Janelly Fourtou
Janelly Fourtou (born 4 February 1939 in Paris) is a French politician and Member of the European Parliament for central France. She is a member of the Union for French Democracy, which is part of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe, and sits on the European Parliament's Committee on Petitions and its Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection.
She is also a substitute for the Committee on Legal Affairs, a member of the delegation to the EU–Chile Joint Parliamentary Committee, and a substitute for the delegation for relations with the countries of Central America.
Career
- Master's degree in language and literature (1972)
- Assistant, Paris Chamber of Commerce (1960–1964)
- In charge of bookshop Maison de la Presse in Paris (1965–1969)
- Member of Neuilly Municipal Council (since 1983)
- Responsibility for housing (1989–1995)
- Responsibility for employment (since 1995)
- Member of the European Parliament (since 1999)
Controversy
Fourtou is married to Jean-René Fourtou, the CEO of Vivendi Universal. Fourtou has been active in the EU Parliaments decisions regarding Intellectual Property rights.
In 2004, she managed to pass a directive "after unofficial meetings with the Council working group and the Commission"[1] suggesting among many other things up to four years of imprisonment for file-sharing.[2] Also, the directive included an introduction of private police forces to enforce the law (in the EU member countries that should adopt the directive as-is).[3]
External links
- European Parliament biography
- Declaration of financial interests (in French; PDF file), where Mrs. Fourtou declares having no affiliations of financial nature.
- DIRECTIVE 2004/48/EC OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL OF 29 APRIL 2004 ON THE ENFORCEMENT OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS, the directive proposed by Mrs. Fourtou