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Council of Europe

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Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox Geopolitical organization

The Council of Europe (CoE; Template:Langx, CdE) is an international organisation with the goal of upholding human rights, democracy and the rule of law in Europe.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Founded in 1949, it is Europe's oldest intergovernmental organisation, representing 46 member states<ref name=MemberStates/> from Europe,Template:Efn with a population of approximately 675 million Template:As of; it operates with an annual ordinary budget of approximately 500 million euros.<ref>Council of Europe, Budget, Retrieved: 21 April 2016</ref>

The organisation is distinct from the European Union (EU), although people sometimes confuse the two organisations – partly because the EU has adopted the original European flag, designed for the Council of Europe in 1955,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> as well as the European anthem.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> No country has ever joined the EU without first belonging to the Council of Europe.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Council of Europe is an official United Nations observer.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Unlike the EU, the Council of Europe cannot make binding laws; however, the council has produced a number of international treaties, including the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (European Convention on Human Rights, ECHR) of 1953. Provisions from the convention are incorporated in domestic law in many participating countries.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The best-known body of the Council of Europe is the European Court of Human Rights, which rules on alleged violations of the ECHR.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The council's two statutory bodies are the Committee of Ministers, which comprises the foreign ministers of each member state, and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), which is composed of members of the national parliaments of each member state.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Commissioner for Human Rights is an institution within the Council of Europe, mandated to promote awareness of and respect for human rights within the member states. The secretary general presides over the secretariat of the organisation. Other major CoE bodies include the European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines & HealthCare (EDQM)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the European Audiovisual Observatory.

The headquarters of the Council of Europe, as well as its Court of Human Rights, are situated in Strasbourg, France. The Council uses English and French as its two official languages. The Committee of Ministers, the PACE, and the Congress of the Council of Europe also use German and Italian for some of their work.<ref>Template:Cite web </ref>

File:Council of Europe (orthographic projection).svg
Member states of the Council of Europe. In addition, the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) applies in Kosovo as a result of domestic incorporation of the ECHR.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

History

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File:Palais Universitaire de Strasbourg-10 août 1949.jpg
Plaque commemorating the first session of the Council of Europe Assembly at Strasbourg University

Founding

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In a speech in 1929, French Foreign Minister Aristide Briand floated the idea of an organisation which would gather European nations together in a "federal union" to resolve common problems.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The United Kingdom's wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill first publicly suggested the creation of a "Council of Europe" in a BBC radio broadcast on 21 March 1943,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> while the Second World War was still raging. In his own words,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> he tried to "peer through the mists of the future to the end of the war", and think about how to rebuild and maintain peace on a shattered continent. Given that Europe had been at the origin of two world wars, the creation of such a body would be, he suggested, "a stupendous business". He returned to the idea during a well-known speech at the University of Zurich on 19 September 1946,<ref name="COE_Churchill">Template:Cite web, including audio extracts</ref><ref name="ENA_Churchill">Template:Cite web Including full transcript</ref> throwing the full weight of his considerable post-war prestige behind it.

Additionally, there were also many other statesmen and politicians across the continent, many of them members of the European Movement, who were quietly working towards the creation of the council. Some regarded it as a guarantee that the horrors of war – or the human rights violations of the Nazi regime – could never again be visited on the continent, others came to see it as a "club of democracies", built around a set of common values that could stand as a bulwark against totalitarian states belonging to the Eastern Bloc. Others again saw it as a nascent "United States of Europe", the resonant phrase that Churchill had reached for at Zurich in 1946.

File:Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F023908-0002, Straßburg, Tagung des Europarates.jpg
Session of the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly in the former House of Europe in Strasbourg in 1967. Willy Brandt, German Minister for Foreign Affairs, is speaking.

The future structure of the Council of Europe was discussed at the Congress of Europe, which brought together several hundred leading politicians, government representatives and members of civil society in The Hague, Netherlands, in 1948.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite web</ref> Responding to the conclusions of the Congress of Europe, the Consultative Council of the Treaty of Brussels convened a Committee for the Study of European Unity, which met eight times from November 1948 to January 1949 to draw up the blueprint of a new broad-based European organisation.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

