The Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe (TCE; commonly referred to as the European Constitution or as the Constitutional Treaty) was an unratified international treaty intended to create a consolidated constitution for the European Union (EU). It would have replaced the existing European Union treaties with a single text, given legal force to the Charter of Fundamental Rights, and expanded qualified majority voting into policy areas which had previously been decided by unanimity among member states.
The Treaty was signed on 29 October 2004 by representatives of the then 25 member states of the European Union. It was later ratified by 18 member states, which included referendums endorsing it in Spain and Luxembourg. However, the rejection of the document by French and Dutch voters in May and June 2005 brought the ratification process to an end.
Following a period of reflection, the Treaty of Lisbon was created to replace the Constitutional Treaty. This contained many of the changes that were originally placed in the Constitutional Treaty but, instead of repealing and replacing the existing treaties, simply amended them and abandoned the idea of a single codified constitution. Signed on 13 December 2007, the Lisbon Treaty entered into force on 1 December 2009.
History
Drafting
The drafting of the European Constitution began in a call for a new debate on the future of Europe, made at the Laeken European Council in December 2001. A European Convention was founded shortly afterward; this was chaired by former French President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and composed of two Members of Parliament (generally one from the governing majority and one from the opposition) of each Member State and applicant state, 16 MEPs, two members of the European Commission[1] and a representative from each government. It met in public. Giscard d'Estaing proposed to draft a Constitution. Romano Prodi, the President of the European Commission, backed a draft text, termed the 'Penelope Project', which contained a deeper integration of the countries and a clearer institutional model.[2]
After protracted negotiations in the Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) during the Italian presidency, disputes arose over the proposed framework for qualified majority voting: the final text of the TCE was settled in June 2004 under the Irish presidency.
Mention of Christianity in the preamble
Several countries urged that the preamble of the Constitution include a reference to Christianity. Among these were Italy, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Portugal, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia, which in May 2004 sent a letter to the Irish Presidency, saying "the governments of those countries consider as a priority the recognition of the Christian tradition in the Preamble" and noting that the list of signatories was not exhaustive as they hoped other countries would join their initiative. The Greek government likewise supported a reference to Christianity.
The strongest opponents of any reference to Christianity were France and Belgium. Other countries opposing such a reference were Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Slovenia, and Cyprus. Among other nations, Spain originally supported the inclusion of a reference to Christianity, but the incoming Zapatero government reversed the stance of its predecessor.
Eventually the agreed-upon Constitution made no explicit references to Christianity, only mentioning the "cultural, religious and humanist inheritance of Europe". This decision caused disappointment in the Vatican, but satisfaction from candidate state Turkey.
The Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe was signed in Rome on 29 October 2004 by 53 senior political figures from the 25 member states of the European Union. In most cases heads of state designated plenipotentiaries to sign the treaty, but some presidents also signed on behalf of states which were republics. Most designated plenipotentiaries were prime ministers and foreign ministers.
Ratification
On 12 January 2005 the European Parliament voted a legally non-binding resolution in support of the Constitution by 500 votes in favour to 137 votes against, with 40 abstentions.[3]
Before an EU treaty can enter into force, it must be ratified by all member states. Ratification takes different forms in each country, depending on its traditions, constitutional arrangements and political processes. Most member states ratify EU treaties following parliamentary votes, while some — notably Ireland and Denmark — sometimes hold referendums, in Ireland's case where the treaty requires a constitutional amendment, for all amendments have to be approved by referendum. As a reaction to what was seen as the novel nature of the Constitution, many advocates and opponents of the Constitution argued that it should be subjected to referendums across the European Union.[4]
On 20 April 2004, the then British prime minister Tony Blair unexpectedly announced an intention to hold a referendum, a proposal which he had previously rejected. A further seven member states announced or had already announced that they would hold referendums on the Constitution, these being Denmark, France, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Spain and Portugal.
Spain was the first country to hold a referendum on the Constitution. On 20 February 2005, Spanish voters backed the treaty with 76% voting in favour to 24% against, on a turnout of 43%.[5]
On 29 May 2005, the French people rejected the Constitution by a margin of 55% to 45% on a turnout of 69%. On 1 June, the Dutch people rejected the constitution by a margin of 61% to 39% on a turnout of 62%.
Notwithstanding the rejection in France and the Netherlands, Luxembourg held a referendum on 10 July 2005 approving the Constitution by 57% to 43%. It was the last referendum to be held on the Constitution, for all of the other member states that had proposed to hold referendums cancelled them.
