Secretary general expresses hope that Belarus will join Council of Europe
Thorbjorn Jagland, secretary general of the Council of Europe,
expressed hope on Tuesday that Belarus would join the organization and
ratify the European Convention on Human Rights.
Speaking
at a meeting of the Russian State Duma's international affairs
committee in Moscow, Mr. Jagland emphasized the importance of the
convention, which he said provides a Europe-wide system of human rights
protection, according to Russia's Regnum news agency.
Belarus is
the only country in Europe that is not a member of the Council of
Europe. The main obstacle for Belarus' accession to the Council is the
use of the death penalty.
In 1993, the Belarusian parliament was
granted special guest status at the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe (PACE), but was stripped of it in 1996 following a
referendum that approved the use of the death penalty in the country.
In
June 2009, PACE decided that the Belarusian parliament’s special guest
status in the Assembly might be restored only after Minsk imposed a
moratorium on the death penalty.
The following year Belarus carried out a number of executions after which PACE advised its members against visiting Belarus.
The
use of the death penalty makes it impossible for Belarus to have any
status in the Council of Europe, Mr. Jagland told reporters in
Strasbourg in January 2012.