“The European Court of Justice decision to overturn the freezing of former President Victor Yanukovych’s assets shows that EU support for Ukraine is constrained by the common values agreed in the EU-Ukraine Association Agreement ”
"The decision of the European Court dated 24 September 2019 on the lifting of sanctions against former President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych for 2018-2019 is a confirmation of the illegality and groundlessness of their introduction by EU authorities and a weighty reason for their speedy complete lifting and rehabilitation of Viktor Yanukovych as a person unjustly suffered from political persecution both in Ukraine and in the European Union."On the surface, this seems like a major embarrassment for the EU, and will no doubt infuriate those Ukrainians who are already convinced of Yanukovych’s complicity in criminality. However, they fail to report one key detail - restrictive measures remain in place. After Yanukovych began his legal battle, the Council revised the decision to meet Yanukovych’s complaints and, in effect, to comply with EU law if it turned out they had not already done so. So is this all a lot of fuss over nothing? On the contrary, it reveals one key aspect of EU foreign policy and the EU-Ukraine relationship. How did the EU restrictions breach fundamental rights? Ever since the decision in Kadi v the Commission in 2008, the EU has been obliged to respect the fundamental rights enshrined in the EU legal order, even if they conflict with the EU foreign policy or international law. In the Kadi case, the ECJ decided that even a United Nations Security Council regulation cannot be enforced if it breaches EU fundamental rights. Two of these fundamental rights are the right of defense and the right to effective judicial protection. In the Yanukovych case, the court decided that these rights had been infringed. This seems strange, given his reputation for criminality, human rights abuses and embezzlement - most notably the actions of police snipers against the Maidan protesters in February 2014 when he was in office. The Yanukovych decision contrasts starkly with the case of the Russian journalist Dmitry Kiselev who was added to the asset freezing list as a result of his journalistic activities and failed to have his listing annulled on the basis that it offended his fundamental right to freedom of expression. In the Kiselev case, the ECJ decided that the Kiselev’s role in the dissemination of Russian propaganda supporting the intervention in Ukraine justified the restrictions.
So why were Yanukovych’s assets unfrozen when Kiselev’s restrictive measures were not? The devil, of course, is in the detail. In the Kiselev case, the Council had provided a sufficiently reasoned justification in its decision to sanction him, reasons that complied with his fundamental rights but were open to judicial review. In the Yanukovych case, it did not.
- Interfax Ukraine, General Court of EU annuls EU sanctions against Viktor Yanukovych – Oleksandr Yanukovych's spokesperson [https://en.interfax.com.ua/news/general/614890.html] (accessed 27.09.2019)
- Judgement of the General Court (Sixth Chamber), 24th of September 2019, Case T?300/18 [http://curia.europa.eu/juris/document/document.jsf?text=&docid=218110&pageIndex=0&doclang=en&mode=lst&dir=&occ=first&part=1&cid=911925] (accessed 27.09.2019)
- Gattini, Andrea. "Joined Cases C–402/05 P & 415/05 P, Yassin Abdullah Kadi, Al Barakaat International Foundation v. Council and Commission, judgment of the Grand Chamber of 3 September 2008, nyr." Common Market Law Review 46.1 (2009): 213-239.
- Радіо Свобода Україна, Санкції ЄС проти Януковича залишаються чинними – представник України при ЄС [https://www.radiosvoboda.org/a/news-sanktsiji-es-proty-janukovycha-chynni/30181632.html] (accessed 27.09,2019)

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