(FRA) European Arrest Warrant: Respecting rights across borders

Date of article: 26/03/2024

Daily News of: 26/03/2024

Country:  EUROPE

Author: European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights

Article language: en

The European Arrest Warrant Proceedings report examines the rights of defendants - people who have been issued with a warrant - and how they apply in practice. They can be suspects or convicts that fled the country. The report looks at what happens in the country that issues the Warrant and the one that executes it. It identifies real-life challenges, how countries address them and suggests improvements:

  • Respect for rights – mutual trust and recognition between national judicial systems is important for cross-border cooperation. However, this can lead the judiciary to overlook personal circumstances, such as ill-health, their family situation, or the detention conditions in the country that issued the Warrant. Countries should assess the wider rights implications of cross-border transfers case-by-case when deciding on extraditions or even consider alternatives to ensuring justice without using the Warrant.
  • Right to legal assistance – people should have legal assistance in the country where they are arrested, as well as in the country that issued the warrant. In practice, they often have State-appointed lawyers. Their right to choose a lawyer freely may be hindered by lack of knowledge and ability to appoint a private lawyer in the arresting country. Legal professionals can be unclear about the need for also appointing lawyers in the issuing country. Defendants are either unaware about their right to such lawyers or do not get help finding one. Countries should provide legal and police training, and guidance on all aspects of the Warrant. Countries should also compile, and make available, lists of lawyers experienced in Warrants, so defendants can properly consult them with enough time.
  • Right to information - defendants generally receive information about their rights and the reason for the Warrant. But they may be informed late or not fully understand the information provided. This underlines the need for simplified information that avoids legal jargon. Training, checklists and guidance could ensure the police and legal professionals inform those arrested so that defendants fully understand proceedings.
  • Right to interpretation and translation - defendants generally have access to interpreters and translations but often the quality is poor. Sometimes this is due to short deadlines and the difficulty in finding people to translate less widely spoken languages. Pooling interpreters and translators between countries and introducing quality checks could improve understanding of proceedings.

The Council of the EU asked FRA to build on the agency’s earlier research. It draws on desk research and interviews with legal professionals, and those who were issued with the Warrant.

Quote from FRA Director Sirpa Rautio:

“The European Arrest Warrant is a vital tool for enforcing justice across borders. It is part of the system that contains key protections to ensure the rights of those served with the Warrant are respected. But theory and practice are sometimes not aligned. This report outlines how the courts and police can ensure that people issued with the Warrant have full access to justice and are tried fairly.”

For more, please contact: media@fra.europa.eu/ Tel.: +43 1 580 30 653

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