Off the wire
British FTSE 100 slumps 2.46 pct on Monday  • Feature: Confucius Institute widens Chinese culture study in Ghana  • Quotable quotes from General Debate of UN General Assembly on Sept. 28  • French stock market index down 2.76 pct on Monday  • LME base metals mostly decline on Monday  • U.S. consumer spending rises 0.4 pct in August  • Internet service resumes after 3-day gag in Indian-controlled Kashmir  • Japan's Sharp announces sale of head office buildings in Osaka  • 2nd LD Writethru: NASA finds "strong" evidence for liquid water on Mars  • 2nd LD Writethru: U.S. says ready to work with Russia, Iran to resolve crisis in Syria  
You are here:   Home

Europe has experienced degradation of human rights: PACE president

Xinhua, September 29, 2015 Adjust font size:

In the opening address of her last parliamentary session in office, President Anne Brasseur of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) judged here on Monday that Europe had experienced the degradation of human rights during her two-year mandate.

"The past two years were not good for human rights and for the values that our organization is defending," the PACE president declared.

Brasseur listed the European refugee crisis, a rise in radicalism, terrorist attacks that have rattled the continent, and also conflict in Ukraine as sources of concern troubling the Council of Europe (CoE), its 47 member states and neighboring countries.

Finding some cause for hope, however, the PACE president also saw some positive developments, particularly in the struggle against discrimination and hate following the Paris Charlie Hebdo attacks which shocked onlookers around the world.

The outgoing leader, who will serve until January 2016, when the PACE assembly will elect a new president, still felt that "the challenges that our values are facing are enormous." She urged unity from her fellow parliamentarians in confronting these challenges.

Among those difficulties to be faced, Brasseur regretted that in some member states, NGOs struggled to operate freely due to "Restrictive laws, complex and inappropriate administrative procedures, pressure, intimidation and reprisals," a situation she found inappropriate in CoE member states.

She also urged parliamentarians to take concerted action on the European refugee crisis, which will be the center of three migration-themed debates to be held on Wednesday afternoon. The debates will focus on the need to review Europe's asylum policies, and also the unique challenges faced by transit countries such as Italy, Greece and Hungary.

"We must think strategically and anticipate developments, as there will be many more people coming, we know this with certainty," insisted President Brasseur, highlighting the need for long term solutions that prepare for future refugee arrivals.

The five-day PACE session, which ends on Friday and is the final full assembly of 2015, will also take up the issue of protecting the interests of public health in regards to the pharmaceutical industry, and investigate difficulties in the faithful implementation of judgments passed by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). Endit