Source: whistleblowingnetwork.org
New analysis from Transparency International has found that most EU countries, including Latvia, do not conform to the minimum requirements of the EU Directive.
The new Report – ‘How well do EU countries protect whistleblowers: Assessing the transposition of the EU Whistleblower Protection Directive’ scrutinises the new whistleblower protection laws adopted in 20 EU member states against the minimum requirements of the Directive and international best practice principles, finding that 19 of the 20 reviewed countries do not comply with EU requirements in at least one of four key areas. These include the rights of whistleblowers to report information directly to the authorities, access remedies and full compensation for damage suffered, obtain free and easily accessible advice, and ensuring proper penalties for those violating the protection provisions.
The report highlights positive and negative elements of the new wave transposition laws, in Latvia highlighting that whilst the legislation expressly foresees a role for civil society organisations which can provide support, and provides for promising oversight and implementation responsibilities at the State Chancellery, it does not provide for robust penalises for failures to maintain confidentiality or failures to establish and operate internal whistleblowing systems nor allow for organisations and authorities to recognise anonymous reports, which is not in line with international best practice principles.
The EU Commission is currently developing a conformity assessment by which it will benchmark Member States compliance with the Directive, passed in 2019.
The full report can be read here.