Education of police officers
Reply to Written question
| Doc. 11764
| 13 November 2008
- Author(s):
- Committee of Ministers
- Origin
- adopted
at the 1040th meeting of the Ministers’ Deputies (5 November 2008) 2008 - November Standing Committee
- Reply to Written question
- : Written question no. 552 (Doc. 11671)
- Thesaurus
The General Agreement on Privileges and Immunities of the
Council of Europe, Paris, 2 September 1949, Part V – Representatives
to the Consultative Assembly, Articles 13 to 15 – sets out the regulations
applying to parliamentarians. It states among other things that
no administrative or other restrictions shall be imposed on the
free movement to and from the place of meeting of representatives
to the Assembly.
At the Assembly’s latest Standing Committee meeting in Stockholm,
a number of members were stopped by the police while they were on
their way to the Assembly meeting. The reason was a parallel high-level
meeting on the International Compact with Iraq, Annual Review Conference
(ICI). The problem is not that some parliamentarians were stopped
according to the Swedish police law and its Article 24. My concern
is that the police officers on duty were not familiar with the General
Agreement mentioned above.
Mr Lindblad,
To ask the Committee of Ministers,
What measures does it intend to take to ensure that information
about the General Agreement is included in the training of police
officers in member countries?
Reply by the Committee of Ministers
1. The Right Honourable Parliamentarian
is referring to events that took place in the context of a high-level international
meeting which required substantial security measures, including
the presence of 1 700 Swedish police officers, to ensure that it
proceeded smoothly. Foreign security forces were also present.
2. Nobody contests the right of the police to prohibit access
to certain areas, in accordance with the relevant national legislation,
on grounds of law and order or security. Such prohibitions invariably
cause inconvenience. Individuals and authorities whose activities
are likely to be affected by such measures have no option but to
modify their habitual behaviour.
3. For over 10 years the Council of Europe has been engaged in
specific co-operation activities designed to improve knowledge of
European standards among police forces so that they can apply these
standards in their daily work. These activities are designed to
familiarise them with the most fundamental human rights standards,
in particular the case law of the European Court of Human Rights
connected with police activities (freedom of assembly, lawfulness
of detention, non-discrimination, lawful use of force, prohibition
of ill-treatment, investigation techniques) and the principles set
out in the European Code of Police Ethics adopted by the Committee
of Ministers on 19 September 2001 at the 765th meeting of the Ministers'
Deputies (Recommendation Rec(2001)10).
4. Part of the European Code of Police Ethics is devoted to training
for the police. Article 28 of the Code states that “general initial
training should preferably be followed by in-service training at
regular intervals, and specialist, management and leadership training,
when it is required”. “Specialist training” means training that meets
the specific needs of police forces, in the light of the duties
and responsibilities assigned to them or attached to their grade.
Article 28 would therefore seem to justify including, in their initial
training or in specialist training for police forces responsible
for patrolling public events, tuition in diplomatic privileges and
immunities, in particular the General Agreement on Privileges and
Immunities of the Council of Europe.
5. The Committee of Ministers nevertheless considers that it
is for the competent national authorities to decide whether, and
at what stage of the training, to include such tuition.