used as tool by terrorists and other
criminal groups. Reprogramming of stolen mobile communications equipment
should be criminalised. Information campaigns should be launched
to encourage the general public to ensure that lost and stolen mobile
phones are reported so that they can be blocked and cannot become
a resource to the use of these groups. Measures should be taken
so that the sale of replacement SIM cards does not impede the efficient
actions of law enforcement authorities.
* Tackling bio-terrorism requires specific
Health Security measures. It is also apparent that the health and
security communities are not communicating as they should and that
urgent action should be taken in order to remedy this state of affairs.
Building on work already done, the EU and Member States should accelerate
the implementation of a Health Security Strategy addressing in particular
(i) the adoption of a general EU Emergency Preparedness Plan, (ii)
joint emergency planning and response exercises, (iii) an agreed
risk incidence classification scale, and (iv) most crucially, ensuring
the mutual availability of adequate stocks of medicines and vaccines.
A European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) will
be established in 2005 and will prioritise the coordination of efforts
to improve surveillance, notification, response, assistance, communication
and laboratory capacity on health security matters.
* The Community Civil Protection Mechanism,
which operates on a 24 hours basis, pools the capabilities of the
Member States and can be called upon, not only on case of natural
catastrophe where it has proven successful - but also in case of
a terrorist attack in order to provide immediate assistance. It
is a key tool for implementing solidarity between Member States
in critical situations. The Commission will propose by the end of
the month to reinforce our capacity by way of (i) an improved database
whereby Member States will have to identify and detail on the basis
of some pre-defined scenarios their available assistance and equipment,
(ii) of the financing of an extensive programme of training and
exercises that would in particular test the interoperability between
intervention teams, including military assets of (iii) the establishment
of a dedicated communication system and of (iv) better coordination
of the assistance delivered. Appropriate links should also be established
between the Mechanism and the "civil-military planning cell"
which will be created on the basis of the agreement reached in the
European Council in December 2003.
(1) In parallel, the Commission at its meeting
of the 16th of March has approved by way of a paper on counter-terrorism
its contribution to the European Security Strategy. This contribution
presents an exhaustive inventory of the challenges and achievements
in the fight against terrorism. The aim of the present paper, on
the contrary, aims at focusing on the main political messages and
outcomes, especially on better implementation and coordination,
which the Madrid atrocities call for.
(2) Council Framework Decision of 13 June 2002
relative on the European Arrest Warrant and surrender procedures
between the Member States, JO L 190 of 18.7.2002, p.1
(3) Council Framework Decision of 13 June 2002
on the fight against terrorism, JO L 164 of 22.6.2002, p.3
(4) Council Framework Decision of 26 June 2001
on money laundering, the identification, tracing, freezing, seizing
and confiscation of instrumentalities and the proceeds of crime,
JO L 182 of 5.7. 2001, p.1
(5) Council Framework Decision of 13 June 2002
on joint investigation teams, JO L 162 of 20.6.2002, p.1
(6) Council Decision of 28 February 2002 setting
up Eurojust with a view to reinforcing the fight against serious
crime, JO L 63 of 6.3.2002, p.1
(7) Council Decision of 19 December 2002 on
the implementation of specific measures for police and judicial
cooperation to combat terrorism in accordance with Article 4 of
Common Position 2001/931/CFSP
(8) Council Framework Decision of 22 July 2003
on the execution in the European Union of orders freezing property
or evidence, JO L 196 of 2.8.2003, p.45
(9) COM(2003)688 of 14 November 2003
Source: European Commission

•Date:
19th March 2004 •Region: UK / W.Europe •Type:
Article •Topic: Terrorism
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