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Report | Doc. 14405 | 25 September 2017

New threats to the rule of law in Council of Europe member States: selected examples

Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights

Rapporteur : Mr Bernd FABRITIUS, Germany, EPP/CD

Origin - Reference to committee: Doc. 13614, Reference 4087 of 17 November 2014 and Doc. 14172, Reference 4255 of 25 November 2016. 2017 - Fourth part-session

Summary

Respect for the rule of law is one of the core values of the Council of Europe, which has drawn up several documents on this subject. In this context, judicial independence and impartiality is one of the key components.

Referring to previous Parlia mentary Assembly resolutions, the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights once again calls on all Council of Europe member States to fully implement the principle of the rule of law. It notes that the rule of law is under threat in certain countries and focuses on the situation in Bulgaria, Poland, the Republic of Moldova, Romania and Turkey. It is concerned about attempts to politicise judicial councils and the courts (Bulgaria, Poland and Turkey), the large-scale dismissal of judges (Turkey) or attempts to this end (Poland) and corruption (Bulgaria, the Republic of Moldova and Romania). It is also concerned about tendencies to limit the legislative power of parliament (the Republic of Moldova, Romania and Turkey).

The committee proposes specific recommendations addressed to these five countries and expresses particular concern regarding the situation in Turkey following the measures taken under the state of emergency and the recent amendments to the Constitution. 

A. Draft resolution 
			(1) 
			Draft resolution adopted
by the committee on 5 September 2017.

(open)
1. The Parliamentary Assembly recalls its previous resolutions on upholding the rule of law in the member States of the Council of Europe, in particular Resolutions 1594 (2007) on the principle of the rule of law, Resolution 1685 (2009) on allegations of politically motivated abuses of the criminal justice system in Council of Europe member States, Resolution 2040 (2015) “Threats to the rule of law in Council of Europe member States: asserting the Parliamentary Assembly’s authority”, Resolution 1703 (2010) and Recommendation 1896 (2010) on judicial corruption, Resolution 1943 (2013) and Recommendation 2019 (2013) on corruption as a threat to the rule of law and Resolution 2098 (2016) and Recommendation 2087 (2016) “Judicial Corruption: urgent need to implement the Assembly’s proposals”.
2. The Assembly notes with concern serious problems related to the rule of law in many member States of the Council of Europe. In its Resolution 2040 (2015), it regretted that a number of its recommendations concerning the safeguarding and strengthening of the rule of law had still not been implemented by certain member States.
3. Fully aware of the diversity of the legal systems and cultures of the member States, the Assembly recalls that respect for the rule of law is one of the core values of the Organisation and is closely interlinked with democracy and respect for human rights. Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5) enshrines one of its main components: the principle of independence and impartiality of the judiciary. Furthermore, the Council of Europe is the main international organisation to have developed legal and political documents in this field, through the work of its statutory bodies and specialised instances, such as the European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission), the Group of States against Corruption (GRECO), the European Commission for the Efficiency of Justice (CEPEJ), the Consultative Council of European Judges (CCJE) and the Consultative Council of European Prosecutors (CCPE).
4. The Assembly calls again on all Council of Europe member States to fully implement the principle of the rule of law, in line with the above-mentioned instruments of the Council of Europe and to continue to co-operate with its relevant bodies and instances.
5. The Assembly has thoroughly examined the situation in five member States: Bulgaria, the Republic of Moldova, Poland, Romania and Turkey. Although the list of problems found in those States does not include all of those to be found in Council of Europe member States, the Assembly is concerned about some recent developments which put at risk respect for the rule of law, and, in particular, the independence of the judiciary and the principle of the separation of powers. This is mainly due to tendencies to limit the independence of the judiciary made though attempts to politicise the judicial councils and the courts (mainly in Bulgaria, Poland and Turkey), massive revocation of judges and prosecutors (Turkey) or attempts to do so (Poland) and tendencies to limit the legislative power of the parliament (the Republic of Moldova, Romania and Turkey). Moreover, corruption, which is a major challenge to the rule of law, remains a widespread phenomenon in Bulgaria, the Republic of Moldova and Romania.
6. The Assembly therefore calls on the Bulgarian authorities to:
6.1. continue the reform of the Supreme Judicial Council, the judiciary and the prosecution service in line with Council of Europe recommendations;
6.2. strengthen efforts to combat corruption and, in particular, establish an anti-corruption agency.
7. The Assembly calls on the authorities of the Republic of Moldova to:
7.1. continue the reform of the Superior Council of Magistracy, the judiciary and the prosecution service in line with the recommendations of Council of Europe bodies;
7.2. considerably strengthen its efforts to combat corruption and, in particular, ensure full independence of the major institutions competent in this field;
7.3. refrain from taking measures which would undermine the separation of powers.
8. The Assembly calls on the Polish authorities to:
8.1. refrain from conducting any reform which would put at risk respect for the rule of law, and in particular the independence of the judiciary;
8.2. ensure that the justice reform which is now under way will be compliant with Council of Europe standards on the rule of law, democracy and human rights;
8.3. fully co-operate with the Venice Commission and implement its recommendations, especially those with respect to the composition and the functioning of the Constitutional Court.
9. The Assembly calls on the Romanian authorities to:
9.1. support an appropriate public debate on the constitutional criteria for lifting parliamentary immunity;
9.2. revise as soon as possible the criminal legislation by implementing the decisions of the Constitutional Court that declared unconstitutional an important number of articles of the Criminal Code and the Criminal Procedure Code;
9.3. ensure that the separation of powers is respected by the government and the judiciary as regards the competences of the parliament;
9.4. support, politically and financially, the work of the National Anti-Corruption Directorate; the latter should respect fundamental human rights during criminal investigations;
9.5. ensure respect for the essential role and the authority of the Constitutional Court throughout Romanian society.
10. Recalling its Resolution 2156 (2017) on the functioning of democratic institutions in Turkey, the Assembly reiterates its deepest concern about the scope of measures taken under the state of emergency and the amendments to the Constitution adopted by the Grand National Assembly on 21 January 2017 and approved in the national referendum of 16 April 2017. It therefore calls on the Turkish authorities to:
10.1. lift the state of emergency as soon as the circumstances and threats which led to the declaration of the state of emergency have ceased;
10.2. reconsider the constitutional amendments approved in the referendum of 16 April 2017, in line with Opinion No. 875/2017 of the Venice Commission, so that there will again be a functioning separation of powers, especially with respect to the parliament and the Constitutional Court;
10.3. make sure that all emergency decree laws passed by the government under the state of emergency are approved by the parliament and that their constitutionality can be verified by the Constitutional Court;
10.4. put an immediate end to the collective dismissal of judges and prosecutors through decree laws and ensure that those who have already been dismissed will have their cases reviewed by a “tribunal” fulfilling the requirements of Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
11. The Assembly recalls its Resolution 2178 (2017) on the implementation of judgments of the European Court of Human Rights and calls on all member States of the Council of Europe to fully implement the Court’s judgments and give political priority to those which reveal a strong need to carry out comprehensive reforms of the judicial system.
12. The Assembly calls on all member States to promote a legal and political culture conducive to the implementation of the rule of law, in conformity with the underlying principles of all Council of Europe standards.

B. Explanatory memorandum by Mr Bernd Fabritius, rapporteur

(open)

1. Introduction

1.1. Procedure and fact-finding

1. Following a motion for a resolution 
			(2) 
			Doc. 13614, Reference 4087 of 17 November 2014. that I tabled on 30 September 2014, I was appointed rapporteur on the issue of “Strengthening the Rule of Law in South-East European countries through targeted reform of the legal system” on 10 December 2014. At its meeting in Yerevan (Armenia), the committee held a hearing on the situation in Bulgaria and Romania with the participation of two experts: Ms Zdravka Kalaydjieva, former judge at the European Court of Human Rights, Sofia (Bulgaria), and Ms Cristina Guseth, Director, Freedom House, Bucharest (Romania). On 19 April 2016, the committee authorised me to undertake fact-finding visits to Bulgaria, the Republic of Moldova and Romania. Consequently, I undertook fact-finding visits to Bucharest (Romania) on 24 May 2016, and to Chisinau (the Republic of Moldova) on 25 and 26 May 2016.
2. Following worrying developments in some member States of the Council of Europe, in October 2016, I lodged a motion for a resolution on “New threats to the Rule of Law in Council of Europe member States”. 
			(3) 
			Doc. 14172. On 25 November 2016, the Standing Committee decided to incorporate the new motion for the resolution into the report on “Strengthening the Rule of Law in South-East European countries through targeted reform of the legal system”. 
			(4) 
			Reference 4255 of 25
November 2016. Following the extension of the substantive scope of my mandate, the committee, at its meeting on 24 January 2017, authorised me to conduct fact-finding visits to Turkey and Poland. Upon agreement of the Turkish delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly, my visit to Ankara was scheduled from 3 to 5 May 2017; however, a day after the Assembly adopted its Resolution 2156 (2017), in which it decided to reopen its monitoring procedure with respect to Turkey, our Turkish interlocutors cancelled my visit, despite the fact that several high-level meetings had already been planned. Therefore, I was not able to carry out a fact-finding visit to this country. Unfortunately, due to my electoral commitments in my home country, I was also unable to visit Bulgaria and Poland. Therefore, in order to get acquainted with the recent developments in those countries, I organised hearings with experts from these countries before the committee. As regards the situation in Poland, at its meeting in Strasbourg on 27 April 2017, the committee held a hearing with the participation of Mr Ireneusz Kamiński (Chair of European and International Law, Professor of Law, Institute of Legal Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw), Mr Kamil Zaradkiewicz (Professor of Law, Faculty of Law and Administration, Warsaw University) and Mr Jean-Claude Scholsem (Venice Commission alternate member, Professor emeritus, University of Liège, Belgium). Concerning Bulgaria, at its meeting in Belgrade (Serbia) on 18 May 2017, the committee held an exchange of views with Mr Hristo Ivanov, former Minister of Justice of Bulgaria, judicial reform expert and advocate, Chairperson of the political party “Da” Bulgaria.
3. Following the above-mentioned decision of the Standing Committee, the committee decided, upon my proposal, at its meeting on 27 April 2017, to change the title of the report to “New threats to the rule of law in Council of Europe member States: selected examples”.

1.2. Issues at stake

4. The motion for a resolution on “Strengthening the rule of law in south-east European countries through targeted reform of the legal system” recalls that a properly functioning legal system and independent courts are key requirements of the rule of law. A judiciary that is truly independent of political influence forms an indispensable part of the checks and balances between State powers in a democratic State. The extent to which the separation of powers is entrenched depends on tradition and social and political characteristics of the State. According to the signatories of this motion, in certain countries, and especially in the south-eastern part of Europe, “the proper functioning of the legal system prescribed by the constitution is threatened by extra-legal developments”. Threats to the rule of law and the separation of powers principle might stem, in particular, from the wide-ranging powers of the public prosecutor’s office and changes to the composition of judicial self-government bodies within which the influence of the executive or the parliamentary majority has increased.
5. I initially intended to focus on the situation in certain south-east European countries which, before the fall of the Iron Curtain, used to be part of the Soviet Union or belong to the Communist Bloc and are now members of the European Union (Bulgaria and Romania) or enjoy close co-operation with it (the Republic of Moldova). Subsequently, another motion for a resolution on “New threats to the Rule of Law in Council of Europe member States”, which referred to the risk of paralysing the functioning of constitutional courts in certain countries and the emergency measures, including the dismissal of a large number of judges and prosecutors, taken in the aftermath of the failed coup d’état of 15 July 2016 in Turkey was tabled and the committee was invited to take it into account for this report. Further developments have showed that this was the right decision: besides the purges initiated after the attempted coup, the situation in Turkey turned out to be even more worrying, as the proposed changes to the Constitution, approved in a controversial referendum on 16 April 2017, threaten the checks and balances system in this country. The functioning of the Polish Constitutional Court was another issue that needed to be analysed more closely. Recent developments in Poland concerning a controversial and hasty reform of the judicial system as a whole also require urgent attention.
6. For these reasons, this report will focus on the five above-mentioned member States of the Council of Europe (in alphabetical order): Bulgaria, the Republic of Moldova, Poland, Romania and Turkey. I will try to identify and investigate threats to the rule of law, in particular the separation of powers and the independence of the judiciary, including: 1) the powers and the accountability of prosecutors, including the Prosecutor General, and their degree of independence from undue influence; 2) the situation and recent reforms of the judicial systems, and in particular of the judicial self-government bodies; 3) other threats to the independence of the judiciary, including corruption; 4) transfers of powers, especially between the executive and the legislative, hampering the separation of powers; and 5) the status of compliance with and the implementation of the standards and recommendations on respect for the rule of law issued by the relevant Council of Europe bodies, and, if relevant, by the European Union.
7. I will also try to propose practical and concrete measures which the Assembly and the concerned member States should consider in order to tackle effectively the above threats to the rule of law. The Council of Europe and the Assembly itself have conducted considerable work on defining the notion of the “rule of law” and on setting and implementing common European standards in this field (see below).

