1. On
23 April 2018 the Parliamentary Assembly decided to hold a debate
under urgent procedure on the follow-up to the report of the Independent
Investigation Body on the allegations of corruption within the Parliamentary
Assembly, which had been made public on the evening of the previous
day after ten months of investigations, and asked the Committee
on Rules of Procedure, Immunities and Institutional Affairs to draw up
a further report. At its meeting on 24 April 2018, the committee
appointed me rapporteur and held an initial in-depth exchange of
views.
1. Reminder
2. During the January 2017 part-session,
the Committee on Rules of Procedure, Immunities and Institutional
Affairs decided to respond to the allegations of corruption and
fostering of interests against members or former members of the
Assembly, revealed by a number of international non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) and given wide coverage in the European media, in particular
in the context of the “Volonté affair”. These allegations highlighted
shortcomings in the procedures and mechanisms for implementing rules
of conduct in force in the Assembly at that time. These NGOs and
several parliamentary delegations – the Swiss, Luxembourg, Belgian,
Dutch, French and German delegations, and eight delegations from
the Baltic and Nordic regions – the EPP/CD and SOC groups, and a
substantial number of members (64 signed a written declaration on
“Parliamentary Assembly integrity”) voiced their extreme concern
with regard to the impact such allegations of corruption could have
on the image, reputation and credibility of the Assembly and asked
that the Assembly conduct an investigation to shed light on the
allegations.
3. On 26 January 2017, in response to these calls for an investigation,
the Committee on Rules of Procedure unanimously adopted an official
declaration on the allegations of corruption and fostering of interests
against certain members or former members of the Assembly, reaffirmed
its commitment to promoting the principles of integrity and transparency
in the functioning of the Parliamentary Assembly and said that it stood
ready and was determined to do everything it could to respond usefully
to the allegations of corruption.
4. On 27 January 2017, the Bureau of the Assembly took note of
the declaration of the Committee on Rules of Procedure and unanimously
endorsed the three-pronged overall strategy advocated by the committee
to deal with the situation:
- to
set up an Independent External Investigation Body (hereafter referred
to as the “IBAC”), tasked with assessing the functioning of the
Assembly and shedding full light on covert practices facilitating corruption,
the only measure likely to put an end to impunity for certain acts
and to restore confidence in the Assembly, its activities and its
decisions;
- to ask the Council of Europe’s Group of States against
Corruption (GRECO) to provide the Assembly with guidance in establishing
a sound and coherent framework of integrity;
- to review the Code of Conduct for members of the Assembly
so as to establish new rules of conduct and declaratory requirements
to prevent all forms of corruption within the Assembly, including
the revision of arrangements for the oversight of principles and
rules governing the conduct of its members.
5. On 10 October 2017, the Assembly adopted
Resolution 2182 (2017) “Follow-up to
Resolution
1903 (2012): promoting and strengthening transparency, accountability
and integrity of Parliamentary Assembly members”,
which provided the opportunity to:
- strengthen the duty of integrity,
accountability and transparency of its members;
- to make provisions related to conflicts of interest more
consistent;
- give the Assembly a coherent framework to strengthen transparency
in relations with extra-institutional actors and prevent any undue
influence of public or private interests on the independent, impartial
and objective exercise of the parliamentary mandate in the Assembly.
6. Members are henceforth asked to undertake not to promise,
give, solicit or accept any reward, payment or gratification in
the performance of their duties and must submit a declaration of
interests at the opening of each annual session. With a view to
increasing transparency, these declarations of interests will be
published online. Measures aimed at increasing transparency in relations
with extra-institutional actors during the sessions and meetings
of the Assembly and more rigorous restrictions on lobbyists, including
stricter rules on access to and movement within Council of Europe
premises, will be introduced. Finally, measures will be taken to
guarantee that former members who are remunerated for their consultations
do not benefit from any special privileges.
7. From now on, new oversight arrangements, set out in the Code
of Conduct of members of the Parliamentary Assembly, will make it
possible to expedite the opening of investigations into allegations
of breaches of the rules of conduct by its members, including when
such violations are revealed by external sources, as well an impartial
examination of such allegations of breaches of the rules. The Committee
on Rules of Procedure can also open an investigation at its own
initiative.
