06/10/2004 | News
"I am convinced that the mains issues of today such as terrorism, poverty, threats to the environment, require a collective local and regional approach, complemented by national policy measures aimed at a globally co-ordinated action to address the challenges we are all facing world wide", today said Giovanni di Stasi, President of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe, addressing PACE.
06/10/2004 | News
"The decision adopted by the Parliamentary Assembly two days ago to include the elected representatives of the Turkish Cypriots in your delibertions is a step in the right direction", Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said in his speech before the PACE today. He also encouraged the Council of Europe to play a more active role in the nomative as well as the practical aspects of combating terrorism. In this context, he invited the 46-member organisation to intensify its contacts with the Organization of Islamic Conference, to promote a dialogue between diverse cultures and relgions. "Turkey, as a member of both organizations, is ready to exert the necessary effort to this end", he said.
06/10/2004 | News
PACE elected Ján Šikuta as judge of the European Court of Human Rights in respect of the Republic of Slovakia. Mr Šikuta was born in 1960 and read law at the Comenius University, Bratislava, and the Charles University, Prague. He was a judge of the District Court in Bratislava from 1986 – 1989 and Judge of the Appeal Court from 1990 – 1994. Since 1994 he has been a Legal Officer at the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Bratislava. Mr Šikuta’s term of office of six years will begin on 1 November 2004. Judges are elected by PACE from a list of three candidates put forward by the State concerned.
06/10/2004 | News
PACE President Peter Schieder today welcomed a call by Serbian President Boris Tadic to Kosovo Serbs encouraging them to take part in the forthcoming elections. “Boris Tadic took a difficult decision in the best interest of the Kosovo Serbs and other people living in Kosovo
06/10/2004 | News
PACE today called for a “common legal area” for action against terrorism in Europe, including a single definition of terrorism in the laws of the Council of Europe’s 46 member states and greater protection for witnesses or pentiti testifying against terrorists. In a resolution and recommendation adopted at the end of an urgent debate, based on a report by Konstantin Kosachev (Russia, EDG), the Assembly said that every act of terror – regardless of the reasons given for it – must be considered “a crime against humanity” and should be utterly rejected as a means of achieving political ends. It called for the issue of co-operation against terrorism to be on the agenda of the Council of Europe's coming Third Summit.
06/10/2004 | News
The Enlarged Parliamentary Assembly, composed of Delegations of OECD and Council of Europe member states, today warned that the current high oil prices could easily derail the economic recovery under way. Parliamentarians said they count “on OPEC and other oil-producing countries to raise production to levels necessary to avoid this.” The adopted resolution on ‘The OECD and the world economy’ welcomes the resumption of a “healthy economic growth” that should assist higher growth also in the major economies in the eurozone, where “insufficient structural reform continues to limit the potential for growth.” The parliamentarians said that globalisation should benefit all the world’s citizens. Herwig Schögl, Deputy Secretary General of the OECD, who took part on the debate, underlined that globalization process has winners but also losers. The governments have the responsibilities that the losers become winners too, he said.
05/10/2004 | News
Monaco today joined the Council of Europe. Ever since it submitted its membership application, PACE has been helping the authorities with a vast programme of reform. On 27 April, the Parliamentary Assembly, having been consulted by the Committee of Ministers, gave the conditional go-ahead for its accession, in the light of the reforms carried out and its commitment to introducing new laws. Ever since they filed a membership application, the Monegasque authorities have co-operated constantly with Assembly representatives. They have, in permanent contact with the Rapporteurs, carried out a vast programme of constitutional and legislative reforms within a relatively short space of time in order to bring the country's institutions and laws into line with Council of Europe standards.
05/10/2004 | News
Serbia and Montenegro is on track with its formal commitments to the Council of Europe, and ambitious legislative reform is under way despite the difficult background of the legacy left by the Milošević regime, the Assembly said today. However – in their first assessment of Serbia and Montenegro since it joined the Council of Europe – the parliamentarians said the state union was “a nearly powerless shell”, and called on both republics to relaunch constitutional reform. “Much has been done, but much remains to be done,” said Miloš Budin (Italy, SOC), presenting the report together with Jonas Čekuolis (Lithuania, LDR).
05/10/2004 | News
"The Summit will provide an opportunity to guide the Council of Europe on the way ahead. Our task will be to ensure that the principles of democracy, human rights and the rule of law continue to be upheld for all citizens of Europe, even in new and changing circumstances. The Summit must enhance our ability to reach these goals. To achieve this, the Summit must attract the interest of Heads of State and Government of all member states", the Foreign Minister of Norway, Jan Petersen, today underlined addressing the Assembly in his capacity as Chairman in office of the Committee of Ministers.
05/10/2004 | News
“We unreservedly condemn the conduct of the Transdnestrian administration in the dispute on the status of Moldovan schools teaching in latin script that operate in the territory under their de facto control," the Monitoring Committee said today. "We demand from Tiraspol that harassment of children, teachers and parents ceases immediately and unconditionally. The international community will not tolerate an inadmissible behaviour which is depriving school children of food, electricity, running water and education in order to settle political scores with the legitimate government of the Republic of Moldova", the Committee concluded.
05/10/2004 | News
PACE's Sub-Committee on the Middle East, meeting in Strasbourg, today adopted the following statement: “The members of the Sub-Committee on the Middle East have expressed their deep concern about the recent dramatic events in Gaza which have already cost the lives of Palestinians and Israelis including children on both sides. The Sub-committee condemns strongly the Palestinian rocket attacks on the Israeli towns and calls upon the Palestinians to stop these attacks immediately.
05/10/2004 | News
The Assembly today called on member states to provide Europeans with more information and better education on sexual and reproductive health. Problems include a sharp rise in teenage pregnancies, rates of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV/Aids, and an increase in sexual violence, the parliamentarians said. PACE also wants member states to share information about their more successful experiences, and to provide adequate funds for the development of STI screening, as well as counselling, services, and contraception, including for young people.