2. The rule of law as a cornerstone of a democratic State and the acquis of the Council of Europe

2.1. The definition of the “rule of law”

8. According to Article 3 of the Statute of the Council of Europe (ETS No. 1), every member State of the Council of Europe must accept the principles of the rule law, human rights and democracy; these three core values are closely interlinked. The “rule of law” (in French prééminence du droit and in German Rechtsstaat) is – or at least should be – a pillar of any national legal order or international organisation, including the Council of Europe, and appears in major international legal and political texts. 
			(5) 
			See, for example, the
2005 United Nations Outcome Document of the World Summit, paragraph
134, Preamble of the Statute of the Council of Europe and Article
2 of the Treaty of the European Union. But it has not been defined in any binding legal text. The European Union has recently sought to establish a related mechanism for its member States. 
			(6) 
			Communication from
the European Commission of 11 March 2014, <a href='http://ec.europa.eu/justice/effective-justice/files/com_2014_158_en.pdf'>A
new EU Framework to strengthen the Rule of Law</a>, COM(2014)158 final. See also the Assembly Resolution 2041 (2015) and Recommendation
2065 (2015) on European institutions and human rights. Several international documents contain a number of indicators meant to help the interested stakeholders in assessing respect for the rule of law in a given State. 
			(7) 
			At
the United Nations level, see the 2011 publication on “<a href='http://www.un.org/en/events/peacekeepersday/2011/publications/un_rule_of_law_indicators.pdf'>Rule
of Law Indicators</a>” and the General Assembly’s <a href='http://www.un.org/fr/documents/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/RES/67/1&TYPE=&referer=/fr/&Lang=E'>declaration</a> of the 2012 high-level meeting on the Rule of Law at
the national and international levels. These indicators focus on
three institutions: the police, the judicial apparatus and prisons,
and there is a marking or percentage system for each indicator. Since last year, the Council of Europe can also make use of the indicators established by the European Commission for Democracy through Law (“Venice Commission”), which will be examined below.

2.2. The case law of the European Court of Human Rights

9. The European Court of Human Rights (“the Court”) has ruled that the rule of law is a concept inherent in all the articles of the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5, “the Convention”). 
			(8) 
			Stafford
v. the United Kingdom, Application No. 46295/99, judgment
of 28 May 2002, paragraph 63. In its case law, the Court has often referred to this notion through different expressions such as “rule of law in a democratic society” 
			(9) 
			See, for example, Centro Europa 7 et di Stefano v. Italy,
Application No. 38433/09, judgment of 7 June 2012, paragraph 156. or “general requirement for respect of the rule of law”. 
			(10) 
			Sylvester
v. Austria, Applications Nos. 36812/97 and 40104/98,
judgment of 24 April 2003, paragraph 63, and P.P.
v. Poland, Application No. 8677/03, judgment of 8 January
2008, paragraph 88.
10. Article 6 of the Convention guarantees the right of access to independent and impartial tribunals and the Court has developed a wide jurisprudence in respect of this provision. 
			(11) 
			See the case law guides
on Article 6 (civil and criminal limbs) at <a href='http://www.echr.coe.int/Pages/home.aspx?p=caselaw/analysis/guides&c='>www.echr.coe.int/Pages/home.aspx?p=caselaw/analysis/guides&c=#</a> and the report of the Research Division of the Court’s
Registry, “<a href='http://www.echr.coe.int/Documents/Research_report_prosecutor_ENG.pdf'>The
role of public prosecutor outside the criminal law field in the
case law of the European Court of Human Rights”</a>. Some of its recent judgments – whose execution is currently being supervised by the Committee of Ministers – are noteworthy in the context of reforms of the judiciary and respect for the rule of law.
11. In the case Oleksandr Volkov v. Ukraine, 
			(12) 
			Application
No. 21722/11, judgment of 9 January 2013. the Court found four violations of the applicant’s right to a fair hearing on account of his unlawful dismissal from his post as a judge at the Supreme Court of Ukraine in June 2010 (Article 6.1). The Court, in the operative part of the judgment, ordered the applicant’s reinstatement in his previous post of judge at the earliest possible date, which eventually happened in February 2015. In the meantime, the long-awaited constitutional reform on the judiciary had been adopted.
12. In the judgment Báka v. Hungary, 
			(13) 
			Application No. 20261/12,
judgment of 23 June 2016. The Court also found a violation of Article
10 in this case. the Court found a violation of Article 6.1 of the Convention due to the fact that the term of office of the President of the Hungarian Supreme Court had been brought to an end before its normal date of expiry through the entry into force of the new Constitution, which provided for the creation of the highest court in Hungary, the Kúria, to succeed and replace the Supreme Court. The applicant had not enjoyed the right of access to a court, since the termination of his term of office resulted from the transitional measures of new constitutional legislation that was not subject to any form of judicial review. Interestingly, in the case of Erményi v. Hungary, 
			(14) 
			Application No. 22254/14,
judgment of 22 November 2016. concerning the premature termination of the applicant’s mandate as Vice-President of the Supreme Court on the basis of the same legislation, the Court found a violation of the right to respect of private life, which also includes the development of relationships of a professional nature (Article 8 of the Convention).
13. In cases against “the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”, 
			(15) 
			Judgments of 7 January
2016: Gerovska Popčevska v. “The former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Application No. 48783/07; Jakšovski and Trifunovski v. “The former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia, Applications Nos. 56381/09 and 58738/09,
and Poposki and Duma v. “The former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia, Applications Nos. 69916/10 and 36531/11. the Court examined complaints brought by judges who had been dismissed from office for professional misconduct. The Court found violations of Article 6.1 of the Convention, since the bodies that had considered their cases – the Supreme Judicial Council or an appeal panel set up within the Supreme Court – had lacked the requisite independence and impartiality.
14. Concerns as to the effectiveness of investigations in light of the lack of the independence and impartiality of the relevant authorities have already been raised in cases brought before the Court, such as in Kolevi v. Bulgaria 
			(16) 
			Kolevi
v. Bulgaria, Application No. 1108/02, judgment of 5 November
2009, see, in particular, paragraphs 201-215. concerning the inability to prosecute, and supervision of the investigation by a chief public prosecutor suspected by the family of masterminding the victim’s murder, where the Court found a procedural violation of Article 2 of the Convention (right to life). In the judgment S.Z. v. Bulgaria, 
			(17) 
			S.Z.
v. Bulgaria, Application No. 29263/12, judgment of 3
March 2015, paragraphs 54-58. the Court stated that the lack of effective investigations was a structural problem and called on the Bulgarian authorities to take the necessary general measures to solve this problem.

2.3. The work of Venice Commission

15. The Venice Commission has been actively involved in assisting member States in drafting legislation related to the independence of the judiciary, as well as in issuing opinions with regard to draft laws submitted to it concerning the judiciary. Albania, Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Republic of Moldova, Montenegro, Serbia and Ukraine were the most recent to receive opinions of the Venice Commission regarding draft legislation concerning this matter. 
			(18) 
			See, in particular,
Moldova – Draft Law on Disciplinary Liability of Judges, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2014)006-e'>CDL-AD(2014)006</a>, Law on professional integrity Testing No. 325 of 23
December 2013 (Lustration Law) <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-REF(2014)041-e'>CDL-REF(2014)041</a>; Ukraine – Draft Law on Independence of Judges, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2013)034-e'>CDL-AD(2013)034</a>; Armenia – Draft law amending and supplementing the
judicial code, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2014)021-e'>CDL-AD(2014)21</a>; Bosnia and Herzegovina – Draft Law on the High Judicial
and Prosecutorial Council, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2014)008-e'>CDL-AD(2014)008</a>; Georgia – Draft
Law on Disciplinary Liability and Disciplinary Proceedings of Judges,
CDL(2014)045; Serbia – Draft amendments to the Law on the High Judicial
Council <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL(2014)041-e'>CDL(2014)041</a>; Montenegro – Draft Law on the Rights and Duties of Judges
and on the Judicial Council, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-REF(2014)044-e'>CDL-REF(2014)044</a>. In 2013, the Venice Commission issued an important opinion on controversial constitutional reforms in Hungary. 
			(19) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2013)012-e'>CDL-AD(2013)012</a>, Opinion on the
Fourth Amendment to the Fundamental Law of Hungary Adopted by the
Venice Commission at its 95th Plenary Session, Venice, 14-15 June
2013. See also the Assembly’s work on this issue: Doc. 13229 of the Monitoring Committee and Resolution 1941 (2013). It has also issued thematic studies on criteria for ensuring the independence of the judiciary (see, in particular, Report on the Independence of the Judicial System. Part I: the Independence of Judges 
			(20) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2010)004-e'>CDL-AD(2010)004</a>, adopted at its 82nd Plenary Session, Venice, 12-13
March 2010. and report on Judicial Appointments 
			(21) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/CDL-AD(2007)028.aspx'>CDL-AD(2007)028</a>, adopted at its 70th Plenary Session, Venice 16-17 March
2007.) and on the role of prosecutors (Report on European standards as regards the independence of the judicial system – Part II: The prosecution service 
			(22) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/default.aspx?pdffile=CDL-AD(2010)040-e'>CDL-AD(2010)040</a> adopted at its 85th plenary session, Venice, 17-18 December
2010. and Compilation of Venice Commission Opinions and Reports concerning Prosecutors 
			(23) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-PI%282015%29009-e'>CDL-PI(2015)009</a>, Strasbourg, 30 June 2015.).
16. Following Assembly Resolution 1594 (2007) on the principle of the Rule of Law, 
			(24) 
			See the report by Mr Erik
Jurgens (Netherlands, SOC), Doc. 11343. the Venice Commission was invited to reflect in depth on the concepts of “rule of law” and the French “prééminence du droit”, more often replaced by “État de droit”. The committee’s former chairperson, Mr Serhiy Holovaty (Ukraine, ALDE), had repeatedly warned the Assembly against misunderstandings caused by the interpretation of the rule of law in former communist countries as “dictatorship of the laws”. Consequently, in March 2011, the Venice Commission embarked upon a study on the notion of the rule of law. It found that “rule of law in its proper sense is an inherent part of any democratic society” and it “requires everyone to be treated by all decision-makers with dignity, equality and rationality and in accordance with the law, and to have the opportunity to challenge decisions before independent and impartial courts for their unlawfulness, where they are accorded fair procedures”. The Venice Commission did not support a purely formalistic concept of the rule of law, merely requiring that any action of a public official be authorised by law. It also noted that the notion of the rule of law was often absent “in former socialist countries which experienced the notion of socialist legality”. 
			(25) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/default.aspx?pdffile=CDL-AD(2011)003rev-e'>CDL-AD(2011)003rev</a>. “Report on the Rule of Law”, Study No. 512/2009, adopted
by the Venice Commission at its 86th plenary session on 25 and 26
March 2011, paragraphs 15-16 and 33.
17. In March 2016, the Venice Commission adopted the Rule of Law Checklist, which has already been endorsed by the Committee of Ministers, the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities and should soon be endorsed by the Assembly. 
			(26) 
			See the report by Mr Philippe
Mahoux (Belgium, SOC), Doc. 14387. The Venice Commission found that there was consensus as to the core elements covered by the terms Rule of Law, Rechtsstaat and État de droit (although these three terms have a different historical background 
			(27) 
			The «rule of law» stems
from the English legal culture, while the French and the German
terms have a continental background.), namely: legality, legal certainty, the prohibition of arbitrariness, access to justice, respect for human rights, non-discrimination and equality before the law, and it translates these core principles into concrete questions. Moreover, it provided two concrete examples of challenges to the rule of law: 1) corruption and conflict of interest; and 2) collection of data and surveillance. Thus, the Rule of Law Checklist defines the “rule of law” by its contents. It is a tool that can be used by every interested stakeholder (national authorities, international organisations, non-governmental organisations (NGOs), academics or ordinary citizens). The Venice Commission stressed, however, that the implementation of the rule of law does not have to be identical in all States despite their concrete juridical, historical, political, social and geographical context. While the main “ingredients” of this concept are constant, their implementation may vary from one country to another (see paragraph 34 of the Rule of Law Checklist).

