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CONVENTION
ON THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A EUROPEAN POLICE OFFICE
EUROPOL
CONVENTION
Done at
Brussels, 26 Jul 1995
Entry into
force: 1 October 1998
THE HIGH CONTRACTING PARTIES
to the present Convention, Member States of the European Union,
REFERRING to the Council Act of 26 July 1995;
AWARE of the urgent problems arising from terrorism, unlawful drug trafficking
and other serious forms of international crime;
WHEREAS there is a need for progress in solidarity and cooperation between
the Member States of the European Union, particularly through an improvement
in police cooperation between the Member States;
WHEREAS such progress should enable the protection of security and public
order to be further improved;
WHEREAS the establishment of a European Police Office (Europol) was agreed
in the Treaty on European Union of 7 February 1992;
IN VIEW of the decision of the European Council of 29 October 1993 that
Europol should be established in the Netherlands and have its seat in
The Hague;
MINDFUL of the common objective of improving police cooperation in the
field of terrorism, unlawful drug trafficking and other serious forms
of international crime through a constant, confidential and intensive
exchange of information between Europol and Member States' national units;
ON THE UNDERSTANDING that the forms of cooperation laid down in this Convention
should not affect other forms of bilateral or multilateral cooperation;
CONVINCED that in the field of police cooperation, particular attention
must be paid to the protection of the rights of individuals, and in particular
to the protection of their personal data;
WHEREAS the activities of Europol under this Convention are without prejudice
to the powers of the European Communities; whereas Europol and the Communities
have a mutual interest, in the framework of the European Union, in establishing
types of cooperation enabling each of them to perform their respective
tasks as effectively as possible,
HAVE AGREED AS FOLLOWS:
TITLE I ESTABLISHMENT AND TASKS
Article 1
Establishment
1. The Member States of
the European Union, hereinafter referred to as 'Member States', hereby
establish a European Police Office, hereinafter referred to as 'Europol'.
2. Europol shall liaise with a single national unit in each Member State,
to be established or designated in accordance with Article 4.
Article 2
Objective
1. The objective of Europol
shall be, within the framework of cooperation between the Member States
pursuant to Article K.1 (9) of the Treaty on European Union, to improve,
by means of the measures referred to in this Convention, the effectiveness
and cooperation of the competent authorities in the Member States in preventing
and combating terrorism, unlawful drug trafficking and other serious forms
of international crime where there are factual indications that an organized
criminal structure is involved and two or more Member States are affected
by the forms of crime in question in such a way as to require a common
approach by the Member States owing to the scale, significance and consequences
of the offences concerned.
2. In order to achieve progressively the objective mentioned in paragraph
1, Europol shall initially act to prevent and combat unlawful drug trafficking,
trafficking in nuclear and radioactive substances, illegal immigrant smuggling,
trade in human beings and motor vehicle crime.
Within two years at the latest following the entry into force of this
Convention, Europol shall also deal with crimes committed or likely to
be committed in the course of terrorist activities against life, limb,
personal freedom or property. The Council, acting unanimously in accordance
with the procedure laid down in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union,
may decide to instruct Europol to deal with such terrorist activities
before that period has expired.
The Council, acting unanimously in accordance with the procedure laid
down in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union, may decide to instruct
Europol to deal with other forms of crime listed in the Annex to this
Convention or specific manifestations thereof. Before acting, the Council
shall instruct the Management Board to prepare its decision and in particular
to set out the budgetary and staffing implications for Europol.
3. Europol's competence as regards a form of crime or specific manifestations
thereof shall cover both:
(1) illegal money-laundering activities in connection with these forms
of crime or specific manifestations thereof;
(2) related criminal offences.
The following shall be regarded as related and shall be taken into account
in accordance with the procedures set out in Articles 8 and 10:
- criminal offences committed in order to procure the means for perpetrating
acts within the sphere of competence of Europol,
- criminal offences committed in order to facilitate or carry out acts
within the sphere of competence of Europol,
- criminal offences committed to ensure the impunity of acts within the
sphere of competence of Europol.
4. For the purposes of this Convention, 'competent authorities' means
all public bodies existing in the Member States which are responsible
under national law for preventing and combating criminal offences.
5. For the purposes of paragraphs 1 and 2, 'unlawful drug trafficking'
means the criminal offences listed in Article 3 (1) of the United Nations
Convention of 20 December 1988 against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs
and Psychotropic Substances and in the provisions amending or replacing
that Convention.
Article 3
Tasks
1. In the framework of
its objective pursuant to Article 2 (1), Europol shall have the following
principal tasks:
(1) to facilitate the exchange of information between the Member States;
(2) to obtain, collate and analyse information and intelligence;
(3) to notify the competent authorities of the Member States without delay
via the national units referred to in Article 4 of information concerning
them and of any connections identified between criminal offences;
(4) to aid investigations in the Member States by forwarding all relevant
information to the national units;
(5) to maintain a computerized system of collected information containing
data in accordance with Articles 8, 10 and 11.
2. In order to improve the cooperation and effectiveness of the competent
authorities in the Member States through the national units with a view
to fulfilling the objective set out in Article 2 (1), Europol shall furthermore
have the following additional tasks:
(1) to develop specialist knowledge of the investigative procedures of
the competent authorities in the Member States and to provide advice on
investigations;
(2) to provide strategic intelligence to assist with and promote the efficient
and effective use of the resources available at national level for operational
activities;
(3) to prepare general situation reports.
3. In the context of its objective under Article 2 (1) Europol may, in
addition, in accordance with its staffing and the budgetary resources
at its disposal and within the limits set by the Management Board, assist
Member States through advice and research in the following areas:
(1) training of members of their competent authorities;
(2) organization and equipment of those authorities;
(3) crime prevention methods;
(4) technical and forensic police methods and investigative procedures.
Article 4
National units
1. Each Member State shall
establish or designate a national unit to carry out the tasks listed in
this Article.
2. The national unit shall be the only liaison body between Europol and
the competent national authorities. Relationships between the national
unit and the competent authorities shall be governed by national law,
and, in particular the relevant national constitutional requirements.
3. Member States shall take the necessary measures to ensure that the
national units are able to fulfil their tasks and, in particular, have
access to relevant national data.
4. It shall be the task of the national units to:
(1) supply Europol on their own initiative with the information and intelligence
necessary for it to carry out its tasks;
(2) respond to Europol's requests for information, intelligence and advice;
(3) keep information and intelligence up to date;
(4) evaluate information and intelligence in accordance with national
law for the competent authorities and transmit this material to them;
(5) issue requests for advice, information, intelligence and analysis
to Europol;
(6) supply Europol with information for storage in the computerized system;
(7) ensure compliance with the law in every exchange of information between
themselves and Europol.
5. Without prejudice to the exercise of the responsibilities incumbent
upon Member States as set out in Article K.2 (2) of the Treaty on European
Union, a national unit shall not be obliged in a particular case to supply
the information and intelligence provided for in paragraph 4, points 1,
2 and 6 and in Articles 7 and 10 if this would mean:
(1) harming essential national security interests; or
(2) jeopardizing the success of a current investigation or the safety
of individuals;
(3) involving information pertaining to organizations or specific intelligence
activities in the field of State security.
6. The costs incurred by the national units for communications with Europol
shall be borne by the Member States and, apart from the costs of connection,
shall not be charged to Europol.
7. The Heads of national units shall meet as necessary to assist Europol
by giving advice.
Article 5
Liaison officers
1. Each national unit shall
second at least one liaison officer to Europol. The number of liaison
officers who may be sent by Member States to Europol shall be laid down
by unanimous decision of the Management Board; the decision may be altered
at any time by unanimous decision of the Management Board. Except as otherwise
stipulated in specific provisions of this Convention, liaison officers
shall be subject to the national law of the seconding Member State.
2. The liaison officers shall be instructed by their national units to
represent the interests of the latter within Europol in accordance with
the national law of the seconding Member State and in compliance with
the provisions applicable to the administration of Europol.
3. Without prejudice to Article 4 (4) and (5), the liaison officers shall,
within the framework of the objective laid down in Article 2 (1), assist
in the exchange of information between the national units which have seconded
them and Europol, in particular by:
(1) providing Europol with information from the seconding national unit;
(2) forwarding information from Europol to the seconding national unit;
and
(3) cooperating with the officials of Europol by providing information
and giving advice as regards analysis of the information concerning the
seconding Member State.
4. At the same time, the liaison officers shall assist in the exchange
of information from their national units and the coordination of the resulting
measures in accordance with their national law and within the framework
of the objective laid down in Article 2 (1).