There were two competing schools of thought: some favoured a classical international organisation with representatives of governments, while others preferred a political forum with parliamentarians. Both approaches were finally combined through the creation of a Committee of Ministers (in which governments were represented) and a Consultative Assembly (in which parliaments were represented), the two main bodies mentioned in the Statute of the Council of Europe. This dual intergovernmental and inter-parliamentary structure was later copied for the European Communities, NATO and OSCE.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Council of Europe was signed into existence on 5 May 1949 by the Treaty of London, the organisation's founding Statute which set out the three basic values that should guide its work: democracy, human rights and the rule of law.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It was signed in London on that day by ten states: Belgium, Denmark, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom, though Turkey and Greece joined three months later. On 10 August 1949, 100 members of the council's Consultative Assembly, parliamentarians drawn from the twelve member nations, met in Strasbourg for its first plenary session, held over 18 sittings and lasting nearly a month. They debated how to reconcile and reconstruct a continent still reeling from war, yet already facing a new East–West divide, launched the radical concept of a trans-national court to protect the basic human rights of every citizen, and took the first steps in a process that would eventually lead to the creation of an offshoot organisation, the European Union.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In August 1949, Paul-Henri Spaak resigned as Belgium's foreign minister in order to be elected as the first president of the assembly. Behind the scenes, he too had been quietly working towards the creation of the council, and played a key role in steering its early work. However, in December 1951, after nearly three years in the role, Spaak resigned in disappointment after the Assembly rejected proposals for a "European political authority".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Convinced that the Council of Europe was never going to be in a position to achieve his long-term goal of a unified Europe,<ref>Sandro Guerrieri, "From the Hague Congress to the Council of Europe: hopes, achievements and disappointments in the parliamentary way to European integration (1948–51)." Parliaments, Estates and Representation 34#2 (2014): 216–227.</ref> he soon tried again in a new and more promising format, based this time on economic integration, becoming one of the founders of the European Union.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Early years

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There was huge enthusiasm for the Council of Europe in its early years, as its pioneers set about drafting what was to become the European Convention on Human Rights, a charter of individual rights which – it was hoped – no member government could ever again violate. They drew, in part, on the tenets of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, signed only a few months earlier in Paris. But crucially, where the Universal Declaration was essentially aspirational, the European Convention from the beginning featured an enforcement mechanism – an international Court – which was to adjudicate on alleged violations of its articles and to hold governments to account, a dramatic leap forward for international justice. Today, this is the European Court of Human Rights, whose rulings are binding on 46 European nations, the most far-reaching system of international justice anywhere in the world.

One of the council's first acts was to welcome West Germany into its fold on 2 May 1951,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> setting a pattern of post-war reconciliation that was to become a hallmark of the council, and beginning a long process of "enlargement" which was to see the organisation grow from its original ten founding member states to the 46 nations that make up the Council of Europe today.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Iceland had already joined in 1950, followed in 1956 by Austria, Cyprus in 1961, Switzerland in 1963 and Malta in 1965.

Historic speeches at the Council of Europe

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File:Churchill Tha Hague 1948.jpg
Winston Churchill's inaugural speech of the Council of Europe in The Hague

In 2018, an archive of all speeches made to the PACE by heads of state or government since the Council of Europe's creation in 1949 appeared online, the fruit of a two-year project entitled "Voices of Europe".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> At the time of its launch,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> the archive comprised 263 speeches delivered over a 70-year period by some 216 presidents, prime ministers, monarchs and religious leaders from 45 countries – though it continues to expand, as new speeches are added every few months.

Some very early speeches by individuals considered to be "founding figures" of the European institutions, even if they were not heads of state or government at the time, are also included (such as Sir Winston Churchill or Robert Schuman). Addresses by eight monarchs appear in the list (such as King Juan Carlos I of Spain, King Albert II of Belgium and Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg) as well as the speeches given by religious figures (such as Pope John Paul II, and Pope Francis) and several leaders from countries in the Middle East and North Africa (such as Shimon Peres, Yasser Arafat, Hosni Mubarak, Léopold Sédar Senghor or King Hussein of Jordan).

The full text of the speeches is given in both English and French, regardless of the original language used. The archive is searchable by country, by name, and chronologically.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Aims and achievement

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Article 1(a) of the Statute states that "The aim of the Council of Europe is to achieve a greater unity between its members for the purpose of safeguarding and realising the ideals and principles which are their common heritage and facilitating their economic and social progress."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Membership is open to all European states who seek harmony, cooperation, good governance and human rights, accepting the principle of the rule of law and are able and willing to guarantee democracy, fundamental human rights and freedoms.

Whereas the member states of the European Union transfer part of their national legislative and executive powers to the European Commission and the European Parliament, Council of Europe member states maintain their sovereignty but commit themselves through conventions/treaties (international law) and co-operate on the basis of common values and common political decisions. Those conventions and decisions are developed by the member states working together at the Council of Europe. Both organisations function as concentric circles around the common foundations for European cooperation and harmony, with the Council of Europe being the geographically wider circle. The European Union could be seen as the smaller circle with a much higher level of integration through the transfer of powers from the national to the EU level. "The Council of Europe and the European Union: different roles, shared values."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Council of Europe conventions/treaties are also open for signature to non-member states, thus facilitating equal co-operation with countries outside Europe.

