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12 - 16 May 2001, Bucharest (Romania)
2nd
Session
Conference
of Prosecutors General of Europe
"Harmonisation and co-operation between prosecutors
at
European level"
2nd Pan-European Conference of Prosecutors General of Europe
organised by the Council of Europe in co-operation with the Prosecutor
General of Romania
C
O N C L U S I O N S
The Second Pan-European Conference of Prosecutors General of Europe
was held in Bucharest, from 12 to 16 May 2001, under the aegis of
the Council of Europe and Romania, with a view to pursuing in particular
the following objectives:
- to contribute to the harmonisation of the principles that guide
prosecutor's functions and statute, in particular by ensuring follow-up
action to Recommendation (2000) 19;
- to improve international co-operation in criminal matters, both
in terms of efficiency and in terms of abidance to human rights
and other standards;
- to organise co-operation between public prosecutors at European
level, in order to achieve the above objectives, and also to ensure
horizontal exchanges between them.
The Conference was opened by the President of Romania, Mr Ion Iliescu.
The Programme of the Conference, as well as the list of participants,
are appended to this document. The Proceedings of the Conference
will be published in due time.
The Conference accepted with gratitude the invitation from Mrs Zdenka
Cerar, Prosecutor General of Slovenia, to hold the next session
in her country.
Recalling the terms of Recommendation Rec (2000) 19 of the Committee
of Ministers of the Council of Europe to member States, on the Role
of Public Prosecution in the Criminal Justice System, and in particular
the notion of "public prosecution" that is developed therein,
the Conference decided as follows as follows:
I. FRAMEWORK
The Conference invites the Committee of Ministers of the Council
of Europe to set up, within this Organisation, a "Conference
of Prosecutors General of Europe" that would stand upon the
following ideas:
The Conference would:
- gather State Prosecutors General, Regional Prosecutors General
and Prosecutors of great areas;
- promote closer ties between prosecution authorities in the different
member States, both at a general level and in more specific areas;
efforts should also be made to promote either closer territorial
ties across the main European regions or closer operational ties
(cf. for example: meetings of Supreme Court prosecutors, meetings
of prosecutors specialising in economic and financial matters, etc.);
- on its initiative or at the request of the Committee of Ministers,
prepare opinions for the latter on matters pertaining to the role
and status of Public Prosecution;
- gather information and put forward suggestions for preparing and
implementing Council of Europe activities relating to Public Prosecution;
- ensure that Public Prosecution can play its role in the field
of international co-operation in criminal matters;
- provide the necessary links between public prosecutors specialising
in organised crime or corruption;
- provide follow-up to Recommendation Rec(2000) 19;
- ensure appropriate links with EUROJUST and other bodies of judicial
co-operation;
- encourage links and exchanges between Supreme Councils for Public
Prosecution or equivalent;
- constitute a framework for setting up subject-oriented or region-based
working parties.
Concerning the follow-up to Recommendation Rec(2000) 19, the Conference
would :
- see to it that the Recommendation is disseminated as widely as
possible;
- assess the practical effects of the Recommendation and support
its implementation in each member State, by using appropriate questionnaires,
ad hoc meetings or mutual evaluation exercises consisting of on
the spot verifications;
- update current documentary information by means of the systematic
compilation of new texts relating to Public Prosecution in each
member State (laws, codes of conduct, case-law etc) and making such
information available, as a first stage in the setting up of a genuine
data base on Public Prosecution in Europe;
- make suggestions, as appropriate, aimed at developing given points
of the Recommendation.
Concerning international co-operation in criminal matters, the Conference
thinks that an informal, yet tangible, structure as mentioned below
should be set up
.
A Coordinating Bureau could be given the following executive tasks:
- to organise the plenary sessions of the Conference;
- to organise the meetings of the sections of the Conference;
- to provide the necessary follow-up to the work of the Conference
and its sections;
- to liaise with the competent bodies of the Council of Europe,
in particular the European
Committee on Crime
Problems (CDPC), the European Committee on Legal Co-operation (CDCJ)
and the Consultative Council of European Judges (CCJE).
The Coordinating Bureau could be made up as follows:
- one member of the Public Prosecution from the country that organised
the last Conference;
- one member of the Public Prosecution from the country that will
organise the next Conference;
- two members of the Public Prosecution appointed by the Conference
for a period of two years;
- two members of the Public Prosecution appointed by the Secretary
General of the Council of Europe for a period of two years.
Membership of the Coordination Bureau shall respect the principles
of geographical distribution and rotation.
Subject to the approval of these proposals by the Committee of Ministers
of the Council of Europe, the Conference appoints Mr Vito Monetti,
Deputy Prosecutor General at the Court of Cassation in Rome (Italy)
and Mr Marc van Erve, Chief Public Prosecutor in the National Prosecutor's
Office, at Rotterdam (Netherlands) as members of the Coordination
Bureau for a period of two years.
II. INTERNATIONAL
LEGAL CO-OPERATION IN CRIMINAL MATTERS
Concerning international
co-operation in criminal matters, the Conference thinks that an
informal framework should be set up within the Conference of Prosecutors
General of Europe designed to:
- improve the efficiency of co-operation, in particular by enabling
the activities of the different bodies that are competent in each
State to be coordinated;
- improve the standards of co-operation in terms of the rule of
law;
- improve the standards of co-operation in terms of human rights;
- if and when necessary, assist in coordinating prosecutorial action
at European level;
- organise the exchange of information and summary legal advice
before requests are made;
- organise the exchange of information after a request has been
made, pending its execution, in the course of execution and after
execution;
- ensure appropriate links with EUROJUST and other bodies of judicial
co-operation;
- identify, for each country, a point of collection and transmission
of information on trans-national criminality, preferably within
a central public prosecution office;
- set up a network of points capable of nourishing a permanent exchange
of information and organise periodical meetings for the purpose
of examining the activities and dynamics of criminal groups;
- to give priority in this respect to the speed of the exchange
of information that is useful to investigations in each country.
The framework should comprise three elements, namely:
- one member of Public Prosecution per member State of the Council
of Europe (and an alternate);
- a multi-lingual liaison group of prosecutors;
- a secretariat provided by the Council of Europe.
It may set up sub-regional groups.
The Council of Europe should provide further support in those matters
through technical co-operation programmes, such as Octopus or PACO.
III. DATA BASE
The Conference tasked
its Bureau with studying ways and means of setting up within a short
period of time data base including:
(a) comparative law
i. information on the legislation governing public prosecution in
the different countries;
ii. information on codes of ethics and other rules with the same
aim, in the different countries
(b) procedural information
i. organisation of public prosecution in each country
ii. geographical jurisdiction
iii. procedural role of public prosecution.
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