5 February 2018
Draft Copenhagen Declaration
The High Level Conference meeting in Copenhagen on 12 and 13 April 2018 at the initiative of the Danish
Chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe (“the Conference”) declares as follows:
1. The States Parties to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms (“the Convention”) reaffirm their deep and abiding commitment to the Convention and
their strong attachment to the right of individual application to the European Court of Human Rights
(“the Court”) as a cornerstone of the system for protecting the rights and freedoms set forth in the
Convention.
2. The Convention system has made an extraordinary contribution to the protection and promotion of
human rights and the rule of law in Europe since its establishment and today it plays a central role in
maintaining democratic security and improving good governance across the Continent.
3. The current reform process, which was initiated at the High-Level Conference in Interlaken in 2010
and continued at the Izmir, Brighton and Brussels High-Level Conferences, has provided an
important opportunity to set the future direction of the Convention system and ensure its viability.
Bringing together actors capable of engaging the responsibility of their country at the political level, it
has reaffirmed States Parties’ commitment to the Convention system, including the right of individual
application, while at the same time clarifying the relationship between the national authorities and the
Convention machinery.
4. States Parties have underlined the need for a more effective, focused and balanced Convention
system, where the Court can focus its efforts on identifying serious or widespread violations,
systemic and structural problems, and important questions of interpretation and application of the
Convention. Great emphasis has been placed on the principle of subsidiarity, by which the protection
of human rights takes place primarily at the national level.
5. Notable results have been achieved, in particular by strengthening subsidiarity, improving the
efficiency of the Court and addressing the need for more effective implementation. Nonetheless, the
Convention system still faces serious challenges. States Parties remain committed to periodically
reviewing the effectiveness of the Convention system and taking all necessary steps to ensure its
effective functioning.
6. States Parties have agreed that, before the end of 2019, the Committee of Ministers must decide
whether the measures adopted so far are sufficient to assure the sustainable functioning of the
control mechanism of the Convention or whether more profound changes are necessary.
Approaching this deadline, the Conference takes stock of the reform process with the goal of
addressing current and future challenges and preparing for the 2019 deadline.
Shared responsibility – better balance, improved protection
7. The current reform process has enabled the creation of a workable model for the respective roles of
the States Parties and the Court, based on a shared responsibility: a major achievement upon which
future reforms can build.
8. It reflects that States Parties and the Court share the responsibility for realising the effective
implementation of the Convention, underpinned by the fundamental principle of subsidiarity.
9. The principle of subsidiarity affects both the way in which States fulfil their obligations and the way
the Court performs its functions. As stated in the preamble to the Convention, as amended by
Protocol No. 15, it is the States Parties which, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity, have
the primary responsibility to secure the rights and freedoms defined in this Convention and the
Protocols thereto, and in doing so they enjoy a margin of appreciation, subject to the supervisory
jurisdiction of the Court.
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