Eurojust Signs Working Arrangements with Five Latin American Countries
By Kaila Hall
On July 10, 2024, the European Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation (Eurojust) announced1 that it signed working arrangements with the Prosecution Services of Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, and Peru. These agreements aim to increase efficiency and reinforce judicial cooperation between states in an effort to crack down on rising crime rates.
Based in The Hague, Eurojust is composed2 of the College, an association of National Members, appointed by European Union Member States to lead Eurojust’s operations. By virtue of over a dozen working agreements with non-EU states, Eurojust permits European prosecutors to operate in over 70 jurisdictions worldwide. Many of these prosecutors also serve as Liaison Prosecutors who may collaborate on various cases.
Earlier this year, Europol released a report titled “Decoding the EU’s Most Threatening Criminal Networks,”3 prompting national authorities to take action. According to the report, 68% of criminal networks are composed of members from multiple nationalities, while 32% have members from one country. Furthermore, 76% of the most threatening criminal networks extend into two to seven countries. Europol observed that these networks are primarily implicated in drug trafficking, fraud, property crime, migrant smuggling, and human trafficking. Nearly half of the world’s most dangerous criminal networks are involved in drug trafficking. 36 % of them are solely focused on it.
Due to the Europol report’s findings, numerous national authorities have joined forces with the European Union using working arrangements. These agreements specifically target drug and arms trafficking, money laundering, and cybercrime. Eurojust has also announced plans to disrupt drug trafficking routes after over €25 billion worth of drugs were seized last year.
In response to the agreements, Ladislav Hamran, President of Eurojust, lauded efforts to quash the €31 billion4 illicit drug trafficking market in Europe. President Hamran explained, “To mitigate and halt the enormous harm to societies and individuals in both the European Union and Latin America, our response needs to be effective and collaborative. It is essential for prosecutors from Europe and Latin America to unite and devise strategies for closer cooperation, enabling us to not only disrupt criminal networks but also hold them accountable in court.”
The European Commissioner for Justice, Didier Reynders, also affirmed that “Today, we open a new chapter in the cooperation between the EU and six strategic partners in this field. By building on our shared values and common strategic interests, we can equip judicial authorities with the necessary instruments for safeguarding the rights of our citizens while enabling effective cooperation “on the ground.”
To date, Eurojust has signed5 working arrangements with the Ibero-American Association of Public Prosecutors Offices, Nigeria, Panama, Costa Rica, Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, and Peru. According to Eurojust officials, Panama’s January 2024 Working Agreement has already yielded results.
Kaila Hall is an intern at IELR. She is a rising senior at Cornell University.
[1] An Important Step against Organised Crime: Eurojust Signs Working Arrangements with Five Latin American Countries | Eurojust | European Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation.” 10 July 2024. Www.eurojust.europa.eu, www.eurojust.europa.eu/news/important-step-against-organised-crime-eurojust-signs-working-arrangements-five-latin-american.
[2] “Who We Are | Eurojust | European Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation.” Www.eurojust.europa.eu, www.eurojust.europa.eu/about-us/who-we-are.
[3] CRIMINAL NETWORKS the EU’S MOST THREATENING DECODING. May 2024, www.europol.europa.eu/cms/sites/default/files/documents/Europol%20report%20on%20Decoding%20the%20EU-s%20most%20threatening%20criminal%20networks.pdf, https://doi.org/10.2813/811566.
[4] European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction and Europol, 2024, “EU Drug Markets Analysis: Key insights for policy and practice,” Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg, https://www.europol.europa.eu/cms/sites/default/files/documents/EU%20Drug%20Markets%20Analysis%202024.pdf
[5] “Working Arrangements | Eurojust | European Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation.” Www.eurojust.europa.eu, www.eurojust.europa.eu/states-and-partners/third-countries/working-arrangements.