Danilo

Türk

President of Slovenia

Speech made to the Assembly

Thursday, 1 October 2009

Thank you, Mr President. Distinguished members of the Parliamentary Assembly, distinguished Secretary General, ladies and gentlemen, it is obviously a great pleasure to be with you today, before this esteemed Assembly. It is also an honour to address you on the day on which the official commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Council of Europe is to take place.

Let me emphasise right from the outset that I consider this Parliamentary Assembly to be a particularly important body in the international framework. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe is the bedrock of legitimacy of the political work of the Council of Europe. We have to understand that Europe does not have a single constituency – a single demos. Europe consists of peoples and nations. Each has its own demos. Therefore, it is extremely important that the authentic representatives of those different peoples come together, work together and provide the basis of legitimacy for everything else that happens in the Organisation.

I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate Mr Thorbjørn Jagland on his election this week as Secretary General of the Council of Europe. We now have a Secretary General who measures up to our hopes. He, in turn, has a great challenge ahead of him. He can count on my support, and, I am convinced, the support of all member states of the Council of Europe.

The arrival of a Secretary General to any organisation brings a certain momentum and with it heightened optimism for the future. This momentum must be taken advantage of. We all have a shared responsibility in facing the challenges ahead of us.

I take this responsibility with a great sense of engagement, but also confidence. My own interest in the activities of the Council of Europe is genuine. It has been nurtured throughout my work as a human rights activist and an international law professor, and in my diplomatic and political life. In all my functions, I have striven to strengthen the core values defended by this Organisation, be it at the national level or through my work at the United Nations.

I agree with those who consider that an anniversary should provide an occasion to look forward and to contemplate how best to shape the future. However, we cannot look to the future without understanding the past.

From its inception after the gruelling years of the Second World War to these first years of the 21st century, the challenges and difficulties that modern society brings have always characterised the work of the Council of Europe, which has been a witness both to dramatic events and gradual changes and has shown the strength and flexibility to adapt accordingly. It has played an essential role in bringing unity and security to the European continent. Most importantly, it has served as a bulwark of the core values of Europe: human rights, democracy and the rule of law.

Twenty years ago, the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Iron Curtain was an important milestone for the Council of Europe. It provided the Organisation with a very particular role, as the organisation most appropriate to welcome yet another wave of new democracies and construct a new and greater Europe. It rose to the challenge and huge advances were made.

Today, we are 47 European states bound together to defend those crucial values which are ours – democracy, human rights and the rule of law. This is indeed a feat worthy of celebration. However, the family is not yet complete, and I look forward to the day when Belarus will be in a position to join our number.

We must also recognise that the ultimate vision of the founding fathers of the Organisation – a Europe united around common values – is still not fully realised.

We have only to look at our recent past, where we witnessed serious and sometimes devastating clashes and conflicts within the borders of the Council of Europe. We all have horrible memories and images in our mind, especially those of us who were witnesses to, and sometimes victims of, wars in south-east Europe.

We are also aware that some areas of our greater Europe are yet to find a solution to unresolved conflicts and find peace and unity within their territories or with their neighbours. My own country, Slovenia, has known such difficult times. It has been a close witness of fighting and destruction in the region of south‑east Europe. However, it has also seen how such disputes can be, as they must, and are, overcome. I would therefore insist that the pursuit of a united Europe, where dividing lines have really been erased, should remain the priority of the Council of Europe.

Today’s world is an uncertain one. The Organisation has adapted to past challenges, but it must remain vigilant and flexible. Be prepared to address new phenomenums and changing circumstances. The Organisation should not take its acquis for granted. It must be active and confident in its capacity to adapt and defend those values and standards, which are fundamental to the security of our common European home.

The 3rd Summit of Heads of State and Government paved the political path for the Council of Europe reaffirming its core objective of preserving and promoting human rights, democracy and the rule of law. That is where the expertise of the Council of Europe lies. Pushing forward this objective is therefore essential for the sake of our 800 million citizens, whose interests are at the heart of the mission of the Organisation.