The Council of Europe's most famous achievement is the European Convention on Human Rights, which was adopted in 1950 following a report by the PACE, and followed on from the United Nations 'Universal Declaration of Human Rights' (UDHR).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Convention created the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. The Court supervises compliance with the European Convention on Human Rights and thus functions as the highest European court. It is to this court that Europeans can bring cases if they believe that a member country has violated their fundamental rights and freedoms.

The various activities and achievements of the Council of Europe can be found in detail on its official website. The Council of Europe works in the following areas:

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  • Support for intercultural integration through the Intercultural Cities (ICC) program. This program offers information and advice for local authorities on the integration of minorities and the prevention of discrimination.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Institutions

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Template:Politics of the Council of Europe The institutions of the Council of Europe are:

File:Plenary chamber of the Council of Europe's Palace of Europe 2014 01.JPG
Council's Parliamentary Assembly hemicycle
  • The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), which comprises national parliamentarians from all member states.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Adopting resolutions and recommendations to governments, the Assembly holds a dialogue with its governmental counterpart, the Committee of Ministers, and is often regarded as the "motor" of the organisation. The national parliamentary delegations to the Assembly must reflect the political spectrum of their national parliament, i.e. comprise government and opposition parties. The Assembly appoints members as rapporteurs with the mandate to prepare parliamentary reports on specific subjects. The British MP Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe was rapporteur for the drafting of the European Convention on Human Rights.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Dick Marty's reports on secret CIA detentions and rendition flights in Europe became quite famous in 2006 and 2007. Other Assembly reports were instrumental in, for example, the abolition of the death penalty in Europe, highlighting the political and human rights situation in Chechnya, identifying who was responsible for disappeared persons in Belarus, chronicling threats to freedom of expression in the media and many other subjects.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • The Congress of Local and Regional Authorities, which was created in 1994 and comprises political representatives from local and regional authorities in all member states. The most influential instruments of the Council of Europe in this field are the European Charter of Local Self-Government of 1985 and the European Outline Convention on Transfrontier Co-operation between Territorial Communities or Authorities of 1980.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • The European Court of Human Rights, created under the European Convention on Human Rights of 1950, is composed of a judge from each member state elected for a single, non-renewable term of nine years by the PACE and is headed by the elected president of the court.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The current president of the court is Guido Raimondi from Italy. Under the recent Protocol No. 14 to the European Convention on Human Rights, the Court's case processing was reformed and streamlined. Ratification of Protocol No. 14 was delayed by Russia for a number of years, but won support to be passed in January 2010.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • The Commissioner for Human Rights is elected by the PACE for a non-renewable term of six years since the creation of this position in 1999. Since April 2024, this position has been held by Michael O'Flaherty from Ireland.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • The Conference of INGOs.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> NGOs can participate in the INGOs Conference of the Council of Europe. Since the [Resolution (2003)8] adopted by the Committee of Ministers on 19 November 2003, they are given a "participatory status".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • The Joint Council on Youth of the Council of Europe.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The European Steering Committee (CDEJ) on Youth and the Advisory Council on Youth (CCJ) of the Council of Europe form together the Joint Council on Youth (CMJ). The CDEJ brings together representatives of ministries or bodies responsible for youth matters from the 50 States Parties to the European Cultural Convention. The CDEJ fosters cooperation between governments in the youth sector and provides a framework for comparing national youth policies, exchanging best practices and drafting standard-setting texts.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Advisory Council on Youth comprises 30 representatives of non-governmental youth organisations and networks. It provides opinions and input from youth NGOs on all youth sector activities and ensures that young people are involved in the council's other activities.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • Information Offices of the Council of Europe in many member states.
File:EU-FR-AL-67@Strasbourg-Pharmacopée européenne 01.jpg
European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines

Partial Agreements

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The CoE system also includes a number of semi-autonomous structures known as "Partial Agreements", some of which are also open to non-member states:

Summits

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Occasionally the Council of Europe organizes summits of the heads of state and government of its member states. Four summits have been held to date with the fourth concluding on 17 May 2023.<ref name=abc20230516>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Overview of Council of Europe summits
Date Host country Host city
8–9 October 1993 Template:AUT Vienna
10–11 October 1997 Template:FRA Strasbourg
16–17 May 2005 Template:POL Warsaw
16–17 May 2023 Template:ISL Reykjavík