2.4. The work of the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights

18. Although in his work the Commissioner for Human Rights mainly focuses on human rights issues, on several occasions he has drawn attention to the independence of the judiciary or the proper administration of justice, in particular with respect to Albania, Georgia, Hungary, Poland, the Republic of Moldova, the Russian Federation, Turkey and Ukraine. 
			(28) 
			For instance, CommDH
(2014)1 <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/-/corruption-and-political-interference-burden-albania-s-judicial-system?redirect=http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/home%3Fp_p_id%3D101_INSTANCE_8EfTacFqd2H9%26p_p_lifecycle%3D0%26p_p_state%3Dnormal%26p_p_mode%3Dview%26p_p_col_id%3Dcolumn-1%26p_p_col_count%3D5'>Corruption
and political interference burden Albania’s judicial system </a>, 16 January 2014; <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/-/georgia-should-continue-strengthening-the-independence-and-impartiality-of-judges'>Georgia
should continue strengthening the independence and impartiality
of judges</a>, Visit Observations, 12 January 2016; <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/-/hungary-legislative-changes-threaten-democracy-and-human-rights'>Hungary:
Legislative changes threaten democracy and human rights</a>, 12 January 2012; <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/view/-/asset_publisher/ugj3i6qSEkhZ/content/judicial-reform-needs-to-be-accelerated-in-the-republic-of-moldova?_101_INSTANCE_ugj3i6qSEkhZ_viewMode=view'>Judicial
reform needs to be accelerated in the Republic of Moldova</a>, 30 September 2013; <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/-/poland-has-a-duty-to-preserve-judicial-independence'>Poland
has a duty to preserve judicial independence</a>, article in Open Democracy,
17 July 2017; <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/-/as-long-as-the-judicial-system-of-the-russian-federation-does-not-become-more-independent-doubts-about-its-effectiveness-remain'>As
long as the judicial system of the Russian Federation does not become
more independent, doubts about its effectiveness remain</a>, article in Kommersant,
25 February 2016; <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/view/-/asset_publisher/ugj3i6qSEkhZ/content/russia-must-strengthen-the-independence-and-the-impartiality-of-the-judiciary?_101_INSTANCE_ugj3i6qSEkhZ_viewMode=view'>Russia
must strengthen the independence and the impartiality of the judiciary</a>, 12 November 2013; <a href='https://rm.coe.int/16806db6f1'>Memorandum on the human
rights implications of the measures taken under the state of emergency
in Turkey</a>, CommDH(2016)39, 7 October 2016; <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/view/-/asset_publisher/ugj3i6qSEkhZ/content/ukraine-crucial-to-pursue-police-and-judicial-reforms-and-address-needs-of-displaced-persons?_101_INSTANCE_ugj3i6qSEkhZ_viewMode=view'>Ukraine:
Crucial to pursue police and judicial reforms and address needs
of displaced persons</a>, 20 June 2014; <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/view/-/asset_publisher/ugj3i6qSEkhZ/content/ukraine-fight-against-impunity-and-judicial-reforms-are-necessary-to-improve-human-rights-protection?_101_INSTANCE_ugj3i6qSEkhZ_viewMode=view'>Ukraine:
Fight against impunity and judicial reforms are necessary to improve
human rights protection</a>, 4 March 2014. See also Human Rights Comment: “<a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/news-2012/-/asset_publisher/nutP1s2ONg0k/content/government-leaders-distort-justice-when-they-interfere-in-individual-court-cases?_101_INSTANCE_nutP1s2ONg0k_viewMode=view'>Government
leaders distort justice when they interfere in individual court
cases</a>”, 20 March 2012.

2.5. The work of other Council of Europe bodies

19. Although there is no specific mechanism for monitoring respect for the rule of law in Council of Europe member States, besides the above-mentioned advice of the Venice Commission, there are a number of tools and mechanisms aimed at assisting member States in implementing reforms of their legal systems, namely the Consultative Council of European Judges (CCJE), the Consultative Council of European Prosecutors (CCPE), the Group of States against Corruption (GRECO) and the European Commission for the Efficiency of Justice (CEPEJ).
20. Furthermore, the Committee of Ministers has also made a number of recommendations concerning the functioning of the judiciary and the prosecution services, including Recommendation CM/Rec(2010)12 on judges: independence, efficiency and responsibilities, Recommendation CM/Rec(2012)11 on the role of public prosecutors outside the criminal justice system and Recommendation (2000) 19 on the role of public prosecution in the criminal justice system. It also prepared a document entitled “The Council of Europe and the Rule of Law: an overview” (CM(2008)170).
21. In April 2016, the Committee of Ministers adopted the Council of Europe Plan of Action on Strengthening Judicial Independence and Impartiality, which is aimed at guiding and supporting Council of Europe member States in the implementation of concrete measures needed to strengthen judicial independence and impartiality, while recognising the diversity of their legal systems.
22. Issues related to the functioning of the judiciary and member States’ other democratic institutions have also been examined in the annual reports of the Secretary General of the Council of Europe on “State of democracy, human rights and the rule of law”, and more recently in his (fourth) 2017 report “Populism – How strong are Europe’s checks and balances?”.

2.6. Overview of the Parliamentary Assembly’s previous work on the matter

23. Besides the Assembly’s work on the notion of “rule of law” (see above), a series of resolutions and recommendations have been issued on strengthening the rule of law and reinforcing the independence of judges and prosecutors, in particular Resolutions 1685 (2009),1645 (2009), 1950 (2013), 2040 (2015), 1703 (2010), 2098 (2016) and 1943 (2013) and Recommendations 1856 (2009), 1896 (2010), 2087 (2016) and 2019 (2013).
24. In Resolution 1685 (2009) on allegations of politically motivated abuses of the criminal justice system in Council of Europe member States, 
			(29) 
			Doc. 11993 (rapporteur:
Ms Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger, Germany, ALDE). the Assembly recommended that prosecutors be allowed to perform their tasks without interference from the political sphere and that they be shielded from instructions pertaining to individual cases, at least where such instructions would prevent an investigation from proceeding to court. The role of judicial councils with regard to recruitment, promotion and the disciplinary regime of judges and prosecutors was also emphasised. The Assembly noted that the criminal justice systems of all member States were potentially exposed to politically motivated interferences, though to very different degrees, and called for further efforts in strengthening the independence of the judiciary. Two other reports by Ms Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger on “The circumstances surrounding the arrest and prosecution of leading Yukos executives” (Resolution 1418 (2005) and Doc. 10368) and on the “Investigation of crimes allegedly committed by high officials during the Kuchma rule in Ukraine – the Gongadze case as an emblematic example” (Resolution 1645 (2009) and Recommendation 1856 (2009), and Doc. 11686) identified and condemned specific cases of political interference. A report approved by the Assembly on 28 June 2013 on “Keeping political and criminal responsibility separate” (rapporteur: Mr Pieter Omtzigt, Netherlands, EPP/CD) developed a number of principles for distinguishing political decision-making from criminal acts, in the light of an opinion our committee had requested from the Venice Commission (Doc. 13214 and Resolution 1950 (2013)).
25. The implementation of the recommendations made by the Assembly on the basis of the above-mentioned reports was followed up in a report by Ms Marieluise Beck (Germany, ALDE) on “Threats to the rule of law in Council of Europe member States: asserting the Parliamentary Assembly’s authority”. Noting that a number of its relevant recommendations had not yet been implemented (namely by France, Germany, the Russian Federation and Ukraine), the Assembly urged member States to ensure that the judiciary is fully independent to resist politically motivated prosecutions of political opponents, journalists and civil society activists (see Doc. 13713 and Resolution 2040 (2015)).
26. In its Resolution 1703 (2010) and Recommendation 1896 (2010) on judicial corruption, 
			(30) 
			See also Doc. 12058 (rapporteur: Mr Kimmo Sasi, Finland, EPP/CD). the Assembly stressed the need to ensure the highest levels of professionalism and integrity of the judiciary and to restore public confidence in the judicial system. It called on member States to create safeguards ensuring the accountability (including penal) of judges, without impairing their independence and impartiality. It examined again the same issue in another report on “Judicial Corruption: urgent need to implement the Assembly’s proposals” (rapporteur: Mr Kimmo Sasi, Finland, EPP/CD; see Doc. 13824, Resolution 2098 (2016) and Recommendation 2087 (2016)).
27. In its Resolution 1943 (2013) and Recommendation 2019 (2013) on corruption as a threat to the rule of law, 
			(31) 
			See also Doc. 13228(rapporteur: Ms Mailis Reps, Estonia, ALDE). the Assembly called on national parliaments to contribute to the implementation of the recommendations made by GRECO, in particular those resulting from its fourth evaluation round which has a focus on corruption within the judiciary and parliaments.

