European court
The Council of Europe may Impose Sanctions on Bosnia and Herzegovina
The Council of Europe may introduce sanctions against Bosnia and Herzegovina for failing to comply with a European Court of Human Rights ruling, MIA said.
This is the case of Sejdic and Finzi.
Serbia Routinely Ignoring Human Rights Rulings, Experts Say
After Serbia ignored the advice of the UN Committee Against Torture and extradited Kurdish political activist Cevdet Ayaz to Turkey, activists and experts have accused of Belgrade of disrespecting important human rights bodies.
Greek appeal over Cosco funding rejected by European Court
The European Court has rejected Greece's appeal against the decision it reached in March 2015, whereby it deemed that state funding to Piraeus Container Terminal SA (SEP), the local subsidiary of China's Cosco Shipping, was not compatible with European legislation.
Greece, EU strike 'preliminary deal' on coal-fired plants sale, says minister
Greece and the European Union have reached a "preliminary deal" on the coal-fired plants the country will sell to comply with an EU court ruling, Greek Energy Minister George Stathakis said on Monday.
Talks on lignite plants to end this month
Greece and the European Union are expected to wrap up talks on which coal-fired plants the country will put up for sale in line with an EU court ruling this month, Greek Energy Minister Giorgos Stathakis has said.
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MEPs to Vote in Motion on Brexit Talks Progress Today
The European Parliament will today debate and vote on a motion which states that the required "sufficient progress" has not yet been made for talks on a post-Brexit trade deal to begin.
Britain had hoped to have advanced enough for EU leaders to green light trade discussions this month.
EU Court Dismisses Complaints by Hungary and Slovakia Over Refugee Quotas
The European Union's top court has dismissed complaints by Slovakia and Hungary about EU migration policy, dealing a blow to the Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán, and his allies in central Europe over the bitterly contested policy of refugee quotas, reported The Guardian.
Protest Against Employer Misdemeanour Outside the National Assembly
Dozens of workers gathered outside the National Assembly for a protest against employer misdemeanour.
The rally was organized by the Autonomous Workers' Trade Union.
''We are not slaves, we have rights'', " Our labor is not free. " These were some of the posters that people were carrying before the National Assembly
Firms must tell employees of email checks, European court rules
Companies need to make sure that employees are aware in advance of management monitoring of their work email accounts, the European Court of Human Rights ruled on Sept. 5 in a landmark privacy case.
MOL Chief Sues Croatia Over 'Illegal' Arrest Warrant
Croatian daily Jutarnji list reported on Monday that Zsolt Hernadi, chairman of the Hungarian energy company MOL had filed a lawsuit against Croatia before the European Court of Human Rights.