Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2001-07-03-Speech-2-156"
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"en.20010703.9.2-156"2
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". – The honourable Member invites me to dig deep into the soil of competence and its related terrain. The provision, deployment and management of EU police officers for external crisis management missions is a competence of the Member States and the Council secretariat. So a police unit has been established in the new politico-military structures in the Council secretariat to carry out the detailed police action plan, which I referred to earlier, in coordination with the Member States and the Committee for Civilian Aspects of Crisis Management. I would not dare to trespass on what is legitimately the territory of Member States, but there is a role and a responsibility for the Commission.
I described how we have considerable experience in the field of police training. Indeed, we can make a particularly important contribution by trying to ensure that training in this area, and in others which are related to civilian crisis management, is compatible with that provided by the UN. The UN and the European Union – the European Commission – now have more experience than others in this area and it is absolutely imperative that we ensure that the training provided – whether for police officers, people running penitentiaries, justices of the peace or magistrates – is compatible and appropriate wherever their services are required. There is an important role for the Commission, but it is not the role of a sixteenth Member State."@en1
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