EU Restrictive Measures and Third Countries’ Evidence

Celia Challet, Dorin-Ciprian Grumaz
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Abstract

EU restrictive measures, often referred to as ‘sanctions’, have become an increasingly used instrument of EU autonomous foreign policy. For some restrictive measures, however, the EU cannot act alone. In order to adopt them, the Council must rely on information transmitted by third states’ authorities and decisions taken by them at domestic level. This has been the case, in particular, of EU restrictive measures adopted in connection with misappropriations of state funds. The Council’s use of such evidence has been somewhat controversial and has led to numerous legal debates before the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). To what extent was the Council free to rely on the evidence provided by these third states’ authorities? How to ensure that the fundamental rights of the targeted persons and entities were complied with in the process? Faced with these questions in its particularly abundant case law, the CJEU has progressively raised the threshold of validity for these sanctions. It has done so up to a point at which, in the authors’ opinion, the sanctions can no longer reach such threshold in practice. This article addresses the evolutions and implications of the CJEU case law on a legal aspect that is of crucial importance for the EU’s sanctions practice. Restrictive measures – Third States evidence – Misappropriations of State funds – Terrorism – Judicial review – Fundamental Rights – Ukraine – Tunisia – Egypt
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欧盟限制措施与第三国证据
欧盟的限制性措施,通常被称为“制裁”,已成为欧盟自主外交政策中越来越常用的工具。然而,对于某些限制性措施,欧盟无法单独行动。为了通过它们,安理会必须依靠第三国当局提供的信息和它们在国内一级作出的决定。特别是欧盟对挪用国家资金采取的限制性措施就是这种情况。理事会对这种证据的使用多少引起了争议,并在欧洲联盟法院(欧洲法院)引起了多次法律辩论。安理会在多大程度上可以自由地依赖这些第三国当局提供的证据?如何确保目标个人和实体的基本权利在此过程中得到遵守?在其特别丰富的判例法中,面对这些问题,欧洲法院逐步提高了这些制裁的有效性门槛。它已经这样做了,在作者看来,制裁在实践中已不能再达到这一限度。本文论述了欧洲法院判例法在一个对欧盟制裁实践至关重要的法律方面的演变和影响。限制性措施-第三国证据-挪用国家资金-恐怖主义-司法审查-基本权利-乌克兰-突尼斯-埃及
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