CLA News / The Luxembourg Convention For the Protection of the Profession of Lawyer
“If the lawyer is not protected, then no one is protected.”
A HISTORIC MILESTONE
Adopted by the Council of Europe in 2025, this is the first binding international legal instrument dedicated to protecting the safety and independence of lawyers.
While originating in Europe, it is designed to be universal, operationalising the UN Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers (1990) into enforceable law.
WHY THIS MATTERS FOR THE COMMONWEALTH
- Upholding Our Shared Values
The Convention offers a vital framework for the entire Commonwealth family, reinforcing shared values of access to justice and the rule of law across both Common Law and Civil Law traditions. It operationalises the Commonwealth Charter and the Latimer House Principles. An independent judiciary is impossible without an independent legal profession free from interference.
- A Response to Global Threats
This is a critical moment. Lawyers across the Commonwealth and the world are increasingly targeted—physically and legally—solely for doing their jobs. This Convention acknowledges that an attack on a lawyer is an attack on the justice system itself. The Convention is more than a legal text – it is an urgent survival mechanism for the Rule of Law.
- The Economic Imperative
The protection of legal professionals is equally critical for a country’s economic health and global standing. The Rule of Law is a driver for economic growth, investment confidence, reduced business risk and commercial integrity. By acceding to the Convention, Commonwealth states can send a powerful message to the global marketplace: contracts are safe here, the law is independent, and the business environment is stable.
THE CLA POSITION
On 19 January 2026, the Commonwealth Lawyers Association (CLA) issued a Declaration endorsing the Convention as the “new international gold standard” for the profession.
“In the absence of an independent Bar that is steadfast and tenacious in its defence of universal and inherent rights, freedoms would be reduced to little more than a fleeting mirage.”
— Steven Thiru, President of the CLA
WHAT DOES THE CONVENTION PROTECT?
Binding obligations on States to guarantee:
- Independence of the Profession: Freedom from state or non-state interference.
- Confidentiality (Legal Professional Privilege): Absolute protection of lawyer-client privilege.
- Protection from Unlawful Actions: Safety of lawyers from threats, assaults, intimidation and harassment.
- Freedom of Expression: No penalties for representing controversial clients or politically sensitive causes.
- Access to Clients: The right to consult clients promptly, including those in custody.
A BRIDGE BETWEEN TRADITIONS
The Commonwealth is a diverse family. The Convention serves as a unique bridge:
- Legal Harmony: Rooted in Civil Law but protecting Common Law values, it unifies standards for diverse Commonwealth members with differing legal traditions.
- The European Bridge: The UK, Cyprus, and Malta—as members of both the Commonwealth and the Council of Europe—can ratify early, helping to create a Europe-Commonwealth bridge and demonstrating how the Convention strengthens Common Law systems.
TIMELINE & ACCESSION
- Status: Opened for signature May 2025.
- Global Accession: Non-European states may join by invitation once the Convention enters into force (estimated 2027 and beyond), and countries have prepared their domestic legal frameworks.
We must act now. We cannot wait for 2027.
CALL TO ACTION
The CLA and Law Society of England and Wales are championing the Convention and urge all legal professionals to:
- ADVOCATE FOR READINESS: Encourage your government to review domestic laws now to ensure they meet the “Luxembourg Standard.”
- PREPARE: Support early ratification by “Bridge” countries to set a precedent.
- MONITOR: Engage with the GRAVO monitoring mechanism to report violations.
Together, we protect the rule of law.
For more information, contact: info@commonwealthlawyers.com
