Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-03-14-Speech-2-139"

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"en.20000314.8.2-139"2
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"I should like to say that a Charter of Fundamental Rights is both welcome and essential, provided it does not fall into the following three traps. The first trap is that it may just become just another public relations exercise – and we have seen many of them from the European Union, in employment for instance – which has no legal basis, which is not binding and which will therefore not allow citizens to enforce their rights through the courts. The second danger is that it may give the European Union an excuse to continue not being legally bound by basic decisions or regulations of international bodies, such as the European Convention on Human Rights or the various decisions of the International Labour Organisation. The third danger is that it may become a general Charter containing a loose set of average values, a mechanism for subverting the advanced human rights which have been acquired in various countries. For example, if a particular country has the right to free education, then any general reference to the right to education in a European Union Charter could be the first step towards subverting that right. Provided the Charter deals with these three traps, provided it addresses social rights in a serious manner, provided it is open to the new issues raised by the Internet, new technologies, etc., and provided it applies to all persons living in Europe, then it may represent a positive contribution."@en1

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