Headquarters and buildings

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File:Council of Europe Palais de l'Europe aerial view.JPG
Aerial shot of the Palace of Europe in Strasbourg
File:Council of Europe Agora building in Strasbourg.JPG
Council of Europe's Agora building

The seat of the Council of Europe is in Strasbourg, France. First meetings were held in Strasbourg's University Palace in 1949,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> but the Council of Europe soon moved into its own buildings. The Council of Europe's eight main buildings are situated in the Quartier européen, an area in the northeast of Strasbourg spread over the three districts of Le Wacken, La Robertsau and Quartier de l'Orangerie, where are also located the four buildings of the seat of the European Parliament in Strasbourg, the Arte headquarters and the seat of the International Institute of Human Rights.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Building in the area started in 1949 with the predecessor of the Template:Lang, the House of Europe (demolished in 1977), and came to a provisional end in 2007 with the opening of the New General Office Building, later named "Agora", in 2008.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref> The Template:Lang (Palace of Europe) and the Art Nouveau Villa Schutzenberger (seat of the European Audiovisual Observatory) are in the Orangerie district, and the European Court of Human Rights, the EDQM and the Agora Building are in the Robertsau district. The Agora building has been voted "best international business centre real estate project of 2007" on 13 March 2008, at the MIPIM 2008.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref> The European Youth Centre is located in the Wacken district.

Besides its headquarters in Strasbourg, the Council of Europe is also present in other cities and countries. The Council of Europe Development Bank has its seat in Paris, the North-South Centre of the Council of Europe is established in Lisbon, Portugal, and the Centre for Modern Languages is in Graz, Austria. There are European Youth Centres in Budapest, Hungary, and in Strasbourg. The European Wergeland Centre, a new Resource Centre on education for intercultural dialogue, human rights and democratic citizenship, operated in cooperation with the Norwegian Government, opened in Oslo, Norway, in February 2009.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Council of Europe has external offices all over the European continent and beyond. There are four 'Programme Offices', namely in Ankara, Podgorica, Skopje, and Venice. There are also 'Council of Europe Offices' in Baku, Belgrade, Chisinau, Kyiv, Paris, Pristina, Sarajevo, Tbilisi, Tirana, and Yerevan. Bucharest has a Council of Europe Office on Cybercrime. There are also Council of Europe Offices in non-European capital cities like Rabat and Tunis.<ref name="auto1">Template:Cite web</ref>

Additionally, there are 4 "Council of Europe Liaison Offices", this includes:

  • Council of Europe Liaison Office in Brussels: The office is in charge of liaison with the European Union
  • Council of Europe Office in Geneva:  Permanent Delegation of the Council of Europe to the United Nations Office and other international organisations in Geneva
  • Council of Europe Office in Vienna: The office is in charge of liaison with the OSCE, United Nations Office, and other international organisations in Vienna
  • Council of Europe Office in Warsaw: The office is in charge of liaison with other international organisations and institutions in Warsaw, in particular, the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (OSCE/ODIHR)<ref name="auto1"/>

Member states, observers, partners

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Eligibility

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There are two main criteria for membership: geographic (Article 4 of the Council of Europe Statute specifies that membership is open to any "European" State) and political (Article 3 of the Statute states applying for membership must accept democratic values—"Every member of the Council of Europe must accept the principles of the rule of law and the enjoyment by all persons within its jurisdiction of human rights and fundamental freedoms, and collaborate sincerely and effectively in the realisation of the aim of the Council as specified in Chapter I").<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=Klebes>Template:Cite web</ref>

Since "Europe" is not defined in international law, the definition of "Europe" has been a question that has recurred during the CoE's history. Turkey was admitted in 1950, although it is a transcontinental state that lies mostly in Asia, with a smaller portion in Europe.<ref name=Klebes/> In 1994, the PACE adopted Recommendation 1247, which said that admission to the CoE should be "in principle open only to states whose national territory lies wholly or partly in Europe"; later, however, the Assembly extended eligibility to apply and be admitted to Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia.<ref name=Klebes/>

Member states and observers

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File:Albanian CoE stamp.jpg
Postage stamp marks Albania as a member of the Council of Europe 1995