5. To the extent necessary for the performance of the tasks under paragraph
3 above, the liaison officers shall have the right to consult the various
files in accordance with the appropriate provisions specified in the relevant
Articles.
6. Article 25 shall apply mutatis mutandis to the activity of the liaison
officers.
7. Without prejudice to the other provisions of this Convention, the rights
and obligations of liaison officers in relation to Europol shall be determined
unanimously by the Management Board.
8. Liaison officers shall enjoy the privileges and immunities necessary
for the performance of their tasks in accordance with Article 41 (2).
9. Europol shall provide Member States free of charge with the necessary
premises in the Europol building for the activity of their liaison officers.
All other costs which arise in connection with seconding liaison officers
shall be borne by the seconding Member State; this shall also apply to
the costs of equipment for liaison officers, to the extent that the Management
Board does not unanimously recommend otherwise in a specific case when
drawing up the budget of Europol.
Article 6
Computerized system of collected information
1. Europol shall maintain
a computerized system of collected information consisting of the following
components:
(1) an information system as referred to in Article 7 with a restricted
and precisely defined content which allows rapid reference to the information
available to the Member States and Europol;
(2) work files as referred to in Article 10 established for variable periods
of time for the purposes of analysis and containing comprehensive information;
and
(3) an index system containing certain particulars from the analysis files
referred to in point 2, in accordance with the arrangements laid down
in Article 11.
2. The computerized system of collected information operated by Europol
must under no circumstances be linked to other automated processing systems,
except for the automated processing systems of the national units.
TITLE II INFORMATION SYSTEM
Article 7
Establishment of the information system
1. In order to perform
its tasks, Europol shall establish and maintain a computerized information
system. The information system, into which Member States, represented
by their national units and liaison officers, may directly input data
in compliance with their national procedures, and into which Europol may
directly input data supplied by third States and third bodies and analysis
data, shall be directly accessible for consultation by national units,
liaison officers, the Director, the Deputy Directors and duly empowered
Europol officials.
Direct access by the national units to the information system in respect
of the persons referred to in Article 8 (1), point 2 shall be restricted
solely to the details of identity listed in Article 8 (2). If needed for
a specific enquiry, the full range of data shall be accessible them via
the liaison officers.
2. Europol shall:
(1) have the task of ensuring compliance with the provisions governing
cooperation on and operation of the information system, and
(2) be responsible for the proper working of the information system in
technical and operational respects. Europol shall in particular take all
necessary measures to ensure that the measures referred to in Articles
21 and 25 regarding the information system are properly implemented.
3. The national unit in each Member State shall be responsible for communication
with the information system. It shall, in particular, be responsible for
the security measures referred to in Article 25 in respect of the data-processing
equipment used within the territory of the Member State in question, for
the review in accordance with Article 21 and, in so far as required under
the laws, regulations, administrative provisions and procedures of that
Member State, for the proper implementation of this Convention in other
respects.
Article 8
Content of the information system
1. The information system
may be used to store, modify and utilize only the data necessary for the
performance of Europol's tasks, with the exception of data concerning
related criminal offences as referred to in the second subparagraph of
Article 2 (3). Data entered shall relate to:
(1) persons who, in accordance with the national law of the Member State
concerned, are suspected of having committed or having taken part in a
criminal offence for which Europol is competent under Article 2 or who
have been convicted of such an offence;
(2) persons who there are serious grounds under national law for believing
will commit criminal offences for which Europol is competent under Article
2.
2. Personal data as referred to in paragraph 1 may include only the following
details:
(1) surname, maiden name, given names and any alias or assumed name;
(2) date and place of birth;
(3) nationality;
(4) sex; and
(5) where necessary, other characteristics likely to assist in identification,
including any specific objective physical characteristics not subject
to change.
3. In addition to the data referred to in paragraph 2 and data on Europol
or the inputting national unit, the information system may also be used
to store, modify and utilize the following details concerning the persons
referred to in paragraph 1:
(1) criminal offences, alleged crimes and when and where they were committed;
(2) means which were or may be used to commit the crimes;
(3) departments handling the case and their filing references;
(4) suspected membership of a criminal organization;
(5) convictions, where they relate to criminal offences for which Europol
is competent under Article 2.
These data may also be input when they do not yet contain any references
to persons. Where Europol inputs the data itself, as well as giving its
filing reference it shall also indicate whether the data were provided
by a third party or are the result of its own analyses.
4. Additional information held by Europol or national units concerning
the groups of persons referred to in paragraph 1 may be communicated to
any national unit or Europol should either so request. National units
shall do so in compliance with their national law.
Where the additional information concerns one or more related criminal
offences as defined in the second subparagraph of Article 2 (3), the data
stored in the information system shall be marked accordingly to enable
national units and Europol to exchange information on the related criminal
offences.
5. If proceedings against the person concerned are dropped or if that
person is acquitted, the data relating to either decision shall be deleted.
Article 9
Right of access to the information system
1. Only national units,
liaison officers, and the Director, Deputy Directors or duly empowered
Europol officials shall have the right to input data directly into the
information system and retrieve it therefrom. Data may be retrieved where
this is necessary for the performance of Europol's tasks in a particular
case; retrieval shall be effected in accordance with the laws, regulations,
administrative provisions and procedures of the retrieving unit, subject
to any additional provisions contained in this Convention.
2. Only the unit which entered the data may modify, correct or delete
such data. Where a unit has reason to believe that data as referred to
in Article 8 (2) are incorrect or wishes to supplement them, it shall
immediately inform the inputting unit; the latter shall examine such notification
without delay and if necessary modify, supplement, correct or delete the
data immediately. Where the system contains data as referred to in Article
8 (3) concerning a person, any unit may enter additional data as referred
to in Article 8 (3). Where there is an obvious contradiction between the
data input, the units concerned shall consult each other and reach agreement.
Where a unit intends to delete altogether data as referred to in Article
8 (2) which has input on a person and where data as referred to in Article
8 (3) are held on the same person but input by other units, responsibility
in terms of data protection legislation pursuant to Article 15 (1) and
the right to modify, supplement, correct and delete such data pursuant
to Article 8 (2) shall be transferred to the next unit to have entered
data as referred to in Article 8 (3) on that person.The unit intending
to delete shall inform the unit to which responsibility in terms of data
protection is transferred of its intention.
3. Responsibility for the permissibility of retrieval from, input into
and modifications within the information system shall lie with the retrieving,
inputting or modifying unit; it must be possible to identify that unit.
The communication of information between national units and the competent
authorities in the Member States shall be governed by national law.
TITLE III WORK FILES FOR THE PURPOSES OF ANALYSIS
Article 10
Collection, processing and utilization of personal data
1. Where this is necessary
to achieve the objective laid down in Article 2 (1), Europol, in addition
to data of a non-personal nature, may store, modify, and utilize in other
files data on criminal offences for which Europol is competent under Article
2 (2), including data on the related criminal offences provided for in
the second subparagraph of Article 2 (3) which are intended for specific
analyses, and concerning:
(1) persons as referred to in Article 8 (1);
(2) persons who might be called on to testify in investigations in connection
with the offences under consideration or in subsequent criminal proceedings;
(3) persons who have been the victims of one of the offences under consideration
or with regard to whom certain facts give reason for believing that they
could be the victims of such an offence;
(4) contacts and associates, and
(5) persons who can provide information on the criminal offences under
consideration.
The collection, storage and processing of the data listed in the first
sentence of Article 6 of the Council of Europe Convention of 28 January
1981 with regard to Automatic Processing of Personal Data shall not be
permitted unless strictly necessary for the purposes of the file concerned
and unless such data supplement other personal data already entered in
that file. It shall be prohibited to select a particular group of persons
solely on the basis of the data listed in the first sentence of Article
6 of the Council of Europe Convention of 28 January 1981 in breach of
the aforementioned rules with regard to purpose.
The Council, acting unanimously, in accordance with the procedure laid
down in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union, shall adopt implementing
rules for data files prepared by the Management Board containing additional
details, in particular with regard to the categories of personal data
referred to in this Article and the provisions concerning the security
of the data concerned and the internal supervision of their use.
2. Such files shall be opened for the purposes of analysis defined as
the assembly, processing or utilization of data with the aim of helping
a criminal investigation. Each analysis project shall entail the establishment
of an analysis group closely associating the following participants in
accordance with the tasks defined in Article 3 (1) and (2) and Article
5 (3):
(1) analysts and other Europol officials designated by the Europol Directorate:
only analysts shall be authorized to enter data into and retrieve data
from the file concerned;
(2) the liaison officers and/or experts of the Member States supplying
the information or concerned by the analysis within the meaning of paragraph
6.
