70th Anniversary
The Organization headquartered in Strasbourg was created on the wake of two World Wars, on May 5th 1949. On the eve of this anniversary SIR publishes the joint statement by Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland, the President of the Parliamentary Assembly Liliane Maury Pasquier and the Chairman of the Committee of Ministers Timo Soini. Forty seven member states have come together with common goals: peace, democracy and the rule of law, protection of fundamental rights, promotion of cultural diversity. Pressing challenges include the management of the Artificial Intelligence revolution, the scourge of modern slavery, and growing inequality in many European societies
70 years after its foundation, the Council of Europe is our continent’s leading human rights organisation. 47 member states have come together to agree common standards on human rights, democracy and the rule of law. All 830 million people living in this common legal space have an ultimate right of appeal to the European Court of Human Rights. This is unprecedented in European history, and an achievement that we should celebrate.
The European Convention on Human Rights and the European Social Charter are the living roots from which our Organisation grows.Over the years the Council of Europe has drawn on these rights, applying them to specific issues and providing additional protection for individuals. This has involved the provision of new legal instruments, based on commonly agreed standards. In this way we have acted to protect national minorities and regional and minority languages and to combat the sexual exploitation and abuse of children and violence against women and domestic violence. We have taken measures to prevent torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, to tackle trafficking in human beings and human organs and to stop the abuse of personal data and acts of cybercrime. We have also been active in ensuring the safety and integrity of sports, the accessibility of European culture, and education that promotes equality, inclusion and democratic citizenship.
In the modern world, challenges keep coming. Today, these include the management of the Artificial Intelligence revolution, the scourge of modern slavery, and growing inequality in many of our societies. In the years ahead, as yet unimagined problems will emerge too. A strong Council of Europe, with its Committee of Ministers and Parliamentary Assembly, will draw on the capacity of our Convention system – and the will of our member states – to provide the multilateral solutions from which citizens across the continent will benefit. There are of course broader challenges too.
Pockets of extreme nationalism and populism pose a direct challenge to the values of our Organisation and the international cooperation on which our democratic security depends. The Council of Europe was founded in the wake of two devastating world wars as an answer to such challenges. Together, the institutions of our Organisation and our 47 member states will stand strong alongside our European and world partners – the EU, the OSCE, the UN and more. We will play our part in ensuring a better future.
Thorbjørn Jagland, Secretary General of the Council of Europe
Liliane Maury Pasquier, President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
Timo Soini, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Finland, Chair of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe