EC welcomes provisional agreement to better protect whistleblowers across the EU

13 Mar 2019 10:55 AM

Yesterday the European Parliament and the Member States reached a provisional agreement on new rules that will guarantee a high level of protection for whistleblowers who report breaches of EU law.

These new rules, setting EU-wide standards of protection for whistleblowers, were first proposed by the European Commission in April 2018.

First Vice-President Frans Timmermans yesterday said: 

“We should protect whistleblowers from being punished, sacked, demoted or sued in court for doing the right thing for society. These new, EU-wide whistleblowers' protection rules do exactly that and will make sure they can report in a safe way on breaches of EU law in many areas. This will help tackle fraud, corruption, corporate tax avoidance and damage to people's health and the environment. We encourage Member States to put in place comprehensive frameworks for whistleblower protection based on the same principles.

VÄ›ra Jourová, Commissioner for Justice, Consumers and Gender Equality yesterday said: 

“Dieselgate, the Panama Papers and Cambridge Analytica revelations made us realise how whistleblowers help uncover unlawful activities that damage both the public interest and our general welfare. We must support and protect the courageous people who bring illegal activities to light. I am happy that we have reached a balanced system that encourages employers to solve problems internally but also allows whistleblowers to turn to public authorities without fear of retaliation."

The new rules cover a wide reach of areas of EU law, including anti-money laundering and corporate taxation, data protection, protection of the Union's financial interests, food and product safety and environmental protection and nuclear safety. Moreover, Member States are free to extend these rules to other areas. The Commission encourages them to establish comprehensive frameworks for whistleblower protection based on the same principles.

Next step

This provisional agreement now has to be formally approved by both the European Parliament and the Council. 

Background

Protection given to whistle-blowers across the EU is currently fragmented and uneven. In most EU countries the protection granted is partial and only applies to specific sectors or categories of employees.

The Commission committed to take action to protect whistleblowers, as journalist sources, at the second Annual Colloquium on Fundamental Rights in November 2016, which was on the theme of ‘Media Pluralism and Democracy'. The Commission proposed this draft Directive on the protection of persons reporting on breaches of Union law in April 2018. It was accompanied by a Communication on how to better protect whistleblowers in Europe more generally.

Strengthening whistleblower protection also gives effect to the Commission's commitment to put a stronger focus on enforcement of EU law, as set out in its 2016 Communication on EU Law: Better Results through Better Application.

For More Information

The Commission proposes new rules on whistleblower protection

Factsheet

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