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Dear ..., (no wiki markup)
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We write to express our concerns about the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) under negotiation. If, as currently planned, the agreement will only be made public once all parties have already agreed to it, none of the EU's national parliaments nor the European Parliament will have been able to scrutinize its contents in any meaningful way. The Community acquis on IPR enforcement was developed in a transparent and democratic way. Both the national parliaments and the European Parliament were involved. As regards to international intellectual property agreements, they have traditionally been conducted in a more open and transparent manner.
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Both the European Parliament and the national parliaments have vetoes on aspects of ACTA. ACTA's secrecy makes it impossible to assess whether these vetoes apply, to assess proportionality and subsidiarity issues, and makes political scrutiny impossible. ACTA sets a precedent of stealth legislation, constitutes a loss of parliamentary legislative power. We call upon the Parliaments of Europe to set parliamentary scrutiny reservations on the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA). It may be the only way to stop silent adoption in the Council.

Behind closed doors, the EU, US, Japan and other countries are negotiating ACTA. No drafts are published. Information surrounding the negotiations shows a too broad definition of piracy is used. As a result, bona fide entrepreneurs and civilians are criminalised, and excessive civil and administrative measures can be invoked against them. This will have far reaching consequences on legal certainty, innovation, competitiveness, freedom of speech and privacy. Trolls will get free reign and companies are chased off the market. ACTA will limit access to medicines, software and the Internet.

It is essential parliaments can scrutinize ACTA. It is unclear whether they will be able to do that. It is unclear whether the final draft will be published prior to Political Agreement in the EU Council. ACTA may pass silently during Parliamentary recess.

In the EU decisions are normally taken as openly as possible and as closely as possible to the citizen. Preparatory legal texts are published. If full disclosure is not possible, parts are published. Translations are made prior to adoption in the Council. With ACTA, parliaments and public get nothing. In a Resolution, the European Parliament called for disclosure of ACTA preparatory drafts, including progress reports, and of the Commission's negotiating mandate. The Council did not release documents.

In the case of trade agreements, both the EU Member States and the European Parliament have vetoes on aspects of the trade agreement. ACTA's secrecy makes it impossible to assess whether the vetoes apply and should be used.

In order to safeguard transparency and parliamentary legislative power, we call upon the parliaments of Europe, both the national as the European Parliament, to set parliamentary scrutiny reservations.


= Vetoes

The following vetoes apply to ACTA:

+ In so far as ACTA will relate to trade in cultural, audiovisual and educational services, the Member States have a veto.

+ In so far as ACTA will relate to non commercial acts, the Member States have a veto.

+ The Member States have a veto on criminal measures in ACTA.

+ The European Parliament has vetoes if ACTA entails amending an act adopted under the procedure referred to in Article 251 or if a specific institutional framework is established by instituting cooperation procedures.
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== Introduction on ACTA

Behind closed doors, the EU, US, Japan and other countries are negotiating the
Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA). On its website, the European
Commission calls ACTA "path breaking". A U.S. government spokesman said that
the ACTA text will only be made public after the parties have agreed to the
actual text. In the U.S., ACTA is treated as an Executive Agreement, meaning
that it will not go through the US Congress for approval.

The U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee expressed concerns about this modus
operadi: "We are concerned, however, that the ACTA under consideration will
prescribe rules for protection so specifically that it could impede
Congress's ability to make constructive policy changes in the future. (...)
Regarding the potential breadth of ACTA, we strongly urge you not to permit
the agreement to address issues of liability for service providers or
technological protection measures." [senate]

More than a 100 public interest organisations from around the world have
called on officials from the countries negotiating ACTA to immediately
publish the draft text of the agreement. [100g] Based on leaked documents and
industry comments on the proposed treaty, the groups expressed concerns that
ACTA may:

+ Require Internet Service Providers to monitor all citizens' Internet
communications;

+ Interfere with fair use of copyrighted materials;

+ Criminalize peer-to-peer electronic file sharing; and

+ Undermine access to low-cost generic medicines.

We share these concerns and support the call for transparency.














A rollback of democracy is not needed nor acceptable.


The ACTA negotiation process violates the
transparency requirements of the "Protocol on the role of the national
parliaments in the European Union". We call upon you to ensure that these
requirements are respected and not circumvented. In this letter we will
address competence, subsidiarity, proportionality and transparency issues.