8. The system of penalties has also been reviewed and the list
of possible penalties extended. In the event of serious or repeated
breach of the rules of conduct by a member, the Committee on Rules
of Procedure can take one or several measures, from temporary deprivation
of the right to speak, of the right to be appointed rapporteur or
to take part in an ad hoc committee for the observation of elections,
to standing for election as President of the Assembly or as the
Chair or Vice-Chair of a committee or sub-committee.
9. The revision of the Code of Conduct of the members of the
Assembly takes account of the recommendations of GRECO, which carried
out a thorough review of the Assembly's integrity framework and the
set of rules and mechanisms governing the conduct of the members
of the Assembly.
10. Finally, it should also be noted that in adopting
Resolution 2169 (2017) “Recognition and implementation of the principle of
accountability in the Parliamentary Assembly” in June 2017, the
Assembly drew attention to the fact that “[t]he members of the Parliamentary
Assembly are required to act in the strictest compliance with the
duties and obligations by which they are bound, as set out in particular
in Rule 6.2.
b (statement that members
subscribe to the aims and basic principles of the Council of Europe),
Rule 13 (members’ ethical conduct) and Rule 22 (maintenance of order)
of the Rules of Procedure, and in the Code of Conduct for Members
of the Parliamentary Assembly” and underlined the fact that “in
a representative democracy, the requirements of transparency, integrity,
responsibility, primacy of the public interest, confidence and accountability
constitute the foundation of the contract which binds an elective
representative to citizens, the Assembly wishes to reiterate the
importance of the principle of accountability which links those
of its members who are elected to certain functions with those who
have elected them. If this undertaking of accountability, which
includes a duty of transparency and an obligation to account for
one’s acts, is not fulfilled, the Assembly cannot have any confidence
in those it has elected to office. Representing an institution also
means respecting it with integrity and honesty”.
2. Recommendations
and conclusions of the Independent External Investigation Body
2.1. The
IBAC: purpose and terms of reference
11. On 24 April 2017, the Assembly
approved the terms of reference of an independent external body
into allegations of corruption (IBAC), which was tasked with conducting
a detailed independent investigation into the allegations of corruption
and fostering of interests with a view to putting an end to impunity
and restoring confidence in the Parliamentary Assembly, its activities
and decisions. On 29 May 2017, the Bureau appointed the three members
of the IBAC:
- Sir Nicolas Bratza
(United Kingdom), former judge and former President of the European
Court of Human Rights;
- Jean-Louis Bruguière (France), former judge in charge
of investigations, in particular in cases linked to terrorism, and
expert with international organisations and States on anti-terrorism
issues;
- Elisabet Fura (Sweden), former judge at the European Court
of Human Rights and former chief parliamentary Ombudsman of Sweden,
legal adviser.
The IBAC began its investigations on 26 June 2017.
12. The IBAC’s task is to carry
out a detailed independent investigation into the allegations of
corruption and fostering of interests made against certain members
or former members of the Assembly, to examine the practical functioning
of the Assembly in its various activities (including but not restricted
to part-sessions, committee and sub-committee meetings, rapporteur
missions, election observation missions and participation in various
events) and its decision-making mechanisms.
13. In the light of these findings, the Investigation Body was
asked to:
- verify whether there
are any forms of individual conduct by members of the Assembly or
former members of the Assembly which are incompatible with the provisions
of the Code of Conduct for members of the Parliamentary Assembly
and other relevant codes of conduct;
- identify any practices contrary to the Assembly’s ethical
standards, and determine the extent thereof;
- establish, in the light of these findings, whether there
is sufficient proof to take action against members or former members
of the Assembly, pursuant to paragraphs 19 and 20 of the Code of
Conduct for members of the Parliamentary Assembly;
- draw up recommendations on the measures to be implemented
to rectify the shortcomings and fill the gaps in the Assembly’s
ethical framework.
The investigation body shall have no jurisdictional competence.