The Council of Europe was founded on 5 May 1949 by Belgium, Denmark, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Greece and Turkey joined three months later.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web and Greece</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Iceland,<ref>Template:Cite web.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> West Germany and Saar Protectorate joined the Council of Europe as associate members in 1950. West Germany became a full member in 1951, and the Saar withdrew its application after it joined West Germany following the 1955 Saar Statute referendum.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Lansing Warren (3 May 1951), "Council of Europe Raises Bonn To the Status of a Full Member", The New York Times.</ref> Joining later were Austria (1956), Cyprus (1961), Switzerland (1963), Malta (1965), and Portugal (1976).<ref name=Klebes/> Spain joined in 1977, two years after the death of its dictator Francisco Franco and the Spanish transition to democracy.<ref>Carlos Lopez (2010), "Franco's Spain and the Council of Europe", Template:Webarchive, Centre virtuel de la connaissance sur l'Europe.</ref> Next to join were Liechtenstein (1978), San Marino (1988) and Finland (1989).<ref name=Klebes/> After the fall of Communism with the Revolutions of 1989 and the collapse of the Soviet Union, the following countries in Europe joined: Hungary (1990), Poland (1991), Bulgaria (1992), Estonia (1993), Lithuania (1993), Slovenia (1993), the Czech Republic (1993), Slovakia (1993), Romania (1993), Andorra (1994), Latvia (1995), Moldova (1995), Albania (1995), Ukraine (1995), the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (1995) (later renamed North Macedonia), Russia (1996, expelled 2022), Croatia (1996), Georgia (1999), Armenia (2001), Azerbaijan (2001), Bosnia and Herzegovina (2002), Serbia and Montenegro (later Serbia) (2003), Monaco (2004) and Montenegro (2007).<ref name=Klebes/> After Russia being expelled in 2022, the council has 46 member states.<ref name=MemberStates>46 "Member States", Council of Europe.</ref>

Although most Council members are predominantly Christian in heritage, there are four Muslim-majority member states: Bosnia and Herzegovina,<ref name=Popis2013>Template:Cite web</ref> Turkey, Albania, and Azerbaijan.<ref name=Klebes/>

The CoE has granted some countries a status that allows them to participate in CoE activities without being full members. There are three types of nonmember status: associate member, special guest and observer.<ref name=Klebes/> Associate member status was created for former Axis states which had not yet regained their sovereignty since their defeat in the Second World War; as such, it is no longer used, although there have been proposals to reactivate it to permit enhanced participation by the current observer states.<ref name=Klebes/> "Special guest" status was used as a transitional status for post-Soviet countries that wished to join the council after the fall of the Berlin Wall and is no longer commonly used.<ref name=Klebes/> "Observer" status is for non-European nations who accept democracy, rule of law, and human rights, and wish to participate in Council initiatives.<ref name=Klebes/> The United States became an observer state in 1995.<ref>"United States // Observer", Council of Europe.</ref> Currently, Canada, the Holy See, Japan, Mexico, and the United States are observer states, while Israel is an observer to the PACE.<ref name=MemberStates/> Additionally Kosovo is a member of the Council of Europe Development Bank and a member of the Council of Europe's Venice Commission.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Assembly of Kosovo was invited to take part in the work of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and its committees as an observer in 2016.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Two representatives of local government in Kosovo participate in the work of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities as observers.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Withdrawal, suspension, and expulsion

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The Statute of the Council of Europe provides for the voluntary suspension, involuntary suspension, and exclusion of members.<ref name=DzehtsiarouCoffey>Kanstantsin Dzehtsiarou & Donal K. Coffey, Suspension and expulsion of members of the Council of Europe: difficult decisions in troubled times, International & Comparative Law Quarterly, Vol. 68, Issue 2 (2019).</ref> Article 8 of the Statute provides that any member who has "seriously violated" Article 3 may be suspended from its rights of representation, and that the Committee of Ministers may request that such a member withdraws from the Council under Article 7. (The Statute does not define the "serious violation" phrase.<ref name=DzehtsiarouCoffey/> Under Article 8 of the Statute, if a member state fails to withdraw upon request, the Committee may terminate its membership, in consultation with the PACE.<ref name=DzehtsiarouCoffey/>

The Council suspended Greece in 1967, after a military coup d'état, and the Greek junta withdrew from the CoE.<ref name=DzehtsiarouCoffey/> Greece was readmitted to the council in 1974.<ref>Vasilopoulou, Sofia. (2018) The party politics of Euroscepticism in times of crisis: The case of Greece. Politics, 38. DOI: 10.1177/0263395718770599.</ref>