3. Selected examples of new threats to the rule of law in Council of Europe member States

3.1. Bulgaria

28. The Assembly is still engaged in a post-monitoring dialogue with Bulgaria; its latest assessment of the reforms in this country dates from January 2013 (Resolution 1915 (2013)). 
			(32) 
			Report
of the Monitoring Committee, Post-monitoring dialogue with Bulgaria, Doc. 13085 (rapporteur: Mr Luca Volontè (Italy, EPP/CD)). Since then, the co-rapporteurs of the Monitoring Committee have undertaken several fact-finding visits to this country (the latest one took place in June 2016). 
			(33) 
			See
their latest information note: Monitoring Committee, Post Monitoring
dialogue with Bulgaria, Information note on a fact-finding visit
to Sofia (8-9 June 2016), AS/Mon (2016) 28 declassified (co-rapporteurs:
Mr Frank Schwabe (Germany, SOC) and Mr Zsolt Németh (Hungary, EPP/CD)). Bulgaria is still subject to a monitoring process launched when it acceded to the European Union in 2007, i.e. the Co-operation and Verification Mechanism (CVM), focusing on the independence and the efficiency of the judiciary, integrity and the fight against corruption and organised crime (six benchmarks).
29. Whilst the European Union’s most recent CVM report, 
			(34) 
			European Commission,
Report from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council
on Progress in Bulgaria under the Co-operation and Verification
Mechanism (“CVM report”)antid, COM(2017)43 final, 25 January 2017, p.
2. published on 25 January 2017, i.e. ten years after Bulgaria’s accession to the European Union, notes that, in 2016, Bulgaria made significant progress in the implementation of judicial reform strategy, over the past ten years the overall pace of reform has not been as fast as expected, notably due to periods of political instability. During this time, Bulgaria has amended its Constitution twice; firstly, shortly after its accession to the European Union on 2 February 2007, to give more powers to the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) and to create an Inspectorate to the Supreme Judicial Council (ISJC) to uphold standards of integrity of the judiciary, and then, on 16 December 2015, to reform both institutions. 
			(35) 
			European Commission,
Commission Staff Working Document. Bulgaria: Technical Report, SWD(2017)24
final, 25 January 2017, pp. 4-5.
30. The 2015 constitutional amendment sought to improve the functioning of the judiciary and the SJC, but failed to implement many of the recommendations included in the opinion of the Venice Commission. 
			(36) 
			Venice Commission,
“Opinion on the Draft Act to Amend and Supplement the Constitution
(in the Field of the Judiciary) of the Republic of Bulgaria’, adopted
at 104th Plenary Session, 23-24 October 2015, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2015)022-e'>CDL-AD(2015)022</a>. Consequently, the former Minister of Justice, Mr Hristo Ivanov, submitted his resignation, considering that the reform did not go far enough. The SJC, whose composition is regulated by Article 130 of the Constitution, was divided into two chambers for prosecutors and judges, alongside the establishment of the “one magistrate, one vote” principle in elections to the SJC, and transparency in its decision-making was improved. However, continued tension among members of the SJC and allegations of a lack of objectivity remain an issue, and the SCJ “has not been able or willing” to drive reforms in sensitive areas such as restructuring courts and prosecutors’ offices, which resulted in a workload imbalance for larger courts in the country; there has also been little progress in establishing fairness and transparency in the disciplinary proceedings of the SCJ. 
			(37) 
			European
Commission, CVM report, op. cit., pp. 4-5. As recently stressed by GRECO, representatives elected by the National Assembly are members of both chambers, with their number equalling that of elected judges and prosecutors (there are 11 members elected by the National Assembly, six elected by judges, four by prosecutors, one by investigating magistrates and three ex officio members: the presidents of the Supreme Court of Cassation and the Supreme Administrative Court as well as the Prosecutor General). This poses a risk of politicisation of decisions concerning judges’ and prosecutors’ careers 
			(38) 
			Group of States against
Corruption (GRECO), Compliance Report on Bulgaria, Fourth Evaluation
Round, Corruption prevention in respect of members of parliament,
judges and prosecutors in Bulgaria, adopted at 76th Plenary Meeting,
19-23 June 2017, paragraphs 28, 73 and 106. (even though following the 2016 amendments to the Judicial System Act, they are elected by a majority of two thirds of the national representatives).
31. Two packages of amendments to the Judicial Systems Act were passed on 31 March and 26 July 2016; they are currently being examined by the Venice Commission (which has been seized for opinion by the Monitoring Committee). The amendments aim at improving the legislation concerning the SCJ, the internal governance of courts and the decentralisation of the prosecutor’s office. 
			(39) 
			Monitoring
Committee, AS/Mon (2016) 28, op. cit., paragraph 32.
32. It should be recalled that in numerous cases against Bulgaria, the European Court of Human Rights found that the length of proceedings before the Bulgarian courts was excessive. The Committee of Ministers is therefore still examining the implementation of such judgments in the framework of the Kitov and Djangozov group of cases. 
			(40) 
			See <a href='http://hudoc.exec.coe.int/eng'>Status of Execution</a> in HUDOC-EXEC. This problem has already been noted by the Assembly in its rapporteurs’ work on the implementation of Court judgments (see in particular Resolution 2178 (2017)).
33. According to the European Commission, the reform of the prosecution service has also proven highly sensitive. Whilst the Prosecutor’s Office forms part of the judiciary and is therefore independent of the executive, it plays an important role in monitoring the administration, raising suspicions of (undue) political influence and a lack of overall accountability. It has been at the centre of the debate over the lack of a convincing track record of convictions for high-level corruption and serious organised crime. 
			(41) 
			European Commission,
CVM report, op. cit., p. 5. The General Prosecutor, who exerts influence over the whole service, is allegedly not integrated into the system of checks and balances, 
			(42) 
			Monitoring Committee,
AS/Mon (2016) 28, op. cit., paragraph 33. although he is now obliged to annually report to the National Assembly and the SCJ about his activities. 
			(43) 
			European
Commission, CVM report, op. cit., p. 14. In 2016, Bulgaria requested the assistance of the European Commission’s Structural Reform Support Service (SRSS); in December 2016, a group of independent and experienced prosecutors from certain EU member States presented an independent analysis of the Bulgarian prosecution service. According to this study, there is a need for better internal supervision of cases by management in order to ensure accountability for decisions taken, as well as for more mechanisms for overall accountability of the Prosecutor’s Office as a whole to the public, for example via the creation of a specialised parliamentary committee and a system of external inspections. 
			(44) 
			Ibid.,
pp. 14 and 24- 25. As mentioned above (see section 2.2), ineffective criminal investigation in sensitive cases has also been identified as a systemic problem by the European Court of Human Rights and is currently being examined by the Committee of Ministers. 
			(45) 
			Kolevi v. Bulgaria, op. cit., and S.Z. v. Bulgaria, op. cit. See <a href='http://hudoc.exec.coe.int/eng'>Status of
Execution</a> at HUDOC-EXEC.
34. In July 2017, the National Assembly began to examine a proposal for an amendment of the Judicial System Act, which would restrict the funding of professional organisations of judges and prosecutors only to domestic sources and prohibit their participation in scientific and academic activities funded by a foreign State or foreign entity. 
			(46) 
			<a href='http://www.bghelsinki.org/en/news/press/single/joint-statement-proposed-amendment-judicial-system-act/'>www.bghelsinki.org/en/news/press/single/joint-statement-proposed-amendment-judicial-system-act/</a>. Following public criticism, it has been withdrawn. On 11 August 2017, new amendments to the Judicial System Act were promulgated; they require, inter alia, the SCJ to automatically remove from office any magistrate charged with criminal accusations, without any judicial review.
35. The fight against corruption has been a long-standing issue in Bulgaria. The country is still perceived to have the highest level of corruption amongst EU member States and ranks 75th out of 176 countries in the world. 
			(47) 
			Transparency International, <a href='https://www.transparency.org/news/feature/corruption_perceptions_index_2016'>Corruption
Perceptions Index 2016</a>. Corruption is still perceived as an important problem by citizens and businesses. The Bulgarian Center for the Study of Democracy openly speaks of “State capture”, due to the high level of political and administrative corruption. 
			(48) 
			Center for the Study
of Democracy, <a href='http://www.csd.bg/artShow.php?id=17723'>State Capture
Unplugged: Countering Administrative and Political Corruption in Bulgaria,</a> 2016. According to the European Commission, there have been very few final convictions in court regarding high-level corruption and progress remains limited in this regard. In 2015 and 2016, the government began to implement a national anti-corruption strategy, including the creation of a unified anti-corruption body with powers to conduct administrative investigations and conflict of interest checks. However, parliament has not yet reached an agreement on the legislation establishing this agency. 
			(49) 
			European Commission,
CVM report, op. cit., pp. 6-7.
36. In its 2017 Compliance Report, GRECO concluded that Bulgaria had satisfactorily implemented 12 of the 19 recommendations made in its Fourth Evaluation Round on “corruption prevention in respect of members of parliament, judges and prosecutors”. GRECO welcomed, in particular, the creation of a Public Council, within the National Assembly, for the involvement of civil society in the legislative process, the setting up of a procedure to tackle breaches of ethical rules by MPs, the obligation for members of the judiciary to present regular asset declarations, the principle of random allocation of cases in respect of both judges and prosecutors and the additional powers granted to the ISCJ. Nevertheless, GRECO requested that “further significant material progress is necessary to demonstrate an acceptable level of compliance with the recommendations within the next 18 months”. 
			(50) 
			GRECO,
Compliance Report on Bulgaria, op. cit., paragraphs 102-107.

