Sonia ALFANO fut élue sur la liste "Italie des Valeurs" du procureur anti-corruption Antonio DI PIETRO , à l'origine de l'opération Mani pulite (mains propres) contre la corruption dans le monde politique.
"La corruption est un phénomène social, politique et économique complexe, qui touche tous les pays. Elle sape les institutions démocratiques, ralentit le développement économique et contribue à l'instabilité gouvernementale" (Office des Nations Unies cotnre la drogue et le crime). La France a ratifié la Convention internationale contre la corruption selon laquelle il n'existe aucune immunité, y compris à l'égard d'un chef d'Etat (Art. 2 a).
La France devrait assister à ce colloque et témoigner de son intérêt à cette initiative en pleines affaires Karachi et Woerth-Bettencourt.
Des personnes comme le Juge Jean-Marc Trevidic ("un président multirécidiviste"), Arnaud de Montebourg (voir sa déclaration sur Europe 1 : "la corruption ça existe"), Jean-Louis Nadal ou des membres du Club Droit Justice et Sécurité peuvent profiter de cette opportunité pour y assister et débattre des difficultés à oeuvrer dans le sens que souhaite promouvoir Sonia ALFANO.
La refus du pays des droits de l'homme à plus de justice s'est formalisé dans le vote à l'unanimité une réforme de la prise illégale d'intérêts réduisant les risques de poursuites - en pleine affaire Woerth Bettencourt - quand l'Europe appelle à une justice impartiale.
La mafia n'est pas un monopole italien (voir les USA (qui l'ont réimplantée en Italie en 1944), la Côte d'Azur, Grenoble, le Kosovo (avec le soutien militaire de l'OTAN, dont le siège est à côté des institutions européennes), le Japon, la Chine, etc.).
La mafia profite du libéralisme économique.
Sonia ALFANO montre que des eurodéputés refusent la logique du tout libéral. Il faut les soutenir dans leurs initaitives contre la confisquation des institutions européennes au profit d'un discours dominant criminogène, qui est avant tout un abdication politique.
Sonia ALFANO montre que l'Europe peut-être un relais pour la justice française.
Qu'en pense Eva Joly ?
Faîtes circuler et soyez nombreux à Bruxelles. L'Europe vous y donne rendez-vous pour parler avec elle de ce qui vous est cher.
As rapporteur in the LIBE committee on organized crime in the European Union, I am organising a hearing on "Towards an EU strategy to fight transnational organized crime" in the European Parliament in Brussels on March 29-30.
As you can see in the programme below, the EU institutions, agencies, prosecutors, writers... involved in the fight against organized crime will participate in this hearing in various ways. This moment of confrontation will be of fundamental importance to understand the current EU approach and the instruments available for combating criminal organizations as much as evaluating the limits of the existing regulatory framework by identifying and discussing proposals for improvement.
Please note that due to the nature of this extraordinary meeting and for security reason, only person regularly registered will be allowed to attend the meeting. Registration is required even if you've already got an access badge. So if you wish to attend please register by Friday 25 March by sending an email to flavien.deltort@europarl.europa.eu.
I look forward to welcoming you.
Sonia Alfano
Member of the European Parliament
ALDE Group
European Parliament
ASP 9G269
60, rue Wiertz
B-1047 Bruxelles
Tel.: +32 228 47598 (BRU)
Tel.: +39 091 6886423 (IT)
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Combating criminal organisations in the European Union:
the institutional perspective
Tuesday March 29 2011
15:00 – 19:15
European Parliament
Room JAN 4Q2
The purpose of this first session is to confront the European and international institutions with the problems related to the fight against organised crime. The contributions will evaluate the weaknesses of the existing regulatory framework by identifying and discussing proposals for improvement, in order to set up some possible legislative and operational measures.
Opening statement by Sonia ALFANO, MEP rapporteur on organised crime in the EU
-Cecilia MALMSTRÖM, European Commissioner for Home Affairs
-Péter STAUBER, Hungarian Presidency of the Council of the European Union
-Aled WILLIAMS, President of Eurojust
-Giovanni KESSLER, Director-General of the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) (TBC)
-Troels OERTING, Assistant Director of Europol
-Ioannis SARMAS, Member of the European Court of Auditors
-Pierre REULAND, Special Representative of Interpol to the European Union
-Pierre LAPAQUE, Chief, Law Enforcement, Organised Crime and Anti Money Laundering Unit at the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)
-Jan Willem VAN DER KAAIJ, Inspector General at European Investment Bank
-Rick MCDONNEL, Executive Secretary of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF-GAFI) (TBC)
The threat of transnational organised crime:
a proposal based on experience
Wednesday March 30 2011
9:00 - 13:00
European Parliament
Room JAN 4Q2
During the second session, a large panel of experts and judges of international level will analyze some of the major organised crime threats in the EU, especially to those that have impacts and implications at transnational and international levels. The instruments available for fighting the major criminal organisations will be identified.
Organised crime in the Balkans
-Jonathan RATEL, special prosecutor on organised crime al Kosovo Special Prosecution Office
Organised crime in Central and Eastern Europe
-Ruslan STEFANOV, Director of Center for the Study of Democracy
Organised crime in the Baltic countries and links with the Russian Mafia
-Expert fromRussian Organised Crime Threat Assessment (ROCTA)
Asian Mafia in the EU countries: the Belgium experience
-Bruno FRANS, Director of the department Fight against Organised Crime, Belgian Federal Police
International drug trafficking
-Robert HAUSCHILD, Head of Organised Crime Networks Unit, Europol
The confiscation of criminal assets and their use for social purpose
-Stefano MANSERVISI, Director -General for Home Affairs in the European Commission (TBC)
-Roberto FORTE, Director of Flare Network
Confrontation of textbook cases
-Vincenzo MACRI, Prosecutor in Ancona, Italy
-Gunther.SCHATZ, Prosecutor in Kempten, Germany (TBC)
-Roberto SCARPINATO, Prosecutor in Caltanissetta, Italy
The Roots of the Mafia in Europe:
recognition of the problem and effective response
Wednesday March 30 2011
15:00 - 19:30
European Parliament
Room JAN 4Q2
The aim of this third session is to higlight the presence of the Italian mafias - especially 'Ndrangheta, Camorra, Cosa Nostra and Sacra Corona Unita - within Member States of the European Union and to make a diagnosis on the legal obstacles which limit the effective fight against transnational organised crime in order to find possible solutions.
-Nicola BIONDO, Journalist, contributor to L'Unità, author of The Pact
-Antonio INGROIA, Public prosecutor antimafia in Palermo, Italy
-Antonio NICASO, Canadian journalist-author of Fratelli di Sangue
-Petra RESKI, German journalist and author renowned for her anti-Mafia publications
-Nicola GRATTERI Chief anti-mafia prosecutor in Reggio Calabria, Italy
-Roberto SAVIANO, Italian writer and journalist (TBC)
-Franco ROBERTI, Anti-mafia Chief Prosecutor in Salerno, Italy
-Antonio DI MATTEO,Deputy Prosecutor antimafia in Palermo, Italy
-Cataldo MOTTA, Prosecutor in Lecce, Italy