3. At the request of Europol or on their own initiative, national units
shall, subject to Article 4 (5), communicate to Europol all the information
which it may require for the performance of its tasks under Article 3
(1), point 2. The Member States shall communicate such data only where
processing thereof for the purposes of preventing, analysing or combating
offences is also authorized by their national law.
Depending on their degree of sensitivity, data from national units may
be routed directly and by whatever means may be appropriate to the analysis
groups, whether via the liaison officers concerned or not.
4. If, in addition to the data referred to in paragraph 3, it would seem
justified for Europol to have other information for the performance of
tasks under Article 3 (1), point 2, Europol may request that:
(1) the European Communities and bodies governed by public law established
under the Treaties establishing those Communities;
(2) other bodies governed by public law established in the framework of
the European Union;
(3) bodies which are based on an agreement between two or more Member
States of the European Union;
(4) third States;
(5) international organizations and their subordinate bodies governed
by public law;
(6) other bodies governed by public law which are based on an agreement
between two or more States; and
(7) the International Criminal Police Organization,
forward the relevant information to it by whatever means may be appropriate.
It may also, under the same conditions and by the same means, accept information
provided by those various bodies on their own initiative. The Council,
acting unanimously in accordance with the procedure laid down in Title
VI of the Treaty on European Union and after consulting the Management
Board, shall draw up the rules to be observed by Europol in this respect.
5. In so far as Europol is entitled under other Conventions to gain computerized
access to data from other information systems, Europol may retrieve personal
data by such means if this is necessary for the performance of its tasks
pursuant to Article 3 (1), point 2.
6. If an analysis is of a general nature and of a strategic type, all
Member States, through liaison officers and/or experts, shall be fully
associated in the findings thereof, in particular through the communication
of reports drawn up by Europol.
If the analysis bears on specific cases not concerning all Member States
and has a direct operational aim, representatives of the following Member
States shall participate therein:
(1) Member States which were the source of the information giving rise
to the decision to open the analysis file, or those which are directly
concerned by that information and Member States subsequently invited by
the analysis group to take part in the analysis because they are also
becoming concerned;
(2) Member States which learn from consulting the index system that they
need to be informed and assert that need to know under the conditions
laid down in paragraph 7.
7. The need to be informed may be claimed by authorized liaison officers.
Each Member State shall nominate and authorize a limited number of such
liaison officers. It shall forward the list thereof to the Management
Board.
A liaison officer shall claim the need to be informed as defined in paragraph
6 by means of a written reasoned statement approved by the authority to
which he is subordinate in his Member State and forwarded to all the participants
in the analysis. He shall then be automatically associated in the analysis
in progress.
If an objection is raised in the analysis group, automatic association
shall be deferred until completion of a conciliation procedure, which
may comprise three stages as follows:
(1) the participants in the analysis shall endeavour to reach agreement
with the liaison officer claiming the need to be informed; they shall
have no more than eight days for that purpose;
(2) if no agreement is reached, the heads of the national units concerned
and the Directorate of Europol shall meet within three days;
(3) if the disagreement persists, the representatives of the parties concerned
on the Management Board shall meet within eight days. If the Member State
concerned does not waive its need to be informed, automatic association
of that Member State shall be decided by consensus.
8. The Member State communicating an item of data to Europol shall be
the sole judge of the degree of its sensitivity and variations thereof.
Any dissemination or operational use of analysis data shall be decided
on in consultation with the participants in the analysis. A Member State
joining an analysis in progress may not, in particular, disseminate or
use the data without the prior agreement of the Member States initially
concerned.
Article 11
Index System
1. An index system shall
be created by Europol for the data stored on the files referred to in
Article 10 (1).
2. The Director, Deputy Directors and duly empowered officials of Europol
and liaison officers shall have the right to consult the index system.
The index system shall be such that it is clear to the liaison officer
consulting it, from the data being consulted, that the files referred
to in Article 6 (1), point 2 and Article 10 (1) contain data concerning
the seconding Member State.
Access by liaison officers shall be defined in such a way that it is possible
to determine whether or not an item of information is stored, but that
it is not possible to establish connections or further conclusions regarding
the content of the files.
3. The detailed procedures for the design of the index system shall be
defined by the Management Board acting unanimously.
Article 12
Order opening a data file
1. For every computerized
data file containing personal data operated by Europol for the purpose
of performing its tasks referred to in Article 10, Europol shall specify
in an order opening the file, which shall require the approval of the
Management Board::
(1) the file name;
(2) the purpose of the file;
(3) the groups of persons on whom data are stored;
(4) the nature of the data to be stored, and any of the data listed in
the first sentence of Article 6 of the Council of Europe Convention of
28 January 1981 which are strictly necessary;
(5) the type of personal data used to open the file;
(6) the supply or input of the data to be stored;
(7) the conditions under which the personal data stored in the file may
be communicated, to which recipients and under what procedure;
(8) the time limits for examination and duration of storage;
(9) the method of establishing the audit log.
The joint supervisory body provided for in Article 24 shall immediately
be advised by the Director of Europol of the plan to order the opening
of such a data file and shall receive the dossier so that it may address
any comments it deems necessary to the Management Board.
2. If the urgency of the matter is such as to preclude obtaining the approval
of the Management Board as required under paragraph 1, the Director, on
his own initiative or at the request of the Member States concerned, may
be a reasoned decision, order the opening of a data file. At the same
time he shall inform the members of the Management Board of his decision.
The procedure pursuant to paragraph 1 shall then be set in motion without
delay and completed as soon as possible.
TITLE IV COMMON PROVISIONS ON INFORMATION PROCESSING
Article 13
Duty to notify
Europol shall promptly
notify the national units and also their liaison officers if the national
units so request, of any information concerning their Member State and
of connections identified between criminal offences for which Europol
is competent under Article 2. Information and intelligence concerning
other serious criminal offences, of which Europol becomes aware in the
course of its duties, may also be communicated.
Article 14
Standard of data protection
1. By the time of the entry
into force of this Convention at the latest, each Member State shall,
under its national legislation, take the necessary measures in relation
to the processing of personal data in data files in the framework of this
Convention to ensure a standard of data protection which at least corresponds
to the standard resulting from the implementation of the principles of
the Council of Europe Convention of 28 January 1981, and, in doing so,
shall take account of Recommendation No R (87) 15 of the Committee of
Ministers of the Council of Europe of 17 September 1987 concerning the
use of personal data in the police sector.
2. The communication of personal data provided for in this Convention
may not begin until the data protection rules laid down in paragraph 1
above have entered into force on the territory of each of the Member States
involved in such communication.
3. In the collection, processing and utilization of personal data Europol
shall take account of the principles of the Council of Europe Convention
of 28 January 1981 and of Recommendation No R (87) 15 of the Committee
of Ministers of the Council of Europe of 17 September 1987.
Europol shall also observe the principles in respect of non-automated
data held in the form of data files, i. e. any structured set of personal
data accessible in accordance with specific criteria.
Article 15
Responsibility in data protection matters
1. Subject to other provisions
in this Convention, the responsibility for data stored at Europol, in
particular as regards the legality of the collection, the transmission
to Europol and the input of data, as well as their accuracy, their up-to-date
nature and verification of the storage timelimits, shall lie with:
(1) the Member State which input or otherwise communicated the data;
(2) Europol in respect of data communicated to Europol by third parties
or which result from analyses conducted by Europol.
2. In addition, subject to other provisions in this Convention, Europol
shall be responsible for all data received by Europol and processed by
it, whether such data be in the information system referred to in Article
8, in the data files opened for the purposes of analysis referred to in
Article 10, or in the index system referred to in Article 11, or in the
data files referred to in Article 14 (3).
3. Europol shall store data in such a way that it can be established by
which Member State or third party the data were transmitted or whether
they are the result of an analysis by Europol.
Article 16
Provisions on the drawing up of reports
On average, Europol shall
draw up reports for at least one in ten retrievals of personal data -
and for each retrieval made within the information system referred to
in Article 7 - in order to check whether they are permissible under law.
The data contained in the reports shall only be used for that purpose
by Europol and the supervisory bodies refereed to in Articles 23 and 24
and shall be deleted after six months, unless the data are further required
for ongoing control. The details shall be decided upon by the Management
Board following consultation with the joint supervisory body.
