EU Finance Ministers of the eurozone meet in Luxembourg on 10 October 2016 to the review the progress achieved by Greece in implementing the milestones agreed during the first review of Greece's economic adjustment programme. Thematic discussions on growth and jobs, health and long-term care systems, current fiscal issues and the outcome of the G7 meeting of finance ministers and central bank governors are also on the agenda.
EU Ministers of Agriculture and Fisheries meet in Luxembourg on 10 September 2016 to discuss the 2017 fishing opportunities in the Baltic sea, the EU-Norway annual consultation, the ICCAT annual meeting and the Omnibus regulation.
The European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Federica Mogherini, on behalf of the EU, and the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Thorbjørn Jagland issued a joint Declaration on the European and World Day against the Death Penalty, 10 October 2016.
Today, on the European and World Day against the Death Penalty, the Council of Europe and the European Union reaffirm their strong and unequivocal opposition to capital punishment in all circumstances and for all cases. The death penalty is incompatible with human dignity. It is inhuman and degrading treatment, does not have any proven significant deterrent effect, and allows judicial errors to become irreversible and fatal.
Abolition of the death penalty is a distinctive achievement in Europe. It is a prerequisite for membership in the Council of Europe, and the absolute ban of the death penalty under all circumstances is inscribed in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union. The Council of Europe and the European Union urge all European States to ratify the protocols to the European Convention on Human Rights, which aim at the abolition of the death penalty.
The Council of Europe and the European Union strongly urge the political leadership of all European countries to ensure compliance with the legal and political obligations arising from the membership in the Council of Europe and the European Union.
The Council of Europe and the European Union deplore the continuing use of the death penalty in Belarus, the only country on the European continent that still applies the death penalty. They strongly urge the authorities of Belarus to commute the remaining death sentences and establish without delay a formal moratorium on executions as a first step towards abolition of the death penalty. The introduction of the moratorium would be a decisive step in bringing Belarus closer to the pan-European legal standards.
The Council of Europe and the European Union welcome the global trend towards the abolition of capital punishment. Today more than two thirds of all countries have abolished the death penalty in either law or practice. However, the Council of Europe and the European Union regret that the number of executions have risen in some of those countries that retain the death penalty and that some countries which had a de facto moratorium carried out executions. Both Organisations are particularly alarmed when this involves the execution of minors, which is contrary to international law. Some countries continue to apply the death penalty for drug related offences, also in violation of international law.
In June of this year, the 6th World Congress on the Abolition of the Death Penalty took place in Oslo. All participating countries and organisations united behind the call for a global moratorium on the death penalty.
The Council of Europe and the European Union hope to see the momentum created by the World Congress reflected in an increased number of countries supporting the Resolution on a Moratorium on the Use of the Death Penalty which will be put to vote at the 71st session of the UN General Assembly in December 2016.
Contractual relations between the European Community and Andorra are based on an Agreement between the European Economic Community and the Principality of Andorra in the form of an exchange of letters, which was signed on 28 June 1990 and entered into force on 1 July 1991.
On 6 October 2016 the European Border and Coast Guard Agency was officially launched. The European Border and Coast Guard provides a missing link in strengthening Europe's external borders, so that people can continue to live and move freely within the European Union – helping to meet Europe's commitment to get back to the normal functioning of the Schengen area and the lifting of temporary internal border controls.
Place: European Convention Centre Luxembourg (ECCL)
Chair: Peter Kažimír, Minister for finance of Slovakia
All times are approximate and subject to change
From 08.00 Arrivals (live streaming)
+/- 08.45
Doorstep by Minister Kažimír
+/- 09.00
Ministerial breakfast (Roundtable)
+/- 11.00
Beginning of the Council meeting
Adoption of the agenda
Adoption of legislative A items (public session)
Any other business - Current financial service legislative proposals (public session)
Fight against fraud (public session)
Adoption of non-legislative legislative A items
Implementation of the Banking Union
Follow-up to the G20 and IMF meetings in Washington on 6-9 October 2016
Climate finance (Preparation of the 22nd Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) (Marrakesh, 7-18 November 2016))
European Semester 2016 - Lessons learnt
Joint Report on health systems and fiscal sustainability
Any other business
At the end of the meeting
Press conference (live streaming)
10 October
15.00
Eurogroup
At last: the international community, meeting in New York last month, finally acknowledged the need for coordinated action and an international agreement on how to handle the unprecedented wave of migration that has hit Europe and elsewhere.
A year ago, those countries most severely affected appealed for support. Now, the idea that this is an issue that affects everybody has caught on at the United Nations. But the end result of the Summit for Refugees and Migrants held on 19 September is, frankly, disappointing: in short, delegates decided to decide. They agreed to sign up to two global conventions – one on migrants and one on refugees – by 2018. Rather than a culmination, the meeting was a starting point; now it is up to all stakeholders, including those in civil society, to ensure that the journey towards these agreements continues until the goal is reached.
