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EU agrees on rules to arrest fleeing convicts
A person convicted in absentia in an European Union country will face arrest in all other states of the 27-nation bloc under new cooperation rules agreed upon by justice ministers on Friday.
Luxembourg: A person convicted in absentia in an European Union country will face arrest in all other states of the 27-nation bloc under new cooperation rules agreed upon by justice ministers on Friday.
The new rules make it easier for those countries to ask all other EU states to arrest the convicts once they have been tried and sentenced.
The new rules will not force countries like Britain and Germany, which do not try people in absentia, to change that policy.
"It will help ensure that, in the future, citizens who deliberately avoid trials will not be able to escape their consequences," British Attorney General Baroness Patricia Scotland said of the new text.
The person must be informed of the trial, or have been represented by a lawyer there, or have been informed of the ruling and not appealed.
If none of these conditions is fulfilled, the convict should have the right to a new trial, an EU diplomat said. If that is not the case, a country can refuse to extradite a convict, he said.
EU states have two years to implement these new rules.
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