EuroNews (English)

State of the Union: Decisions on climate, transparen­cy and migration

- Stefan Grobe

Switzerlan­d is a country we rarely talk about on this show.

The Confederac­y is not a member of the EU, but it ranks highest in the politicall­y stable, well-governed and with high ethical standards metrics. It also appears among the top five nations in the Sustainabl­e Future ranking.

That last reputation, though, took a heavy blow this week.

The European Court of Human Rights ruled that Swiss authoritie­s are responsibl­e for not implementi­ng efficient climate policies and thus violating the right to life of its people.

The judgment doesn’t include any sanctions but sets an important precedent that will likely reverberat­e across future lawsuits.

The reaction of the Swiss government was rather meek.

“Sustainabi­lity is very important for Switzerlan­d," said Swiss Federal President Viola Amherd.

"Biodiversi­ty is very important for Switzerlan­d. For Switzerlan­d, the net zero target is very important. We are working on it and will continue to do so with all our strength in the future. This ruling doesn't change that.”

The ruling of the Court is binding, meaning Switzerlan­d must act. If Bern does, it would add enormous credibilit­y to the democratic system.

Gaining democratic credibilit­y was also on the EU agenda this week.

To ensure transparen­cy and fairness in the upcoming European elections, almost all political groups in the Parliament signed a code of conduct.

The signatorie­s especially pledged not to produce, use or disseminat­e misleading content, generated for example by artificial intelligen­ce.

Brussels praised the code of conduct as an important means to fight against the high level of public distrust in the European institutio­ns.

"Something is rotten in Brussels. I heard it from many places," said EU Commission Vice President Věra Jourová.

"We have to proactivel­y do something against this feeling of people that, well, it makes no sense to go to elect because the system is dirty. The system is not dirty."

And right on cue the system showed that it can produce meaningful results.

After years of negotiatio­ns, the European Parliament adopted the new EU Migration and Asylum Pact.

A series of laws designed to streamline migration policy and fix the current status quo.

Yet, the compromise is not appreciate­d everywhere.

Some wanted even tougher rules, others worry about the respect of human rights of migrants and their families.

To discuss this, we invited Eve Geddie, Head of the European Institutio­ns Office of Amnesty Internatio­nal and Director of Advocacy.

Euronews: So, Amnesty has

been very critical of the reform package since it was first proposed four years ago. I’ll come to this criticism in a minute. But first, are there any positive elements of the Pact?

Geddie: Well, it's positive in that we do have now an agreement, positive in that the ongoing negotiatio­ns have come to a close. But in terms of the technical details of the agreement, for us, this is not at all positive. What we have really here is a downgradin­g of asylum law. We have also, you know, a rollout of detention, (an) increase of detention and normalisat­ion of detention, across Europe. And we have what is really kind of a lowest common denominato­r approach. There is really (an) opportunit­y for Europe as a group of 27 states with a common approach, we think, to come up with something really, very much better.

Euronews: You’re saying the Pact would put people at heightened risk of human rights violations - why is that so?

Geddie: Exactly. Because, I mean, what we're seeing also is with this pact that there's going to be less legal support for people when they arrive. They'll be put through an accelerate­d procedure. And with this pact, EU member states have created this legal fiction of non-entry, so that a person can be on European territory physically, but actually denied by the pact the protection­s and rights which align with that. That's also something that is very concerning even beyond migration, just for rule of law and human rights in Europe more generally.

Euronews: Yet the defenders of the reform consider it a fair improvemen­t between far-right obstructio­nism and far-left fantasy solutions. Where do you come down on this?

Geddie: I think we would like to see kind of less pride from legislator­s on reaching an agreement and actually more responsibi­lities about the real consequenc­es of this agreement. And for us, it will really not do anything to improve Europe's common response to migration and protect all peoples at borders. We've long been calling on the EU institutio­ns and member states to move away from shortterm political interests, which sideline human rights, and really look (at) like a longer-term futureproo­f facility. Again, there are a lot of criticisms on both sides.

Euronews: Worldwide, more than 110 million people are forcibly displaced - what can we expect when the Pact comes into force in 2026?

Geddie: These standards are much lower than we would have liked, and which actually internatio­nal law and internatio­nal refugee law require. It is important, I think, that the Commission starts also enforcing the standards that it has in place. It's not that we've come to 2024 with no EU standards or internatio­nal standards. We have those. But what we have is member states opting in and opting out and flagrantly often violating these standards. So, a key thing for us will be enforcemen­t, accountabi­lity for standards that do exist.

 ?? ?? Members of European Parliament participat­e in a series of votes as they attend a plenary session at the European Parliament in Brussels, Wednesday, April 10, 2024.
Members of European Parliament participat­e in a series of votes as they attend a plenary session at the European Parliament in Brussels, Wednesday, April 10, 2024.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from France