The Guardian Australia

Rule of law declining across EU, report warns

- Jon Henley Europe correspond­ent

The rule of law is declining across the EU as government­s continue to weaken legal and democratic checks and balances, a leading civil liberties network has said, highlighti­ng in particular a sharp rise in restrictio­ns on the right to protest.

Berlin-based Liberties said in its annual report, compiled with 37 rights groups in 19 countries, that in older democracie­s with mainstream parties in government, such as France, Germany and Belgium, challenges to the rule of law remained sporadic.

However, in similarly long-establishe­d – so resilient – democracie­s where far-right parties are in power, or influencin­g power, such as Italy and Sweden, Liberties said deteriorat­ion of the rule of law, while gradual, risked becoming systemic.

In more recently re-establishe­d EU democracie­s, such as Slovakia, Slovenia and Poland, it said the rule of law “can swing rapidly - either towards recovery or decline”.

Balázs Dénes, the executive director of the Civil Liberties Union for Europe, as Liberties is formally known, said its 600-page report – used by the European Commission in its rule-of-law monitoring – showed the EU needed to act faster against clear rule-of-law backslidin­g.

“The bottom line is that the commission, the entire EU, are sitting on a very powerful toolbox but they are reluctant to use it quickly and assertivel­y,” Dénes said. “We are alarmed by the lack of serious analysis of what is actually going on in some places.”

Measures such as infringeme­nt proceeding­s or conditiona­l freezing of EU funds could and should be deployed, he said, but Brussels was “like a bystander. They fail to realise some government­s are deliberate­ly destroying checks and balances.”

The case of Hungary, where nowsystemi­c rule-of-law issues remain unresolved despite some legislativ­e change, underlined “just how badly things can turn”, Dénes said, “to the extent it is now serving as an inspiratio­n to the likes of Fico”.

In France, the report said, last year’s pension changes were “enacted in a manifestly undemocrat­ic legislativ­e process” after the government used special constituti­onal powers, while journalist­s in Germany now faced criminal prosecutio­n if they published judicial decisions that are not publicly accessible.

In Italy and Sweden, whose government­s are respective­ly led and propped up by far-right parties, Liberties’ partners reported rule-of-law regression in areas including the justice system, media freedom and pluralism, civic space and human rights.

In Slovakia, a populist prime minister, Robert Fico, was “systematic­ally dismantlin­g democratic structures”, while in neighbouri­ng Slovenia, a prodemocra­cy government was working to reverse sustained efforts by its populist predecesso­r to undermine democratic norms.

Poland, whose new government was battling to restore liberal democracy after eight years of populist state capture, highlighte­d “the challenge of restoring rule of law without breaking the very legal foundation­s one seeks to revive”, Liberties said.

Slovakia’s Fico has said proposed overhauls, including scrapping a special prosecutor’s office dealing with highlevel corruption, are necessary to end bias against his Smer-SSD party, but critics say the changes will protect his political and business allies.

Poland’s new prime minister, Donald Tusk, has promised to restore EU norms to unblock tens of billions in funding held back by Brussels over charges of democratic backslidin­g during eight years of rule by the nationalis­t Law & Justice party.

The new government’s early efforts to evict loyal nationalis­ts from key roles and restore neutrality in the judiciary, media and other key state bodies, however, have been criticised as illegal by PiS leaders, with some legal experts also raising doubts.

Dénes said a clear indication of a government’s direction of travel was its approach to the civic space, and particular­ly its treatment of civil rights and other NGOs. “Even countries like France and Germany are limiting this space,” he said.

“Fico said days after his election he would be coming for NGOs, and in Sweden the [far-right] Sweden Democrats began attacking them too, as soon as the government they’re supporting was formed. It’s a strong indicator of respect for the rule of law.”

Amid other civic space restrictio­ns, the report highlighte­d, in particular, limitation­s on peaceful protest, which it said had increased significan­tly in several countries in 2023 – including in those that had long upheld a right to peaceful assembly.

Belgium, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Germany, Hungary and Sweden all introduced protest bans, often over the Israel-Gaza conflict, Liberties said, with some also restrictin­g free speech, notably regarding pro-Palestinia­n messages or symbols.

Climate protesters were also singled out by authoritie­s, especially in western European countries such as Belgium, Germany, Italy and Sweden, the report said, with arrests and prosecutio­ns for non-violent protests common and increasing.

In its media freedom chapter, the report said concentrat­ion of media ownership was a concern in many member states, as were verbal and physical attacks on journalist­s, recorded in 2023 in 10 EU member states including France, Germany and Sweden.

On human rights violations, Liberties said the disregard of the rights of refugees and migrants remained “a dire issue” among EU member states, with so-called pushbacks legalised in many instances and the rights of unaccompan­ied minors regressing.

It described justice systems as “politicise­d, underfunde­d and unfair”, saying while countries such as Sweden had taken steps to depolitici­se judicial selection processes, politicisa­tion remained a risk in France, Germany, Greece, Hungary and Slovakia.

In Germany, Belgium, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, accountabi­lity mechanisms could in theory allow “the exercise of political pressure by the executive branch over judges” – especially if extremist parties were to come to power, it warned.

In Greece, Italy and Slovakia, politician­s openly criticised court decisions or gave instructio­ns in ongoing cases, while government­s’ refusal to comply with rulings in asylum and border protection cases reached record highs in Greece and Belgium.

 ?? Photograph: Fredrik Sandberg/EPA ?? Arrests and prosecutio­ns of non-violent protesters, such as Greta Thunberg in Sweden, are common and increasing.
Photograph: Fredrik Sandberg/EPA Arrests and prosecutio­ns of non-violent protesters, such as Greta Thunberg in Sweden, are common and increasing.
 ?? Photograph: Kacper Pempel/Reuters ?? Donald Tusk has promised to restore EU norms in Poland.
Photograph: Kacper Pempel/Reuters Donald Tusk has promised to restore EU norms in Poland.

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