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Venice Commish: 15 years of const. expertise from Romania to Iraq
July 07, 2005 18:07:39
Venice Commission: 15 years of constitutional expertise from Romania to Iraq
Strasbourg, 07.07.2005 - Addressing the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, on the occasion of the 15th anniversary of the European Commission for Democracy through Law, better known as the Venice Commission, the Commission's President Antonio La Pergola declared:
"Our role, and along with it our work-load are steadily increasing. One of the principal reasons for this development [...] is that the Venice Commission has always tried, [...] to engage in matters of immediate relevance to the countries concerned, and that it has thus made all the contribution it could to implement within the member states the shared and cherished values of which the Council of Europe is the guardian", adding that "in the new democracies basic questions of constitutional law remain crucial for the democratic stabilisation of these countries".
Most recently, the Commission reached an agreement with the Armenian authorities on constitutional reform that should contribute to the country's democratisation and might pave the way for the return of the opposition to parliament.
Mr La Pergola also informed the Committee of Ministers about ongoing work notably in Kyrgyzstan and Iraq: "Upon the invitation of the German Friedrich Naumann Stiftung we participated in a seminar on constitution-making with members of the Constituent Assembly of Iraq in Amman. A follow-up seminar on federalism will take place in Germany in mid-July. We sincerely hope that these activities, which are entirely funded by the German foundation, will contribute to the emergence of a peaceful, stable and democratic Iraq".
In 15 years of activity, the Venice Commission has played a key role in promoting European constitutional heritage and bringing constitutional texts in Central and Eastern European countries into line with the fundamental norms of modern democracies. Romania was the first country to request the cooperation of the Commission in 1990. Since then, nearly all the new European democracies, together with other countries such as South Africa, have benefited from its expertise. The Venice Commission is also active in the fields of elections and constitutional justice.
A consultative body of the Council of Europe composed of independent experts in the field of democracy and constitutional law, the Venice Commission currently has 48 member states(*).
For more information, see www.venice.coe.int
------------------- (*) Argentina, Canada, Korea, the United States, Japan, Kazakhstan, Mexico, the Holy See and Uruguay have observer status, Belarus has associated member state status, and South Africa has a special cooperation status. The European Commission and OSCE/ODIHR also work with the Commission.
Press Release Council of Europe Press Division Ref: 384a05 Tel: +33 (0)3 88 41 25 60 Fax:+33 (0)3 88 41 39 11 pressunit@coe.int internet: www.coe.int/press
To receive our press releases by e-mail, contact : Council.of.Europe.Press@coe.int
A political organisation set up in 1949, the Council of Europe works to promote democracy and human rights continent-wide. It also develops common responses to social, cultural and legal challenges in its 46 member states.
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