Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2005-10-26-Speech-3-105"
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"en.20051026.13.3-105"2
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Europe wants to fight against serious organised crime, the international ramifications of which strike at the heart of Europe. That is all well and good. It is indeed high time to become concerned about the damage caused by the deplorable Schengen Agreement. Although I am opposed to setting up a European police force – a real European FBI – it is, in actual fact, necessary to strengthen cooperation between the Member States, but to do so by fully respecting national sovereignties where the police, justice and the fight against cross-border organised crime are concerned.
Europe does not need to provide itself with scores of Theodule-style committees whose ultimate aim is completely to strip the nation States of their sovereign prerogatives: the ability to say what the law is and to enforce it. Today, the majority of police information is transferred, and handled by, Interpol. Our Eurocrats’ obsession with superimposing a European agency on Interpol generates, over and above the inherent costs of funding any organisation, a great deal of complications, particularly in relation to the absolute desire to harmonise the definitions of punishable crimes and offences or, furthermore, the scale of their penalties.
Let us abandon this pipe dream of standardisation and finally concentrate our efforts on a coherent fight against all types of crime, and let us begin to do so by re-establishing our national borders."@en1
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