| Charter |

The Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union

Charter text
filet

Explanations by
the Convention

filet




ARCHIVE 2000:
Reference texts
filet

NGO contributions
filet

Links
filet

Introduction

This website contains the complete text of the European Union Charter of Fundamental Rights, as signed and proclaimed by the Presidents of the European Parliament, the Council and the Commission at the European Council meeting in Nice on 7 December 2000.

This Charter is the end-result of a special procedure, which is without precedent in the history of the European Union and may be summarised as follows:

  • the Cologne European Council (3-4 June 1999) entrusted the task of drafting the Charter to a Convention,
  • the Convention held its constituent meeting in December 1999 (see annex for its composition) and adopted the draft on 2 October 2000,
  • the Biarritz European Council (13-14 October 2000) unanimously approved the draft and forwarded it to the European Parliament and the Commission,
  • the European Parliament gave its agreement on 14 November 2000 and the Commission on 6 December 2000,
  • the Presidents of the European Parliament, the Council and the Commission signed and proclaimed the Charter on behalf of their institutions on 7 December 2000 in Nice.

The European Union Charter of Fundamental Rights sets out in a single text, for the first time in the European Union's history, the whole range of civil, political, economic and social rights of European citizens and all persons resident in the EU.

These rights are divided into six sections:

  • Dignity
  • Freedoms
  • Equality
  • Solidarity
  • Citizens' rights
  • Justice

They are based, in particular, on the fundamental rights and freedoms recognised by the European Convention on Human Rights, the constitutional traditions of the EU Member States, the Council of Europe's Social Charter, the Community Charter of Fundamental Social Rights of Workers and other international conventions to which the European Union or its Member States are parties.

The issue of the Charter's legal status - i.e. whether to make it legally binding by incorporating it into the TEU - was raised by the Cologne European Council, which originally launched the Charter initiative. The Convention drew up the draft Charter with a view to its possible incorporation, and the European Parliament voted in favour of incorporation. The Nice European Council (see Annex I to the Presidency conclusions) decided to consider the question of the Charter's legal status during the general debate on the future of the European Union, which was initiated on 1 January 2001.

Statements by the Presidents : extracts

Annex: Composition of the Convention

Full text of the Charter of Fundamental Rights (PDF files, including Gaelic language version)

  castellano   dansk   deutsch   ellinika   english   francais   gaeilge   italiano   nederlands   portugues   suomi   svenska

Explanations by the Convention relating to the Charter of Fundamental Rights, document CONVENT 49 of 11.10.2000 (PDF files, 11 languages)

Nice signing ceremony photographs:
Select a picture to enlarge it
Sélectionnez une image pour l'agrandir

photo signature Nice 1 - click for largest
photo signature Nice 2 - click for largest
photo signature Nice

Statements by the Presidents of the European Council, the European Parliament and the Commission on the Charter of Fundamental Rights

Mr Jacques Chirac, President of the European Council

'In Nice, we proclaimed the European Union Charter of Fundamental Rights, a text which is of major political importance. Its full significance will become apparent in the future and I wish to pay tribute to your Assembly for the major contribution it has made to its drafting'.

(Strasbourg, 12 December 2000)

Mrs Nicole Fontaine, President of the European Parliament

'A signature represents a commitment (...). I trust that all the citizens of the Union will understand that from now on (...)the Charter will be the law guiding the actions of the Assembly (...). From now on it will be the point of reference for all the Parliament acts which have a direct or indirect bearing on the lives of citizens throughout the Union.'

(Nice, 7 December 2000)

Mr Romano Prodi, President of the Commission

'In the eyes of the European Commission, by proclaiming the Charter of Fundamental Rights, the European Union institutions have committed themselves to respecting the Charter in everything they do and in every policy they promote (...). The citizens of Europe can rely on the Commission to ensure that the Charter will be respected (...)'.

(Nice, 7 December 2000)