Thursday Dec 12, 2024
Friday, 17 October 2014 00:49 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
European Court annuls sanctions on LTTE on technical grounds but maintains asset freezeLuxembourg: The European Court on procedural grounds Thursday annulled the European Council measures maintaining Sri Lanka’s defunct Tamil Tiger terrorist group, Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on the European list of terrorist organizations but allowed measures to keep their assets frozen. The effects of the annulled measures will be maintained temporarily in order to ensure the effectiveness of any possible future freezing of funds, the Court ruled. The European Court said a decision by the European Council to place the LTTE on a list of terrorist organizations had been based on “factual imputations derived from the press and the internet” and not on acts examined and confirmed in decisions of competent authorities as required by law. The Council in 2006, placed the LTTE on the EU list relating to frozen funds of terrorist organizations and has maintained them on that list ever since, referring to, inter alia, decisions of Indian authorities. The LTTE, contesting their maintenance on the list, has told the Court that their confrontation with the Government of Sri Lanka was an ‘armed conflict’ within the meaning of international law, subject only to international humanitarian law and not to anti-terrorist legislation. However, in today’s ruling the Court found that EU law on the prevention of terrorism also applies in ‘armed conflicts’ within the meaning of international law. The Court also found that the Indian authorities, on whom the Council relied on to place the LTTE in the list, are a “competent authority” but the Council did not verify that the legislation of the third State ensures protection of the rights of defense and of the right to effective judicial protection equivalent to that guaranteed at EU level. “Therefore the Court annuls the contested measures while temporarily maintaining the effects of the last of those measures in order to ensure the effectiveness of any possible future freezing of funds,” the Court said in a statement. The Court stressed that those annulments, on fundamental procedural grounds, do not imply any substantive assessment of the question of the classification of the LTTE as a terrorist group. |