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3 June 2008, by Daily Mail
The Euro 2008 football tournament is in danger of a terrorist attack from Al Qaeda.
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2 April 2008, by Earth Times
Cultures clashed at Vienna’s provincial court on Monday, as judges heard Austria’s first-ever case of alleged Islamist terrorism and banned one defendant for refusing to remove her burka. Two defendants, Mohamed M. and Mona S., aged 22 and 21, face charges of membership in a terrorist organization, having allegedly planned bomb attacks in Austria during the upcoming European football tournament, on European politicians and producing an Islamist threat video distributed on the internet. Prosecutors accused Mohamed M. of membership of «al-Qaeda, or respectively other internationally active Islamist terrorist networks», spreading their terrorist ideology and goals in the German-speaking world.
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2 April 2008, by Earth Times
Court proceedings in the trial against the alleged producers of an al-Qaeda-promoting threat video, billed Austria’s first case of Islamist terrorism, were adjourned on Thursday until March 12. Two defendants, Mohamed M. and his wife Mona S., aged 22 and 21, face charges of membership in a terrorist organization, having allegedly planned bomb attacks in Austria during the upcoming European football tournament and against European politicians, and producing an Islamist threat video distributed on the internet.
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4 February 2008, by European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia
This pilot study on migrants’ experiences of discrimination is based on country studies conducted between 2002 and 2005 in Belgium, Germany, Greece, Spain, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Austria, Portugal and UK. According to the study in all these countries migrants subjectively experience discriminatory practices to a significant extent.
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5 December 2007, by European Commission
On 1 December 2007, the deadline for transposition of the Asylum Procedures Directive (Council Directive 2005/85/EC of 1 December 2005, on minimum standards on procedures in Member States for granting and withdrawing refugee status) expired. Until today, only 6 Member States (Bulgaria, Germany, Luxemburg, Austria, Romania and the United Kingdom) have communicated their national measures informing that they transpose fully the Directive. 4 Member States (Belgium, Estonia, France and Lithuania) have notified partial transposition.
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13 November 2007, by Tirol
One of the two arrested suspect in an attempted bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Vienna has released from prison. The prime suspect Asim C. remains in jail. He was arrested after he tried to enter the embassy with a backpack containing explosives and nails.
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12 November 2007, by Die Presse
The Austrian extreme-Right Freedom Party (FPÖ) tried to initiate the threat of a «creeping Islamization» into a Parliament debate. In June, the Freedom Party, joined by the second extreme-Right Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZÖ) had already initiated a parliamentary debate about the threat mosques and minarets posed to the «ambience» of Austrian towns which needed to be protected against «the danger of creeping Islamisation».
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5 November 2007, by European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights
Equality, non-discrimination and anti-racism are the themes at Diversity Day, a youth event organised on 14 November 2007 in Vienna. Under the theme «chancen=gleich», Diversity Day seeks to make young people aware of the objectives of the 2007 European Year of Equal Opportunities for All. The event is open to the public and will gather around 1,500 young people from Vienna and neighbouring Hungarian towns.
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25 September 2007, by European Commission
The Commission has adopted a first batch of four cross-border programmes under the new cohesion policy 2007-2013. The programmes concern Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Italy, the United Kingdom and Ireland. The Commission expects to validate about 50 programmes on EU internal cross-border cooperation over the coming months, involving all Member States.
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19 June 2007, by European Parliament
The application of the Prüm Treaty, signed on 27 May 2005 by seven EU countries, should facilitate the exchange of data from DNA and fingerprint databases to produce «a stepping up of cross-border cooperation, particularly in combating terrorism, cross-border crime and illegal migration», according to a report by Fausto CORREIA (PES, PT) and adopted by the European Parliament.
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19 juin 2007, par Parlement européen
Le Parlement a adopté un rapport portant sur le transfert automatisé de profils ADN, de fichiers d’empreintes digitales et d’immatriculations de véhicules dans le cadre de la discussion commune sur la coopération transfrontière en matière de lutte contre le terrorisme et la criminalité. L’avis du Parlement est en l’espèce consultatif, mais les députés souhaitent modifier la base juridique utilisée, afin que le Conseil ne puisse passer outre ses recommandations à la majorité qualifiée.
