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Panel Session Parliamentary Immunity: Benefit or Burden?: WWW - Ipu2012uip - Ca

This document announces a panel session at the 127th Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union in Québec City, Canada from October 21-26, 2012 on the topic of parliamentary immunity. The panel will discuss the rationale and effectiveness of parliamentary immunity in today's world, with a focus on whether MPs should enjoy immunity including against legal proceedings unrelated to their duties, and how to ensure immunity protects those facing politically motivated charges while not blocking valid prosecutions.

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Anca Kosman
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views

Panel Session Parliamentary Immunity: Benefit or Burden?: WWW - Ipu2012uip - Ca

This document announces a panel session at the 127th Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union in Québec City, Canada from October 21-26, 2012 on the topic of parliamentary immunity. The panel will discuss the rationale and effectiveness of parliamentary immunity in today's world, with a focus on whether MPs should enjoy immunity including against legal proceedings unrelated to their duties, and how to ensure immunity protects those facing politically motivated charges while not blocking valid prosecutions.

Uploaded by

Anca Kosman
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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127th Assembly of the

Inter-Parliamentary Union and Related Meetings


Qubec City, Canada
21-26 October 2012

127me Assemble de
lUnion interparlementaire et runions connexes
Qubec, Canada
21-26 octobre 2012

www.ipu2012uip.ca

PANEL SESSION
PARLIAMENTARY IMMUNITY: BENEFIT OR BURDEN?

Freedom of expression is the working tool of members of parliament. It enables them to


do their job as representatives of the people and to speak out, criticize the government and
investigate and denounce abuses. Parliamentary immunity is designed to ensure that
parliamentarians can freely express themselves without obstruction and fear of prosecution.
Citizens generally perceive immunity as a negative concept: they tend to see it as a way
for politicians to place themselves above the law. This is particularly true in countries where
parliamentary immunity offers protection to MPs against legal proceedings for acts they carry
out outside the confines of their parliamentary duties.
The publics reasoning may be partly due to a lack of understanding of the purpose of
parliamentary immunity. It may also reflect a more widely held belief that parliamentary
immunity offers protection to those who should be prosecuted and, inversely, fails to protect
those who have done nothing wrong.
The panel discussion will look at the rationale and effectiveness of parliamentary
immunity in todays world, in particular in the light of the publics insistence on ever greater
accountability. It will do so by focusing on the following questions:

Should MPs enjoy parliamentary immunity, including against legal proceedings for acts
unrelated to their parliamentary duties, in order to effectively do their work? Should
such immunity exist everywhere as a matter of principle or only in fragile democracies?

How can one ensure that the application of parliamentary immunity indeed protects
those subjected to politically motivated charges often members from the opposition
and that, inversely, the majority in parliament cannot block, for purely political reasons,
the prosecution of one of theirs? Are there other ways of protecting MPs and their work
which are more effective and more acceptable to the public?

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