14. The IBAC’s report was published
on the internet site of the Assembly on the evening of Sunday 22 April. It
was sent by letter by the President of the Parliamentary Assembly
to the Presidents of national parliaments of member States.
2.2. Findings
on the general functioning of the Assembly
15. From its assessment of the
general functioning of the Assembly, the Investigation Body drew
a number of conclusions and made some very detailed recommendations
on the measures to be implemented to rectify the identified shortcomings
and fill the gaps found in the Assembly’s ethical framework.
16. Firstly, the Investigation Body calls on the Assembly to “consider
implementing all the remaining recommendations
made by GRECO which are not fully or partially covered
by the new ethical framework”, namely:
- the need to further harmonise the various existing codes
and guidelines on the conduct of Assembly members;
- to define more clearly the sanctions that may be applied
for breaches of the Code of Conduct, in particular by clarifying
the meaning of the concept “minor violation” and “serious breach”
of the Code and by providing guidance on when to publish a finding
of a “minor violation” by an MP and when to apply a sanction for
a “serious breach”;
- to complement the existing rules on immunity with a set
of clear and objective criteria;
- to establish mechanisms for the receipt and processing
of information on allegations of corruption and fraud.
17. Secondly, as regards
transparency
in the work and decision-making processes, the IBAC noted
that the key deficiency relates to the manner in which the decisions
on appointments to different functions are made and, specifically,
the lack of transparency and insufficient regulation of the procedures
for such appointments, which are a matter of particular concern
in connection with the appointments of members of the Monitoring Committee
and the Rules Committee, as well as the appointments of rapporteurs
in general. A similar lack of transparency and safeguards against
abuses was observed with regard to the voting processes in the committees,
which may affect the voting results and open the door to the possibility
of the exertion of improper influence. The IBAC accordingly invites
the Assembly:
- to establish
mechanisms which will ensure that the decision-making processes
on appointments in the Assembly’s various committees and other bodies,
notably in the Monitoring Committee and the Rules Committee, are
transparent and sufficiently regulated;
- to ensure that transparent and sufficiently regulated
procedures for the appointment of rapporteurs are put in place;
- to ensure that the principles related to the concept of
“conflict of interest” are made clearer to rapporteurs;
- to emphasise the rapporteurs’ duty to make the necessary
declarations of the absence of any such conflict, and to ensure
that a robust and consistent approach is applied to monitor the
observance of these declarations, both at the time when the declaration
is made and at any time during a rapporteur’s term of office. In
particular, procedures should be put in place to allow for arguable
allegations of a conflict of interest on the part of a rapporteur,
or other forms of inappropriate conduct or breaches of ethical standards,
to be investigated and, where appropriate, sanctioned;
- to consider introducing a fully transparent voting system
in the committees, based on the one existing in the Assembly’s plenary
sittings, subject to ensuring that adequate safeguards against abuse
are put in place;
- to put in place relevant procedures to allow for a clear
identification of those who have the right to vote in a committee
and to safeguard against deliberate attempts to falsify the vote.
Any attempt to falsify a vote must be investigated and met with
appropriate sanctions;
- to take steps to ensure that improper pressure, including
pressure from governments, is not brought to bear on the free and
independent voting of MPs.
18. As regards the
conduct of MPs in
the context of missions undertaken on behalf of the Assembly,
the IBAC recommends putting in place clear rules and procedures
and ensuring that those rules and procedures are made known to every
MP taking part in such missions. These procedures should in particular
regulate:
- participation in
meetings (including the reporting protocols for cases where private
meetings are held with the authorities);
- compliance with the agreed programme for a visit;
- conduct in the context of an offer of hospitality by the
local authorities;
- the respective roles of the Assembly secretariat and MPs
in the mechanisms for reporting on missions.
Failure to comply with the procedures regulating appropriate
conduct in the context of missions should be investigated and met
with appropriate sanctions.
