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  • Council of Europe: Briefing on the human rights situation in Turkey

    A new Action Plan on Human Rights, announced by President Erdogan on 2 March after a two-year long preparation, represents another missed opportunity for the Turkish authorities to display a strong commitment to addressing the root causes of the most crucial problems of Turkey’s human rights situation. The Plan does not include any concrete steps to ensure the independence of the judiciary, with no measures foreseen to remove the executive control over the judiciary including through necessary constitutional changes. It does not foresee any concrete action to prevent politically motivated and punitive pre-trial detention and convictions under overly broad and vague anti-terrorism laws against opposition politicians, political activists, journalists, and human rights defenders solely for peacefully exercising their human rights. Crucially, it does not include any commitment to implement the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR).

  • Council of Europe: Briefing on the human rights situation in Russia

    The arbitrary arrest and imprisonment of Russian prominent anti-corruption campaigner and opposition figure Aleksei Navalny, and the concurrent arrests and detention on spurious charges of his colleagues from the Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK), civil society activists and peaceful protesters during mass public protests held at the beginning of the year and in smaller protests that followed, are the latest in a series of severe, brazen reprisals against all forms of dissent in Russia. The prosecution of Aleksei Navalny and of his colleagues and supporters is politically motivated and their deprivation of liberty is unlawful. They are being held in detention solely for their peaceful political activism and their exercise of the rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly. They must be immediately released.

  • Amnesty International Position on the Proposals for a Digital Services Act and a Digital Markets Act

    On 15 December 2020, the European Commission has adopted two legislative proposals to govern the digital sphere: the Digital Services Act (DSA) and the Digital Markets Act (DMA). These proposals have been eagerly awaited as there is a pressing need for a safer and more transparent online environment, where human rights are effectively protected, in particular in view of a few tech giants dominating and controlling the sphere. In our position paper, we address how these legislative proposals affect human rights and put forward recommendations on what changes are needed to put the protection of human rights at the core of these rules.

  • Five years after the EU-Turkey Statement, European Civil Society demands an end to containment and deterrence at the EU’s External Borders

    The 18th of March 2021 will mark five years since the announcement of the “EU-Turkey Statement”, under which EU and Turkish leaders agreed, among other things, that asylum seekers crossing from Turkey into Greek islands will be returned to Turkey. The statement led Greece to implement an array of laws and policies, designed to restrict the movement of asylum seekers, keep them in the designated “hotspots” on the islands (later named ‘Reception and Identification Centres”), and facilitate their readmission to Turkey.The policy of containment at borders is central to the new European Pact on Migration and Asylum, which introduces a “pre-entry phase consisting of screening and border procedures for asylum and return”. According to the proposal, in this phase asylum seekers “shall not be authorised to enter the territory of the Member State”.

  • EU: Anniversary of Turkey deal offers warning against further dangerous migration deals

    Ahead of the five year anniversary of the EU-Turkey deal on migration on 18 March, Amnesty International is calling on EU leaders to turn away from the five years of failed policies which have resulted in tens of thousands of people being forced to stay in inhumane conditions on the Greek islands, and put refugees at risk by forcing them to stay in Turkey.  As EU Foreign Affairs and Home Affairs ministers prepare to debate on further expanding migration cooperation with countries outside of Europe, Eve Geddie, Director of Amnesty International’s EU office said:

  • Position Paper: the proposed Crisis Regulation

    SUMMARYOn 23 September 2020, the European Commission presented a new Pact on Migration and Asylum whichincluded a number of legislative proposals to change the way EU member state authorities should dealwith people arriving irregularly at their external borders. Among the legislative measures proposed is anew Regulation that allows for derogations to the EU rules on asylum and return procedures in situationsof crisis and cases of force majeure. It also foresees the possibility to grant an immediate protectionstatus, repeals the (never used) 2001 Temporary Protection Directive and withdraws the 2015 proposalfor a Regulation establishing a crisis relocation mechanism.