Suspension and exclusion of Russia

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Template:Main Russia became a member of the Council of Europe in 1996. In 2014, after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine and supported separatists in eastern Ukraine, the Council stripped Russia of its voting rights in the PACE.<ref name=Erlanger>Steven Erlanger, Council of Europe Restores Russia's Voting Rights, New York Times (25 June 2019).</ref> In response, Russia began to boycott the Assembly in 2016, and beginning from 2017 ceased paying its annual membership dues of 32.6 million euros (US$37.1 million) to the Council<ref name=Erlanger/><ref>Russia cancels payment to Council of Europe after claiming its delegates are being persecuted over Crimea, The Independent. 30 June 2017</ref> placing the institution under financial strain.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref>

Russia stated that its suspension by the council was unfair, and demanded the restoration of its voting rights.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite web</ref> Russia had threatened to withdraw from the Council unless its voting rights were restored in time for the election of a new secretary general.<ref name=Erlanger/> European Council secretary-general Thorbjørn Jagland organized a special committee to find a compromise with Russia in early 2018, a move that was criticised by some as giving in to alleged Russian pressure by Council members and academic observers, especially if voting sanctions were lifted.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In June 2019, an approximately two-thirds majority of the Council voted (on a 118–62 vote, with 10 abstentions) to restore Russia's voting rights in the council.<ref name=Erlanger/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Opponents of lifting the suspension included Ukraine and other post-Soviet countries, such as the Baltic states, who argued that readmission amounted to normalizing Russia's malign activity.<ref name=Erlanger/> Supporters of restoring Russia's council rights included France and Germany,<ref name=Suspends2022>Steven Erlanger, The Council of Europe suspends Russia for its attack on Ukraine., New York Times (3 March 2022).</ref> which argued that a Russian withdrawal from the council would be harmful because it would deprive Russian citizens of their ability to initiate cases in the European Court of Human Rights.<ref name=Erlanger/>

On 3 March 2022, after Russia launched a full-scale military invasion of Ukraine, the council suspended Russia for violations of the council's statute and the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). The suspension blocked Russia from participation in the council's ministerial council, the PACE, and the Council of the Baltic Sea States, but still left Russia obligated to follow the ECHR.<ref name=Suspends2022/><ref name=Mehta>Pooja Mehta, Russia withdraws from Council of Europe, JURIST (12 March 2022).</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On 15 March 2022, hours before the vote to expel the country, Russia initiated a voluntary withdrawal procedure from the council. The Russian delegation planned to deliver its formal withdrawal on 31 December 2022, and announced its intent to denounce the ECHR. However, on the same day, the council's Committee of Ministers decided Russia's membership in the council would be terminated immediately, and determined that Russia had been excluded from the Council instead under its exclusion mechanism rather than the withdrawal mechanism.<ref name="CoE_Expulsion_RU">Template:Cite press release</ref> After being excluded from the Council of Europe, Russia's former president and prime minister Dmitry Medvedev endorsed restoring the death penalty in Russia.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Co-operation

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Conventions: European Treaty Series

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Template:Main The Council of Europe works mainly through international treaties, usually called conventions in its system. By drafting conventions or international treaties, common legal standards are set for its member states. The conventions are collected in the European Treaty Series.

Non-member states

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Several conventions have also been opened for signature to non-member states. Important examples are the Convention on Cybercrime (signed for example, by Canada, Japan, South Africa and the United States), the Lisbon Recognition Convention on the recognition of study periods and degrees (signed for example, by Australia, Belarus, Canada, the Holy See, Israel, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, New Zealand and the United States), the Anti-doping Convention (signed, for example, by Australia, Belarus, Canada and Tunisia) and the Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats (signed for example, by Burkina Faso, Morocco, Tunisia and Senegal as well as the European Community). Non-member states also participate in several partial agreements, such as the Venice Commission, the Group of States Against Corruption (GRECO), the European Pharmacopoeia Commission and the North-South Centre.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Invitations to sign and ratify relevant conventions of the Council of Europe on a case-by-case basis are sent to three groups of non-member entities:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

  • Non-European states: Algeria, Argentina, Australia, Bahamas, Bolivia, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Malaysia, Mauritius, Morocco, New Zealand, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Senegal, South Africa, South Korea, Syria, Tajikistan, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Uruguay, Venezuela and the observers Canada, Israel, Japan, Mexico, United States.
  • European states: Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Russia and the observer Holy See.
  • The European Community and later the European Union after its legal personality was established by the ratification of the EU's Lisbon Treaty.