19. As regards the Assembly’s
election observation missions, the
IBAC proposes strengthening the Guidelines on the observation of
elections and including them in the ethical framework. It further
emphasises that:
- the Assembly
should in principle refrain from deploying election observation
missions if the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
(ODIHR) decides for valid reasons not to deploy its own;
- for the same reasons, the heads of the Assembly’s election
observation missions should use every endeavour to reach a common
position with ODIHR and the other members of the International Election Observation
Mission in any statements made on election observation.
20. As regards gifts and different
forms of benefits, the Investigation Body “has not found
that the receipt of gifts and benefits has played a prominent role
in the PACE activities concerning Azerbaijan or that it has been shown
to have affected the requirements of neutrality in the work of the
PACE MPs, in particular the rapporteurs”. Nevertheless the Investigation
Body “notes with concern that only a few declarations of gifts have been
made so far in PACE” and that, in accordance with the principle
of transparency, “there is a need for diligent observance by MPs
of the rules on declarations of gifts and interests as envisaged
under the relevant PACE ethical framework”.
2.3. Findings
on the individual behaviour of Assembly members
21. The Investigation Body “established
the facts concerning two principal forms of the use of financial means
to influence PACE’s work concerning Azerbaijan. The first concerned
the remunerated lobbying activities performed by a number of former
PACE MPs. The second concerned the actual use of money and other
corruptive activities as a means of influencing various activities
which were directly or indirectly seen as being in favour of Azerbaijan”.
With regard to the performance of lobbying activities in the Assembly,
the Investigation Body found that a number of former members of
the Assembly who had performed such activities had acted contrary
to the Assembly’s Code of Conduct. As to the corruptive activities
in favour of Azerbaijan, the Investigation Body established that
there was a strong suspicion that certain current and former members of
the Assembly had engaged in activity of a corruptive nature.
22. The Investigation Body found that the following current and
former members of the Assembly had violated certain provisions of
the Code of Conduct for rapporteurs of the Assembly and/or the Assembly’s
Code of Conduct (paragraphs 748, 749, 750 and 752 of the report),
namely:
- as regards serving members of the Parliamentary
Assembly (in alphabetical order):
- Mr Pedro
Agramunt (Spain, EPP/CD)
- Mr Cezar Florin Preda (Romania, EPP/CD)
- Mr Stefan Schennach (Austria, SOC)
- Mr Samad Seyidov (Azerbaijan, EC)
- Mr Jordi Xuclà (Spain, ALDE)
- as regards former members of
the Parliamentary Assembly (in alphabetical order):
- Mr Agustín Conde
- Mr Alain Destexhe
- Mr Tadeusz Iwinski
- Ms Karin Strenz
- Mr Robert Walter.
23. As regards the use of financial means and corruptive activities
in influencing the Assembly’s work concerning Azerbaijan, the Investigation
Body has found that the following former Assembly members performed
lobbying activities in the Assembly in breach of the Assembly’s
Code of Conduct:
- M. Eduard
Lintner
- M. Stef Goris
- M. Jaakko Laakso
- Mme Karin S. Woldseth
- M. Göran Lindblad.
And it concludes that: “There are substantial grounds to believe
that Mr Luca Volontè, Mr Elkhan Suleymanov and Mr Muslum Mammadov
engaged in activity of a corruptive nature and that Mr Volontè and
Mr Suleymanov seriously breached paragraph 12 of the PACE Code of
Conduct. There is a strong suspicion that Mr Pedro Agramunt was
party to activity of a corruptive nature” (paragraph 756).
24. Lastly, the Investigation Body
compiled a list of the members and honorary members of the Assembly who
were summoned but who failed or declined to appear before the Investigation
Body:
- as regards serving members of the Assembly:
- Mr Pedro Agramunt (Spain, EPP/CD)
- Mr Cezar Florin Preda (Romania, EPP/CD)
- as regards former members of
the Assembly:
- Mr Elkhan Suleymanov
- Mr Muslum Mammadov
- Mr Luca Volontè
- Mr Andeas Gross
- Mr Michael Hancock.
Some former members of the Assembly were summoned to give
evidence before the Investigation Body and declined to appear but
provided written statements:
- Mr Agustín
Conde
- Mr Eduard Lintner
- Ms Karin Strenz
- Ms Karin Woldseth.
