The 'Charter of Fundamental Rights of the
European Union' is a document containing
human rights provisions, 'solemnly proclaimed' by the
European Parliament, the
Council of the European Union, and the
European Commission in December
2000.

Minibook published by the European Union containing the text of the Charter
Origin
The
European Court of Justice decided in 1996 that the
treaties establishing the
European Community do not empower it to accede to the
European Convention on Human Rights, this despite all EC/EU member states being signatories to the Convention (
Opinion 2/94 "Accession by the Community to the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms" of
28 March 1996).
Following this, the Cologne
European Council (3/4 June 1999) entrusted the task of drafting the Charter to a Convention.
[1] The Convention held its constituent meeting in December 1999 and adopted the draft on 2 October 2000. The Biarritz European Council (13/14 October 2000) unanimously approved the draft and forwarded it to the European Parliament and the European Commission.
The European Parliament gave its agreement on 14 November 2000 and the Commission on 6 December 2000. The Presidents of the European Parliament, the Council and the Commission signed and proclaimed the Charter on behalf of their institutions on 7 December 2000 in Nice. Thus the aforementioned three institutions of the
European Union (Council, Commission, and Parliament) decided that the Charter is the appropriate format (for the moment) of presenting the fundamental principles of human rights for the Union.
Status
As it stands, the Charter is not a
treaty,
constitutional, or
legal document, and has the ambiguous value of a 'solemn proclamation' by three of the Union's most important institutions. Its text is mainly in harmony with the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the
European Convention on Human Rights, and therefore can be taken as a confirmation (by the Council, Commission, and Parliament) of the pre-existing rights contained therein, while adding widely-accepted principles such as the 'right' to good administration, workers' social rights, and bioethics. The Charter's 'power' or 'effect', if it has any, may be only these:
★ The proclaiming institutions (and other institutions such as the
European Court of Justice) are not going to contradict the Charter, since they have 'solemnly proclaimed' it.
★
Common law,
Community law, and
case law are generally in harmony with it, so there is little probability of conflict.
It does not have the status of
Community law. Therefore, cases cannot be brought solely on the ground of a contradiction against the Charter.
As part of the proposed Treaty establishing a constitution for Europe
Part II of the proposed
European Constitution, which was signed in October 2004 but which failed to be
ratified after
referendum defeats in
France and
the Netherlands, contained a version of the Charter. The intention was to enable the European Union to accede to the
European Convention on Human Rights, thus enabling the
European Court of Justice to rule on the basis of this Charter.
The Charter, if it acquires legal force, will only be binding on the
Institutions of the European Union, since the Union does not have competences beyond such. Therefore, the Charter does not limit the competences of Member States under the Treaties.
As part of the Reform Treaty
The
Reform Treaty that is being drafted as of July 2007 will make a reference to the Charter, whereby the Charter gains legally binding force. The Charter will be slightly modified by the Reform Treaty to resemble the text that was part of the rejected
European Constitution.
Notable provisions
The Charter is organized into 6 titles:
dignity,
freedoms,
equality, solidarity,
citizens' rights, and
justice. The second, third, and fourth rubrics reflect the
three generations of human rights after
Karel Vasak.
★ (Article 3) Prohibition of reproductive
cloning of human beings
★ (Article 53) 'Nothing in this Charter shall be interpreted as restricting or adversely affecting human rights and fundamental freedoms as recognised, in their respective fields of application, by Union law and international law and by international agreements to which the Union, the Community or all the Member States are party, including the
European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, and by the Member States' constitutions.'
See also
★
Four Freedoms
★
Fundamental right
★
Capital punishment in the European Union
External links
★ (and
in PDF format).
★
European Parliament's explanation of the Charter
★
Dynamic Guide to EU Charter
★
Official FAQs
★
Article-by-Article guide to the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights
★
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union European Navigator
★
EU Agency for Fundamental Rights.