Article 17
Rules on the use of data
1. Personal data retrieved
from the information system, the index system or data files opened for
the purposes of analysis and data communicated by any other appropriate
means, may be transmitted or utilized only by the competent authorities
of the Member States in order to prevent and combat crimes falling within
the competence of Europol and to combat other serious forms of crime.
The data referred to in the first paragraph shall be utilized in compliance
with the law of the Member State responsible for the authorities which
utilized the data.
Europol may utilize the data referred to in paragraph 1 only for the performance
of its tasks as referred to in Article 3.
2. If, in the case of certain data, the communicating Member State or
the communicating third State or third body as referred to in Article
10 (4) stipulates particular restrictions on use to which such data is
subject in that Member State or by third parties, such restrictions shall
also be complied with by the user of the data except in the specific case
where national law lays down that the restrictions on use be waived for
judicial authorities, legislative bodies or any other independent body
set up under the law and made responsible for supervising the national
competent authorities within the meaning of Article 2 (4). In such cases,
the data may only be used after prior consultation of the communicating
Member State whose interests and opinions must be taken into account as
far as possible.
3. Use of the data for other purposes or by authorities other than those
referred to in Article 2 of this Convention shall be possible only after
prior consultation of the Member State which transmitted the data in so
far as the national law of that Member State permits.
Article 18
Communication of data to third States and third bodies
1. Europol may under the
conditions laid down in paragraph 4 communicate personal data which it
holds to third states and third bodies within the meaning of Article 10
(4), where:
(1) this is necessary in individual cases for the purposes of preventing
or combating criminal offences for which Europol is competent under Article
2;
(2) an adequate level of data protection is ensured in that State or that
body; and
(3) this is permissible under the general rules within the meaning of
paragraph 2.
2. In accordance with the procedure in Title VI of the Treaty on European
Union, and taking into account the circumstances referred to in paragraph
3, the Council, acting unanimously, shall determine the general rules
for the communication of personal data by Europol to the third States
and third bodies within the meaning of Article 10 (4). The Management
Board shall prepare the Council decision and consult the joint supervisory
body referred to in Article 24.
3. The adequacy of the level of data protection afforded by third States
and third bodies within the meaning of Article 10 (4) shall be assessed
taking into account all the circumstances which play a part in the communication
of personal data; in particular, the following shall be taken into account:
(1) the nature of the data;
(2) the purpose for which the data is intended;
(3) the duration of the intended processing; and
(4) the general or specific provisions applying to the third States and
third bodies within the meaning of Article 10 (4).
4. If the data referred to have been communicated to Europol by a Member
State, Europol may communicate them to third States and third bodies only
with the Member State's consent. The Member State may give its prior consent,
in general or other terms, to such communication; that consent may be
withdrawn at any time.
If the data have not been communicated by a Member State, Europol shall
satisfy itself that communication of those data is not liable to:
(1) obstruct the proper performance of the tasks falling within a Member
State's sphere of competence;
(2) jeopardize the security and public order of a Member State or otherwise
prejudice its general welfare.
5. Europol shall be responsible for the legality of the authorizing communication.
Europol shall keep a record of communications of data and of the grounds
for such communications. The communication of data shall be authorized
only if the recipient gives an undertaking that the data will be used
only for the purpose for which it was communicated. This shall not apply
to the communication of personal data required for a Europol inquiry.
6. Where the communication provided for in paragraph 1 concerns information
subject to the requirement of confidentiality, it shall be permissible
only in so far as an agreement on confidentiality exists between Europol
and the recipient.
Article 19
Right of access
1. Any individual wishing
to exercise his right of access to data relating to him which have been
stored within Europol or to have such data checked may make a request
to that effect free of charge to the national competent authority in any
Member State he wishes, and that authority shall refer it to Europol without
delay and inform the enquirer that Europol will reply to him directly.
2. The request must be fully dealt with by Europol within three months
following its receipt by the national competent authority of the Member
State concerned.
3. The right of any individual to have access to data relating to him
or to have such data checked shall be exercised in accordance with the
law of the Member State where the right is claimed, taking into account
the following provisions:
Where the law of the Member State applied to provides for a communication
concerning data, such communication shall be refused if such refusal is
necessary to:
(1) enable Europol to fulfil its duties properly;
(2) protect security and public order in the Member States or to prevent
crime;
(3) protect the rights and freedoms of third parties,
considerations which it follows cannot be overridden by the interests
of the person concerned by the communication of the information.
4. The right to communication of information in accordance with paragraph
3 shall be exercised according to the following procedures:
(1) as regards data entered within the information system defined in Article
8, a decision to communicate such data cannot be taken unless the Member
State which entered the data and the Member States directly concerned
by communication of such data have first had the opportunity of stating
their position, which may extend to a refusal to communicate the data.
The data which may be communicated and the arrangements for communicating
such data shall be indicated by the Member State which entered the data;
(2) as regards data entered within the information system by Europol,
the Member States directly concerned by communication of such data must
first have had the opportunity of stating their position, which may extend
to a refusal to communicate the data;
(3) as regards data entered within the work files for the purposes of
analysis as defined in Article 10, the communication of such data shall
be conditional upon the consensus of Europol and the Member States participating
in the analysis, within the meaning of Article 10 (2), and the consensus
of the Member State(s) directly concerned by the communication of such
data.
Should one or more Member State or Europol have objected to a communication
concerning data, Europol shall notify the person concerned that it has
carried out the checks, without giving any information which might reveal
to him whether or not he is known.
5. The right to the checking of information shall be exercised in accordance
with the following procedures:
Where the national law applicable makes no provision for a communication
concerning data or in the case of a simple request for a check, Europol,
in close cooperation with the national authorities concerned, shall carry
out the checks and notify the enquirer that is has done so without giving
any information which might reveal to him whether or not he is known.
6. In its reply to a request for a check or for access to data, Europol
shall inform the enquirer that he may appeal to the joint supervisory
body if he is not satisfied with the decision. The latter may also refer
the matter to the joint supervisory body if there has been no response
to his request within the timelimits laid down in its Article.
7. If the enquirer lodges and appeal to the joint supervisory body provided
for in Article 24, the appeal shall be examined by that body.
Where the appeal relates to a communication concerning data entered by
a Member State in the information system, the joint supervisory body shall
take its decision in accordance with the national law of the Member State
in which the application was made. The joint supervisory body shall first
consult the national supervisory body or the competent judicial body in
the Member State which was the source of the data. Either national body
shall make the necessary checks, in particular to establish whether the
decision to refuse was taken in accordance with paragraphs 3 and 4 (1)
of this Article. On confirmation of that, the decision, which may extend
to a refusal to communicate any information, shall be taken by the joint
supervisory body in close cooperation with the national supervisory body
or competent judicial body.
Where the appeal relates to a communication concerning data entered by
Europol in the information system or data stored in the work files for
the purposes of analysis, the joint supervisory body, in the event of
persistent objections from Europol or a Member State, may not overrule
such objections unless by a majority of two-thirds of its members after
having heard Europol or the Member State concerned. If there is no such
majority, the joint supervisory body shall notify the enquirer that it
has carried out the checks, without giving any information which might
reveal to him whether or not he is known.
Where the appeal concerns the checking of data entered by a Member State
in the information system, the joint supervisory body shall ensure that
the necessary checks have been carried out correctly in close cooperation
with the national supervisory body of the Member State which entered the
data. The joint supervisory body shall notify the enquirer that it has
carried out the checks, without giving any information which might reveal
to him whether or not he is known.
Where the appeal concerns the checking of data entered by Europol in the
information system or of data stored in the work files for the purposes
of analysis, the joint supervisory body shall ensure that the necessary
checks have been carried out by Europol. The joint supervisory body shall
notify the enquirer that it has carried out the checks, without giving
any information which might reveal to him whether or not he is known.
8. The above provisions shall apply mutatis mutandis to non-automated
data held by Europol in the form of data files, i. e. any structured set
of personal data accessible in accordance with specific criteria.
Article 20
Correction and deletion of data
1. If it emerges that data
held by Europol which have been communicated to it by third States or
third bodies or which are the result of its own analyses are incorrect
or that their input or storage contravenes this Convention, Europol shall
correct or delete such data.
2. If data that are incorrect or that contravene this Convention have
been passed directly to Europol by Member States, they shall be obliged
to correct or delete them in collaboration with Europol. If incorrect
data are transmitted by another appropriate means or if the errors in
the data supplied by Member States are due to faulty transmission or have
been transmitted in breach of the provisions of this Convention or if
they result from their being entered, taken over or stored in an incorrect
manner or in breach of the provisions of this Convention by Europol, Europol
shall be obliged to correct them or delete them in collaboration with
the Member States concerned.