Lastly, other current or former members were not summoned
but failed to comply with the IBAC’s requests for the submission
of written statements:
- as regards serving members of the Assembly:
- Mr Tiny Kox (Netherlands, UEL)
- Ms Ria Oomen-Ruijten (Netherlands, EPP/CD)
- Mr Ondřej Benešik (Czech Republic, EPP/CD)
- as regards former members of
the Assembly:
- Ms Gultakin Hajibayli
- Mr Zmago Jelinčič Plemeniti
- Mr Jaakko Laakso.
3. Thoughts
of the Rules Committee
25. At its meeting on 22 April
2018, the Bureau of the Assembly took note of the Investigation
Body’s report and, in response, decided to:
- invite the current and former members of the Assembly
whose behaviour had been found by the investigation body as unethical
or in violation of the Assembly’s Code of Conduct, or who had refused
to co-operate with the Investigation Body, to suspend all their
activities within the Assembly with immediate effect;
- invite the Rules Committee to consider further possible
actions;
- invite the Rules Committee to ensure proper follow-up
to the recommendations for the Assembly’s ethical framework made
in the report.
26. At its previous meeting on 15 March 2018, the Bureau had,
as a preliminary measure, decided “to invite the members of the
Assembly whose behaviour has been found by the investigation body
as unethical or in violation of the Assembly’s Code of Conduct,
or who have refused to co-operate with the investigation body, to suspend
all their activities within the Assembly with immediate effect”.
27. As part of the follow-up to the IBAC report, it is essential
for the Rules Committee to first of all define its framework for
action. To this end, a distinction must be made between, on the
one hand, the Investigation Body’s recommendations relating to the
functioning of the Assembly, current procedures, the decision-making mechanism
and, in general, its integrity framework (see Section 2.2 above),
and, on the other, the conclusions which call into question, at
an individual level, the actions of certain members or former members
of the Assembly who have violated the Assembly’s ethical rules and
principles (see Section 2.3 above).
3.1. The
committee’s proposed response to the recommendations on the general
functioning of the Assembly and on improving its integrity framework
28. The IBAC report acknowledges
the Assembly’s efforts to improve its integrity framework and consequently
makes a rather positive assessment. Some of the recommendations
made – drawing up a set of criteria on immunities, strengthening
the guidelines on election observation – are currently being considered by
the Assembly. Other recommendations relate more to clarifying certain
existing regulatory provisions (the concept of rapporteurs’ “conflict
of interest”; scrutiny of rapporteurs’ declarations of interest;
assessing the seriousness of a violation of the ethical rules and
principles), “logistical” implementation of integrity measures (reception
and processing of information on allegations of corruption; drawing
up guidelines on the conduct of missions) but in no cases do these
require a modification of the Rules of Procedure.
29. In contrast, the Rules Committee should continue its deliberations,
if appropriate in the report under preparation on “Modification
of various provisions of the Rules of Procedure”, concerning a number
of the IBAC’s recommendations, and in particular:
- procedures governing the appointment
of members of the Monitoring Committee and the Rules Committee;
- the procedures for appointing rapporteurs;
- voting procedures in committee;
These deliberations could result in a modification of the
procedures currently in force.
30. Moreover, the committee considers
that the framework for preventing corruption and fraud should be strengthened,
and that there is a need for a better protection of whistle-blowers
in this context. It shall be recalled that, within the Council of
Europe, not only staff of the Council of Europe Secretariat, including
the Assembly secretariat, shall be covered, from the point of view
of whistle-blowing, but this protection shall also apply to “persons
who are not Council of Europe Secretariat members who participate
in the Council of Europe’s activities, wherever they may be held.
These include, but are not limited to, judges of the European Court
of Human Rights, the Commissioner for Human Rights, members of the
Parliamentary Assembly and the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities
of the Council of Europe, members of Permanent Representations, trainees,
experts, consultants, and employees of outside companies”, pursuant
to Rule No. 1327 of the Secretary General of the Council of Europe
of 10 January 2011 on awareness and prevention of fraud and corruption.