3.2. The Republic of Moldova

37. On 25 and 26 May 2016, I carried out a fact-finding visit to Chisinau, where I met the Prime Minister, former Prime Minister Iurie Leanca, the Minister of Justice, Judge Aurel Baiesu of the Constitutional Court, the Chairperson of the Standing Committee on Legal Affairs, Appointments and Immunities, the Moldovan delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly and representatives of NGOs. Following my visit, in a statement of 27 May 2016, I expressed serious concern over issues of corruption, the lack of judicial independence and the effective separation of powers.
38. The Republic of Moldova is under the Assembly’s monitoring procedure (see Resolution 1955 (2013) of 2 October 2013). The EU–Moldova Association Agreement entered fully into force on 1 July 2016 after being applied provisionally since September 2014. It commits the country to ambitious reforms in a number of key areas such as justice and the fight against corruption.
39. The fight against corruption remains one of the major issues in this country. Despite some positive measures, corruption remains widespread and the perception of corruption remains high, 
			(51) 
			The Republic of Moldova
ranked 123rd out of 176 countries in Transparency International’s
Corruption Perception Index 2016. with the judiciary perceived as the branch most affected by this phenomenon. 
			(52) 
			GRECO, Evaluation Report
on Republic of Moldova, Fourth Evaluation Round, Corruption prevention
in respect of members of parliament, judges and prosecutors in Republic
of Moldova, adopted on 1 July 2016, paragraph 16. Excessive politicisation of State institutions and close links between politics and business are important issues of concern in this context.
40. Prior to the parliamentary elections of November 2014, US$1 billion “disappeared” from three of the country’s main banks in a major bank fraud scandal, which saw protesters call for the resignation of the government, the Prosecutor General and the Head of the National Anti-Corruption Centre. On 29 October 2015, parliament passed a vote of no confidence in the government and a new coalition government was formed in January 2016. Despite the conviction of former Prime Minister Vlad Filat and the criminal proceedings launched against some other individuals, the bank scandal has yet to be investigated. Following the Moldovan Central Bank’s emergency aid to replace the money “stolen” from the currency reserves of the three banks, in June 2016, the government decided to issue special bonds, which was widely perceived as shifting the financial burden onto the citizens. 
			(53) 
			Monitoring Committee,
Information note by the co-rapporteurs on their fact-finding visit
to Chisinau and Tiraspol (27-29 June 2016) (co-rapporteurs: Ms Valentina
Leskaj (Albania, SOC) and Mr Ögmundur Jónasson (Iceland, UEL), AS/Mon (2016)
27 declassified, paragraphs 7-9.
41. During my visit to Chisinau, some of my interlocutors, mainly from NGOs, referred to the notion of “captured State”, due to the alleged illegal influence of private interests on government bodies. This is apparently due to the concentration of powers in the hands of a businessman Mr Vladimir Plahotniuc, whose assets are estimated at US$2-2.5 billion, i.e. around 30% of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP), and who owns a major part of the Moldovan media. It is believed that Mr Plahotniuc, who does not hold any high public office, is close to many members of the government and exerts influence over the heads of law- enforcement and judicial bodies. 
			(54) 
			The Captured State:
Politically Motivated Prosecution in Moldova And Usurpation of Power
by Vladimir Plahotniuc, Open Dialog, 22 May 2017, pp. 4-5. These allegations are in line with GRECO’s conclusion stating that “in the absence of public funding, parties themselves are weak and under the influence of a narrow circle of private individuals”. 
			(55) 
			GRECO, Evaluation Report
on Republic of Moldova, op. cit., paragraph 15.
42. In its latest report, GRECO identified a number of problems in the fight against corruption, such as inconsistent application of the existing anti-corruption legislative and policy framework and the weak capacities and lack of independence of the major institutions in charge of fighting corruption, including the Prosecutor General, the National Anti-Corruption Centre and the National Integrity Commission. Corruption-related sanctions are weak and impunity is widespread. There has been little progress in this respect, despite some efforts taken by the authorities such as the 2011-2015 National Anti-Corruption Strategy, which was extended to 2016 and 2017. 
			(56) 
			Ibid. See also European
Commission, Joint Staff Working Document. Association Implementation
Report on the Republic of Moldova, 10 March 2017, p. 6.
43. According to GRECO, regarding members of parliament, more needs to be done to ensure proper parliamentary debate, allow for meaningful public consultation and to regulate how parliamentarians interact with third parties seeking to influence the legislative process. The GRECO report also recommended the adoption of a code of conduct for members of parliament and measures to ensure that the procedures for lifting parliamentary immunity do not prevent investigations in respect of corruption-related offences. 
			(57) 
			GRECO, Evaluation Report
on Republic of Moldova, op. cit., paragraphs 15, 32, 77 and 83.
44. According to the GRECO report, top positions within anti-corruption institutions such as the Prosecutor General, the National Anti-Corruption Centre and the National Integrity Commission were “distributed along political allegiance lines following deals between political parties”. In particular, the National Integrity Commission needed to be significantly strengthened to ensure independent and effective control of compliance with the rules on conflicts of interest and integrity by members of parliament, as well as judges and prosecutors.
45. The Moldovan judiciary is affected by negative public perception and “perceived political interference in the judiciary and law enforcement is a systemic impediment to social and economic development”. 
			(58) 
			European Commission,
op. cit., p.3. Some judges have been prosecuted for their decisions (for example, judge Domnica Manole, who annulled the decision of the Central Election Commission rejecting the holding of a referendum on amending the Constitution requested by a political party) and the same has happened to lawyers engaged in high-profile cases (see cases of Ana Ursachi, Veaceslav Turcan and Maxim Belinschi). 
			(59) 
			The Captured State:
Politically Motivated Prosecution in Moldova And Usurpation of Power
by Vladimir Plahotniuc, Open Dialog, op. cit., pp. 9-10 and 16-17,
and Monitoring Committee, AS/Mon (2016) 27 declassified, op. cit., paragraph 29.
46. GRECO recommended that the composition and operation of the SCM be reviewed, in particular by abolishing the ex officio participation of the Minister of Justice and the Prosecutor General, by allowing for more diverse profiles among lay members and by ensuring transparent procedures for electing both judicial and lay members of the SCM. 
			(60) 
			GRECO, Evaluation Report
on Republic of Moldova, op. cit., paragraphs 89, 92-93, 115, 119
and 135. The SCM is composed of 12 members, including the President
of the Supreme Court, the Minister of Justice, the Prosecutor General, three
lay members – who must be law professors – elected by the parliament
and six members elected by the General Assembly of Judges. It also concluded that the reasoning of the SCM’s decisions should be improved and made subject to judicial review (not only on procedural grounds, but also on the merits), especially as regards the recruitment, promotion and disciplinary liability of judges. GRECO also recommended taking measures to inform judges better about the rules on ethics and integrity and on gifts and other advantages, and the revision of the legal and operational framework for the disciplinary liability of judges.
47. The government is still implementing the Justice Sector Reform Strategy 2011-2016, while preparing a new strategy for justice reform. A new Law on the Prosecution Service entered into force on 1 August 2016, in line with recommendations of GRECO. It creates an Office of the Anti-Corruption Special Prosecutor and an Office for Fighting Organised Crime and Money Laundering and aims to strengthen prosecutors’ professionalism and independence, establish clear criteria for their appointment and promotion and build the capacity of the Superior Council of Prosecutors. However, it remains to be seen how the law will be implemented in practice. The GRECO report also called for further measures regarding the composition and operation of the Superior Council of Prosecutors and the awareness of prosecutors of rules on ethics and integrity. 
			(61) 
			GRECO, Evaluation Report
on Republic of Moldova, op. cit., paragraphs 141, 148 and 164, and
European Commission, op. cit., p.
5.
48. More recently, concerns have been raised regarding proposals made by the Moldovan Government to change the electoral system of the country from a proportional to a mixed system in advance of the parliamentary elections in 2018. The reform envisages that 50 MPs shall be elected by a proportional closed-list system in a single constituency, whilst 51 MPs shall be elected by a plurality system in single-member constituencies. According to an opinion of the Venice Commission and the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), the proposed reform raises “significant concerns”, potentially risking business influence over candidates and imposing excessive thresholds for the proportional component. While the choice of an electoral system is a sovereign decision of a State, such a fundamental change is “not advisable at this time”. 
			(62) 
			Venice Commission and
OSCE/ODIHR, Republic of Moldova. Joint Opinion on the Draft Laws
on Amending and Completing Certain Legislative Acts (Electoral System
for the Election of the Parliament), adopted at 111th Plenary Session,
16-17 June 2017 <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/default.aspx?pdf=CDL-AD(2017)012-e&lang=en'>CDL-AD(2017)012</a>, paragraphs 14-15 and 29. The law was adopted by the parliament on 21 July 2017. It is believed that it is intended to favour the interests of the Democratic Party (PDM), led by Mr Plahotniuc, and the Socialist Party (PSRM), both dominant in the current parliament. 
			(63) 
			Electoral
reform in Moldova likely to benefit larger parties and reduce government
instability, HIS Global Insight Daily Analysis/UK, 25 July 2017.
49. The President of the Republic, Mr Igor Dodon, has also proposed to amend Article 85 of the Constitution to expand the powers of the President to dissolve parliament. The Venice Commission concluded that adding a broad discretionary power of the President to dissolve parliament is “ill-advised”, risking provoking unnecessary constitutional and political conflicts, and could be interpreted as giving the President the power to use dissolution as a tool for “party politics”, which is incompatible with the President’s role as pouvoir neutre in a parliamentary regime. 
			(64) 
			Venice
Commission, Republic of Moldova, Opinion on the Proposal by the
President of the Republic to Expand the President’s Powers to Dissolve
Parliament, adopted at 111th Plenary Session, 16-17 June 2017, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2017)014-e'>CDL-AD(2017)014</a>, paragraph 58.

3.3. Romania

50. On 24 May 2016, I visited Bucharest, where I met the Minister of Justice, the President of the Court of Law, the President of the Constitutional Court, the Chief Prosecutor of the National Anti-corruption Directorate (DNA), the Presidential advisor on institutional and constitutional reforms, the Romanian delegation to the Assembly and representatives of NGOs. Following my visit, I praised the work of the DNA and stressed that the government was issuing too many emergency ordinances, which created confusion as to the separation of powers (see my statement of 27 May 2016).
51. Like Bulgaria, Romania has been under the CVM monitoring since its accession to the European Union. The CVM addresses four benchmarks related to judicial independence and efficiency, integrity and the fight against corruption. Whilst the most recent CVM report, published on 25 January 2017, recognises major progress in the areas of judicial independence and the fight against corruption over the ten years since Romania’s accession to the European Union, a number of key issues remain unresolved.
