Stockholm programme laid out to MEPs

Published: 2 October 2009 y., Friday

Temidė
The initial scope of an ambitious programme of police, customs, asylum and visa cooperation between the EU's 27 countries was laid out in the Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee Wednesday. This “Stockholm programme” is the initiative of the Swedish presidency as current legal and political agreements in this field are drawing to a close.

The aim is to put citizens at the heart of the project with special emphasis being placed on rights, security and solidarity between countries.

As well as covering ways in which police forces from different countries can work together to tackle crime, the Stockholm programme will also look at Europe's asylum policy. In what could be one of the most contentious issues the programme aims to build consensus on a common approach among the 27 EU members on how to deal with migration and migrants when they arrive.

Negotiations are at an early stage and several of Parliament's committees will be involved in the drafting of a parliamentary resolution on the programme, which is expected to be debated by all MEPs in November.

Meetings will be held with national MPs on 16 November. EU leaders will consider a proposal at a summit in December.


 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Florida school meeting turns violent

A gunman opens fire at a Florida school board meeting, then kills himself. more »

Customs: New security rules enter fully into force on 1 January 2011

From 1 January 2011, traders will have to make an electronic declaration to Customs with security data on goods before they leave or enter the European Union. more »

Children released after nursery siege

A youth armed with two swords is arrested after holding several children hostage at a nursery school in eastern France. more »

Police say Sweden blasts are terror crimes

Swedish authorities say Saturday's two explosions in Stockholm were terror crimes, while local media reports one blast was caused by a suicide bomber. more »

Investigation of Russia crash begins

Investigators have begun examining the wreckage of the crash that injured 90 and killed 2 people after takeoff near Moscow. more »

Blaze rips through Shanghai tower

Fire tears through a Shanghai high-rise apartment building, killing at least 8 people and injuring scores. more »

Child pornography: MEPs doubt effectiveness of blocking web access

Blocking access to web sites containing child pornography may not be entirely effective, and could be hard to do EU-wide, due to EU Member States' differing sensitivities and traditions, said Civil Liberties Committee MEPs on Monday, in a preliminary debate on a proposed EU directive on sexual abuse of children and child pornography. more »

The vote on legalized marijuana

Californians are casting ballots on a proposition to legalize limited use of marijuana. more »

Mexico's biggest-ever drug bust

Heavily armed soliders raid houses in Tijuana confiscating 134 tonnes of marijuana valued at 340 million dollars. more »

Dramatic calls in London 7/7 inquest

An inquest into the London 7/7 bombings hears how emergency services struggled to cope with the chaos sparked by the bomb attacks. more »