Post-rejection
After the French and Dutch referendum results, European leaders decided to hold a "period of reflection" on what to do next.[6] As part of this reflection period, a "group of wise men" was set up to consider possible courses of action.[7] This group of high-level European politicians – former prime ministers, ministers and members of the European Commission – first met on 30 September 2006 in Rome.[8]
On 4 June 2007, this group, known as the Amato Group, presented its report. They proposed to establish a new Inter-Governmental Conference with a view to writing a new treaty which would rewrite the Maastricht Treaty, amend the Treaty of Rome and give the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union a legally binding status. The new treaty would be based on the first and fourth parts of the Constitution, the rest of the Constitution's changes being achieved through amendments to the Treaty of Rome.[9]
In the June 2007 European summit meeting, member states agreed to abandon the constitution and to amend the existing treaties, which would remain in force. They also agreed a detailed mandate for a new intergovernmental conference to negotiate a new treaty containing such amendments to the existing treaties (primarily the Treaty of Rome and the Treaty of Maastricht). These negotiations were completed by the end of the year. The new treaty, which had previously been referred to as the Reform Treaty, became the Lisbon Treaty on its signing in Lisbon on 13 December 2007.
Under the TCE, the Council of the European Union would have been formally renamed the "Council of Ministers", which is already its informal title. The "General Affairs Council" would have been formally split from the "Foreign Affairs Council", which had informally held meetings separately since June 2002.
The TCE proposed the formal recognition of a flag, an anthem and a motto for the Union, although none of them were new.
Conferral, subsidiarity, proportionality
The TCE would have reiterated several key principles of how the Union functions:
the principle of conferral: that all EU competences are conferred on it voluntarily by member states;
the principle of subsidiarity: that governmental decisions should be taken at the lowest level possible while still remaining effective;
the principle of proportionality: that the EU may only act exactly to the extent that is needed to achieve its objectives;
the primacy of EU law: in areas where member states have made legally binding agreements at EU level, they may not then pass national laws incompatible with those EU laws.
The TCE would have specified that the EU is a union of member states, and that all its competences (areas of responsibility) are voluntarily conferred on it by its member states according to the principle of conferral. The EU would have no competences by right, and thus any areas of policy not explicitly specified in the Constitution would have remained the domain of the sovereign member states (notwithstanding the ‘flexibility clause').
According to the TCE, the EU may act (i.e. make laws) only where its member states agree unanimously that actions by individual countries would be insufficient. This is the principle of subsidiarity and is based on the legal and political principle that governmental decisions should be taken as close to the people as possible while still remaining effective. It is a main argument against claims that Europe limits national sovereignty, but critics say that it is a principle to which lip service only is paid and, in practice, the reach of the EU has been increasingly ambitious.[citation needed]
Primacy of Union law
Amongst European countries, the European Court of Justice has consistently ruled since 1964 that EU law has primacy over the laws of member states in the areas where member states allow it to legislate. National law that is incompatible with an agreement already made at European level is deemed to be 'disapplied' when questions arise in courts. This controversial and fundamental principle of European Community law was first recognised in the case of Van Gend en Loos in 1963 which was followed in Costa v. ENEL in 1964.
It would further have rendered the (at that point) non-binding Charter of Fundamental Rights legally binding. Unlike the Treaty of Lisbon, it incorporated the text of the Charter in the Treaty itself (see Part II of the TCE). This included various adjustments to the Charter as promulgated in 2000, including granting persuasive value to the Explanations to the Charter (see article II-112(7) and Declaration 12 to the TCE).
The EU has six exclusive competences, policy areas in which member states have agreed that they should act exclusively through the EU and not legislate at a national level. The list remains unchanged from the previous treaties:
the conclusion of certain limited international agreements.
There are a number of shared competences. These are areas in which member states agree to act individually only where they have not already acted through the EU, or where the EU has ceased to act (though these are areas where member states may act both nationally and through the EU if they wish). Three new competences have been added to those in previous treaties.
There are a number of areas where the EU may take only supporting, coordinating or complementary action. In these areas, member states do not confer any competences on the Union, but they agree to act through the Union in order to support their work at national level. Again, three new competences have been added to those from previous treaties.
