A woman named Catherine De Bolle is the current director of Europol.
For the last 16 years, wherever I travel in Europe, it appears that I have been pointed out to the police, border control officers, and security at whichever airport I arrive at, where they invariably abuse, mock, and try to intimidate me. The same thing happens then with police and security guards in the city or town I’m visiting, and even for many years members of the public, including restaurant staff and shop workers.
If I booked a flight to Frankfurt, Glasgow, or Istanbul for tomorrow, for example, no doubt the police and security staff there would be waiting to give me a sadistic ‘welcome’.
This is something I assume is only reserved for ISIS terrorist supsects, the worst type of gangsters, drug smugglers and such like. But even if somehow they had legitimate ‘suspicion’ of me being such a hardened criminal (which they certainly don’t), it’s not merely ‘observing’ a suspect. They have gone out of their way to gaslight and mock me in the knowledge that I’m a paranoid schizophrenic, and clearly in the knowledge of the extreme psychological suffering this would cause me, and has caused me over 16 years.
In other words, if what I have described above isn’t psychological torture as defined clearly by the UN Convention Against Torture (CAT), which has been ratified by every European country, then the definition has no meaning or application – which is nonsense.
Psychological torture is explicitly prohibited under the European Convention on Human Rights.
Note that Europol is the law enforcement arm of the European Union.
Most countries in Europe have set harsh penalties for those convicted of psychological torture, especially for public officials. For example, in the United Kingdom, a public official convicted of torture (including psychological torture) faces a lifetime prison sentence. This applies regardless of both nationality of the public official, and where the offence took place. In other words, if Europol have taken part in my torture, and Catherine De Boll is/was aware of it, then she faces a life-sentence upon conviction in the UK and many other countries, and likely in her own country too.