3. In the cases referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2, the Member States which
are recipients of the data shall be notified forthwith. The recipient
Member States shall also correct or delete those data.
4. Any person shall have the right to ask Europol to correct or delete
incorrect data concerning him.
Europol shall inform the enquirer that data concerning him have been corrected
or deleted. If the enquirer is not satisfied with Europol's reply or if
he has received no reply within three months, he may refer the matter
to the joint supervisory body.
Article 21
Time limits for the storage and deletion of data files
1. Data in data files shall
be held by Europol only for as long as is necessary for the performance
of its tasks. The need for continued storage shall be reviewed no later
than three years after the input of data. Review of data stored in the
information system and its deletion shall be carried out by the inputting
unit. Review of data stored in other Europol data files and their deletion
shall be carried out by Europol. Europol shall automatically inform the
Member States three months in advance of the expiry of the time limits
for reviewing the storage of data.
2. During the review, the units referred to in the third and fourth sentences
of paragraph 1 above may decide on continued storage of data until the
next review if this is still necessary for the performance of Europol's
tasks. If no decision is taken on the continued storage of data, those
data shall automatically be deleted.
3. Storage of personal data relating to individuals as referred to in
point 1 of the first subparagraph of Article 10 (1) may not exceed a total
of three years. Each time limit shall begin to run afresh on the date
on which an event leading to the storage of data relating to that individual
occurs. The need for continued storage shall be reviewed annually and
the review documented.
4. Where a Member State deletes from its national data files data communicated
to Europol which are stored in other Europol data files, it shall inform
Europol accordingly. In such cases, Europol shall delete the data unless
it has further interest in them, based on intelligence that is more extensive
than that possessed by the communicating Member State. Europol shall inform
the Member State concerned of the continued storage of such data.
5. Deletion shall not occur if it would damage the interests of the data
subject which require protection. In such cases, the data may be used
only with the consent of the data subject.
Article 22
Correction and storage of data in paper files
1. If it emerges that an
entire paper file or data included in that file held by Europol are no
longer necessary for the performance of Europol's tasks, or if the information
concerned is overall in contravention of this Convention, the paper file
or data concerned shall be destroyed. The paper file or data concerned
must be marked as not for use until they have been effectively destroyed.
Destruction may not take place if there are grounds for assuming that
the legitimate interests of the data subject would otherwise be prejudiced.
In such cases, the paper file must bear the same note prohibiting all
use.
2. If it emerges that data contained in the Europol paper files are incorrect,
Europol shall be obliged to correct them.
3. Any person covered by a Europol paper file may claim the right vis-à-vis
Europol to correction or destruction of paper files or the inclusion of
a note. Article 20 (4) and Article 24 (2) and (7) shall be applicable.
Article 23
National supervisory body
1. Each Member State shall
designate a national supervisory body, the task of which shall be to monitor
independently, in accordance with its respective national law, the permissibility
of the input, the retrieval and any communication to Europol of personal
data by the Member State concerned and to examine whether this violates
the rights of the data subject. For this purpose, the supervisory body
shall have access at the national unit or at the liaison officers' premises
to the data entered by the Member State in the information system and
in the index system in accordance with the relevant national procedures.
For their supervisory purposes, national supervisory bodies shall have
access to the offices and documents of their respective liaison officers
at Europol.
In addition, in accordance with the relevant national procedures, the
national supervisory bodies shall supervise the activities of national
units under Article 4 (4) and the activities of liaison officers under
Article 5 (3), points 1 and 3 and Article 5 (4) and (5), in so far as
such activities are of relevance to the protection of personal data.
2. Each individual shall have the right to request the national supervisory
body to ensure that the entry or communication of data concerning him
to Europol in any form and the consultation of the data by the Member
State concerned are lawful.
This right shall be exercised in accordance with the national law of the
Member State to the national supervisory body of which the request is
made.
Article 24
Joint supervisory body
1. An independent joint
supervisory body shall be set up, which shall have the task of reviewing,
in accordance with this convention, the activities of Europol in order
to ensure that the rights of the individual are not violated by the storage,
processing and utilization of the data held by Europol. In addition, the
joint supervisory body shall monitor the permissibility of the transmission
of data originating from Europol. The joint supervisory body shall be
composed of not more than two members or representatives (where appropriate
assisted by alternates) of each of the national supervisory bodies guaranteed
to be independent and having the necessary abilities, and appointed for
five years by each Member State. Each delegation shall be entitled to
one vote.
The joint supervisory body shall appoint a chairman from among its members.
In the performance of their duties, the members of the joint supervisory
body shall not receive instructions from any other body.
2. Europol must assist the joint supervisory body in the performance of
the latter's tasks. In doing so, it shall in particular:
(1) supply the information it requests, give it access to all documents
and paper files as well as access to the data stored in the system; and
(2) allow it free access at any time to all its premises;
(3) carry out the joint supervisory body's decisions on appeals in accordance
with the provisions of Articles 19 (7) and 20 (4).
3. The joint supervisory body shall also be competent for the examination
of questions relating to implementation and interpretation in connection
with Europol's activities as regards the processing and utilization of
personal data, for the examination of questions relating to checks carried
out independently by the national supervisory bodies of the Member States
or relating to the exercise of the right to information, as well as for
drawing up harmonized proposals for common solutions to existing problems.
4. Each individual shall have the right to request the joint supervisory
body to ensure that the manner in which his personal data have been collected,
stored, processed and utilized by Europol is lawful and accurate.
5. If the joint supervisory body notes any violations of the provisions
of this Convention in the storage, processing or utilization of personal
data, it shall make any complaints it deems necessary to the Director
of Europol and shall request him to reply within a time limit to be determined
by it. The Director shall keep the Management Board informed of the entire
procedure. In the event of any difficulty, the joint supervisory body
shall refer the matter to the Management Board.
6. The joint supervisory body shall draw up activity reports at regular
intervals. In accordance with the procedure laid down in Title VI of the
Treaty on European Union, these shall be forwarded to the Council; the
Management Board shall first have the opportunity to deliver an opinion,
which shall be attached to the reports.
The joint supervisory body shall decide whether or not to publish its
activity report, and, if it decides to do so, determine how it should
be published.
7. The joint supervisory body shall unanimously adopt its rules of procedure,
which shall be submitted for the unanimous approval of the Council. It
shall set up internally a committee comprising one qualified representative
from each Member State with entitlement to a vote. The committee shall
have the task of examining the appeals provided for in Articles 19 (7)
and 20 (4) by all appropriate means. Should they so request the parties,
assisted by their advisers if they so wish, shall be heard by the committee.
The decisions taken in this context shall be final as regards all the
parties concerned.
8. It may also set up one or more other committees.
9. It shall be consulted on that part of the budget which concerns it.
Its opinion shall be annexed to the draft budget in question.
10. It shall be assisted by a secretariat, the tasks of which shall be
defined in the rules of procedures.
Article 25
Data security
1. Europol shall take the
necessary technical and organizational measures to ensure the implementation
of this Convention. Measures shall only be necessary where the effort
they involve is proportionate to the objective they are designed to achieve
in terms of protection.
2. In respect of automated data processing at Europol each Member State
and Europol shall implement measures designed to:
(1) deny unauthorized persons access to data processing equipment used
for processing personal data (equipment access control);
(2) prevent the unauthorized reading, copying, modification or removal
of data media (data media control);
(3) prevent the unauthorized input of data and the unauthorized inspection,
modification or deletion of stored personal data (storage control);
(4) prevent the use of automated data processing systems by unauthorized
persons using data communication equipment (user control);
(5) ensure that persons authorized to use an automated data processing
system only have access to the data covered by their access authorization
(data access control);
(6) ensure that it is possible to verify and establish to which bodies
personal data may be transmitted using data communication equipment (communication
control);
(7) ensure that it is subsequently possible to verify and establish which
personal data have been input into automated data or processing systems
and when and by whom the data were input (input control);
(8) prevent unauthorized reading, copying, modification or deletion of
personal data during transfers of personal data or during transportation
of data media (transport control);
(9) ensure that installed systems may, in case of interruption, be immediately
restored (recovery);
(10) ensure that the functions of the system perform without fault, that
the appearance of faults in the functions is immediately reported (reliability)
and that stored data cannot be corrupted by means of a malfunctioning
of the system (integrity).