== Introduction on ACTA

== Transparency

ACTA has three major legs: International Cooperation, Enforcement Practices,
and Legal Framework. In this letter we will concentrate on ACTA providing a
new legal framework.

+ ACTA will not be published prior to adoption in the Council. Adding a legal
framework to a trade agreement circumvents the "Protocol on the role of the
national parliaments in the European Union"'s transparency requirements for
Community legislation. The Protocol stipulates that translations have to be
available 6 weeks prior to adoption by the Council.

+ in the landmark ECJ judgment on the Turco case (joined cases C-39/05 P and
C-52/05 P), the Court stressed the importance of the public right of access
to the documents of the institutions, including preparatory ones, especially
in the case of legislative acts.

+ while ACTA is not a legislative act in the strict sense, it will be legally
binding for the member states. ACTA is therefore de facto legislation and
ACTA texts should be made directly accessible.

+ keeping the ACTA texts secret makes both properly assessing ACTA's
proportionality and subsidiarity issues, and political scrutiny, impossible.


== Community Competence

+ ACTA can not surpass present Community legislation. (TEC 133.3)

+ ACTA will relate to trade in cultural and audiovisual services and
educational services. This falls within the shared competence of the
Community and its Member States. (TEC 133.6)

+ the intention expressed in a leaked discussion paper to address
non-commercial acts by civilians does not fall within TITLE IX Common
Commercial Policy. The Community is not competent. And even if it would fall
within TITLE IX, it does not fall within "commercial aspects of intellectual
property" (TEC 133.5). Therefore, unanimity in the Council is needed and
Parliament has to be consulted (TEC 133.7)

+ if a specific institutional framework is established by instituting
cooperation procedures, assent of the European Parliament has to be obtained.
(TEC 300.3) The same is true if ACTA entails amending an act adopted under
the procedure referred to in Article 251.

+ ACTA cannot be concluded before the study on whether criminal measures are
essential, is ready, and the criminal measures proven essential. (TEC 133.6,
ECJ C-176/03) [study]

For more competence issues, we would like to refer you to the FFII analysis.
[analysis]
Yours sincerely,

(no wiki markup)

We call upon the Parliaments of Europe to set parliamentary scrutiny reservations on the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA). It may be the only way to stop silent adoption in the Council.

Behind closed doors, the EU, US, Japan and other countries are negotiating ACTA. No drafts are published. Information surrounding the negotiations shows a too broad definition of piracy is used. As a result, bona fide entrepreneurs and civilians are criminalised, and excessive civil and administrative measures can be invoked against them. This will have far reaching consequences on legal certainty, innovation, competitiveness, freedom of speech and privacy. Trolls will get free reign and companies are chased off the market. ACTA will limit access to medicines, software and the Internet.

It is essential parliaments can scrutinize ACTA. It is unclear whether they will be able to do that. It is unclear whether the final draft will be published prior to Political Agreement in the EU Council. ACTA may pass silently during Parliamentary recess.

In the EU decisions are normally taken as openly as possible and as closely as possible to the citizen. Preparatory legal texts are published. If full disclosure is not possible, parts are published. Translations are made prior to adoption in the Council. With ACTA, parliaments and public get nothing. In a Resolution, the European Parliament called for disclosure of ACTA preparatory drafts, including progress reports, and of the Commission's negotiating mandate. The Council did not release documents.

In the case of trade agreements, both the EU Member States and the European Parliament have vetoes on aspects of the trade agreement. ACTA's secrecy makes it impossible to assess whether the vetoes apply and should be used.

In order to safeguard transparency and parliamentary legislative power, we call upon the parliaments of Europe, both the national as the European Parliament, to set parliamentary scrutiny reservations.

= Vetoes

The following vetoes apply to ACTA:

+ In so far as ACTA will relate to trade in cultural, audiovisual and educational services, the Member States have a veto.

+ In so far as ACTA will relate to non commercial acts, the Member States have a veto.

+ The Member States have a veto on criminal measures in ACTA.

+ The European Parliament has vetoes if ACTA entails amending an act adopted under the procedure referred to in Article 251 or if a specific institutional framework is established by instituting cooperation procedures.

Yours sincerely,

acta letter (last edited 2009-05-30 23:30:38 by localhost)