1. Introduction
1. After the adoption by the Parliamentary
Assembly of
Recommendation
963 (1983) on cultural and educational means of reducing violence,
a range of dramatic incidents, and in particular the Heysel disaster
in May 1985,

made
clear the need to give a binding response to the phenomenon of hooliganism
and other football-related violence.
2. This led to the drafting of the European Convention on Spectator
Violence and Misbehaviour at Sport Events and in particular at Football
Matches (ETS No. 120), which was opened for signature on 19 August
1985 and entered into force on 1 November 1985; it has since been
ratified by 42 States.
3. Convention No. 120 represented an important step forward.
However, over the past decade it became increasingly apparent that
its content (which was essentially aimed at preventing, deterring
and responding to incidents of violence and misbehaviour inside
or within the vicinity of stadiums) had become inappropriate with some
provisions felt to potentially exacerbate rather than counter the
threat of violence and disorder.
4. Therefore, upon the proposal of the 12th Council of Europe
Conference of Ministers responsible for Sport (Belgrade, March 2012),
in June 2012, the Committee of Ministers entrusted the Standing
Committee of the Spectator Violence Convention to study the extent
to which it was necessary to update Convention No. 120 (see CM/Del/Dec(2012)1145/8.1).
This study, which was submitted to the Committee of Ministers in
December 2013 (see CM/Del/Dec(2013)1187/8.3), concluded that there
was a strong case for revising the 1985 Convention.
5. A number of interrelated explanations were provided, including:
- the content of Convention No. 120
is in some respects inconsistent with the experience acquired and good
practices adopted in Europe since its adoption; the Standing Committee’s
recommendations accordingly do not tally with the provisions of
the convention, which causes confusion for the States Parties;
- Convention No. 120 focuses on spectator violence and does
not take account of other factors such as security and services
(“hospitality”), although an integrated multi-agency approach to
the three pillars should be promoted;
- revision would enable:
- greater
account to be taken of the impact of societal changes (economic,
migratory, political, social and technological) on football and
of the nature and level of associated risks;
- partnerships to be developed more widely.
6. In the light of this study,
the Committee of Ministers decided at its 1187th meeting in December
2013 to update the convention, and instructed the Standing Committee
to revise it. The Standing Committee prepared a new text which,
after intensive consultation and discussion, was refined and then
unanimously endorsed by delegations of all States Parties in December
2014. The Committee of Ministers sent this text to the Assembly for
an opinion.
2. Main elements of the draft convention
7. The draft Council of Europe
Convention on an Integrated Safety, Security and Service Approach
at Football Matches and Other Sports Events (hereafter “the draft
convention”) aims to ensure that football and other sports events
provide a safe, secure and welcoming environment for all individuals.
8. To achieve this end, the draft builds on a basic idea: to
promote a multi-agency, integrated approach towards safety, security
and service, and a partnership ethos between all of the agencies
involved in a sport event, with the roles and responsibilities of
each public and private agency being clear and complementary.
9. The draft convention also highlights the importance of developing
a dialogue with local communities and supporters, and underlines
that sport can have an important role in promoting the core values
of the Council of Europe, such as social cohesion, tolerance and
the fight against discrimination.
10. The draft convention proposes setting out key principles which
States can adapt and apply in the light of their national legislation
and circumstances, depending on the character and severity of the
safety and security problems associated with sports events in their
territory.
11. With regard to the scope of the convention, its provisions
are therefore to be applied to all domestic and international professional
football matches, but it is for each State Party to decide whether
they should be extended to other sports events where comparable
risks and challenges apply.
12. Moreover, obligations under the convention must not interfere
with the principle of autonomy of sport in Europe, which has been
recognised by the Committee of Ministers.

However, the principle does
not exclude the sports movement from compliance with the rule of
law and the applicable law in each jurisdiction.
13. The draft convention also stresses that the convention should
be applied in a manner that is consistent with international and
national legal obligations in respect of matters such as human rights,
data protection and rehabilitation of offenders.
14. The text also provides for the establishment of a Committee
on Safety and Security at Sports Events which would be entrusted
with monitoring compliance with the convention and providing support
and advice to States Parties for its implementation. This arrangement
is similar to that used by the Anti-Doping Convention (ETS No. 135).
3. The
multi-agency, integrated approach towards safety, security and service
15. The concept of “safety” comprises
all measures related to the protection of people from being injured
or facing a risk for their health and well-being during sports events.
