site.btaEU Justice Commissioner Jourova: "Ending Cooperation and Verification Mechanism Depends on Bulgaria' Achievements"
EU Justice Commissioner Jourova:"Ending Cooperation and Verification Mechanism Depends on Bulgaria' Achievements"
Sofia, April 8 (BTA) - Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov conferred here on Friday with visiting EU Justice, Consumers and Gender Equality Commissioner Vera Jourova, the Government Information Service said.
The Proposal for a Council Regulation on the establishment of the European Public Prosecutor's Office topped the agenda. The Prime Minister noted that right from the outset of the debate, Bulgaria has been supporting the establishment of a strong and independent European public prosecutor's office. "We agree that institutional measures at the EU level are needed to enable the effective criminal prosecution of fraud and other criminal offences against EU financial interests," Borissov said. He and the EU Commissioner discussed the progress of the judicial reform in Bulgaria and the countercorruption measures which the State is taking.
Jourova stressed the importance of building public trust in the judiciary and the prosecuting magistracy, which would clearly signal tangible results. She added that she can see that there is a political will for the achievement of sustainable results in Bulgaria.
Whether the Cooperation and Verification Mechanism (CVM) will be discontinued in respect of Bulgaria depends on developments in the country and Bulgaria's achievements, Commissioner Jourova told a news briefing at the Ministry of Justice earlier in the day.
She conferred with Justice Minister Ekaterina Zaharieva after holding talks with Prosecutor General Sotir Tsatsarov and Deputy Prime Minister for European Policies Coordination and Institutional Affairs Meglena Kuneva.
The guest sees the CVM rather as a tool of cooperation and believes that it is quite balanced. In her words, this year's report makes several critical remarks on which results must be achieved. Jourova noted that some topics are left over from 2015. The talks she had with Tsatsarov and Zaharieva left her with the impression that Bulgaria is on the right track, and the European Commission expects tangible results in order to discontinue the mechanism, the Commissioner said.
According to Jourova, results do not consist in just making new laws but also in their effective implementation. She drew attention to the criminal cases against public figures charged with corruption. The Commissioner takes a positive view of ending the CVM in respect of Bulgaria. "What we need in Bulgaria are sustainable results, and sustainable results require a sustained political will, which I can see in your country," she commented. Asked about the EU experts who will be checking the operation of the Bulgarian prosecution service, Jourova pointed out that they are being selected.
Zaharieva said, for her part, that Bulgaria is ready to welcome the EU experts. She and the Commissioner considered the establishment of a European Public Prosecutor's Office, online trading contracts, the ratification of the Istanbul Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence, and the judicial reform in Bulgaria.
Jourova and Tsatsarov discussed the establishment of a European public prosecutor's office, the Bulgarian prosecuting magistracy said in a press release.
The Commissioner said that she is seeing the competent authorities of all EU Member States about their readiness to support the establishment of a European public prosecutor's office. In Bulgaria, there has never been a difference between the professional and political position on the establishment of such office, the guest emphasized.
The refugee crisis, human trafficking and the prosecution of radical Islam also figured on the agenda. The Prosecutor General pointed out that the capacity of prosecution offices in the border areas has been strengthened in view of the refugee flow and the larger number of human trafficking cases. He said that Bulgaria is taking preventive action against the spread of radical Islam in this country and emphasized that counterterrorism legislation is being drafted by a working group of experts of the prosecution service, the Interior Ministry and the State Agency for National Security.
Regarding the judicial reform, Tsatsarov said that the division of the Supreme Judicial Council into a judges' college and a prosecutors' college and the amendments to the Judicial System Act provide the necessary guarantees that the independence of the judiciary will be enhanced with clearly formulated rules and magistrates' responsibilities.
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