Friday 25 May 2018

No…..not ‘EL Greco’!

GRECO.  It would be great to write about the Greek-born painter, sculptor and architect of the Spanish Renaissance.

Sorry. In this instance ‘GRECO’ is the Group of States against Corruption, established in 1999 by the Council of Europe.  GRECO’s objective; to improve the capacity of its members to fight corruption.
GRECO published its fourth evaluation round  Corruption prevention in respect of members of parliament, judges and prosecutors’,  Interim Compliance Report, Spain on 3rd January 2018.  If it was a Greco, it wouldn’t be described as his best work.

GRECO concludes that “…none of the eleven recommendations contained in the Fourth Round Evaluation Report had been satisfactorily implemented or dealt with in a satisfactory manner by Spain.” Seven recommendations have been partly implemented; four recommendations have not been implemented.

The eleven recommendations covered:

                    corruption prevention in respect of members of parliament 
                    the legislative framework governing the General Council of the Judiciary (CGPJ) 
                    objective criteria and evaluation requirements be laid down in law for the appointment of the higher ranks of the judiciary… in order to ensure that these appointments do not cast any doubt on the independence, impartiality and transparency of this process.
                    a code of conduct for judges be adopted.
                    recommended extending the limitation period for disciplinary procedures.
                    corruption prevention in respect of prosecutors recommended
                    a code of conduct for prosecutors be adopted and made easily accessible to the public.
                    recommended developing a specific regulatory framework for disciplinary
matters in the prosecution service, which is vested with appropriate guarantees of
fairness and effectiveness and subject to independent and impartial review.

The low level of compliance meant that Spain was graded as “globally unsatisfactory”.

Why is this relevant to the Catalan political prisoners and exiles?


Because GRECO highlights just how close the Prosecutor General is to the government in Madrid. GRECO wants the prosecutor to be clearly separate from the government, so that communication between the two is out in the open;

“…it  is  key  that  communication  between  the  Prosecutor General  and  the  Government  is  made  in  a  transparent  manner,  in  writing  and published  in  an  adequate  way.”

This is important because of the widespread reports that the Prosecutor General, and the judges have been in close contact with the Justice Minister, Rafael Catalá Polo over the Catalan political prisoners. Sr. Catalá is uncannily able to predict exactly what the judges will decide – for example, predicting the detention order against the rapper Valtonyc. In a clumsy attempt to swop prisoners, the minister denies having ordered the arrest of former HSBC employee Hervé Falciani in order to use him as a bargaining chip to win back Marta Rovira and AnnaGabriel, both exiled in Switzerland.



The report finishes like this:

Finally, GRECO invites the authorities of Spain to authorise, as soon as possible, the
publication of the report, to translate the report into the national language and to
make this translation public.

Unsurprisingly, the Spanish government has chosen not to do so…

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