These measures concern stadium infrastructure, stadium certification,
rules for the consumption of alcohol, emergency plans, etc.; but
there are also measures which can be implemented outside stadiums
in order to protect people on their journey to the event, or those
who live or work in the vicinity. This may incorporate the management
of public and private vehicles and supporters in the vicinity of
stadiums. It also includes measures in respect of football-related events
held in public spaces, like fan zones and public viewing areas.
16. The concept of “security” comprises all measures aiming to
tackle violence inside and outside stadiums, and namely all measures
designed to deter, prevent and sanction any incident of violence
or misbehaviour, including co-operation between policing and other
agencies involved in the security of an event, risk assessment,
and sanctions against individuals committing offences or public
disorder.
17. “Service” measures comprise all measures designed to make
football and other sports events enjoyable and welcoming for all,
not only in stadiums but also in public spaces where spectators
gather, either at organised events or in a spontaneous manner. This
incorporates key elements like catering and toilet facilities and
also the manner in which they are greeted and treated throughout
the event experience.
18. The draft convention stresses that these three dimensions
must be addressed jointly (“integrated” approach) so as to ensure
maximum effectiveness of the system for combating violence inside
and outside stadiums. I entirely agree with this analysis and believe
that this reflects clear added value of the new convention compared
with Convention No. 120. In my view, it is very important to regard
spectators not just as a crowd of people to be managed and controlled
but as “individuals” with “legitimate expectations” to be able to
attend sports events in comfortable conditions and without taking
risks. When seen in this way, spectators become partners in the
efforts to combat misbehaviour. I unreservedly endorse this commendable
approach.
19. I consider the provisions in Articles 7 (Contingency and emergency
planning), 9 (Police strategies and operations), 10 (Prevention
and sanctioning of offending behaviour) and 11 (International co-operation)
are particularly important. Among other elements, these provisions
establish that the Parties to the convention:
- “shall ensure that multi-agency contingency and emergency
plans are developed, and that those plans are tested and refined
in regular joint exercises” (Article 7);
- “shall ensure that policing strategies are developed,
regularly evaluated and refined in the light of national and international
experience and good practices, and are consistent with the wider,
integrated approach to safety, security and service” (Article 9.1);
- “shall, in accordance with national and international
law, ensure that effective exclusion arrangements, appropriate to
the character and location of risk, are in place to deter and prevent
incidents of violence or disorder” (Article 10.2);
- “shall, in accordance with national and international
law, co-operate in seeking to ensure that individuals committing
offences abroad receive appropriate sanctions, either in the country
where the offence is committed or in their country of residence
or citizenship” (Article 10.3);
- “shall co-operate closely on all matters covered by this
Convention and related matters, in order to maximise collaboration
in respect of international events, share experiences and participate
in the development of good practices” (Article 11.1).
20. I strongly welcome the reference in Article 8 to the need
to encourage multi-agency projects. In this respect, I find particularly
important the role that schools can play in getting youth involved
and gaining their support. This will certainly strengthen the effectiveness
of the process, by raising awareness on safety and security risks,
helping the dissemination of relevant information and thus promoting
proper behaviour.
21. I also welcome the fact that the new convention will be open
to non-member States: their accession will ensure maximum effectiveness.
4. Possible
improvements
4.1. Preamble
22. In the preamble, a new paragraph
worded as follows should be added: “Having regard to Opinion… (2015),
adopted by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe on
[27] November 2015”.
4.2. Provisions
on Parties’ obligations and on the monitoring mechanism
23. Proper risk assessment – based
on relevant, exhaustive data – is a precondition of any sound strategy development
and implementation. Therefore, the Parties should ensure that co-ordination
arrangements are established to identify, analyse and evaluate the
risks pertaining to safety, security and services and to allow the
sharing of updated information on risk assessment. In this respect,
I would deem it appropriate to develop national databases to gather
relevant information on potential risks and tensions which may occur
during sports events, also with a view to supporting the preparation
of the policing strategies foreseen in Article 9 of the draft convention
and to enhancing the intelligence capacity of police forces. I hope
that this idea can be taken on board in the explanatory report to
the draft convention.
24. In any case, I believe that the new convention should refer
explicitly to risk assessment. I therefore suggest inserting in
Article 4 the following new paragraph 4.2 (or 4.4):
“The Parties shall ensure that
co-ordination arrangements are established to identify, analyse
and evaluate the risks pertaining to safety, security and services
and to allow the sharing of updated information on risk assessment.”
25. Article 7 of the draft convention reads as follows:
“Contingency and emergency planning
The Parties shall ensure that multi-agency contingency
and emergency plans are developed, and that those plans are tested
and refined in regular joint exercises. National legal, regulatory
or administrative frameworks should make clear which agency is responsible
for initiating, supervising and certifying the exercises.”