European Union

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Template:Main Template:Supranational European Bodies The Council of Europe is not to be confused with the Council of the European Union (the "Council of Ministers") or the European Council, which belong to the European Union, an entirely separate body from the Council of Europe,<ref name="COE_not_EU">Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> although they have shared the same European flag and anthem since the 1980s since they both work for European integration.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Cooperation between the European Union and the Council of Europe was reinforced in the mid-2000s, notably on culture and education as well as on the international enforcement of justice and Human Rights.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The European Union is expected to accede to the European Convention on Human Rights (the convention). There are also concerns about consistency in case law – the European Court of Justice (the EU's court in Luxembourg) is treating the convention as part of the legal system of all EU member states in order to prevent conflict between its judgements and those of the European Court of Human Rights (the court in Strasbourg interpreting the convention). Protocol No. 14 of the convention is designed to allow the EU to accede to it and the EU Treaty of Lisbon contains a protocol binding the EU to join. The EU would thus be subject to its human rights law and external monitoring as its member states currently are.<ref name="Juncker Council">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Reform Draft">Template:Cite web</ref>

Schools of Political Studies

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The Council of Europe Schools of Political Studies were established to train future generations of political, economic, social and cultural leaders in countries in transition. With the participation of national and international experts, they run annual series of seminars and conferences on topics such as European integration, democracy, human rights, the rule of law and globalisation. The first School of Political Studies was created in Moscow in 1992. By 2020, 20 other schools had been set up along the same lines, forming an association;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> a network covering the whole of Eastern and South-Eastern Europe and the Caucasus, as well as some countries in the Southern Mediterranean region. The schools are part of the Education Department, which is part of the Directorate of Democratic Participation within the Directorate General of Democracy ("DGII") of the Council of Europe.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

United Nations

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Cooperation between the CoE and the UN started with the agreement signed by the Secretariats of these institutions on 15 December 1951. On 17 October 1989, the General Assembly of the United Nations approved a resolution on granting observer status to the Council of Europe which was proposed by several member states of the CoE.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Currently, the Council of Europe holds observer status with the United Nations and is regularly represented in the UN General Assembly. It has organised the regional UN conferences against racism and on women. It co-operates with the United Nations at many levels, in particular in the areas of human rights, minorities, migration and counter-terrorism. In November 2016, the UN General Assembly adopted by consensus Resolution (A/Res/71/17) on Cooperation between the United Nations and the Council of Europe whereby it acknowledged the contribution of the Council of Europe to the protection and strengthening of human rights and fundamental freedoms, democracy and the rule of law, welcomed the ongoing co-operation in a variety of fields.

Non-governmental organisations

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Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) can participate in the INGOs Conference of the Council of Europe and become observers to inter-governmental committees of experts. The Council of Europe drafted the European Convention on the Recognition of the Legal Personality of International Non-Governmental Organisations in 1986, which sets the legal basis for the existence and work of NGOs in Europe. Article 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights protects the right to freedom of association, which is also a fundamental norm for NGOs. The rules for consultative status for INGOs appended to the resolution (93)38 "On relation between the Council of Europe and non-governmental organisations", adopted by the Committee of Ministers on 18 October 1993 at the 500th meeting of the Ministers' Deputies. On 19 November 2003, the Committee of Ministers changed the consultative status into a participatory status, "considering that it is indispensable that the rules governing the relations between the Council of Europe and NGOs evolve to reflect the active participation of international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) in the Organisation's policy and work programme".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Others

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On 30 May 2018, the Council of Europe signed a memorandum of understanding with the European football confederation UEFA.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Council of Europe also signed an agreement with FIFA in which the two agreed to strengthen future cooperation in areas of common interests. The deal which included cooperation between member states in the sport of football and safety and security at football matches was finalized in October 2018.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Characteristics

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Privileges and immunities

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The General Agreement on Privileges and Immunities of the Council of Europe grants the organisation certain privileges and immunities.<ref name="priv-immu-EC">General Agreement on Privileges and Immunities of the Council of Europe, Council of Europe</ref>

The working conditions of staff are governed by the council's staff regulations, which are public.<ref>Resolutions on the Council of Europe Staff Regulations, Council of Europe</ref> Salaries and emoluments paid by the Council of Europe to its officials are tax-exempt on the basis of Article 18 of the General Agreement on Privileges and Immunities of the Council of Europe.<ref name="priv-immu-EC"/>

Symbol and anthem

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The Council of Europe created, and has since 1955 used as its official symbol, the European Flag with 12 golden stars arranged in a circle on a blue background.

Its musical anthem since 1972, the "European anthem", is based on the "Ode to Joy" theme from Ludwig van Beethoven's ninth symphony.

