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G8 Ministers for Justice and Home Affairs usually meet once every year.
2003
On May 5, 2003, they met in Paris and issued a
Chair's Summary at the conclusion of their meeting. The
G8 Ministers in attendance adopted the following work:
2002
On May 14, 2002, G8 Justice and Home Affairs Ministers met in Mont Tremblant, Canada and issued
a Chair's Summary at the conclusion of the meeting. In response to the terrorist
attacks of September 11, 2001, they adopted
G8 Recommendations on Transnational Crime. (These Recommendations updated the 40 Recommendations
to Fight Transnational Organized Crime that were adopted by G8 Justice and Home Affairs Ministers,
and subsequently by G8 Heads of State, in 1996. In parallel work, G8 Foreign Affairs Ministers adopted
G8 Recommendations on Counter-Terrorism at a meeting in Whistler, British Columbia, on June 13, 2002.)
At their meeting in Mont Tremblant, the G8 JHA Ministers also adopted the following work:
2001
On February 27, 2001, G8 Justice and Home Affairs Ministers met in Milan and issued a joint
Communiqué at the conclusion of the meeting.
2000
G8 Justice and Home Affairs Ministers did not meet in 2000.
1999
On October 20, 1999, G8 Justice and Home Affairs Ministers met in Moscow. At the conclusion of the
meeting, they issued:
1998
On December 15, 1998, British Home Secretary Jack Straw "hosted" a video conference for G8 Justice and Home
Affairs Ministers, and the Ministers issued a
joint press release at the conclusion of their meeting.
1997
On December 11, 1997, U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno hosted, in Washington, DC, the first-ever meeting
of G8 Justice and Home Affairs Ministers. At the conclusion of their meeting, the Ministers issued a joint
Communiqué, which included
10 Principles and a 10-Point Action Plan to combat cybercrime. Attorney General Reno also made a
statement to the media.
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