J. Vaculíková | 8.11.2024
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Veronika Odrobinová | Martina Šumavská | December 14, 2021
On 23 October 2019, Directive (EU) 2019/1937 of the European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of persons who report breaches of Union law was adopted. This Directive should have been implemented by Member States in their national law within the transposition period ending on 17 December 2021. Today, however, it is clear that the Directive will not be implemented in the Czech Republic on time. Nevertheless, the Czech Republic will not be able to avoid some of its obligations under the Directive. To facilitate the situation for the addressees of the obligations under the Directive, on 4 November 2021 the Ministry of Justice issued a methodology for direct applicability of the Directive (link).
Direct effect of the directive
According to the methodology of the Ministry of Justice, if the Directive is not transposed properly (in this case not on time), a possible consequence is the direct effect of the Directive, on the basis of which rights and obligations are created directly and national courts and other public authorities are obliged to protect them. According to the methodology, the direct effect of the Directive affects only public law subjects (not all addressees of the Directive – the private sector is therefore not affected yet), namely the following public authorities:
The direct effect of the Directive will be activated as early as 18 December 2021 in view of the expiry of the transposition deadline. From that date, the above-mentioned public authorities are obliged to fulfil their obligations under the Directive.
Obligations of obliged entities
The main obligations under the Directive include, in particular, the establishment of an internal notification system and the setting up of processes for handling, processing and storing notifications. As a result of the direct effect of the Directive, the above-mentioned public authorities are therefore obliged in particular to:
To protect whistleblowers, the Directive also stipulates a prohibition on retaliation, which public authorities are obliged to respect. Such measures include any direct or indirect act or omission occurring in a work context that could cause unjustified harm to the whistleblower (e.g., termination of employment, non-renewal of a fixed-term contract, reduction in pay/salary, non-granting of a personal bonus). In the event of a violation of the prohibition on retaliation, the whistleblower will be able to claim compensation for damage or compensation for non-pecuniary damage.
Conclusion
In view of the imminent activation of the direct effect of the Directive, it is therefore high time for the relevant public authorities to prepare for the obligations under the Directive that will apply to them from 18 December 2021.