52. The CVM report indicates that, overall, there has been substantial progress on issues concerning the independence, impartiality, transparency and accountability of the judicial system. This was due to the commitment shown by many judges and prosecutors, the implementation work of the Ministers of Justice, the good co-operation between the Romanian authorities and the European Commission and the strong involvement of civil society. 
			(65) 
			European
Commission, “Report from the Commission to the European Parliament
and the Council on Progress in Romania under the Co-operation and
Verification Mechanism”, 25 January 2017, COM(2017)44 final, pp.
2 and 6. Since 2012, the Superior Council of Magistracy (SCM) “has established itself as a manager of the judicial system” and has continued to fulfil its constitutional function of defending the independence of the judiciary; this entailed a strong public perception of judicial independence and trust in the judiciary, but political and media attacks on individual magistrates and judicial institutions continued. However, progress has been slow on issues concerning the workload balance between and within courts, and the full implementation of court decisions. 
			(66) 
			Ibid., p.4.
See also European Commission, Commission
Staff Working Document. Romania: Technical report, SWD(2017)25
final, 25 January 2017, p. 14. The SCM is composed of 19 members,
including 9 judges and 5 prosecutors, elected by the general assemblies
of judges and prosecutors, 2 representatives of the civil society
and 3 members de jure – the
President of the High Court of Cassation and Justice (HCCJ), the
Minister of Justice and the General Prosecutor. The CVM report 
			(67) 
			European
Commission, CVM report on Romania, op. cit., pp. 5 and 9, and its
technical report, op. cit., p. 6. and the 2016 GRECO report 
			(68) 
			GRECO,
Fourth Evaluation Round. Corruption prevention in respect of members
of parliament, judges and prosecutors. Evaluation Report. Romania,
adopted at its 70th Plenary Meeting, 30 November–4 December 2015, paragraphs
3 and 130. also criticised the lack of an open and transparent procedure for the appointment of senior prosecutors (who are part of a unified body of magistrates, along with judges).
53. In the last few years, new Civil and Criminal Codes have been adopted. The Civil Code entered into force in 2011, the Code for Civil Procedures in 2013 and the new Criminal Codes in 2014; the transition to the new codes has been gradual. Although their implementation has shown some reduction in the length of court proceedings (see also the status of implementation of Court judgments from the group Nicolau v. Romania 
			(69) 
			Application No. 1295/02,
judgment of 12 January 2006, <a href='http://hudoc.exec.coe.int/eng'>Status of execution</a> at HUDOC-EXEC.), the finalisation of the reform has been difficult in practice. As regards the Civil Code, provisions requiring new infrastructure had been postponed. The Criminal Code and the Code of Criminal Procedure had to be amended following numerous judgments of the Constitutional Court referring to the European Court of Human Rights and the principle of balance of powers (in 2016 alone, the Constitutional Court delivered 12 such decisions) or other urgent developments. In many cases, the government adopted emergency ordinances, but the parliament was slow in approving them. 
			(70) 
			European Commission,
CVM report on Romania, op. cit., p. 6, and its technical report,
op. cit., p. 16. Moreover, in numerous cases Romania has been criticised by the European Court of Human Rights for the ineffectiveness of the mechanism set up to afford restitution or compensation for properties nationalised during the communist period and, despite a new law of 2013, administrative authorities and courts still have an unacceptable backlog of cases concerning former owners’ claims. 
			(71) 
			See
Status of execution of the group of cases <a href='http://hudoc.exec.coe.int/eng'>Strain and Others and
Maria Atanasiu</a> at HUDOC-EXEC.
54. As regards integrity issues and the fight against corruption, the CVM report also highlights the progress made in the confiscation of assets as a means of tackling corruption, noting the establishment of the new national agency for the management of seized assets (ANABI) in January 2017, alongside the government’s adoption of a new National Anti-Corruption Strategy for 2016-2020. 
			(72) 
			European Commission,
CVM report on Romania, op. cit., pp. 8-9. Corruption is still a major issue in Romania, 
			(73) 
			According to Transparency
International, Romania ranks 57th out of 176 countries in the <a href='https://www.transparency.org/news/feature/corruption_perceptions_index_2016'>Corruption
Perceptions Index 2016</a>. despite the good track record of the institutions involved in its investigation, prosecution and adjudication (the DNA, prosecutors and the High Court of Cassation). In 2016, 403 cases were sent to trial by the DNA, involving 1 271 defendants, including numerous high-level officials, deputies and senators. 339 conviction decisions were ruled in court against 879 defendants. Despite the fact that there has been an increase in the length of prison sentences, in approximately two thirds of convictions the execution of sentences was suspended.The lack of significant progress in eradicating corruption is mainly due to the media and political attacks on the DNA (which were particularly intense in 2016 and were voiced by high officials and public figures), constant attempts to soften up the laws criminalising corruption (including the Criminal Code) 
			(74) 
			According
to GRECO, “Romania has a tendency to adopt and pile-up numerous
rules and pieces of legislation dealing with integrity and the prevention
of corruption which are often inconsistent or redundant”, note 69 supra, paragraph 1. and systematic refusals to lift parliamentary immunity to enable investigations of MPs. Concerning the latter, it should be stressed that the criteria on the basis of which parliament accepts or rejects the lifting of parliamentary immunity remain unclear or are not communicated to the public or the prosecution. 
			(75) 
			European Commission,
Romania: Technical Report, op. cit., pp. 11 and 37-38. However,
as regards starting investigations against former ministers who
are no longer MPs, consent is needed from the President of the Republic;
so far, all President have accepted launching investigations in
such cases. However, this has not been the case of former ministers
who are still MPs; one third of requests for starting investigation
against them have been rejected by the competent chamber of the
parliament. This is due to a misinterpretation of Article 72 of the Romanian Constitution, which might give a false impression that MPs have absolute immunity. In its 2015 Evaluation Report, GRECO recommended a review of the system of MPs’ immunities, to improve the transparency of the legislative process and develop a code of conduct for MPs (paragraph 155 items i), ii) and viii)). Moreover, clear recommendations on the lifting of immunity have been issued by the Venice Commission. 
			(76) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2014)011-e'>CDL-AD(2014)011</a>, Report on the scope and lifting of parliamentary immunities,
adopted at its 98th plenary session (Venice, 21-22 March 2014).
55. The abuse of government emergency ordinances (GEOs), allowing the executive to legislate disregarding parliament, remains a long-standing issue in Romania, which was examined by the Venice Commission in 2012 
			(77) 
			Venice Commission,
Opinion on the Compatibility with Constitutional Principles and
the Rule of Law of Actions Taken by the Government and the Parliament
of Romania in respect of other State Institutions and on the Government Emergency
Ordinance on Amendment to the Law No. 47/1992 Regarding the Organisation
and Functioning of the Constitutional Court and on the Government
Emergency Ordinance on Amending and Completing the Law No. 3/2000 Regarding
the Organisation of a Referendum of Romania, Adopted by the Venice
Commission at its 93rd Plenary Session (Venice, 14-15 December 2012), <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/default.aspx?pdffile=CDL-AD(2012)026-e'>CDL-AD(2012)026</a>. and was recently criticised by GRECO. 
			(78) 
			GRECO,
Evaluation Report on Romania, Third Evaluation Round, Addendum to
the Second Compliance Report on Romania, adopted at 75th Plenary
Meeting, 20-24 March 2017. According to Article 115-4 of the Romanian Constitution, GEOs can only be adopted in “exceptional cases”, the regulation of which cannot be postponed; the government has the obligation to give the reasons for the emergency. In my view, GEOs should be seen as administrative documents and should respect the law. Unfortunately, the government acts more and more as a legislative body. The use of GEOs should be forbidden at least for some time in order to allow the parliament to fulfil its tasks. One should also establish a deadline for the verification of GEOs by the parliament.
56. A recent example of such misuse of GEOs is related to two draft emergency ordinances, on pardon and amending the Criminal Code and the Code of Criminal Procedure respectively, put forward for consultation by the newly elected government on 18 January 2017. Whilst the ordinance on pardon was passed to parliament, 
			(79) 
			<a href='http://www.romania-insider.com/govt-passes-pardoning-parliament-may-approve-penal-code-changes-emergency-ordinance/'>www.romania-insider.com/govt-passes-pardoning-parliament-may-approve-penal-code-changes-emergency-ordinance/</a>. the other emergency ordinance, OUG 13/2017, 
			(80) 
			<a href='http://www.dreptonline.ro/legislatie/oug_13_2017_modificare_lege_286_2009_codul_penal_lege_135_2010_codul_procedura_penala.php'>www.dreptonline.ro/legislatie/oug_13_2017_modificare_lege_286_2009_codul_penal_lege_135_2010_codul_procedura_penala.php</a> (in Romanian). was approved by the Cabinet of Prime Minister Sorin Grindeanu on 31 January 2017. This emergency ordinance, inter alia, redefined and effectively decriminalised some lower-level corruption offences, including abuse of public office offences where the damage involved was less than 200 000 lei (€44 000). 
			(81) 
			Which would have overturned
the criminal convictions of many politicians, including the ruling
Social Democrat Party (PSD) party leader, Liviu Dragnea; see <a href='https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jan/27/european-commission-criticises-romania-prisoner-pardon-plan'>https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jan/27/european-commission-criticises-romania-prisoner-pardon-plan</a>. According to the government, both ordinances were needed to tackle the problem of prison overcrowding, pointed out in many judgments of the European Court of Human Rights. This attracted widespread international criticism 
			(82) 
			Pertaining to the fact
that such an ordinance clearly undermined the rule of law and the
fight against corruption; see e.g. European Commission, “Joint Statement
of President Juncker and First Vice-President Timmermans on the
fight against corruption in Romania”, Brussels, 1 February 2017.
See also my <a href='http://assembly.coe.int/nw/xml/News/News-View-en.asp?newsid=6520&lang=2'>statement
of 2 February 2017</a>. and sparked country-wide protests in Romania. The ordinance was repealed by the government on 5 February 2017 
			(83) 
			<a href='http://gov.ro/en/news/the-government-emergency-ordinance-no-13-2017-has-been-abrogated'>http://gov.ro/en/news/the-government-emergency-ordinance-no-13-2017-has-been-abrogated</a>. and the Minister of Justice, Florian Iordache, announced his resignation. As regards the draft bill elaborated on the basis of the emergency ordinance on pardon, the Senate’s Legal Committee has proposed controversial amendments, which would allow pardons for a number of corruption offences. However, following new country-wide protests, it reversed its decision. Nevertheless, on 8 May 2017, the Senate refused to pass the bill and sent it back to its Legal Committee. 
			(84) 
			<a href='http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/romanian-senators-approve-toned-down-pardon-bill-05-08-2017-1'>www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/romanian-senators-approve-toned-down-pardon-bill-05-08-2017-1</a>. On 21 June 2017, the ruling PSD voted out their own government in a no-confidence vote; consequently, Prime Minister Soring Grindeanu was replaced by Mihai Tudose. It is believed that this was due to Mr Grindeanu’s failure to relax anti-corruption laws. 
			(85) 
			<a href='http://www.euronews.com/2017/06/26/romania-s-ruling-social-democrats-have-chosen-mihai-tudose-as-prime-minister'>www.euronews.com/2017/06/26/romania-s-ruling-social-democrats-have-chosen-mihai-tudose-as-prime-minister</a>