Flexibility clause
The TCE's flexibility clause allows the EU to act in areas not made explicit in the TCE, but only:
The TCE was going to state explicitly that the EU had a legal personality. Prior to this, the treaties explicitly stated that the European Community, the European Coal and Steel Community and Euratom each had their own separate legal personality, but remained silent over whether the European Union itself had one. They did mandate the EU "to assert its identity on the international scene",[50] and permitted the European Union to enter into treaties. Brsakoska-Bazerkoska,[51] and Choutheete and Ndoura[52] argue that the EU had an implicit legal personality prior to the Treaty of Lisbon; the latter treaty also contained an express statement that the EU had a legal personality.
New competences
The TCE would have conferred upon the EU as new 'shared competences' the areas of territorial cohesion, energy, and space. These are areas where the EU may act alongside its individual member states. The EU has conferred upon it as new areas of 'supporting, coordinating or complementary action' the areas of tourism, sport, and administrative co-operation.
Criminal justice proceedings
Member states would have continued to co-operate in some areas of criminal judicial proceedings where they agree to do so, as at present. Under the TCE, seven new areas of co-operation would have been added:
The new solidarity clause of the TCE specifies that any member state which falls victim to a terrorist attack or other disaster will receive assistance from other member states, if it requests it. The type of assistance to be offered is not specified. Instead, the arrangements are to be decided by the Council of Ministers should the situation arise.[53]
The TCE includes a copy of the Charter already agreed to by all EU member states. This is included in the Constitution so that EU institutions themselves are obliged to conform to the same standards of fundamental rights. At the time of the Charter's original agreement, the British Government said that it did not have binding effect. Incorporation into TCE would have put its importance beyond doubt.
Simplification
Simplified jargon and legal instruments
The TCE made an effort to simplify jargon and reduce the number of EU legal instruments. However, it is a long document couched in technical terms, which proved unpopular when presented (for example) to French voters in their referendum on the TCE.
The TCE unifies legal instruments across areas of policy (referred to as pillars of the European Union in previous treaties). Specifically:
More day-to-day decisions in the Council of Ministers would be to be taken by qualified majority voting, requiring a 55% majority of members of the Council representing a 65% majority of citizens. (The 55% is raised to 72% when the Council acts on its own initiative rather than on a legislative proposal from the Commission or the Union Minister for Foreign Affairs.) The unanimous agreement of all member states would only be required for decisions on more sensitive issues, such as tax, social security, foreign policy and defence.
President of the European Council
The six-month rotating Presidency of the European Council would switch to a chair chosen by the heads of government, in office for 2+1⁄2 years and renewable once. The role itself would remain administrative and non-executive, but rather than the Presidency being held by a member state as at present, it would be held by an individual elected by and accountable to the Council.
President of the Council of Ministers
The six-month rotating Presidency of the Council of Ministers, which currently coincides with the Presidency of the European Council, would be changed to an 18-month rotating Presidency shared by a trio of member countries, in an attempt to provide more continuity. The exception would be the Council's Foreign Affairs configuration, which would be chaired by the newly created Union Minister for Foreign Affairs.
Smaller Commission
The Commission would be reduced in size from 27 to 18 by the year 2014. There would be fewer Commissioners, with member states taking it in turn to nominate Commissioners two times out of three.
Parliament as co-legislature: The European Parliament would acquire equal legislative power under the codecision procedure with the Council in virtually all areas of policy. Previously, it had this power in most cases but not all.
Meeting in public: The Council of Ministers would be required to meet in public when debating all new laws. Currently, it meets in public only for texts covered under the codecision procedure.
Budget: The final say over the EU's annual budget would be given to the European Parliament. Agricultural spending would no longer be ring-fenced, and would be brought under the Parliament's control.
Role of national parliaments: Member states' national parliaments would be given a new role in scrutinising proposed EU laws, and would be entitled to object if they feel a proposal oversteps the boundary of the Union's agreed areas of responsibility. If the Commission wishes to ignore such an objection, it would be forced to submit an explanation to the parliament concerned and to the Council of Ministers.
Popular initiative: The Commission would be invited to consider any proposal "on matters where citizens consider that a legal act of the Union is required for the purpose of implementing the Constitution" which has the support of one million citizens. The mechanism by which this would be put into practice has yet to be agreed. (See Article I-46(4) for details.)