Rule
No. 1327 requires staff and the above-mentioned persons to report
suspected fraud and corruption.
3.2. The
committee’s proposed response to the conclusions on the actions
of certain members or former members of the Assembly in violation
of the Assembly’s integrity framework
31. The Rules Committee was asked
by the Bureau to consider “further possible actions” relating to Assembly
members whose behaviour was deemed by the Investigation Body to
be contrary to the Assembly’s ethos or in violation of the Assembly’s
Code of Conduct, or who had refused to co-operate with the Investigation Body.
32. It should be recalled that when the Assembly revised its Code
of Conduct for members in October 2017, it set up a means of monitoring
implementation of this code, making provision for an impartial examination
of the alleged breaches of ethical rules and principles, offering
the Assembly members in question the necessary procedural guarantees:
- an adversarial procedure (enabling
the person in question to become aware of and comment on the observations
put forward and the evidence adduced, at all stages);
- equality of arms (granting each party a reasonable opportunity
to have his or her case heard in conditions which do not place him
or her at a disadvantage vis-à-vis the other party).
33. It is therefore proposed to implement this procedure forthwith,
as the committee has the authority to initiate an investigation
of its own motion (paragraph 20 of the Code of Conduct), bearing
in mind that some of the Assembly members concerned have already
suspended their activities, as requested by the Bureau, pending
a decision by the Rules Committee.
34. Pursuant to paragraph 21 of the Code of Conduct, the committee
may examine cases relating to serving members of the Assembly who:
- have violated certain provisions
of the Code of Conduct for Assembly rapporteurs and/or the Code
of Conduct for members of the Parliamentary Assembly, namely Mr Pedro
Agramunt, Mr Cezar Florin Preda, Mr Stefan Schennach, Mr Samad Seyidov
and Mr Jordi Xuclà;
- have failed to comply with their duty to co-operate with
the Investigation Body by not responding to the summons to appear
addressed to them, namely Mr Pedro
Agramunt and Mr Cezar Florin Preda.
35. With regard to the former members
of the Assembly, the sanctions provided for in paragraph
16 of the Code of Conduct for members of the Assembly (“Former members
of the Parliamentary Assembly involved in representing and fostering
another person’s or entity's interests in the Parliamentary Assembly
shall not, throughout the period of such activity, benefit from
the prerogatives of the honorary associates or the Honorary President
of the Parliamentary Assembly as far as the distribution of documents
and access to the buildings and meeting
rooms are concerned”) should be applied.
36. Consequently, the committee should examine the cases of the
following former members (in alphabetical order) and ascertain whether
they have breached the provisions of paragraph 16 of the Code of Conduct:
Mr Agustín Conde, Mr Alain Destexhe, Mr Stef Goris, Mr Michael Hancock,
Mr Tadeusz Iwinski, Mr Jaakko Laakso, Mr Goran Lindblad, Mr Eduard
Lintner, Mr Muslum Mammadov, Ms Karin Strenz, Mr Elkhan Suleymanov,
Mr Luca Volontè, Mr Robert Walter and Ms Karin Woldseth. If such
is the case, they will no longer be allowed access to the buildings
of the Council of Europe.
37. For those who have the title of honorary associate with the
Assembly, namely Mr Agustín Conde, Mr Stef Goris, Mr Michael Hancock,
Mr Jaakko Laakso, Mr Goran Lindblad, Mr Eduard Lintner, Mr Luca
Volontè, Mr Robert Walter and Ms Karin Woldseth, it will be necessary
to verify, in the light of the declarations on honour they have
submitted to the Assembly secretariat, whether paragraph 3 of the
Special rules on honorary association with the Parliamentary Assembly
should apply (“When awarded the title of honorary associate, the former
member of the Assembly shall sign a sworn declaration stating that
he or she is not involved in representing or fostering another person’s
or entity’s interests in the Assembly. The former member shall be stripped of the title if
he or she failed to declare any relevant interests or made an untruthful
declaration”). Decisions concerning them will be taken later, in
due course.