3.4. Turkey

57. On the basis of its Resolution 2156 (2017), the Assembly decided to reopen the monitoring procedure of Turkey. It is not my intention to repeat the findings of the Monitoring Committee, but to focus on the main threats to the rule of law in this country, namely in relation to the situation of the judiciary, the emergency decree laws and the constitutional amendments approved in the referendum of 16 April 2017. I sincerely regret that my fact-finding visit to Ankara was cancelled by the Turkish authorities.
58. Following the failed coup d’état of 15 July 2016, on 20 July 2016, President Erdoğan declared a three-month long state of emergency (which was approved by parliament on the same day, despite the summer recess), giving extraordinary powers to the government. The state of emergency has since been extended four times, most recently on 18 July 2017. On 21 July 2016, the Turkish authorities notified the Council of Europe of its derogation from the European Convention on Human Rights, under Article 15 of the Convention (this issue is currently being examined by our committee colleague Mr Raphaël Comte (Switzerland, ALDE). 
			(86) 
			See <a href='http://www.assembly.coe.int/Committee/JUR/2017/20170227-ejdoc03-EN.pdf'>AS/Jur
(2017) 03</a>, State of emergency: proportionality issues concerning
derogations under Article 15 of the European Convention on Human
Rights, Information note of 27 February 2017. The Turkish authorities attributed the coup attempt to the “Gülenist movement” and launched a vast purge of people apparently linked to the conspiracy, including collective dismissals and arrests of numerous civil servants, judges, prosecutors, soldiers, academics, closing down of associations and media outlets, confiscation of assets, etc. 
			(87) 
			According to numerous
sources, nearly 50 000 people have been arrested and 150 000 dismissed
from their jobs.
59. Following the declaration of a state of emergency, the Turkish Government may legislate by way of emergency decree laws, without prior authorisation of the parliament, in “matters necessitated by the state of emergency” (Article 121 of the Constitution). Since then, 21 emergency “Decrees with Force of Law” have been published. The procedure governing emergency rule is regulated by the Law on State of Emergency of 1983. Emergency decree laws need to be approved by parliament (the Grand National Assembly), but, according to the Venice Commission, due to the delays involved, its control lost some of its effectiveness. Thus, the government legislated without parliament’s and the Constitutional Court’s control for over two months. 
			(88) 
			Venice
Commission, Opinion on Emergency Decree Laws Nos. 667-676 Adopted
Following the Failed Coup of 15 July 2016, adopted at 109th Plenary
Session, 9-10 December 2016, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2016)037-e'>CDL-AD(2016)37</a>, paragraphs 51 and 53-54.
60. In the view of the Venice Commission, by issuing emergency decree laws, the government has “interpreted its extraordinary powers too extensively” and the measures have gone “beyond what is permitted by the Turkish Constitution and by international law”. The measures taken were permanent ones, as they “went beyond a temporary state of emergency” and “the Government made a number of structural changes to the legislation, which should normally be done through the ordinary legislative process outside of the emergency period”. The Venice Commission recommended that the Constitutional Court review the constitutionality of the emergency decree laws, once they have been approved by the parliament, in abstracto and in concreto. It also expressed concern about the apparent lack of access to justice for the public servants dismissed directly by the decree laws and supported the idea of the Secretary General of the Council of Europe to create an independent ad hoc body for the examination of such cases. 
			(89) 
			Ibid., paragraphs 226,
228 and 277. See also <a href='http://assembly.coe.int/nw/xml/News/News-View-EN.asp?newsid=6660&lang=2&cat=5'>the
statement</a> I made in this respect along with Mr Comte, 24 May 2017. By way of Decree Law No. 685 of 23 January 2017, an Inquiry Commission on State Emergency Measures was created on 17 July 2017 and it has since started receiving applications. The executive appoints five of the seven members of the commission, the decisions of which are subject to judicial review. 
			(90) 
			Monitoring
Committee, The functioning of democratic institutions in Turkey,
Doc. 14282 (co-rapporteurs: Ms Ingebjørg Godskesen (Norway, EC)
and Ms Marianne Mikko (Estonia, SOC)), paragraphs 54-55.
61. The judiciary is perceived as being one of the most “penetrated” State institutions. On 16 July 2016, the High Council of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) held an extraordinary meeting and decided to dismiss 2 745 judges and five of its own members. 
			(91) 
			Monitoring Committee,
Post-monitoring dialogue with Turkey, The failed coup of 15 July
2016: some facts and figures (co-rapporteurs: Ms Ingebjørg Godskesen
(Norway, EC) and Ms Marianne Mikko (Estonia, SOC), <a href='https://pace.coe.int/documents/19887/2221584/AS-MON-INF-2016-14-EN.pdf/dd9e2a06-d8e0-4d75-86aa-e38c14bfe12f'>AS/Mon/Inf
(2016) 14 rev 3</a>, paragraph 4. Further dismissals were decided pursuant to Article 3 of Decree Law No. 667 of 23 July 2016. On this basis, two Constitutional Court judges, Mr Alparslan Altan and Mr Erdal Tercan, have been dismissed (having been taken into custody on 16 July 2016), as well as numerous other judges working at all levels of jurisdiction. It is estimated that more than 4 000 judges and prosecutors, i.e. a quarter of them, have been dismissed, while around 2 400 have been arrested; some of them are now detained in overcrowded prisons or held in solitary confinement. 
			(92) 
			According to a letter
from the European Association of Judges of 17 July 2017 sent to
the Assembly. The Association of Judges and Prosecutors (YARSAV, a member of the International and European Association of Judges) was also dissolved by a governmental order and many of its board members arrested, including President Murat Arslan, who was taken into custody on 19 October 2016. In December 2016, the General Assembly of the European Network of Councils for the Judiciary (ECNJ) suspended the observer status of the HSYK. According to some sources between 800 and 900 newly appointed judges have direct links with the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). 
			(93) 
			<a href='http://www.theglobepost.com/2017/05/11/top-judge-defends-purge-state-of-emergency-measures/'>www.theglobepost.com/2017/05/11/top-judge-defends-purge-state-of-emergency-measures/.</a>
62. The mass dismissals and arrests of judges often took place without any individualised accusations. Many judges were dismissed and then detained by decisions of criminal judges of the peace who can only supervise the protective measures taken at the stage of investigation and do not have jurisdiction to detain other judges. 
			(94) 
			See Venice Commission,
Opinion on the Duties, Competences and Functioning of the Criminal
Peace Judgeships, adopted at 110th Plenary Session, 10-11 March
2017, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/default.aspx?pdffile=CDL-AD%282017%29004-e'>CDL-AD(2017)004</a>, paragraphs 16-18 and 100. As stressed by the Venice Commission, any dismissals within the judiciary or its regulatory bodies “should be subjected to particularly exacting scrutiny, even in times of a serious public emergency”, since “judges represent a special category of public servants, whose independence is guaranteed at the constitutional and international levels”. Such dismissals may weaken the judiciary as a whole, whilst creating a “chilling effect”, resulting in other judges being “reluctant to reverse measures declared under the emergency decree laws out of fear of becoming subjects of such measures themselves”. 
			(95) 
			Venice Commission,
Opinion on Emergency Decree Laws Nos. 667-676 Adopted Following
the Failed Coup of 15 July 2016, op. cit., paragraph 148.
63. In its decision of 10 March 2017 in the case Çatal v. Turkey 
			(96) 
			Application No. 2873/17. concerning the dismissal of the applicant, a former judge, by a decision of the HSYK, the European Court of Human Rights stated that the applicant should have complained to the State Council (on the basis of Decree Law No. 685 of 2 January 2017) and, had this been unsuccessful, to the Constitutional Court. Therefore, the Court declared her application inadmissible due to the non-exhaustion of domestic remedies. It will be interesting to follow the future case law of the Court concerning similar applications.
64. On 21 January 2017, the Turkish Grand National Assembly adopted a text of constitutional amendments, which was submitted to a referendum for voters’ approval on 16 April 2017. The result of the referendum was highly contested. Even beforehand, the Venice Commission expressed concern about the circumstances in which the constitutional amendments were adopted by the parliament: the President of the second-largest opposition party HDP and 10 other MPs were in detention on remand, the immunity of numerous MPs had been lifted in May 2016, the secret ballot rule was not fully respected during the vote and debates were lengthy but resulted in a very quick completion of the procedure, the amendments being adopted within 12 days. Moreover, the adoption of the constitutional amendments, and indeed the referendum itself took place during the prolonged state of emergency. The Venice Commission considered it to be “highly doubtful that the constitutional referendum scheduled for 16 April 2017 could and would meet the democratic principle of the European democratic tradition”. 
			(97) 
			Venice Commission,
Opinion on the Amendments to the Constitution Adopted by the Grand
National Assembly on 21 January 2017 and to be Submitted to a National
Referendum on 16 April 2017, adopted at 110th Plenary Session, 10-11
March 2017, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2017)005-e'>CDL-AD(2017)005</a>, paragraphs 21-26, 29 and 41.
65. The amendments, the majority of which will enter into force after the next presidential election in 2019, bring about a very extensive constitutional reform, moving from a parliamentary system to what the Turkish authorities have themselves described as a “Turkish-style” Presidential system. According to the Venice Commission, “they are not based on the logic of separation of powers, which is characteristic for democratic presidential systems” and “lead to an excessive concentration of executive power in the hands of the President and the weakening of parliamentary control of that power”. 
			(98) 
			Ibid., paragraphs
126 and 47. The Venice Commission enumerated a number of concerns in this respect, in particular: 
			(99) 
			Ibid., paragraph
127.
  • the President will have the power to appoint and dismiss ministers and high officials on the basis of criteria established by him or her alone (there will be no Prime Minister and no collegiate government);
  • he or she will be empowered to choose one or more vice-presidents;
  • the President, vice-presidents and ministers will be accountable only by the procedure of impeachment (there will be no possibility of interpellations; only written questions will be allowed);
  • there will be a compulsory synchronisation of presidential and parliamentary elections;
  • the President will have the power to dissolve parliament, on any grounds whatsoever;
  • the President will have the opportunity to obtain a third mandate, under certain conditions;
  • he/she will be allowed to issue presidential decrees on matters relating to executive powers, without the need to have them approved by the parliament and be given the exclusive power to declare a state of emergency.
66. The amendments to the Constitution also enhance the executive’s control over the judiciary, by granting the President the power to appoint six of the 13 members of the High Council of Judges and Prosecutors, including the Minister of Justice and his/her under-secretary. The remaining seven members will be appointed by the parliament. Thus, no member will be elected by peer judges anymore. The Venice Commission recalled that “at least a substantive part of the members of a High Judicial Council should be judges appointed by their peers”. As a result of the amendments, “if the party of the President has a three-fifths majority in the Assembly, it will be able to fill all positions in the Council”. This places the independence of the judiciary in “serious jeopardy”, because the HSYK is the “main self-governing body overseeing appointment, promotion, transfer, disciplining and dismissal of judges and public prosecutors”. 
			(100) 
			Ibid., paragraphs
94, 116 and 119. The amendments provide for elections to the HSYK within 30 days of their entry into force. Subsequently, on 7 June 2017 new members of the HSYK – four appointed by the President and seven by the parliament – were sworn in. 
			(101) 
			See <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/commissioner/country-monitoring/turkey/-/asset_publisher/lK6iqfNE1t0Z/content/turkey-new-council-of-judges-and-prosecutors-does-not-offer-adequate-safeguards-for-the-independence-of-the-judiciary?inheritRedirect=false&redirect=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.coe.int%2Fen%2Fweb%2Fcommissioner%2Fcountry-monitoring%2Fturkey%3Fp_p_id%3D101_INSTANCE_lK6iqfNE1t0Z%26p_p_lifecycle%3D0%26p_p_state%3Dnormal%26p_p_mode%3Dview%26p_p_col_id%3Dcolumn-1%26p_p_col_pos%3D1%26p_p_col_count%3D2'>statement
by the Commissioner for Human Rights</a>, 7 June 2017.