Further integration, amendment and withdrawal
Enhanced co-operation
There would have been a tightening of existing rules for 'enhanced cooperation', where some member states would have chosen to act together more closely and others not. A minimum of one third of member states would now be forced to participate in any enhanced cooperation, and the agreement of the European Parliament is needed. The option for enhanced cooperation would also be widened to all areas of agreed EU policy.
Treaty revisions
Traditionally amendments to the EU treaties were considered in inter-governmental conferences in which the European Council would meet in long private sessions in order to reach unanimous agreement on the proposed changes. The Convention which wrote the draft constitutional treaty was quite different in this regard. It met in public and was composed of a mix of national and European politicians. The Constitution proposed that amendments to the Constitution would be drafted by a convention unless both the Council of Minister and the European Parliament agreed otherwise.
A simplified revision was created for changes which might be proposed to be made to Title III of Part III of the TCE on the internal policies and action of the Union. Changes to this Title could be made by a decision of the European Council subject to it being ratified by all member states.
move from a special legislative procedure to the ordinary legislative procedure
in a specific policy area.
Although the Lisbon Treaty was itself drafted behind closed doors, it adopted the amendment procedures proposed by the Constitution.
Withdrawal clause
A new clause in the TCE provided for the unilateral withdrawal of any member state from the Union (clause I-60). Under this clause, when a country notifies the Council of its intent to withdraw, a settlement is agreed in the Council with the consent of Parliament. If negotiations are not agreed within two years, the country leaves anyway. An identical provision was subsequently inserted into the treaties by the Lisbon Treaty.
^Article IV-447 of the Treaty requires that instruments of ratification be deposited with the Government of the Italian Republic in order for the Treaty to enter into force. Each country deposits the instrument of ratification after its internal ratification process is finalised by all required state bodies (parliament and the head of state). Countries are ordered according to the date of deposition of ratification documents. When two countries have deposited the necessary documents on the same date the order is alphabetical.
^Results refer to the final round of parliamentary vote when more than one vote is required.
^Participation in Luxemburg referendum is calculated based on the total number of valid, non-blank votes. Results are calculated based on the valid, non-blank votes.
^Åland is an autonomous province of Finland. It is part of the European Union, but is subject to certain exemptions. Åland is not party to the Treaty to establish European constitution, but according to Article IV-440, Paragraph 5 the Treaty will apply on the territory but with derogation. So Åland Parliament ratification is not necessary for the European Constitution to enter into force, but it is needed for provisions of Article IV-440, Paragraph 5 to be applied.
^Participation in French referendum is calculated based on the total number of votes(2.51% of votes were blank or invalid). Results are calculated based on the valid, non-blank votes.
^Participation in Dutch referendum is calculated based on the total number of votes (0.76% of votes were blank or invalid). Results are calculated based on the valid, non-blank votes.
History of the Constitution – Academic site linking to many documents concerning the preparation, negotiation and ratification stages of the TCE and previous treaties.
Kung Fu Pocong PerawanPoster filmSutradara Yoyok Dumprink Produser KK Dheeraj Ditulis olehPemeran Jessica Iskandar Olga SyahputraDaus Mini Yadi Sembako Raffi Ahmad Rizky Putra DistributorK2K ProductionsTanggal rilis12 April 2012 (2012-04-12)Negara Indonesia Bahasa Indonesia Kung Fu Pocong Perawan adalah film horor-komedi Indonesia yang akan dirilis pada tanggal 12 April 2012. Film ini disutradarai oleh Yoyok Dumprink. Film ini dibintangi oleh Olga Syahputra dan Jessica Iskandar. Sinopsis...
Fred Ott's SneezeFilm lengkapSutradara William Kennedy Dickson Produser William K.L. Dickson Ditulis olehPemeranFred OttDistributorPerusahaan Manufaktur EdisonTanggal rilis 9 Januari 1894 (1894-01-09) Durasi5 detikNegara Amerika Serikat BahasaFilm bisu Fred Ott's Sneeze (juga dikenal sebagai Edison Kinetoscopic Record of a Sneeze) adalah sebuah film dokumenter bisu hitam-putih pendek Amerika tahun 1894 yang direkam oleh William K.L. Dickson dan dibintangi oleh Fred Ott. Karya tersebut ad...
