Members access

12 years of experience in obtaining European subsidies
Monitoring, Training and Consultancy for private, public and non-profit organisations

Home >  EU Funding news >  News

Picto - Facebook Picto - Twitter

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

The aims of the presidency Hungary to fight against crime in Europe

On January 20th, 2011, in Godollo, near Budapest, the EU Interior Ministers met to discuss border administration and the budgetary status of internal activities. This meeting is line with the objectives of the Hungarian Presidency which aims to give impetus to the fight against organized crime.The Hungarian Presidency hopes to give an impetus to the fight against organised crime. This was one of the topics at the meeting of EU Interior Ministers on 20 January 2011 in Gödöllő, a city near Budapest. The informal meeting confronted views about the budgetary status of border administration and internal activities.

The reinforcement of the fight against organised crime and integrated border administration were the topics on the first day of the two-day informal meeting of the Justice and Home Affairs Council. During the business lunch, the Ministers discussed the share of internal expenses in the EU’s post-2014 multiannual budget.

The Hungarian Presidency asked member states about the new tendencies they experienced in organised crime, the ways to weaken the financial basis of crime and to make the recovery of stolen assets more efficient, and about the desirable form of cooperation in the fight against organised crime. Since 2000, the EU has had a strategy to combat organised crime, but the Hungarian Presidency thinks the issue should be revisited.

A need for an imaginative and integrated approach

Several Ministers stressed the need for an imaginative, rather than conventional, and integrated approach. They noted that organised crime is penetrating the legal profession to legalize assets earned by unlawful means.

Some of the member states considers organised crime as risky as terrorism. There was much talk on cybercrime, if with various perceptions. Some Ministers think this form of crime is only new in terms of its techniques, while others think that Internet crimes are not only committed by individuals but also by countries.

According to the Ministers, there is no need for new laws but for the existing ones to reinforce cooperation in the fight against crime.

The Hungarian Presidency wishes to keep on the agenda the reinforcement of the fight against organised crime. The topic is at the heart of the Hungarian Presidency’s internal policy programme. Budapest hopes that a comprehensive document will be prepared, including the main points of the fight against organised crime, by the June informal meeting of Justice and Interior Ministers.

Informal ministerial meetings do not consist of decision making but an exchange of views, and may prepare the ground for some important documents in the future.

Financial issues

Regarding the internal policy chapter of the EU’s next long-term budget, the Hungarian Presidency asked the Ministers which internal areas they thought received insufficient EU budget funding, if there was a need to increase internal expenses, if disbursement rules should be simplified, and about the ways to finance the external, international dimension of internal activities.

The reason is that internal expenditures account for less than 1 percent of the EU’s budget, while internal activities are gaining momentum. The multiannual EU budget system is just too rigid for unexpected needs, such as disasters. Another problem is that foreign cooperation aimed at internal security is only eligible for a symbolic amount of the EU’s budget.

Hungarian-German negotiation on Schengen

In the break of the meeting, Sándor Pintér, Minister of the Interior, had a bilateral discussion with his German counterpart, Thomas de Maiziere. Mr Pintér told that they had discussed the Hungarian Media Act and the enlargement of the Schengen Area. Mr Pintér said that he hoped to have convinced the German Minister that the Hungarian Media Act can stand up to EU requirements.

As for the Schengen Area, the German Minister told journalists before the meeting that Germany has set out not only technical but also political requirements for the accession of Romania and Bulgaria to the Schengen Area. The Minister repeated the German and French position that the two countries may only join the Schengen Area if they eliminate corruption and reform their judicial systems. After the Hungarian-German negotiation, Mr Pintér said they will revisit the issue during the Hungarian Presidency’s term.

Before the Council meeting, the German Minister of the Interior announced that Germany will immediately stop deporting some refugees back to Greece, since their refugee rights are not respected there.

The security of Europe’s borderlines

At the meeting in Godollo, the ministers also discussed the security of borderlines in the presence of Frontex, the EU agency responsible for border security. Participants and Commission representative Cecilia Malmström acknowledged the potential importance of border security from the perspective of Europe’s security, and welcomed the Hungarian Presidency’s choice of subject. Several participants stressed the significance of cooperation with third countries in the field of integrated border administration.

It was repeatedly remarked that opportunities, offered by modern technology, including the introduction of automated systems, were inevitable and exciting potentials in the field of border control, though many commented that we had to conform to existing demands. It was also pointed out that an appropriate and efficient management was necessary for the Schengen System. Member states supported the European Commission’s new proposal on the reform of the Schengen evaluation mechanism.

Source  Website of the Hungarian Presidency of the Council of the European Union

More information  Website of the Hungarian Presidency of the Council of the European Union




linked programmes:

Also read:

EU states are encouraged to implement national programmes for Roma integration

A report adopted by the European Commission calls for implementing national strategies aiming at integrating Roma population socially and economically. Roma population represents 10 to 12 million of people in Europe.

Youth enemployment: european efforts are required

Several proposals aiming at tackling youth unemployment are on the agenda at the European Parliament: a "European Investment Plan", reallocating EU structural funds for youth employment and a "European Youth Guarantee".

The European Parliament is funding your projects!

The European Parliament’s Communication DG has just launched a new grant programme, which will fund projects aiming at improving citizens’ knowledge of the role and functioning of the European Parliament. This 2012 - 2014 programme was...

Pre-accession assistance instrument (IPA): seven Western Balkan countries are given the possibility to participate to large scale flooding exercise in Croatia

During four days, exercises simulating a large scale flooding are organized in Zagreb for civil protection intervention teams from seven Balkan countries.

The EU launches a pilot phase on European project bonds

A pilot phase on European project bonds was decided today between the Council of the European Union and the European Parliament. This remains an important milestone, and the Danish presidency has therefore played an important role in the efforts t...

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Privacy Policy
Recherche avancée

Need an advice?
To place an order?

Contact
Marine Rossi at

33 (0)1 42 54 60 64

Click here to ask me your question in live

Quick Access

 
 
 

Welcomeurope, 38 rue Léon, 75018 Paris | Tél . : 33 +1 42 54 60 64 / Fax : 33 +1 42 54 70 04


© Welcomeurope 2000-2012