TITLE V LEGAL STATUS, ORGANIZATION AND FINANCIAL PROVISIONS
Article 26
Legal capacity
1. Europol shall have legal
personality.
2. Europol shall enjoy in each Member State the most extensive legal and
contractual capacity available to legal persons under that State's law.
Europol may in particular acquire and dispose of movable or immovable
property and be a party to legal proceedings.
3. Europol shall be empowered to conclude a headquarters agreement with
the Kingdom of the Netherlands and to conclude with third States and third
bodies within the meaning of Article 10 (4) the necessary confidentiality
agreements pursuant to Article 18 (6) as well as other arrangements in
the framework of the rules laid down unanimously by the Council on the
basis of this Convention and of Title VI of the Treaty on European Union.
Article 27
Organs of Europol
The organs of Europol shall
be:
(1) the Management Board;
(2) the Director;
(3) the Financial Controller;
(4) the Financial Committee.
Article 28
Management Board
1. Europol shall have a
Management Board. The Management Board:
(1) shall take part in the extension of Europol's objective (Article 2
(2));
(2) shall define unanimously liaison officers' rights and obligations
towards Europol (Article 5);
(3) shall decide unanimously on the number of liaison officers the Member
States may send to Europol (Article 5);
(4) shall prepare the implementing rules governing data files (Article
10);
(5) shall take part in the adoption of rules governing Europol's relations
with third States and third bodies with the meaning of Article 10 (4)
(Articles 10, 18 and 42)
(6) shall unanimously decide on details concerning the design of the index
system (Article 11);
(7) shall approve by a two-thirds majority orders opening data files (Article
12);
(8) may deliver opinions on the comments and reports of the joint supervisory
body (Article 24);
(9) shall examine problems which the joint supervisory body brings to
its attention (Article 24 (5));
(10) shall decide on the details of the procedure for checking the legal
character of retrievals in the information system (Article 16);
(11) shall take part in the appointment and dismissal of the Director
and Deputy Directors (Article 29);
(12) shall oversee the proper performance of the Director's duties (Articles
7 and 29);
(13) shall take part in the adoption of staff regulations (Article 30);
(14) shall take part in the preparation of agreements on confidentiality
and the adoption of provisions on the protection of confidentiality (Articles
18 and 31);
(15) shall take part in the drawing up of the budget, including the establishment
plan, the auditing and the discharge to be given to the Director (Articles
35 and 36);
(16) shall adopt unanimously the five-year financing plan (Article 35);
(17) shall appoint unanimously the financial controller and oversee the
performance of his duties (Article 35);
(18) shall take part in the adoption of the financial regulation (Article
35);
(19) shall unanimously approve the conclusion of the headquarters agreement
(Article 37);
(20) shall adopt unanimously the rules for the security clearance of Europol
officials;
(21) shall act by a two-thirds majority in disputes between a Member State
and Europol or between Member States concerning compensation paid under
the liability for unauthorized or incorrect processing of data (Article
38);
(22) shall take part in any amendment of this Convention (Article 43);
(23) shall be responsible for any other tasks assigned to it by the Council
particularly in provisions for the implementation of this Convention.
2. The Management Board shall be composed of one representative of each
Member State. Each member of the Management Board shall have one vote.
3. Each member of the Management Board may be represented by an alternate
member; in the absence of the full member, the alternate member may exercise
his right to vote.
4. The Commission of the European Communities shall be invited to attend
meetings of the Management Board with non-voting status. However, the
Management Board may decide to meet without the Commission representative.
5. The members or alternate members shall be entitled to be accompanied
and advised by experts from their respective Member States at meetings
of the Management Board.
6. The Management Board shall be chaired by the representative of the
Member State holding the Presidency of the Council.
7. The Management Board shall unanimously adopt its rules of procedure.
8. Abstentions shall not prevent the Management Board from adopting decisions
which must be taken unanimously.
9. The Management Board shall meet at least twice a year.
10. The Management Board shall adopt unanimously each year:
(1) a general report on Europol's activities during the previous year;
(2) a report on Europol's future activities taking into account Member
States' operational requirements and budgetary and staffing implications
for Europol.
These reports shall be submitted to the Council in accordance with the
procedure laid down in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union.
Article 29
Director
1. Europol shall be headed
by a Director appointed by the Council, acting unanimously in accordance
with the procedure laid down in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union
after obtaining the opinion of the Management Board, for a four-year period
renewable once.
2. The Director shall be assisted by a number of Deputy Directors as determined
by the Council and appointed for a four-year period renewable once, in
accordance with the procedure laid down in paragraph 1. Their tasks shall
be defined in greater detail by the Director.
3. The Director shall be responsible for:
(1) performance of the tasks assigned to Europol;
(2) day-to-day administration;
(3) personnel management;
(4) proper preparation and implementation of the Management Board's decisions;
(5) preparing the draft budget, draft establishment plan and draft five-year
financing plan and implementing Europol's budget;
(6) all other tasks assigned to him in this Convention or by the Management
Board.
4. The Director shall be accountable to the Management Board in respect
of the performance of his duties. He shall attend its meetings.
5. The Director shall be Europol's legal representative.
6. The Director and the Deputy Directors may be dismissed by a decision
of the Council, to be taken in accordance with the procedure laid down
in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union by a two-thirds majority of
the Member States, after obtaining the opinion of the Management Board.
7. Notwithstanding paragraphs 1 and 2, the first term of office after
entry into force of this Convention shall be five years for the Director,
four years for his immediate Deputy and three years for the second Deputy
Director.
Article 30
Staff
1. The Director, Deputy
Directors and the employees of Europol shall be guided in their actions
by the objectives and tasks of Europol and shall not take or seek orders
from any government, authority, organization or person outside Europol,
save as otherwise provided in this Convention and without prejudice to
Title VI of the Treaty on European Union.
2. The Director shall be in charge of the Deputy Directors and employees
of Europol. He shall engage and dismiss employees. In selecting employees,
in addition to having regard to personal suitability and professional
qualifications, he shall take into account the need to ensure the adequate
representation of nationals of all Member States and of the official languages
of the European Union.
3. Detailed arrangements shall be laid down in staff regulations which
the Council shall, after obtaining the opinion of the Management Board,
adopt unanimously in accordance with the procedure laid down in Title
VI of the Treaty on European Union.
Article 31
Confidentiality
1. Europol and the Member
States shall take appropriate measures to protect information subject
to the requirement of confidentiality which is obtained by or exchanged
with Europol on the basis of this Convention. To this end the Council
shall unanimously adopt appropriate rules on confidentiality prepared
by the Management Board and submitted to the Council in accordance with
the procedure laid down in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union.
2. Where Europol has entrusted persons with a sensitive activity, Member
States shall undertake to arrange, at the request of the Director of Europol,
for security screening of their own nationals to be carried out in accordance
with their national provisions and to provide each other with mutual assistance
for the purpose. The relevant authority under national provisions shall
inform Europol only of the results of the security screening, which shall
be binding on Europol.
3. Each Member State and Europol may entrust with the processing of data
at Europol, only those persons who have had special training and undergone
security screening.
Article 32
Obligation of discretion and confidentiality
1. Europol organs, their
members, the Deputy Directors, employees of Europol and liaison officers
shall refrain from any action and any expression of opinion which might
be harmful to Europol or prejudice its activities.
2. Europol organs, their members, the Deputy Directors, employees of Europol
and liaison officers, as well as any other person under a particular obligation
of discretion or confidentiality, shall be bound not to disclose any facts
or information which come to their knowledge in the performance of their
duties or the exercise of their activities to any unauthorized person
or to the public. This shall not apply to facts or information too insignificant
to require confidentiality. The obligation of discretion and confidentiality
shall apply even after leaving office or employment, or after termination
of activities. The particular obligation laid down in the first sentence
shall be notified by Europol, and a warning given of the legal consequences
of any infringement; a written record shall be drawn up of such notification.
3. Europol organs, their members, the Deputy Directors, employees of Europol
and liaison officers, as well as persons under the obligation provided
for in paragraph 2, may not give evidence in or outside court or make
any statements on any facts or information which come to their knowledge
in the performance of their duties or the exercise of their activities,
without reference to the Director or, in the case of the Director himself,
to the Management Board.
The Director or Management Board, depending on the case, shall approach
the judicial body or any other competent body with a view to taking the
necessary measures under the national law applicable to the body approached;
such measures may either be to adjust the procedures for giving evidence
in order to ensure the confidentiality of the information, or provided
that the national law concerned so permits, to refuse to make any communication
concerning data in so far as is vital for the protection of the interests
of Europol or of a Member State.