Die häufigste Form der Systemkamera ist die digitale Spiegelreflexkamera, im Bild links oben eine Nikon. Die vier Wechselobjektive rechts übereinander sind Zoom-Teleobjektive, das kleine Objektiv rechts unter der Kamera ist ein 35-mm-Weitwinkelobjektiv. Ein Blitzgerät (oben mittig) desselben Herstellers stammt ebenfalls aus dem System. Eine Systemkamera ist ein Fotoapparat mit austauschbaren Komponenten innerhalb eines voll kompatiblen Kamerasystems. Die wichtigsten Komponenten eines solch...
Pour le jeu vidéo de 1979, voir Lunar Lander (jeu vidéo, 1979). Atterrisseur Apollo 16 LM Le Lunar Lander est un genre de jeux vidéo vaguement inspiré de l’atterrissage du module lunaire Apollo sur la Lune. Dans ce genre de jeu, le joueur dirige généralement un vaisseau spatial et tente de le faire atterrir sur la Lune ou sur un autre corps céleste en utilisant ses propulseurs pour ralentir et contrôler sa descente jusqu’à l’aire d’atterrissage. Heurter le sol ou un obstacle ...
فريشلي -بيك تينغلز روزي روبيلاند الغلاف الأوروبي المطور فانبول الناشر نينتندو المخرج تورو كودو المنتج كينسوكي تنابي الموسيقى ماسانوري أداشي سلسلة اللعبة ذا ليجند أوف زيلدا النظام نينتندو دي إس تاریخ الإصدار اليابان سبتمبر 2, 2006أوروبا سبتمبر 14, 2007 نوع اللعبة لعبة...
Cornelius Gemma van Leuven, medicus et philosophus (arts en filosoof) De oudst bekende wetenschappelijke illustratie tekening van het noorderlicht uit het boek van Cornelius Gemma uit 1575 over de supernova van 1572 Cornelius (of Cornelio) Gemma (Leuven, 28 februari 1535 - Leuven, 12 oktober 1578)[1] was arts, astronoom en astroloog, en de oudste zoon van cartograaf en instrumentmaker Gemma Frisius. Hij was hoogleraar geneeskunde aan de Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, en streed met zi...
هذه مقالة غير مراجعة. ينبغي أن يزال هذا القالب بعد أن يراجعها محرر مغاير للذي أنشأها؛ إذا لزم الأمر فيجب أن توسم المقالة بقوالب الصيانة المناسبة. يمكن أيضاً تقديم طلب لمراجعة المقالة في الصفحة المخصصة لذلك. (ديسمبر 2020) هذه المقالة يتيمة إذ تصل إليها مقالات أخرى قليلة جدًا. ف...
Венсан Ротьєфр. Vincent Rottiers Венсан Ротьє у 2016 роціДата народження 17 червня 1985(1985-06-17) (38 років)Місце народження Еврі, ФранціяГромадянство ФранціяПрофесія акторРоки активності 2002 — наш часIMDb ID 1196219 Венсан Ротьє у Вікісховищі Венса́н Ротьє́ (фр. Vincent Rottiers; нар. 17 черв...
Relazioni tra Georgia e Italia Mappa che indica l'ubicazione di Georgia e Italia Georgia Italia Le relazioni bilaterali tra Italia e Georgia fanno riferimento ai rapporti diplomatici fra la Repubblica Italiana e la Georgia, istituiti per la prima volta l'11 maggio 1992. L'Italia ha un'ambasciata a Tbilisi, la Georgia ha un'ambasciata a Roma. Entrambi i paesi sono membri del Consiglio d'Europa. Indice 1 Nel 2008 2 Note 3...
2011 studio album by SepulturaKairosStudio album by SepulturaReleasedJune 24, 2011RecordedDecember 2010–March 2011 at Trama Studios, São Paulo, BrazilGenre Groove metal[1][2] thrash metal[1][2][3] death metal[4] Length45:51LabelNuclear Blast, Tribus Music (Brazil)ProducerRoy ZSepultura chronology A-Lex(2009) Kairos(2011) The Mediator Between Head and Hands Must Be the Heart(2013) Kairos is the twelfth studio album by the Brazilian met...
Абдур Рахман-ханпушту عبد رحمان خان Эмир Афганистана Абдур-Рахман в 1897. 7-й Эмир Афганистана 21 июля 1880 года — 1 октября 1901 года Предшественник Мухаммед Якуб-хан Преемник Хабибулла-хан Рождение 1844(1844)Кабул, Эмират Афганистан Смерть 1 октября 1901(1901-10-01)Кабул, Эмират Афг...