AVSI, a development NGO created in 1972, will keep up the pressure. We began our work in the fringes of the UN summit, drawing attention to our priorities and our practical experiences.
In the first instance, this means paying attention to people. Their personal experiences bring “good” and practical indications to the entire international community. For example, Cyprian Kaliunga comes from a Kenyan village affected by famine, cholera and malnutrition. He founded a school, formed a group of 700 families and started the largest dairy in the district thanks to AVSI’s Distance Support Programme. He has changed the face of his village and reduced or removed a ‘push’ factor for migration.
“The UN meeting was not a culmination, but a starting point; now it is up to all to continue the journey until the goal is reached”
Take Sultan Fawaz Jalloul, from Idlib, Syria. For five years, he has lived in a tent – with his wife and five sons – in an informal settlement in Lebanon. Thanks to a cash-for-work project, promoted by Italian development cooperation in collaboration with local authorities, Sultan has been able to work and to contribute to forest management in southern Lebanon. He has not (yet) been forced to cross the Mediterranean, risking his own life and those of his children.
What have we learnt from these experiences?
Migrants and refugees have special stories. They are not just numbers. And migration brings continents closer together, requiring them to work together at different stages of the migration journey.
In the countries of origin, we must promote business initiatives and local leadership, which ignites development in areas where poverty would otherwise force people to leave. Above all, we need to support education, which generates employment opportunities and helps to ensure peaceful coexistence.
In transit countries, we also need to focus on education for children and job opportunities for adults who still hope to go back home.
“Migrants and refugees have special stories. They are not just numbers. And migration brings continents closer together, requiring them to work together”
And in host countries, such as those in Europe, we must support projects for those who are arriving and those who are staying, helping people to become autonomous and to integrate. This means providing schooling, scholarships and training.
But the most important aspect is that these different interventions should be considered together. They support each other: if one falls, they all fall.
At the same time these experiences tell that no-one can even think of being able to face this challenge alone. It takes the involvement of all those affected by the migration phenomenon. A singular approach gets us nowhere. We also need a personal approach – “cultural work” based on personal relationships.
Through the reconstruction and care of those interpersonal ties, we can – we should – weave a new narrative on migration. We can rediscover the idea that the different, the other, is valuable and is good – something that risks being lost on many European institutions and citizens. The UN Summit is hopefully a first step on a better path.
The post A first step towards a better approach to migrants and refugees appeared first on Europe’s World.
Place: European Convention Center Luxembourg
Chair: Gabriela Matečná, Minister for Agriculture and Rural Development of Slovakia
All times are approximate and subject to change
+/- 09.00
Doorstep by Minister Gabriela Matečná
+/- 10.00
Beginning of the meeting (Roundtable TV/Photo opportunity)
Adoption of the agenda
Adoption of non-legislative A items
Adoption of legislative A items (public session)
FISHERIES
+/- 10.15
2017 fishing opportunities in the Baltic Sea
AGRICULTURE
+/- 11.20
Any other business:
International financial institutions and animal welfare
Ministerial conference "The consumers have the right to be informed"
+/- 11.50
Omnibus proposal (public session)
+/- 15.05
Any other business:
Conference of paying agencies
+/- 15.15
Market situation and support measures
Support programme in pigmeat sector in Poland
Sugar market
+/- 16.15
Joint statement of member states on greening
+/- 17.00
Consequences of judgement of Case C-113/14
+/- 17.30
Press conference with Commissioner Hogan (live streaming)
FISHERIES
+/- 17.45
EU/Norway: annual consultations for 2017
+/- 18.20
ICCAT special meeting
+/- 19.00
Baltic final compromise
+/- 19.45
Press conference with Commissioner Vella (live streaming)
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A small region of Belgium may determine the fate of an EU free trade deal with Canada – and potentially the terms of any post-Brexit deal with the UK.
Read moreThe new European Border and Coast Guard Agency (EBCG) is established today, October 6, 2016.
This successor of the former Frontex (from French: Frontières extérieures for "external borders") is an agency of the European Union headquartered in Warsaw, Poland, tasked with border control of the European Schengen Area, in coordination with the border and coast guards of Schengen Area member states. Frontex was established in 2004 as the European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders, and primary responsible for coordinating border control efforts.
In response to the European migrant crisis of 2015-2016, the European Commission proposed on December 15, 2015, to extend Frontex's mandate and to transform it into a fully-fledged European Border and Coast Guard Agency. On 18 December 2015, the European Council roundly supported the proposal, and after a vote by the European Parliament, the Border and Coast Guard was officially launched on 6 October 2016 at the Bulgarian external border with Turkey.
