Examples of using Hague programme in English and their translations into Danish
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The Hague Programme gives important new impulses.
The European Council laid down the Hague Programme on 5 November.
The Hague Programme is a beginning; it is certainly not an end.
The Council is due to present its mid-term review of The Hague Programme at the end of the year.
I welcome the Hague Programme for the next five years.
Last January, the Commission adopted a policy plan on legal immigration in accordance with the mandate in the Hague Programme.
The Hague Programme is based on the Constitutional Treaty but does not anticipate it.
This new multiannual programme- also called The Hague Programme- builds on the Tampere Programme. .
The Hague Programme also mentions that there is a need for better coordination of national policies.
The Commission has put forward several proposals for this in its communication'Implementing the Hague Programme: the way forward.
Both Tampere and the Hague Programme are good examples of a Community approach that involves everyone.
The Committee on Civil Liberties,Justice and Home Affairs has prepared another proposal in the context of the Hague Programme.
The Hague Programme expressly stipulates the need for European common rules on this matter.
Mr President, I would like to confine my remarks to two aspects of the Council's presentation:Lisbon and the Hague Programme.
In writing.-(LT) The Hague Programme recognised that legal immigration would play an important role in economic development.
The European Union has developed a joint policy on immigration, border control andasylum on the basis of the Tampere European Council and the Hague Programme.
The Hague programme, to which I referred, aims to combat illegal immigration and clandestine immigration, and also undeclared labour.
Mr President, all the Council's fine words,as enshrined in the Tampere programme and confirmed in the Hague programme, have borne very little fruit to date.
The Hague Programme builds on that of Tampere, which, in 1999, was the first programme to formulate cooperation in this area.
It goes without saying that we must now plan new measures for information sharing in the next five-year programme that will succeed the Hague programme.
Now, in 2006, the assessment of the Hague Programme will provide an opportunity actively to push ahead with European cooperation in this area.
In December 2003, for example, the European Council suggested that the mandate of the Vienna Observatory be broadened, andthat wish was enshrined in the Hague Programme.
Under the Hague programme, the vital role of legal immigration in, for example, enhancing the Union's economic development, is already recognised.
It should be noted that it is the outcome of a long-term programme of work, the Hague Programme for strengthening freedom, security and justice in the European Union.
Criticism of the Hague Programme for placing undue emphasis on security considerations at the expense of respect for fundamental rights is justified.
We have seen the endorsement of the new integrated guidelines for growth and employment andan action plan to implement The Hague Programme for freedom, security and justice.
The 2004 Hague Programme has not been promoted to the degree that was needed, despite the efforts and initiatives of the Commissioner responsible, Mr Frattini.
Therefore, after the two examples of Tampere and Lisbon,we should be thankful to the Dutch presidency for the Hague Programme and their examination of these questions in their social context.
The Hague Programme adopted by the Brussels European Council of 2004 set up the blueprint in the area of Justice and Home Affairs at EU level for the coming years.
Ladies and gentlemen, the proposal we are debating this evening is a necessary step towards the development of judicial and police cooperation between the Member States of the European Union, a step towards promoting the strategy to develop an area of justice and security and I congratulate Commissioner Frattini on promoting proposals such as we are examining today,which promote the Hague programme.