Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2005-03-08-Speech-2-334"

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"Mr President, Commissioner, ladies and gentlemen, the institution of the ombudsman, which is directly linked to the Committee on Petitions in order to ensure it is able to respond to the circumstances, as well as to the obligations of the European Parliament towards the citizens and the citizens' right to ask the extended family of the European Union for protection, fills us with responsibilities. It is up to us to ensure that citizens do not lose their trust in the institutions which we support and try to apply to the majority of them. The Committee on Petitions – and the rapporteur gives an excellent presentation of its work and its problems – emphasises the need for greater attention, respect and reinforcement of the services within the framework of its operation, both during preliminary work and during the processing of petitions, but is, nonetheless, important. Citizens often complain about delays. There is clearly a great deal of red tape in numerous Member States, which refuse or are unable to respond to the Commission's requests that they speed up the procedures for sending the information from which the Commission will draw its conclusions and judge accordingly. We are disappointing the citizens. We are causing them, in this way, to disdain the institutions and functions of Parliament. We keep them away from knowledge. They lose their trust and, as time goes by, they turn their back on us. That is not our role. The rapporteur proposes, denounces and clearly records the experiences of one year. I, for my part, appreciate that the Committee on Petitions and its cooperation with the ombudsman and his services needs to be galvanised into greater action, given that, according to the initial data, there has been an increase in petitions in the order of 40% compared with the previous year. There needs to be a qualitative increase in information for citizens and this will be achieved through cooperation between the competent European institutions, by which I mean between the European Parliament, the Committee on Petitions, the ombudsman and his counterparts in the Member States. The authority of the Committee on Petitions depends on the respect that we show towards the four hundred and fifty million citizens who turn to us in the knowledge that procedures and appraisals, decisions and judgments come before interests and personal conduct. We always talk very highly of you, Commissioner, and I want to ask a question. How do you believe that the application of the justification of citizens is safeguarded by the Member States following the Commission's decision?"@en1

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