http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=613

The European Union, A Prison of Nations

by Srdja Trifkovic

Srdja TrifkovicVarious multiethnic states (imperial Russia, the Habsburg 
Monarchy, pre-World War II Kingdom of Yugoslavia) have been 
labeled—often unfairly—as “prisons of nations.” That designation will 
apply more aptly to the European Union when the Lisbon Treaty, signed by 
all 27 EU heads of states or governments last December, takes effect 
next year. Under the “European Arrest Warrant,” which is to be 
implemented under the terms of the Treaty, every citizen or visitor of a 
member country the European Union will be liable to arrest and 
extradition at the behest of a judge in any other EU member-country, 
under one of 32 vaguely defined categories of “crime.”

This is a momentous development, and not one in a hundred EU citizens, 
let alone non-EU visitors to Europe, are fully aware of its implications.

Those 32 offenses, according to the drafters of the Treaty, “if they are 
punishable in the issuing Member State by a custodial sentence or a 
detention order for a maximum period of at least three years and as they 
are defined by the law of the issuing Member State, shall, under the 
terms of this Framework Decision and without verification of the double 
criminality of the act, give rise to surrender pursuant to a European 
arrest warrant.”

The list of 32 offenses includes criminal conspiracy, terrorism, human 
trafficking, child pornography, smuggling of drugs, weapons and 
explosives, fraud and money laundering, murder, kidnapping, forgery, 
etc. It also includes “racism and xenophobia,” as well as “computer 
crime” and “crimes under the jurisdiction of the International Criminal 
Court.” The local police will be obliged to arrest the indicted person 
and have him transferred to the issuing judge’s court for trial—and they 
will have to act regardless of their country’s judicial system or penal 
code.

Once the person is at the local court, he will be at the mercy of the 
local laws. The involvement of the ICC implies possible further 
extradition to non-EU countries. The Warrant is already in force in 
eight EU countries (Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Portugal, Spain, 
Sweden and the United Kingdom). An initial hearing takes place before a 
judge within 48 hours merely to establish the identity of the arrested 
(habeus corpus) and whether the arrest warrant has been filled in 
correctly. Additional information from the state that issued the arrest 
warrant may be requested. The major difference between extradition and 
EAW procedures is that the “hearing” in the latter process does not 
consider the allegations against the defendant or examine evidence. 
Instead, the hearing is merely meant to satisfy the court that no “legal 
bars to surrender” apply.

The European Arrest Warrant was one of the main topics at the recent 
Counter-Jihad Summit in Vienna, where the former Austrian Ambassador 
Edgar K. Selzer gave a detailed talk on the implications of this new 
weapon against freedom of speech in the EU. Dr. Selzer pointed out that 
the inclusion of “racism and xenophobia” brings “an emotion, a 
sentiment” into the category of major crimes, such as murder, arson etc, 
which is a legal and logical absurdity.

The European Arrest Warrant does not define “racism and xenophobia” as 
such, but its drafters have relied on the European Commission’s 
“Framework Decision on combating racism and xenophobia” which 
criminalizes “belief in race colour, descent, religion or belief, 
national or ethnic origin as a factor determining aversion to 
individuals.” The Decision mandates that “racist and xenophobic 
behaviour must constitute an offence in all Member States and be 
punishable by effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties.” This 
framework decision will apply to all “offences” committed within the 
territory of the European Union, or “for the benefit of a legal person 
established in a Member State.”

The implications of all this are significant, for the future of civil 
liberties in the Western world no less than for me personally.

On May 11, I gave a speech at the Counter-Jihad Summit in Vienna. As our 
readers are well aware, “racism and xenophobia” in the EU-speak have 
long included the nebulous thought-crime of “Islamophobia”—and my speech 
could be construed as paradigmatically “Islamophobic” by the drafters of 
the EU Framework Decision, and accordingly acted upon by the future 
users of the European Arrest Warrant.

I am not an EU citizen, but that is immaterial if the “offence” was 
committed in an EU member-country. Once the European Arrest Warrant is 
in force, a Muslim-friendly judge in, say, Leicester or Birmingham could 
issue a warrant for my arrest in Greece—where I often go during the 
summer— for the “offence” committed by giving that speech in Austria 
last May, and the authorities in Thessaloniki or Athens would have to 
comply, no questions asked.

Furthermore, the speech was given at a gathering of 60 like-minded 
persons, most of them EU citizens. This constitutes a criminal 
conspiracy, a separate offense among those 32 crimes covered by the 
Warrant, since the Framework Decision defines a “racist or xenophobic 
group” as “a structured organisation consisting of at least two persons 
established for a specific period.” The speech was given to the Karl 
Martell Society, i.e. “for the benefit of a legal person established in 
a Member State.”

Last but not least, the said speech is widely available on the Internet, 
in both German and English, which potentially falls under the separate 
and as yet undefined offence of “computer crime.” Such EAWs have been 
issued already by British judges to Dutch authorities demanding the 
surrender of a Danish citizen in a case involving pornography.

Interestingly, under the Framework Decision, anything that is said at a 
John Randolph Club conference here in the United States may be deemed 
illegal and actionable under the European Arrest Warrant, if the 
offending speech or statement is posted on a website (such as 
www.chroniclesmagazine.org) that is downloadable within the EU, or if 
some supposedly “racist and xenophobic” material written by one of our 
editors or contributors is distributed by mailing Chronicles to a 
subscriber or an institution in the EU. This would be actionable under 
the Framework Decision as “public dissemination or distribution of 
tracts, pictures or other material containing expressions of racism and 
xenophobia,” potentially subjecting the author to arrest in any EU 
country on a warrant issued by a judge in any other EU country.

Orwell was prescient but his date was wrong, a quarter-century premature.

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