Where a Member State's legislation provides for the right to refuse to
give evidence, persons asked to give evidence must obtain permission to
do so. Permission shall be granted by the Director and, as regards evidence
to be given by the Director, by the Management Board. Where a liaison
officer is asked to give evidence concerning information he receives from
Europol, such permission shall be given after the agreement of the Member
State responsible for the officer concerned has been obtained.
Furthermore, if the possibility exists that the evidence may extend to
information and knowledge which a Member State has communicated to Europol
or which clearly involve a Member State, the position of that Member State
concerning the evidence must be sought before permission is given.
Permission to give evidence may be refused only in so far as this is necessary
to protect overriding interests of Europol or of a Member State or States
that need protection.
This obligation shall apply even after leaving office or employment or
after termination of activities.
4. Each Member State shall treat any infringement of the obligation of
discretion or confidentiality laid down in paragraphs 2 and 3 as a breach
of the obligations imposed by its law on official or professional secrets
or its provisions for the protection of confidential material.
Where appropriate, each Member State shall introduce, no later than the
date of entry into force of this Convention, the rules under national
law or the provisions required to proceed against breaches of the obligations
of discretion or confidentiality referred to in paragraphs 2 and 3. It
shall ensure that the rules and provisions concerned apply also to its
own employees who have contact with Europol in the course of their work.
Article 33
Languages
1. Reports and all other
papers and documentation placed before the Management Board shall be submitted
in all official languages of the European Union; the working languages
of the Management Board shall be the official languages of the European
Union.
2. The translations required for Europol's work shall be provided by the
translation centre of the European Union institutions.
Article 34
Informing the European Parliament
1. The Council Presidency
shall each year forward a special report to the European Parliament on
the work of Europol. The European Parliament shall be consulted should
this Convention be amended in any way.
2. The Council Presidency or its representative appointed by the Presidency
shall, with respect to the European Parliament, take into account the
obligations of discretion and confidentiality.
3. The obligations laid down in this Article shall be without prejudice
to the rights of national parliaments, to Article K.6 of the Treaty on
European Union and to the general principles applicable to relations with
the European Parliament pursuant to Title VI of the Treaty on European
Union.
Article 35
Budget
1. Estimates shall be drawn
up of all of Europol's income and expenditure including all costs of the
joint supervisory body and of the secretariat set up by it under Article
22 for each financial year and these items entered in the budget; an establishment
plan shall be appended to the budget. The financial year shall begin on
1 January and end on 31 December.
The income and expenditure shown in the budget shall be in balance.
A five-year financing plan shall be drawn up together with the budget.
2. The budget shall be financed from Member States' contributions and
by other incidental income. Each Member State's financial contribution
shall be determined according to the proportion of its gross national
product to the sum total of the gross national products of the Member
States for the year preceding the year in which the budget is drawn up.
For the purposes of this paragraph, 'gross national product' shall mean
gross national product as determined in accordance with Council Directive
89/130/EEC, Euratom of 13 February 1989 on the harmonization of the compilation
of gross national product at market prices.
3. By 31 March each year at the latest, the Director shall draw up the
draft budget and draft establishment plan for the following financial
year and shall submit them, after examination by the Financial Committee,
to the Management Board together with the draft five-year financing plan.
4. The Management Board shall take a decision on the five-year financing
plan. It shall act unanimously.
5. After obtaining the opinion of the Management Board, the Council shall,
in accordance with the procedure laid down in Title VI of the Treaty on
European Union, adopt Europol's budget by 30 June of the year preceding
the financial year at the latest. It shall act unanimously. The adoption
of the budget by the Council shall entail the obligation for each Member
State to make available promptly the financial contribution due from it.
6. The Director shall implement the budget in accordance with the financial
regulation provided for in paragraph 9.
7. Monitoring of the commitment and disbursement of expenditure and of
the establishment and collection of income shall be carried out by a financial
controller from an official audit body of one of the Member States who
shall be appointed by the Management Board, acting unanimously, and shall
be accountable to it. The financial regulation may make provision for
ex-post monitoring by the financial controller in the case of certain
items of income or expenditure.
8. The Financial Committee shall be composed of one budgetary representative
from each Member State. Its task shall be to prepare for discussions on
budgetary and financial matters.
9. The Council shall, in accordance with the procedure laid down in Title
VI of the Treaty on European Union, unanimously adopt the financial regulation,
specifying in particular the detailed rules for drawing up, amending and
implementing the budget and for monitoring its implementation as well
as for the manner of payment of financial contributions by the Member
States.
Article 36
Auditing
1. The accounts in respect
of all income and expenditure entered in the budget together with the
balance sheet showing Europol's assets and liabilities shall be subject
to an annual audit in accordance with the financial regulation. For this
purpose the Director shall submit a report on the annual accounts by 31
May of the following year at the latest.
2. The audit shall be carried out by a joint audit committee composed
of three members, appointed by the Court of Auditors of the European Communities
on a proposal from its President. The term of office of the members shall
be three years; these shall alternate in such a way that each year the
member who has been on the audit committee for three years shall be replaced.
Notwithstanding the provisions of the second sentence, the term of office
of the member that, after drawing lots:
- is first, shall be two years,
- is second, shall be three years,
- is third, shall be four years,
in the initial composition of the joint audit committee after Europol
has begun to operate.
Any costs arising from the audit shall be charged to the budget provided
for in Article 35.
3. The joint audit committee shall in accordance with the procedure laid
down in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union submit to the Council
an audit report on the annual accounts; prior thereto the Director and
Financial Controller shall be given an opportunity to express an opinion
on the audit report and the report shall be discusses by the Management
Board.
4. The Europol Director shall provide the members of the joint audit committee
with all information and every assistance which they require in order
to perform their task.
5. A decision on the discharge to be given to the Director in respect
of budget implementation for the financial year in question shall be taken
by the Council, after examination of the report on the annual accounts.
6. The detailed rules for performing audits shall be laid down in the
Financial Regulation.
Article 37
Headquarters agreement
The necessary arrangements
concerning the accommodation to be provided for Europol in the headquarters
State and the facilities to be made available by that State as well as
the particular rules applicable in the Europol headquarters State to members
of Europol's organs, its Deputy Directors, employees and members of their
families shall be laid down in a headquarters agreement between Europol
and the Kingdom of the Netherlands to be concluded after obtaining the
unanimous approval of the Management Board.
TITLE VI LIABILITY AND LEGAL PROTECTION
Article 38
Liability for unauthorized or incorrect data processing
1. Each Member State shall
be liable, in accordance with its national law, for any damage caused
to an individual as a result of legal or factual errors in data stored
or processed at Europol. Only the Member State in which the event which
gave rise to the damage occurred may be the subject of an action for compensation
on the part of the injured party, who shall apply to the courts having
jurisdiction under the national law of the Member State involved. A Member
State may not plead that another Member State had transmitted inaccurate
data in order to avoid its liability under its national legislation vis-à-vis
an injured party.
2. If these legal or factual errors occurred as a result of data erroneously
communicated or of failure to comply with the obligations laid down in
this Convention on the part of one or more Member States or as a result
of unauthorized or incorrect storage or processing by Europol, Europol
or the other Member State in question shall be bound to repay, on request,
the amounts paid as compensation unless the data were used by the Member
State in the territory of which the damage was caused in breach of this
Convention.
3. Any dispute between that Member State and Europol or another Member
State over the principle or amount of the repayment must be referred to
the Management Board, which shall settle the matter by a two-thirds majority.
Article 39
Other liability
1. Europol's contractual
liability shall be governed by the law applicable to the contract in question.
2. In the case of non-contractual liability, Europol shall be obliged,
independently of any liability under Article 38, to make good any damage
caused through the fault of its organs, of its Deputy Directors or of
its employees in the performance of their duties, in so far as it may
be imputed to them and regardless of the different procedures for claiming
damages which exist under the law of the Member States.
3. The injured party shall have the right to demand that Europol refrain
from or drop any action.
4. The national courts of the Member States competent to deal with disputes
involving Europol's liability as referred to in this Article shall be
determined by reference to the relevant provisions of the Brussels Convention
of 27 September 1968 on Jurisdiction and the Enforcement of Judgements
in Civil and Commercial Matters, as later amended by Accession Agreements.
Article 40
Settlement of disputes
1. Disputes between Member
States on the interpretation or application of this Convention shall in
an initial stage be discussed by the Council in accordance with the procedure
set out in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union with the aim of finding
a settlement.
