Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2002-09-24-Speech-2-105"
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"en.20020924.7.2-105"2
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As today's debate has amply illustrated, the machinery for producing undemocratic, repressive legislation has gone into overdrive in the European Union. The objective of the Spanish Government's initiatives (voted without debate under the new Rules of Procedure) is to strengthen and accelerate the decisions on collecting and exchanging information which have already been taken and to stifle the Member States with strict supervision to ensure they transpose the European terrorism law and the European arrest warrant into their legislation quickly and faithfully. Their fear appears to be that, with pressure from democratic grass-roots movements already voicing their opinion in numerous countries, the Member States may not fall into line with this dire legislation.
As part of improved coordination, Member States are obliged, contrary to all notions of national sovereignty, to collate a minimum number of facts on so-called terrorist-related crimes and pass them on to Europol and Eurojust.
Just what is meant by coordination and uniform police and judicial cooperation is perfectly clear from the confidential Europol document leaked recently which, under the telling title ‘European Best Practices on Handling Information Sources’, sanctions the use of grasses and sting operations by agents acting for the police who will go unpunished even if they help commit the crime!
That is why the MEPs of the Communist Party of Greece voted against the texts in question."@en1
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