To enable the Agency to carry out its tasks, its budget would be gradually increased from the €143 million originally planned for 2015 up to €238 million in 2016, €281 million in 2017, and will reach €322 million (about US$350 million) in 2020. The staff of the agency would gradually increase from 402 members in 2016 to 1,000 by 2020.
The European Border and Coast Guard Agency is not a new body. It does not replace Frontex and it retains the same legal personality. What the Commission draft Regulation aims to do is to strengthen the mandate of the EU border agency, to increase its competences and to better equip it to carry out its operational activities. The new tasks and responsibilities of the Agency need to be reflected by its new name. It coordinates its work alongside the European Fisheries Control Agency and European Maritime Safety Agency with regard to coastguard functions.
The permanent staff of the Agency will be more than doubled between 2015 and 2020. The new proposal provides for a reserve of European border guards and technical equipment. The Agency will be able to purchase its own equipment (this is not a novelty). However - and this is new - the Member States where this equipment is registered (this refers mainly to big equipment items such as patrol vessels, air crafts, etc. which need a flag of state) will be obliged to put it at the Agency's disposal whenever needed. this will make it possible for the Agency to rapidly deploy the necessary technical in border operations. A rapid reserve pool of border guards and a technical equipment pool will be put at the disposal of the agency, intending to remove the shortages of staff and equipment for the Agency's operations.
A monitoring and risk analysis centre will be established, with the authorisation to carry out risk analysis and to monitor the flows towards and within the EU. The risk analyses includes cross-border crime and terrorism, process personal data of persons suspected to be involved in acts of terrorism and cooperate with other Union agencies and international organisations on the prevention of terrorism. A mandatory vulnerability assessments of the capacities of the Member States to face current or upcoming challenges at their external borders will be established. The Agency is able to launch joint operations, including the use of drones when necessary. The European Space Agency's earth observation system Copernicus provides the new Agency with real time satellite surveillance capabilities alongside the current Eurosur border surveillance system.
ember States will be able to request joint operations, rapid border interventions, and deployment of the EBCG Teams to support national authorities when a Member State experiences an influx of migrants that endangers the Schengen area. In such a case, especially when a Member State’s action is not sufficient to handle the crisis, the Commission will have the authority to adopt an implementing decision that will determine whether a situation at a particular section of the external borders requires urgent action at the EU level. Based on this decision, the EBCGA will be able to intervene and deploy EBCG Teams to ensure that action is taken on the ground, even when a Member State is unable or unwilling to take the necessary measures.
The right to intervene is a point of contention between a number of EU Members and the Commission, especially those Members whose borders form the external borders of the EU, such as Greece, Hungary, Italy, and Poland. They want to ensure that intervention is possible only with the consent of the Member States, whose external borders necessitate the presence of the ECBGA. Greece’s Alternate Minister for European Affairs, Nikos Xydakis, stated in an interview that while Greece is supportive of a common European action and of changing Frontex’s mandate, it wants the ECBGA to take complete charge of migration and refugee flows.
Tag: FRONTEXEBCGThousands of young people took part in the European Youth Event (EYE2016) at the European Parliament in Strasbourg last May with the aim of producing ideas for Europe’s future.
Former EYE2016 participants will have the opportunity to present some of the most impactful ideas collected during the EYE and exchange views with MEPs, with the aim of having an impact on the future agenda of the EU and make positive change. The topics in the AFET-DEVE joint committee meeting, taking place on 8 October, will cover migration in the context of the joint AFET-DEVE Initiative report “Addressing refugees and migrants movements: the role of European external action”.
The meeting will be webstreamed live on http://eye2016.eu, from 10:00-10:45.
Monday 10 October 2016
Passau (Germany)
18.00 Participation in the "Menschen in Europa 2016" conference
Tuesday 11 October 2016
13.30 Meeting with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and European Parliament President Martin Schulz (Berlaymont)
17.45 Phone call with Prime Minister of the Netherlands Mark Rutte
19.30 Meeting with a delegation of the EU Committee of the Regions led by President Markku Markkula
Thursday 13 October 2016
17.30 Speech at the European Policy Centre 20th anniversary conference (Palais des Académies)
Friday 14 October 2016
10.00 Meeting with President of Croatia Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović (photo opportunity)
11.30 Meeting with General Secretary Luca Visentini of European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC)
12.30 Meeting with President Katherina Reiche and General Secretary Valeria Ronzitti of the European Centre of Employers and Enterprises providing Public Services (CEEP)
13.30 Presentation of letters of credentials of ambassadors
15.15 Meeting with President Emma Marcegaglia and Director General Markus Beyrer of BusinessEurope