At the plenary session of the Parliament of Georgia held on 2 April 2014, the representative of the Parliamentary Minority, Chiora Taktakishvili, stated: “On 27 March, the European Commission issued concrete recommendations to the Georgian Government. About five of those recommendations relate to the abolition of politically motivated cases under the rule of law. The European Commission openly demands from the Georgian Government to exclude the persecution and incarceration of political opponents and the politically motivated exploitation of the Prosecutor’s Office.”
FactCheck inquired about the accuracy of the MP’s statement and examined the report of the European Commission along with the recommendations elaborated within.
The European Commission is the executive body of the European Union and represents the interests of the EU as a whole. The Commission drafts European laws and presents them to the Parliament and the Council. It implements EU policy and administers EU funds and programmes. The Commission is comprised of 28 commissioners, each of them being a representative of an EU member state. The President of the Commission is elected by the 28 governments of the EU and approved by the European Parliament. Other commissioners are nominated by their national governments in agreement with the new President and then the 28 members as a single body are subject to a vote of approval by the European Parliament. The commissioners are appointed for a term of five years but they do not represent the governments of their countries; instead, each is responsible for a specific field of EU policy.
The European Commission document, entitled Implementation of the European Neighbourhood Policy in Georgia – Progress in 2013 and Recommendations for Action, dated 27 March 2014, reports on the progress made in implementing the EU-Georgia European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) Action Plan between 1 January and 31 December 2013.
The report indicates (below we name only those recommendations and suggestions which are closely related to the statement of the MP): with a view to the sustained implementation of the European Neighbourhood Policy Action Plan in 2014, Georgia is invited to:
- ensure that criminal prosecutions are conducted in a transparent and impartial manner, free of political motivation, in order to avoid any perception of politically motivated justice;
- ensure that prosecution activities are performed according to the highest standards of independence, transparency and avoidance of political bias, including through effective oversight of the Prosecutor’s Office;
- ensure that pre-trial detention is used only as an exceptional measure, in line with the law, in order to safeguard, inter alia, the principle of the presumption of innocence. Revise rules on administrative detention in compliance with fair trial norms; and
- increase the accountability and democratic oversight of law enforcement agencies. Consider establishing a fully-fledged independent and effective complaints mechanism. Investigate abuses and implement structural reforms and effective monitoring of the prison system.