3.5. Poland

67. Following general elections held on 25 October 2015, the Law and Justice party (PiS) got 37.6% of the vote, which gave it 235 out of 460 seats in the Sejm (lower chamber of the Polish Parliament), and 61 seats out of 100 in the Senate. Since the start of the democratic transformation in 1989, it was also the first election in Poland in which a party won an absolute majority in the Sejm. The general elections were preceded by the presidential election in May 2015, in which PiS candidate, Mr Andrzej Duda, won. The PiS considered that the election victory gave it a clear mandate to reform the political system and also the judiciary. Very soon, some of the reforms launched by the new majority raised the concern of the European Union, which Poland had joined in May 2004, and of the Council of Europe. Within the Assembly, the situation in Poland is currently being examined by the Monitoring Committee, whose co-rapporteurs are preparing a report on “The functioning of democratic institutions in Poland”. It is not my intention to duplicate their work, but I feel obliged to point out a number of issues which, in my view, are not in the line with the principles of rule of law in a democratic State. Therefore, I refer to the “constitutional crisis” and the reform of the judiciary.
68. Shortly after the parliamentary elections, the PiS contested the election of five judges (out of 15) of the Constitutional Court elected on 8 October 2015 by the previous Sejm, following an amendment adopted by the previous parliamentary majority led by the Civic Platform party (PO), which allowed the outgoing Sejm to replace the Constitutional Court judges whose mandates expired in November and December 2015. This led to a so-called “constitutional crisis”, the details of which have been thoroughly explained in the information note of the Monitoring Committee's rapporteurs 
			(102) 
			Information note by
the co-rapporteurs on their fact-finding visit to Warsaw (3-5 April
2017) (co-rapporteurs: Mr Yves Cruchten (Luxembourg, SOC) and Mr Thierry
Mariani (France, EPP/CD)), AS/Mon (2017) 14 declassified, section
III. and in the report by our committee colleague Mr Philippe Mahoux (Belgium, SOC) on “Venice Commission's “Rule of Law Checklist””. 
			(103) 
			Doc. 14387, Section 4.1. On two occasions, the Venice Commission issued opinions on the consecutive changes to the Law on the Constitutional Court voted by the new parliament. 
			(104) 
			Venice Commission,
Opinion on the Amendments to the Act of 25 June 2015 of the Constitutional
Tribunal of Poland, adopted at its 106th plenary session on 11-12
March 2016, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2016)001-e'>CDL-AD(2016)001,</a> and Poland. Opinion on the Act on the Constitutional
Tribunal, adopted at its 108th session on 14-15 October 2016, <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2016)026-e'>CDL-AD(2016)026</a>. The Venice Commission's recommendations were not fully followed by the Sejm, which modified the Law on the Constitutional Court three times between November 2015 and July 2016. During the “crisis”, the Prime Minister refused to publish two judgments of the Constitutional Court (of 9 March and 11 August 2016), although, according to Article 190 Section 2 of the Polish Constitution, judgments of the Constitutional Court must be published in the Official Journal. Eventually, new legislation on the Constitutional Court (the law on the organisation and procedure before the Constitutional Court, the law on the status of judges of the Constitutional Court of 30 November and the law on transitional provisions of 13 December 2016) entered into force on 13 December 2016; it has not been assessed by the Venice Commission. The constitutional crisis led to a situation in which the five judges elected by the previous Sejm (“October judges”) have been replaced by judges elected by new Sejm (“December judges”). Although the Sejm had also annulled the election of the “October judges”, the Constitutional Court found that only two of them had been elected in violation of the Constitution. Nevertheless, the three other “October judges” have not been allowed to take up their duties, due mainly to the refusal of the President of the Republic to accept their oaths, despite the criticism of the Venice Commission. 
			(105) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2016)001-e'>CDL-AD(2016)001</a>, ibid., paragraphs 108-109. Three “December judges” were allowed to adjudicate in December 2016 by the new President of the Constitutional Court, Ms Julia Przyłębska, whose election had been boycotted by seven judges. Thus, the current composition of the Constitutional Court raises issues as to the validity of its judgments and the principle of legal certainty. Since the beginning of the crisis, the number of legal questions posed by ordinary courts to the Constitutional Court has drastically decreased and the National Council of the Judiciary (Krajowa Rada Sądownictwa – KRS) has decided not to use this legal avenue. 
			(106) 
			Article by Małgorzata
Kryszkiewicz, Temida radzi sobie bez TK, “Dziennik Gazeta Prawna”,
27 June 2017, p. B6.
69. It must be stressed that under the current Constitution of Poland of 1997 (Article 194 Section 1) judges of the Constitutional Court are elected by the Sejm by a simple majority, which, in a situation where one party has a majority, creates a risk of politicisation of these elections. The Venice Commission recommended that “the Constitution be amended in the long run to introduce a qualified majority for the election of the Constitutional Tribunal judges by the Sejm, combined with an effective anti-deadlock mechanism”. 
			(107) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2016)001-e'>CDL-AD(2016)001</a>, op. cit., paragraph 140. As stressed at the hearing on 27 April 2017 by Mr Jean-Claude Scholsem, alternate member of the Venice Commission, who took part in the drafting of the two opinions, the work on this file was one of the most complicated from the legal, political and human point of view. Due to the constitutional crisis in Poland, the European Commission triggered, for the first time, its new mechanism under the “Rule of Law Framework” and, in its recommendations of 27 July 2016 and 21 December 2016, it found that there was a “systemic threat to the rule of law”. 
			(108) 
			European Commission,
Recommendations (EU) 2016/1374 of 27 July 2016 and 2017/146 of 21
December 2016.
70. Excessive length of proceedings has been a chronic problem in Poland for nearly two decades, with over 400 such findings made by the European Court of Human Rights since 1998. 
			(109) 
			Podbielski
v. Poland, Application No. 27916/95, judgment of 30 October
1998. The Polish authorities' efforts to tackle it have been constantly monitored by the Committee of Ministers under Article 46.2 of the Convention. 
			(110) 
			See <a href='http://hudoc.exec.coe.int/eng'>Status of Execution</a>, Majewski v. Poland, HUDOC-EXEC. However, the recently proposed reform of the justice system, pushed by the ruling party purportedly to improve the courts’ efficiency and enhance public trust in the judiciary, which has not been deeply reformed since the fall of the communist regime, has given rise to numerous controversies. On 12 July 2017, the parliament passed two laws – a law amending the Law on Ordinary Courts Organisation and a law amending the Law on the National Council of the Judiciary (KRS). On 20 July 2017, upon an initiative of a group of PiS MPs, it adopted a new law on the Supreme Court. This attracted widespread national 
			(111) 
			See, for example, <a href='http://www.krs.pl/pl/dzialalnosc/posiedzenia-rady/f,189,posiedzenia-w-2017-r/664,30-stycznia/4595,opinia-krajowej-rady-sadownictwa-z-dnia-30-stycznia-2017-r-nr-wo-020-5616-ud-73'>the
opinion of the KRS of 30 January 2017</a> (in Polish). and international criticism 
			(112) 
			See, in particular,
OSCE/ODIHR, <a href='http://www.osce.org/odihr/315946?download=true'>Final
Opinion on Draft Amendments to the Act on the National Council of
the Judiciary of Poland</a>; <a href='http://www.coe.int/t/dghl/cooperation/ccje/cooperation/Opinion EN 1_Poland April 2017_en.asp'>Opinion
of the Bureau of the Consultative Council of European Judges (CCJE)
of 7 April 2017</a>, <a href='\\transitsrc\Transit_src\Internet\DGHL\Cooperation\CCJE\Web\annonces\CCJE Bureau statement 17 July 2017.pdf'>Opinion
of the CCJE Bureau of 17 July 2017</a>; <a href='http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=21912&LangID=E'>UN
Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers statement
of 26 July 2017</a>; <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/events/?id=2430'>Statement
by the Venice Commission's President of 18 July 2017</a>; <a href='http://www.coe.int/en/web/portal/-/secretary-general-raises-concerns-over-polish-draft-law-on-supreme-court'>Statement
by the Secretary General of Council of Europe of 18 July 2017</a>, <a href='https://pace.coe.int/en_GB/web/as-jur/main;jsessionid=C83BA1EE0A02E10F6C5D2B68D27521D1?p_auth=H64kIbv2&p_p_id=newsreader_WAR_PACECALENDARportlet&p_p_lifecycle=1&p_p_state=normal&p_p_mode=view&p_p_col_id=column-1&p_p_col_pos=1&p_p_col_count=2&_newsreader_WAR_PACECALENDARportlet_articleId=6740&_newsreader_WAR_PACECALENDARportlet_backUrl=%2Fen_GB%2Fweb%2Fas-jur%2Fmain&_newsreader_WAR_PACECALENDARportlet_javax.portlet.action=viewDetail'>Statement
by the co-rapporteurs of the Monitoring Committee and my statement
of 17 July 2017</a>. and sparked big protests in Warsaw and in many Polish cities. President Duda signed the first law on 25 July 2017, but a day earlier he announced that he would veto the remaining two. Both laws are now back in the Sejm and the legislative process is suspended, awaiting the President's proposals, which should be ready in two months.
71. There are several reasons why the laws vetoed by the President have been criticised. The amendments to the Law on the National Council of the Judiciary, are, first of all, deemed contrary to the Constitution. Article 187 of the Constitution regulates clearly the composition of the KRS, stipulating that out of its 25 members, 15 are elected by judges. According to the new law, the power to appoint the 15 judicial members of the KRS will be transferred from the judiciary to the Sejm. The new KRS would be composed of two assemblies, one composed of judges and another one composed of political appointees; all decisions on judges' appointments would require the agreement of both assemblies and no anti-deadlock mechanism has been foreseen. Moreover, the law also foresees the end of the term of all judges currently sitting on the KRS.
72. The new Law on the Supreme Court, which mainly aims at restructuring this jurisdiction and establishing a disciplinary chamber for judges, contains a provision on the basis of which all current judges of the Supreme Court would be transferred into retirement on the day following the entry into force of the law, except those who would be arbitrarily indicated by the Minister of Justice.
73. As regards the law amending the Law on Ordinary Courts Organisation, which entered into force on 12 August 2017, 
			(113) 
			Published on 28 July
2017, Official Journal (Dziennik Ustaw) of 2017, item 1452. it contains provisions aimed at disciplining judges, regulating their retirement and introducing random allocation of cases. It allows the Minister of Justice to appoint presidents and vice-presidents of all ordinary courts without obtaining opinions on candidates from the general assemblies of these courts. Furthermore, the Minister of Justice will be entitled to dismiss them on a new ground of “ascertainment of particularly ineffective performance of a president's administrative supervision or work organisation in the court over which they preside or in the courts' subordinate thereto” (according to Article 27.1.3 of the amended law); any dismissal should be based on an opinion of the KRS, but the latter will be binding only if it has been adopted by a majority of two thirds. However, within six months after the law enters into force, the Minister of Justice will be allowed to dismiss presidents and vice-presidents of courts without consulting the KRS. 
			(114) 
			Article
17 of the Law amending the Law on Ordinary Courts Organisation. These new provisions have also been widely criticised, as the Minister of Justice is also the Prosecutor General, according to the new law on the Prosecution Service of 28 January 2016, which is currently being assessed by the Venice Commission. Moreover, as the new law provides for a different retirement age for female judges (60 years) and male judges (65 years), on 29 July 2017, the European Commission launched infringement proceedings against Poland. 
			(115) 
			<a href='http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-17-2205_en.htm'>http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-17-2205_en.htm</a>.
74. This initiative comes in addition to the above-mentioned Rule of Law Dialogue launched by the European Commission in January 2016, including the latest Rule of Law Recommendation of 26 July 2017, adopted by the European Commission in reaction to the planned reform of the judiciary. The European Commission was particularly concerned about the planned dismissal of all judges of the Supreme Court, considered that the reform “amplifies the systemic threat to the rule of law” and requested the Polish authorities to address the problem within one month. 
			(116) 
			Commission
Recommendation of 26 July 2017 regarding the rule of law in Poland,
C(2017)5320 final.

4. Conclusions

75. Although the Council of Europe has developed many recommendations on respect for the rule of law and in particular judicial independence, its bodies have always taken into account the diversity of legal systems and approaches to the separation of powers. As stressed in the Venice Commission’s Rule of Law Checklist, the “contextual elements of the Rule of Law are not limited to legal factors” and one should take into account factors such as the presence (or absence) of a shared political and legal culture within a society. 
			(117) 
			Venice
Commission, Rule of Law Checklist, paragraph 42. Therefore, it is not always so obvious to conclude whether the principle of rule of law is violated or not in a given country. Nevertheless, the examples examined in this report show that there have been some new developments in certain member States of the Council of Europe which show that threats to the rule of rule have become very serious, and its components such as legality, legal certainty, prohibition of arbitrariness and access to justice are especially at risk. This is mainly due to tendencies to limit the independence of the judiciary made though attempts to politicise the judicial councils and the courts (mainly in Bulgaria, Poland and Turkey), massive revocation of judges and prosecutors (Turkey) or attempts to do so (Poland). There are also tendencies to limit the legislative power of the parliament (the Republic of Moldova, Romania and Turkey) and corruption, which poses a major challenge to the rule of law, remains a widespread phenomenon in Bulgaria, the Republic of Moldova and Romania.
76. I would like to recall some basic principles stemming from the work of Council of Europe bodies. In its opinion on “Judicial appointments”, the Venice Commission noted that in some older democracies there are systems in which the executive power has a strong influence on judicial appointments; these systems work, however, because the executive is restrained by a long-standing legal culture and traditions. In new democracies, there should be explicit constitutional provisions to prevent political abuse by other State powers in the appointment of judges. Many European States have introduced a judicial council with a role in judicial appointments. Although there is no standard model for such a body, the Venice Commission stressed that “a substantial element or a majority of the members of the judicial council should be elected by the Judiciary itself”. In its Recommendation CM/Rec(2010)12, the Committee of Ministers went even further, by requiring that “[n]ot less than half the members of such councils should be judges chosen by their peers from all levels of the judiciary …” (paragraph 27). The Venice Commission also recommended that members of a judicial council should not be active MPs and was strongly in favour of a qualified majority for the election of its parliamentary component. 
			(118) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/default.aspx?ref=cdl-ad(2007)028&lang=EN'>CDL-AD(2007)028</a>, op. cit., paragraphs 6, 49 and 31. See also <a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/CDL-AD(2010)004.aspx'>CDL-AD(2010)004</a>, op. cit., paragraph 82.
77. As regards judges’ dismissal, Recommendation CM/Rec(2010)12, in its paragraphs 49 and 50, recalled that “[s]ecurity of tenure and irremovability are key elements of the independence of judges” and that “judges should have guaranteed tenure until a mandatory retirement age”; their terms of office should be established by law and can be terminated only “in cases of serious breaches of disciplinary or criminal provisions established by law”, “where the judge can no longer perform judicial functions” or in cases of early retirement, decided under certain conditions.
78. As regards prosecutors, their “independence” is not of the same nature as that of judges and there is no common standard that would call for it; however, in its report of 2010 on the prosecution service, the Venice Commission gave some indications on how to shield prosecution services from external influences. 
			(119) 
			<a href='http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/?pdf=CDL-AD(2010)040-e'>CDL-AD(2010)040</a>, op. cit., paragraphs 84-86.
79. I am particularly worried about the situation in Turkey, where the recent developments not only threaten the principle of rule of law, but also undermine democracy and violate the human rights of numerous individuals. This shows flagrant incompatibility with Council of Europe values. I exhort the Turkish authorities to comply with the Council of Europe’s norms in this respect, and in particular to reconsider the latest constitutional amendments, lift the state of emergency, ensure that the decree laws have been approved by parliament, review the dismissals of judges and prosecutors in line with Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights and the above-mentioned recommendations of the Venice Commission and Recommendation CM/Rec(2010)12 (see paragraphs 75-76), release opposition MPs and continue its co-operation with the Council of Europe through its statutory organs and specialised bodies.
80. As regards Poland, I call on the Polish authorities to refrain from any reform which would put at risk respect for the rule of law, and in particular the functioning of the KRS and the independence of the judiciary and of prosecutors. I also encourage them to make use of the Council of Europe’s relevant standards including Recommendation CM/Rec(2010)12, to fully co-operate with its bodies, and to implement the Venice Commission recommendations. The current situation of the Constitutional Court should also be revisited in light of the international bodies’ recommendations in order to ensure full respect of the principles of legality and legal certainty. I also invite the Polish Parliament and all political forces to further reflect on the amendment of the 1997 Constitution, which is currently in force.
81. As regards Bulgaria, the Republic of Moldova and Romania, I invite the authorities to strengthen their efforts to combat corruption, ensure the separation of powers and reinforce the independence of the judiciary in light of the above-mentioned recommendations of the Venice Commission and Recommendation CM/Rec(2010)12. They should continue to make use of the expertise of Council of Europe’s relevant bodies, such as GRECO and the Venice Commission. Bulgaria and Romania have made a great effort to comply with Council of Europe standards and the benchmarks established by the European Union in the framework of the CVM and they should continue on this path. Similarly, the Republic of Moldova should continue to implement the comprehensive reforms stemming from the requirements of its membership in our Organisation and its Association Agreement with the European Union. A “captured State”, by definition, does not comply with the principles of rule of law and democracy.
82. The Assembly should remain vigilant as regards any new threats to the rule of law in Council of Europe member States and react rapidly, if need be, using the monitoring procedure or any other procedure deemed appropriate. It should also encourage all member States of the Council of Europe to promote a legal and political culture conducive to the implementation of the concept of the rule of law.