Brussels, 15/12/2008 (Agence Europe) - European Ombudsman Nikiforos Diamandouros has criticised the European Commission's discrimination against freelance interpreters aged more than 65. This follows a complaint from an interpreter who stopped receiving job offers after he turned 65, although he wanted to continue working. The Ombudsman made a proposal for an amicable resolution of the problem in which he asked the Commission to abandon this discriminatory policy. He also suggested that the Commission compensate the complainant. The Commission rejected his proposals. The Ombudsman has now sent a special report to the European Parliament (EP) asking it to support his position.
The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights prohibits discrimination on the basis of age, the Ombudsman points out in a press release in which he reports the facts of the case in point.
The Belgian complainant had worked as a freelance interpreter for more than 35 years for the European Commission and the EP. He had interpreted, at conferences and meetings, from Dutch, English, German, Italian, and Spanish, into French. In 2004, when he turned 65, he stopped receiving job offers from the two EU institutions. He turned to the Ombudsman, complaining that he was being discriminated against by the two institutions because of his age. The Ombudsman opened two separate inquiries.
The Commission confirmed that it treated freelance conference interpreters over 65 differently because it needed to give opportunities to new, young interpreters. The Ombudsman was not convinced of this argument. He accepted that different treatment on grounds of age can sometimes be justified under exceptional circumstances. In this case, however, a complete ban on giving any work to interpreters over 65 was disproportionate.
The EP accepted the Ombudsman's recommendations and changed its policies. It now bases its hiring policy solely on the professional ability of interpreters. The Commission, however, rejected his proposals to stop its policy of discrimination and to compensate the complainant. The Ombudsman, therefore, sent a special report to the EP stressing that unjustified age discrimination is a violation of a fundamental right. For special report, please go to: http: //http://www.ombidsman.europa.eu/special/en/default.htm (O.J./transl.rt)