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13 June 2007, by Committee of Experts on Terrorism (Codexter)
The CODEXTER profiles give an overview on member states’ provisions on counter-terrorism measures, including telephone tapping and related measures, legal rules and organisational and jurisdictional matters.
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21 May 2007, by House of Lords Select Committee on European Union
The Committee’s main criticism centres on the perception that the German Presidency is circumventing established EU procedures in its attempt to incorporate the Treaty into EU law. In particular, there has been a failure to allow other Member States and the European Parliament proper opportunity to consider the proposal. It is also noted that the Treaty contains provisions on data protection which are intended to supplement a general Data Protection Framework Decision. The problems lie in the fact that the EU Framework Decision has yet to be agreed.
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21 février 2007, par European Presidency
Le Conseil des ministres de la Justice et des Affaires intérieures de l’Union européenne qui s’est tenu le jeudi 15 février à Bruxelles a permis de parvenir à un accord politique sur la transposition des dispositions essentielles du Traité de Prüm (Eifel/Allemagne) dans le cadre juridique de l’UE. Le projet de décision y afférent devra être transmis sans délai au Parlement européen pour avis. Ainsi, la procédure de transposition du Traité dans le cadre juridique de l’UE pourrait encore aboutir sous présidence allemande.
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21 February 2007, by European Presidency
At their meeting in Brussels on Thursday, 15 February, the council of European Union justice and home affairs ministers agreed on incorporating the main provisions of the Prüm Treaty into the EU’s legal framework. The resulting draft decision is to be forwarded without delay to the European Parliament for its comments, meaning that the process of incorporating the treaty into EU legislation could be completed before the German Presidency ends on June 30.
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13 February 2007, by European Council
Implementing Agreement of the Treaty between the Kingdom of Belgium, the Federal Republic of Germany, the Kingdom of Spain, the French Republic, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, the Kingdom of the Netherlands and the Republic of Austria on the stepping up of cross-border cooperation, particularly in combating terrorism, cross-border crime and illegal migration, signed in Prüm, Germany, on 27 May 2005.
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17 January 2007, by European Presidency
At the informal meeting of EU home affairs ministers in Dresden today, the Federal Minister of the Interior, Dr Wolfgang Schäuble, presented an initiative to transpose the Prüm Treaty into the legal framework of the EU by drafting EU legislation using the exact wording of the Prüm Treaty.
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17 janvier 2007, par European Presidency
A l’occasion de la réunion informelle des ministres de l’Intérieur de l’Union européenne à Dresde, le ministre fédéral de l’Intérieur, Dr. Wolfgang Schäuble, a présenté, aujourd’hui, l’initiative visant à transposer le Traité de Prüm dans le cadre juridique de l’UE.
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4 December 2006, by Carrera Sergio
This Briefing Paper presents a typology of integration programmes for immigrants in selected Member States of the European Union. It first looks at the concept of ‘integration of immigrants’ and its inherent vulnerabilities. It then provides a typology of integration strategies and policies in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany and the Netherlands. The cases of Spain, Poland and the UK are also taken into consideration. The main tendencies and common elements are assessed and broadly compared. As the paper shows, there appears to be a move towards a restrictive integration policy for immigrants in the EU. Mandatory participation in integration programmes has become a constituent element of immigration and national citizenship legislation, as well as precondition to having access to a secure status. A nexus between immigration, integration and citizenship is also becoming the norm in a majority of the national legal systems assessed in this paper. The link between the social inclusion of immigrants and the juridical framework on immigration, integration and citizenship may raise human rights considerations, and endanger the inter-culturalism and diversity that are inherent to the character of the EU.
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4 December 2006, by Carrera Sergio
This briefing paper offers an overview of the current trends in ‘legal migration’ law and policy in a selection of EU member states. The main tendencies are ascertained through a comparative analysis of their strategies and priorities in the specific areas of labour migration, family reunification and immigration for the purpose of studies. In particular, this paper looks at the legal and political experiences of and responses pursued by Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Poland, Spain and The Netherlands. The following issues will be addressed: what are the latest developments in the legal and policy framework covering the admission of third country nationals for the purposes of employment, family reunification and studies? What is the underlying approach taken by EU countries? What are the conditions being applied in each of the cases? Are there any migration policy and legal trends that are common to all the member states of the EU?