Cian C. Murphy,
The Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London
The slow strangulation of the
transnational public sphere continues. The publication last month of a draft EU Directive on Combating
Terrorism is the
Union’s initial (legislative) response to recent murders by Islamic State
fighters in Europe and elsewhere. The draft Directive will recast the Framework Decision on Combating
Terrorism, first
adopted in 2002 and amended in 2008, and will further broaden the impact of
EU law in national criminal law as regards terrorism.
The Directive may be of more
significance in terms of constitutional law in this field than criminal law. The
majority of the Directive’s content can already be found in the Framework
Decision (as amended) and, as such, will not require much by way of
transposition by those Member States that have been fastidious in their
transposition of the Framework Decision (although such Member States may be
fewer than one would expect).
The draft Directive does have certain rule
of law strengths. As a measure to be adopted upon the legal bases of Article
83(1) and Article 82(2) TFEU it will enjoy the full enforcement mechanisms and
procedures that the European Commission and the Court of Justice of the EU can
bring to bear. This is in contrast to the Framework Decision which, as a
(former) third pillar measure, did not (at first) benefit from the application
of these enforcement mechanisms. The extent to which these rule of law
strengths are virtuous might, however, be open to discussion. The content of the
Directive is rather broad and it is not absolutely clear what faithful
transposition of some measures would entail.
Nevertheless, for those Member States to
whom the adopted Directive applies, there will be the prospect of enforcement
in the case of tardy or inaccurate transposition. It remains to be seen as to which
Member States the adopted Directive will apply. The list will not include
Denmark, which does not participate in these measures, but it may include
Ireland or the United Kingdom. Either Member State may elect to participate in
the measure – either before or after its adoption. The United Kingdom’s opt-out
from former third pillar measures (discussed here) included an opt-out from the Framework Decision
on Combating Terrorism – a somewhat absurd decision given the emphasis the UK
places on action in this field (at national, EU, and international levels).
Even if none of the three Member States
participate in the Directive, two of them (Ireland and Denmark) will continue to be bound by the Framework
Decision. Because the majority of the two texts are identical there may not be
much variance in the ‘variable geometry’ in this field – although the different
powers of enforcement for the European Commission and Court of Justice merit
restatement. The example of the Framework Decision and Directive demonstrate
how increasingly complex this field of EU law is at a constitutional level – a
complexity that is not helpful from either the point of view of operational
effectiveness or the protection of civil liberties.
Insofar as there is new content in the
Directive it largely derives from recent ‘international standards’ in the field
of counter-terrorism finance and travel by ‘foreign terrorist fighters’. Chief
amongst these standards is UN Security Council resolution 2178 – adopted in 2014 to address the threat
from Islamic State – and much of the resolution is to be found in the
Directive. (See also the recent Council of Europe Protocol on this issue) Key amongst these initiatives are Articles 9 and 10, which require
Member States to create offences of travelling abroad for terrorism and of
organising or facilitating such travel. Member States must ‘take the necessary
measures’ to punish such action ‘as a criminal offence when committed
intentionally’. Article 8 provides a new offence – to receive training for
terrorism – that aims to capture those individuals that may ‘self-radicalise’
and train themselves using materials available on the internet or elsewhere.
The draft Directive also contains some
language of interest to victims of terrorism. Article 22 provides for the
protection of, and provision of assistance to, victims of terrorism. Of
particular note is the requirement to provide ‘emotional and psychological
support, such as trauma support and counselling’. It is unclear how Member
States are to ensure that the services are ‘confidential, free of charge, and easily
accessible to all victims of terrorism’. This clause would appear to include
what could be quite a significant commitment of resources for Member States’
mental health services – one that is entirely commendable but the funding of
which may prove a challenge.
A further point of note is that the
structure of certain clauses in the Directive, for example setting out the definition
of terrorism, have been subject to alteration in comparison with the Framework
Decision. It is not clear, however, that anything turns on these syntax
changes. Indeed, it seems unlikely that Member States which have already spent
legislative time on the implementation of the Framework Decision would now look
to revise their national measures merely to update the language of the
definition (if, indeed, nothing does turn on the differences).
Certain substantive discrepancies do
exist between the Framework Decision and the draft Directive. One example is
Article 1(2) of the Framework Decision. The Article provides that the Framework
Decision does ‘not have the effect of altering the obligation to respect
fundamental rights and fundamental legal principles as enshrined in Article 6
of the Treaty on European Union’. In terms of the application of the law this
clause was always redundant – legislation cannot alter a Treaty rule. However,
it is easy to read the omission of the clause from the draft Directive as a
shift in emphasis – and the failure to address the admission in the proposal
document makes this criticism easier to make.
Taken as a whole, the Directive continues
the ongoing restriction of various mobilities – of finance, information, and
people – in the name of counter-terrorism. This restriction has been the
hallmark of international efforts since 11 September 2001. There is an
inevitable risk for critiques of such action: on the one hand it appears to be
restrictive of civil liberties across Europe and on the other hand its
operational usefulness is unclear. Can such a law be both draconian and
ineffective? Undoubtedly. As with any EU measure the proof will be in the
transposition and implementation.
Update, March 2016: the Council agreed its position on this Directive, which must now be negotiated with the European Parliament. For the text of this position, see here.
Update, March 2016: the Council agreed its position on this Directive, which must now be negotiated with the European Parliament. For the text of this position, see here.
Barnard &
Peers: chapter 25
JHA4: chapter
II:5
Photo: 9/11 memorial, New York City
Photo credit:
www.theblaze.com
No comments:
Post a Comment