2. When such disputes are not so settled within six months, the Member
States who are parties to the dispute shall decide, by agreement among
themselves, the modalities according to which they shall be settled.
3. The provisions on appeals referred to in the rules relating to the
conditions of employment applicable to temporary and auxiliary staff of
the European Communities shall apply, mutatis mutandis, to Europol staff.
Article 41
Privileges and immunities
1. Europol, the members
of its organs and the Deputy Directors and employees of Europol shall
enjoy the privileges and immunities necessary for the performance of their
task in accordance with a Protocol setting out the rules to be applied
in all Member States.
2. The Kingdom of the Netherlands and the other Member States shall agree
in the same terms that liaison officers seconded from the other Member
States as well as members of their families shall enjoy those privileges
and immunities necessary for the proper performance of the tasks of the
liaison officers at Europol.
3. The Protocol referred to in paragraph 1 shall be adopted by the Council
acting unanimously in accordance with the procedure laid down in Title
VI of the Treaty on European Union and approved by the Member States in
accordance with their respective constitutional requirements.
TITLE VII FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 42
Relations with third States and third bodies
1. In so far
as is relevant for the performance of the tasks described in Article 3,
Europol shall establish and maintain cooperative relations with third
bodies within the meaning of Article 10 (4), points 1 to 3. The Management
Board shall unanimously draw up rules governing such relations. This provision
shall be without prejudice to Article 10 (4) and (5) and Article 18 (2);
exchanges of personal data shall take place only in accordance with the
provisions of Titles II to IV of this Convention.
2. In so far as is required for the performance of the tasks described
in Article 3, Europol may also establish and maintain relations with third
States and third bodies within the meaning of Article 10 (4), points 4,
5, 6 and 7. Having obtained the opinion of the Management Board, the Council,
acting unanimously in accordance with the procedure laid down in Title
VI of the Treaty on European Union, shall draw up rules governing the
relations referred to in the first sentence. The third sentence of paragraph
1 shall apply mutatis mutandis.
Article 43
Amendment of the Convention
1. In accordance with the
procedure laid down in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union, the Council,
acting on a proposal from a Member State and, after consulting the Management
Board, shall unanimously decide, within the framework of Article K.1 (9)
of the Treaty on European Union, on any amendments to this Convention
which it shall recommend to the Member States for adoption in accordance
with their respective constitutional requirements.
2. The amendments shall enter into force in accordance with Article 45
(2) of this Convention.
3. However, the Council, acting unanimously in accordance with the procedure
laid down in Title VI of the Treaty on European Union, may decide, on
the initiative of a Member State and after the Management Board has discussed
the matter, to amplify, amend or supplement the definitions of forms of
crime contained in the Annex. It may in addition decide to introduce new
definitions of the forms of crime listed in the Annex.
4. The Secretary-General of the Council of the European Union shall notify
all Member States of the date of entry into force of the amendments.
Article 44
Reservations
Reservations shall not
be permissible in respect of this Convention.
Article 45
Entry into force
1. This Convention shall
be subject to adoption by the Member States in accordance with their respective
constitutional requirements.
2. Member States shall notify the depositary of the completion of their
constitutional requirements for adopting this Convention.
3. This Convention shall enter into force on the first day of the month
following the expiry of a three-month period after the notification, referred
to in paragraph 2, by the Member State which, being a member of the European
Union on the date of adoption by the Council of the act drawing up this
Convention, is the last to fulfil that formality.
4. Without prejudice to paragraph 2, Europol shall not take up its activities
under this Convention until the last of the acts provided for in Articles
5 (7), 10 (1), 24 (7), 30 (3), 31 (1), 35 (9), 37 and 41 (1) and (2) enters
into force.
5. When Europol takes up its activities, the activities of the Europol
Drugs Unit under the joint action concerning the Europol Drugs Unit of
10 March 1995 shall come to an end. At the same time, all equipment financed
from the Europol Drugs Unit joint budget, developed or produced by the
Europol Drugs Unit or placed at its disposal free of charge by the headquarters
State for its permanent use, together with that Unit's entire archives
and independently administered data files shall become the property of
Europol.
6. Once the Council has adopted the act drawing up this Convention, Member
States, acting either individually or in common, shall take all preparatory
measures under their national law which are necessary for the commencement
of Europol activities.
Ariticle 46
Accession by new Member States
1. This Convention shall
be open to accession by any State that becomes a member of the European
Union.
2. The text of this Convention in the language of the acceding State,
drawn up by the Council of the European Union, shall be authentic.
3. Instruments of accession shall be deposited with the depositary.
4. This Convention shall enter into force with respect to any State that
accedes to it on the first day of the month following expiry of a three-month
period following the date of deposit of its instrument of accession or
on the date of entry into force of the Convention if it has not already
entered into force at the time of expiry of the said period.
Article 47
Depositary
1. The Secretary-General of the Council of the European Union shall act
as depositary of this Convention.
2. The depositary shall publish in the Official Journal of the European
Communities the notifications, instruments or communications concerning
this Convention.
In witness whereof, the undersigned Plenipotentiaries have hereunto set
their hands.
Done at Brussels on the twenty-sixth day of July in the year one thousand
nine hundred and ninety-five in a single original, in the Danish, Dutch,
English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Irish, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
and Swedish languages, each text being equally authentic, such original
remaining deposited in the archives of the General Secretariat of the
Council of the European Union.
ANNEX Referred to in Article 2
List of other serious forms of international crime which Europol could
deal with in addition to those already provided for in Article 2 (2) in
compliance with Europol's objective as set out in Article 2 (1).
Against life, limb or personal freedom:
- murder, grievous bodily injury
- illicit trade in human organs and tissue
- kidnapping, illegal restraint and hostage-taking
- racism and xenophobia
Against property or public goods including fraud:
- organized robbery
- illicit trafficking in cultural goods, including antiquities and works
of art
- swindling and fraud
- racketeering and extortion
- counterfeiting and product piracy
- forgery of administrative documents and trafficking therein
- forgery of money and means of payment
- computer crime
- corruption
Illegal trading and harm to the environment:
- illicit trafficking in arms, ammunition and explosives
- illicit trafficking in endangered animal species
- illicit trafficking in endangered plant species and varieties
- environmental crime
- illicit trafficking in hormonal substances and other growth promoters
In addition, in accordance with Article 2 (2), the act of instructing
Europol to deal with one of the forms of crime listed above implies that
it is also competent to deal with the related money-laundering activities
and the related criminal offences.
With regard to the forms of crime listed in Article 2 (2) for the purposes
of this Convention:
- 'crime connected with nuclear and radioactive substances' means the
criminal offences listed in Article 7 (1) of the Convention on the Physical
Protection of Nuclear Material, signed at Vienna and New York on 3 March
1980, and relating to the nuclear and/or radioactive materials defined
in Article 197 of the Euratom Treaty and Directive 80/836 Euratom of 15
July 1980,
- 'illegal immigrant smuggling' means activities intended deliberately
to facilitate, for financial gain, the entry into, residence or employment
in the territory of the Member States of the European Union, contrary
to the rules and conditions applicable in the Member States,
- 'traffic in human beings' means subjection of a person to the real and
illegal sway of other persons by using violence or menaces or by abuse
of authority or intrigue with a view to the exploitation of prostitution,
forms of sexual exploitation and assault of minors or trade in abandoned
children,
- 'motor vehicle crime' means the theft or misappropriation of motor vehicles,
lorries, semi-trailers, the loads of lorries or semi-trailers, buses,
motorcycles, caravans and agricultural vehicles, works vehicles, and the
spare parts for such vehicles, and the receiving and concealing of such
objects,
- 'illegal money-laundering activities' means the criminal offences listed
in Article 6 (1) to (3) of the Council of Europe Convention on Laundering,
Search, Seizure and Confiscation of the Proceeds from Crime, signed at
Strasbourg on 8 November 1990.
The forms of crime referred to in Article 2 and in this Annex shall be
assessed by the competent national authorities in accordance with the
national law of the Member States to which they belong.
Declaration
Article 40 (2)
'The following Member States agree that in such cases they will systematically
submit the dispute in question to the Court of Justice of the European
Communities:
- Kingdom of Belgium,
- Kingdom of Denmark,
- Federal Republic of Germany,
- Hellenic Republic,
- Kingdom of Spain,
- French Republic,
- Ireland,
- Italian Republic,
- Grand Duchy of Luxembourg,
- Kingdom of the Netherlands,
- Republic of Austria,
- Portuguese Republic,
- Republic of Finland,
- Kingdom of Sweden'.
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