Looking to the future, we can build on the valuable tools of the Council of Europe that have been developed in the last six decades. The Organisation brings together 47 governments. It houses our Assembly and your extensive collective experience as our citizens’ elected representatives. Let us never underestimate the importance of the citizens’ elected representatives. The basis of the Council of Europe and its mission is the citizen, and citizens’ elected representatives have to have a lead role in shaping the strategy and vision for the Council of Europe.

The Congress provides a unique forum for local and regional authorities, which is another dimension of the Council of Europe. Their role is essential at the grass-roots level. That adds to the importance of the concept of the citizen, as well as practical meaning.

The Organisation has carved out a unique place for non-governmental organisations within its walls. That is another important dimension that adds to the legitimacy of the Organisation. The Office of the Commissioner for Human Rights, 10 years after its creation, is a well-reputed and most appreciated institution. We need human rights activism and we need initiative. The Commissioner for Human Rights is the embodiment of that need.

The Council of Europe is indeed a multi-faceted organisation, but it is the richness of its structures that adds to its effectiveness and uniqueness. Finally, the European Court of Human Rights is, as we all know, the jewel in the Council of Europe’s crown. However, that jewel needs to keep its shine and must therefore receive our constant and focused attention. We all agree the Court is one of a kind. It is crucial in ensuring that our citizens are guaranteed their fundamental rights. However, the Court is still desperately struggling with its caseload, not surprisingly after the expansion in number of the members of the Council of Europe. The measures recently decided by the member states in Madrid, including the adoption of Protocol No. 14 bis which has entered into force today, are of course to be welcomed but are not sufficient. Ensuring the long-term effectiveness of this mechanism remains a priority.

The greatest support that member states can give to the Court is to work tirelessly to improve human rights protection at the national level. It is within states that violations of human rights occur and it is within states where violations have to be remedied and effective preventive action must be taken. Each member state must strive fully to respect its commitments and this includes not only implementing the judgments of the Court but paying the required attention to the many conventions, conclusions and recommendations of the other monitoring mechanisms of the Council of Europe, and bodies such as the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance, the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, the European Committee of Social Rights, the Group of Experts on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings and the Advisory Committee to the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities. All these bodies contribute to the strengthening of human rights provisions and guarantees on home ground, but decisive action must take place in member states and you, as parliamentarians, can make a critical contribution to that.

Education and awareness-raising, the promotion of tolerance and non-discrimination, ethnic pluralism and integration of immigrants are all indispensable in order to cultivate a human rights culture in all our member states. We need informed citizens, individuals who are aware of our values and principles and willing to promote them in order to firmly root them in the ground. Promoting an active citizenship in an era of globalisation is certainly one of the major challenges ahead of us, and the Council of Europe has a distinctive role to play in that respect. The future of Europe lies not in consumerism, but in responsible, active and decisive citizens. Rhetoric must become reality and responsibility should be assumed by us all – heads of state, governments, parliamentarians, local and regional authorities and indeed NGOs.

Fundamental as it is, the nature of the work of the Council of Europe does not always lend itself to attracting the attention of the press or other publicity agents. The press itself is part of the consumer society and the ideology of consumption. It is therefore important that we, who are fully cognisant of the value of the Council of Europe, make the effort to promote it.

My aim today was not to enter into complex discussions on specific issues relating to human rights, democracy and the rule of law, the defence of which is close to our hearts. You will have sensed from my remarks how important I consider these issues to be and how basic they are to the future of Europe and the world. Today, I simply wish to pay tribute to the Council of Europe, an Organisation which has thrived for over 60 years now, labouring, sometimes thanklessly, sometimes almost invisibly, to bring democratic peace, security and unity to our continent. We must not rest on the laurels of past achievements. The future may not always be easy, but it is our collective responsibility to ensure that the Council of Europe, our home of democracy, continues its necessary work and, as the ultimate watchdog for human rights on our continent, continues to be effective.

I hope that will continue to be the future of the Council of Europe and I thank you for your attention.