On 5 May 1964, the 15th anniversary of its founding, the Council of Europe established 5 May as Europe Day.<ref name="symbols">Template:Cite web</ref>

The wide private and public use of the European Flag is encouraged to symbolise a European dimension. To avoid confusion with the European Union which subsequently adopted the same flag in the 1980s, as well as other European institutions, the Council of Europe often uses a modified version with a lower-case "e" surrounding the stars which are referred to as the "Council of Europe Logo".<ref name="symbols"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Criticism and controversies

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Both Human Rights Watch and the European Stability Initiative have called on the Council of Europe to undertake concrete actions to show that it is willing and able to return to its "original mission to protect and ensure human rights",<ref name="ESI_HavelPrize">Template:Cite news</ref> despite launching political and economic activities that could generate redundancies with other international organizations (including the European Union and OCSE).<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="euractiv1">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazineTemplate:Cbignore</ref>

In October 2022, a new and different Pan-European meeting of 44 states was held, as the "inaugural summit of the European Political Community", a new forum largely organized by French President Emmanuel Macron. The Council of Europe, sidelined, reportedly was "perplexed" with this development, with a spokesperson stating "In the field of human rights, democracy and the rule of law, such a pan-European community already exists: it is the Council of Europe."<ref name=CookJanicekCorbet>Template:Cite news</ref> A feature of the new forum is that Russia and Belarus are deliberately excluded,<ref name=CookJanicekCorbet/> which was not seen as explaining the need for a different entity, given that at the time, Russia was no longer a member of the Council of Europe and Belarus only participated partially, as a non-member.Template:Citation needed

"Caviar diplomacy" scandal

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Template:See also After Azerbaijan joined the CoE in 2001, both the Council and its Parliamentary Assembly were criticised for having a weak response to election rigging and human rights violations in Azerbaijan.<ref name=PACEGuard>Template:Cite web</ref> The Human Rights Watch criticised the Council of Europe in 2014 for allowing Azerbaijan to assume the six-month rotating chairmanship of the council's Committee of Ministers, writing that the Azeri government's repression of human rights defenders, dissidents, and journalists "shows sheer contempt for its commitments to the Council of Europe".<ref name="HRW_Criticism">Template:Cite news</ref> An internal inquiry was set up in 2017 amid allegations of bribery by Azerbaijan government officials and criticism of "caviar diplomacy" at the council.<ref name=Rankin>Jennifer Rankin, Council of Europe urged to investigate Azerbaijan bribery allegations, The Guardian, 1 February 2017.</ref><ref name=Valencia>Template:Cite magazineTemplate:Cbignore</ref> A 219-page report was issued in 2018 after a ten-month investigation.<ref name=PACEGuard/> It concluded that several members of the Parliamentary Assembly broke CoE ethical rules and were "strongly suspected" of corruption; it strongly criticised former Parliamentary Assembly president Pedro Agramunt and suggested that he had engaged in "corruptive activities" before his resignation under pressure in 2017.<ref name=PACEGuard/> The inquiry also named Italian member Luca Volontè as a suspect in "activities of a corruptive nature".<ref name=PACEGuard/> Volontè was investigated by Italian police and accused by Italian prosecutors in 2017 of receiving over 2.39 million euros in bribes in exchange for working for Azerbaijan in the parliamentary assembly, and that in 2013 he played a key role in orchestrating the defeat of a highly critical report on the abuse of political prisoners in Azerbaijan.<ref name=Rankin/><ref name=Valencia/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 2021, Volontè was convicted of accepting bribes from Azerbaijani officials to water down critiques of the nation's human rights record, and he was sentenced by a court in Milan to four years in prison.<ref>Zdravko Ljubas, Italian Court Sentences Former Council of Europe MP for Bribery, Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (14 January 2021).</ref>

See also

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Notes

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Footnotes

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References

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Further reading

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  • Template:Cite book
  • Dinan, Desmond. Europe Recast: A History of European Union (2nd ed. 2004). excerpt Template:Webarchive; the excerpt covers the historiography
  • Gillingham, John. Coal, Steel, and the Rebirth of Europe, 1945–1955: The Germans and French from Ruhr Conflict to Economic Community (Cambridge UP, 2004).
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  • Kopf, Susanne. Debating the European Union Transnationally: Wikipedians' Construction of the EU on a Wikipedia Talk Page (2001–2015). (PhD dissertation Lancaster University, 2018)online.
  • Moravcsik, Andrew. The Choice for Europe: Social Purpose and State Power from Messina to Maastricht (Cornell UP, 1998). Template:Isbn. Template:Oclc.
  • Stone, Dan. Goodbye to All That?: The Story of Europe Since 1945 (Oxford UP, 2014).
  • Template:Cite book
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