26. In the second sentence, the modal verb “shall” is in the conditional
(“should”); this does not seem consistent, as the obligation provided
for in the first sentence cannot be met unless the exercises mentioned are
initiated, supervised and certified and hence also unless an agency
is clearly entrusted with the task. I propose that the second sentence
be modified as follows:
“National
legal, regulatory or administrative frameworks shall make clear which agency is
responsible for initiating, supervising and certifying the exercises.”
27. Article 13 of the draft convention deals with the establishment
of the Committee on Safety and Security at Sports Events, which
will be the body responsible for monitoring the application of the
convention, composed of Parties’ representatives. Paragraph 3 of
this article provides that:
“3.
Any member State of the Council of Europe or other State Party to
the European Cultural Convention which is not a Party to this Convention,
as well as any non-member State which is a Party to Convention No.
120, may be represented on the committee as an observer.”
28. It is unfortunate that the draft convention does not make
provision for the Parliamentary Assembly and the Congress of Local
and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe to be represented
(without the right to vote) on the committee. For instance, the
Council of Europe Convention on the Manipulation of Sports Competitions
(CETS No. 215) provides for our Assembly’s involvement in the follow-up
committee. I propose that Article 13 be amended to make provision
for the involvement of the Assembly and the Congress (the organisation
of sports events necessarily involves local authorities).
4.3. Final
clauses
29. I consider that the present
drafting of article 16.4 lacks clarity. The present text reads as
follows:
“4. When depositing its
instrument of ratification, acceptance or approval in accordance
with the preceding paragraph and the provisions of Article 17, a
Contracting State may declare that it will continue to apply Convention
No. 120 until the entry into force of this Convention.”
30. Article 17, which is mentioned here, concerns the entry into
force of the convention, not the depositing of instruments. In my
view, the following wording would therefore be more accurate [changes
highlighted]:
“4. When depositing
its instrument of ratification, acceptance or approval in accordance
with the preceding paragraph [DELETE:
“and the provisions of Article 17”], a Contracting State may declare
that it will continue to apply Convention No. 120 until the entry
into force of this Convention according
to the provisions of Article 17.1.”
31. I propose to delete Article 19.2, which reads as follows:
“2. Pending the effective denunciation
of Convention No. 120, a Contracting State to this Convention may
declare that the provisions of this Convention shall apply to it
on a provisional basis.”
32. The meaning of this provision is very ambiguous and the explanatory
report does not really help to clarify it. A declaration of the
provisional application of a new convention relates to the process
of its ratification – whereas there is no reference to ratification
here – not (only) to the denunciation of a previous convention (Convention
No. 120 in this case).
33. It may be that the intention is to enable the new convention
to be applied provisionally following denunciation of Convention
No. 120 and until such time as ratification takes effect. In other
words, a State which has decided to ratify and denounces Convention
No. 120 could, with the declaration, “provisionally” apply the new
convention system pending the entry into force of the ratification
(not the denunciation). A mechanism of this kind would be acceptable,
but it would be better for the corresponding provision to be included
in Article 17 (as a new paragraph 3) and it should be worded completely
differently, for example:
“3.
Following denunciation of Convention No. 120, a State may declare
that the provisions of this Convention shall apply to it on a provisional
basis until such time as its ratification enters into force in accordance
with the provisions of Article 17.2 of this Convention.”
4.4. Explanatory
report
34. The explanatory report should
be adjusted, depending on changes introduced in the text of the convention.
35. In addition, there is no explicit reference to the threat
of terrorist attacks, although they are today a major safety and
security issue. Sports events may easily become focal points of
terrorist attacks and I believe that, to some extent, this convention
could and should contribute to their prevention. For this reason,
I suggest that, at the end of paragraph 14 in the explanatory report
of the draft convention, the following new sentence be added:
“These are risks which can originate
from different causes, for instance natural disasters, terrorist attacks,
infrastructure failures, violence of any kind and misbehaviour.”
5. Conclusion
36. I agree with the approach and
the spirit of co-operation behind the draft Council of Europe Convention on
an Integrated Safety, Security and Service Approach at Football
Matches and Other Sports Events; it is an extremely welcome text
which our Assembly should support by inviting Council of Europe
member States to ratify it promptly.
37. The few amendments proposed are merely intended to involve
our Assembly (and the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities
of the Council of Europe) more closely in its implementation, make
the text clearer and strengthen it in a few key points.