Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2004-04-20-Speech-2-159"
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"en.20040420.7.2-159"2
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The Tampere European Council, of 15 and 16 October 1999, decided ‘to set up a European Police College for the training of senior law enforcement officials’. It stated that ‘it should start as a network of existing national training institutes’.
The aim of this Irish initiative is to confer on the European Police College (CEPOL) the legal personality and authority normally accorded to legal entities. The purpose of the United Kingdom’s initiative is to locate the College’s seat in Bramshill, following on from the political agreement at the Council, and to establish a permanent secretariat to assist CEPOL.
The feasibility study on giving CEPOL a permanent structure was carried out in a three-year report on the operation and future of CEPOL, which stated that the lack of legal personality had led to difficulties in terms of governance, and at financial and organisational level.
The rapporteur tabled three amendments in order to restore some logic to the proposals
as regards costs borne by the CEPOL budget and the location of the seat of CEPOL.
I feel that CEPOL has done excellent work, and should continue to develop. There is no need during the current stage to create a European College separately from the national training institutes. Consequently, I support the proposals tabled by Ireland and the United Kingdom, along with the amendments adopted and ...
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