BabadanKelurahanNegara IndonesiaProvinsiJawa TimurKabupatenBlitarKecamatanWlingiKode Kemendagri35.05.17.1002 Kode BPS3505140005 Babadan adalah kelurahan di kecamatan Wlingi, Blitar, Jawa Timur, Indonesia. Babadan terdiri dari 5 pedukuhan yaitu dukuh Gurit, Babadan, Darungan, Duren, dan Tejo. Penduduk dari perbatasan dukuh Tejo dan Babadan kebanyakannya bekerja mencari batu di Sungai Lekso untuk menambah pendapatan. Dengan naungan dari Gunung Kelud, masyarakatnya cukup mampu untuk menghid...
North American video game publisher This article is about the North American video game subsidiary. For its parent company in Japan, see Atlus. Atlus WestTrade nameAtlusFormerlyPrevious divisions Atlus Software Inc. (1991–1997)Atlus Co., Ltd. (1996–1999)Current company Atlus U.S.A., Inc. (1999–2010)Index Digital Media, Inc. (2010–2014)Atlus USA (2014–2019)Atlus West (2019–present)TypeSubsidiaryIndustryVideo gamesFoundedJanuary 18, 1991; 32 years ago (1991-01-18)H...
Резервування підсистеми B Резервування твердих дисків для побудови масиву RAID Резервування промислового комп'ютера Резервування блока живлення (дублювання) Резервува́ння у техніці — спосіб забезпечення надійності об'єкта за рахунок використання додаткових засобів ...
2011 film by Vetrimaaran AadukalamTheatrical release posterDirected byVetrimaranScreenplay byVetrimaaranAdditional screenplay:Vikram SugumaranStory byVetrimaaran Dialogues byVetrimaaranVikram Sugumaran Produced byS. KathiresanStarring Dhanush Tapsee Pannu Kishore V. I. S. Jayapalan Naren Murugadoss CinematographyVelrajEdited byKishore Te.Music byG. V. Prakash KumarProductioncompanies Group Companys Five Star Films Distributed bySun PicturesRelease date 14 January 2011 (2011-01-...
Гаплогруппа Q2 Тип Y-ДНК Время появления 28,700 лет BP Время до БОП 14,900 лет BP Предковая группа Q (M242) Сестринские группы Q1 Субклады Q2a, Q2b Мутации-маркеры L275 Прежние обозначения Q1b, Q3 Гаплогруппа Q2 или Q-L275 — гаплогруппа Y-хромосомы человека. Содержание 1 Субклады 2 Палеогенетика 2...
Iraqi writer, author and journalist Rezgar AkrawiBorn1966 (age 56–57)Akra, IraqNationalityIraq, DanishNotable workfounder of the Al-Hewar Al-Mutamaden – Modern discussion foundation and the term: “electronic left”AwardsIbn Rushd Prize for Free Thought representing the Al-Hewar Al-Mutamaden – Modern discussion foundation. Rezgar Akrawi (Arabic: رزكار عقراوي) is an Iraqi writer, author, and journalist. He was born in 1966 in Kurdistan region of Iraq,[1] in ...
American actor (1910–1983) For the professional golfer, see Vaughn Taylor. This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Vaughn Taylor actor – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Vaughn TaylorTaylor in Robert Montgomery Presen...
1965 filmDie Abenteuer des Werner HoltThe premier of The Adventures of Werner Holt.Directed byJoachim KunertWritten byDieter Noll, Claus Küchenmeister, Joachim KunertProduced byHans Mahlich, Martin SonnabendStarringKlaus-Peter ThieleCinematographyRolf SohreEdited byChrista StrittMusic byGerhard WohlgemuthProductioncompanyDEFADistributed byProgress FilmRelease date 5 February 1965 (1965-02-05) Running time164 minutesCountryEast GermanyLanguageGerman The Adventures of Werner Hol...
Artículo principal: Liga 1 2020 Liga 1 Fase 1 2020 Primer torneo corto El Estadio Nacional albergó el primer encuentro luego de la primera cuarentena.Datos generalesSede PerúCiudad Lima y Callao (a partir de la fecha 7)Asociación ConmebolFecha 31 de enero de 202019 de octubre de 2020Organizador FPFPatrocinador MovistarPalmarésCampeón UniversitarioSubcampeón Sport HuancayoDatos estadísticosParticipantes 20 equiposGoleador Emanuel Herrera Yorley Mena (12 goles) Cronología 1 ...
Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!