European Court of Human Rights
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The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) in Strasbourg was established under the European Convention on Human Rights of 1950 to monitor compliance by Signatory Parties. The European Convention on Human Rights, or formally named Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, is one of the most important conventions adopted by the Council of Europe. All 47 member states of the Council of Europe are signatories of the Convention. Applications against Signatory Parties for human rights violations can be brought before the Court either by other States Parties or by individuals.
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[edit] History and structure
The Court was instituted as a permanent court with full-time judges on 1 November 1998, replacing the then existing enforcement mechanisms, which included the European Commission of Human Rights (created in 1954) and the European Court of Human Rights, which had been created in 1950.
The new format of the Court was the result of the ratification of Protocol 11, an amendment to the Convention that was ratified in November 1998. The new full-time Judges were subsequently elected by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
All member states of the Council of Europe have to sign and ratify the Convention. The court consists of a number of judges equal to the number of Signatory Parties, which currently stand at 47. Each judge is elected in respect of a Signatory Party by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Despite this correspondence, however, there are no nationality requirements for judges (e.g. a Swiss national is elected in respect of Liechtenstein). Judges are assumed to be impartial arbiters, rather than representatives of any country. Judges are elected to six-year terms. They can be re-elected.
The court is divided into five "Sections", each of which consists of a geographic and gender-balanced selection of justices. The entire court elects a President and five Section Presidents, two of whom also serve as Vice-Presidents of the court. All terms last for three years. Each section selects a Chamber, which consists of the Section President and a rotating selection of six other justices. The court also maintains a 17-member Grand Chamber, which consists of the President, Vice-Presidents, and Section Presidents, in addition to a rotating selection of justices from one of two balanced groups. The selection of judges alternates between the groups every nine months.
[edit] Procedure
Complaints of violations by member states are filed in Strasbourg, and are assigned to a Section. Each complaint is first heard by a committee of three judges, which may unanimously vote to strike any complaint without further examination. Once past committee, the complaint is heard and decided by a full Chamber. Decisions of great importance may be appealed to the Grand Chamber. Any decision of the court has the character of a recommendation and is therefore executed on the sole discretion of the affected member states [1].
It is the role of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe to supervise the execution of court judgments, though it has no formal means of using force against member countries in order to comply. However, the ultimate sanction of non-compliance is expulsion from the Council of Europe and thus becoming a 'pariah' state within Europe. Furthermore, the European Union takes a keen interest in the Convention and Court (and its jurisprudence) so would not look kindly upon any EU member state that did not fulfill its Convention obligations.
[edit] Judges
As of 16 May 2007 (in order of precedence):[2]
| Name | Country | Position | Elected | Term Ends |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jean-Paul Costa | Image:Flag of France.svg France | President | 1998 | 2010 |
| Christos Rozakis | Image:Flag of Greece.svg Greece | Vice-President | 1998 | 2010 |
| Sir Nicolas Bratza | Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom | Vice-President | 1998 | 2010 |
| Boštjan Zupančič | Image:Flag of Slovenia.svg Slovenia | Section President | 1998 | 2010 |
| Peer Lorenzen | Image:Flag of Denmark.svg Denmark | Section President | 1998 | 2010 |
| Françoise Tulkens | Image:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium | Section President | 1998 | 2010 |
| Giovanni Bonello | Image:Flag of Malta.svg Malta | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Loukis Loucaides | Image:Flag of Cyprus.svg Cyprus | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Ireneu Cabral Barreto | Image:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Riza Türmen | Image:Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Corneliu Bîrsan | Image:Flag of Romania.svg Romania | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Karel Jungwiert | Image:Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Czech Republic | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Volodymyr Butkevych | Image:Flag of Ukraine.svg Ukraine | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Josep Casadevall | Image:Flag of Andorra.svg Andorra | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Nina Vajić | Image:Flag of Croatia.svg Croatia | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Margarita Tsatsa-Nikolovska | Image:Flag of Macedonia.svg Republic of Macedonia | Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| András Baka | Image:Flag of Hungary.svg Hungary | Ad Litem Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Rait Maruste | Image:Flag of Estonia.svg Estonia | Ad Litem Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Kristaq Traja | Image:Flag of Albania.svg Albania | Ad Litem Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Snejana Botoucharova | Image:Flag of Bulgaria.svg Bulgaria | Ad Litem Judge | 1998 | 2010 |
| Mindia Ugrekhelidze | Image:Flag of Georgia.svg Georgia | Ad Litem Judge | 1999 | 2011 |
| Anatoly Kovler | Image:Flag of Russia.svg Russia | Ad Litem Judge | 1999 | 2011 |
| Vladimiro Zagrebelsky | Image:Flag of Italy.svg Italy | Ad Litem Judge | 2001 | 2007 |
| Antonella Mularoni | Image:Flag of San Marino.svg San Marino | Ad Litem Judge | 2001 | 2007 |
| Elisabeth Steiner | Image:Flag of Austria.svg Austria | Ad Litem Judge | 2001 | 2007 |
| Stanislav Pavlovschi | Image:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova | Ad Litem Judge | 2001 | 2007 |
| Lech Garlicki | Image:Flag of Poland.svg Poland | Ad Litem Judge | 2002 | 2008 |
| Javier Borrego Borrego | Image:Flag of Spain.svg Spain | Ad Litem Judge | 2003 | 2009 |
| Elisabet Fura-Sandström | Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden | Ad Litem Judge | 2003 | 2009 |
| Alvina Gyulumyan | Image:Flag of Armenia.svg Armenia | Ad Litem Judge | 2003 | 2009 |
| Khanlar Hajiyev | Image:Flag of Azerbaijan.svg Azerbaijan | Ad Litem Judge | 2004 | 2010 |
| Ljiljana Mijović | Image:Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Bosnia and Herzegovina | Ad Litem Judge | 2004 | 2010 |
| Renate Jaeger | Image:Flag of Germany.svg Germany | Ad Litem Judge | 2004 | 2010 |
| Egbert Myjer | Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands | Ad Litem Judge | 2004 | 2010 |
| Sverre Erik Jebens | Image:Flag of Norway.svg Norway | Ad Litem Judge | 2004 | 2010 |
| Davið Þór Björgvinsson | Image:Flag of Iceland.svg Iceland | Ad Litem Judge | 2004 | 2010 |
| Danutė Jočienė | Image:Flag of Lithuania.svg Lithuania | Ad Litem Judge | 2004 | 2010 |
| Ján Šikuta | Image:Flag of Slovakia.svg Slovakia | Ad Litem Judge | 2004 | 2010 |
| Dragoljub Popović | Image:Flag of Serbia.svg Serbia | Ad Litem Judge | 2005 | 2011 |
| Ineta Ziemele | Image:Flag of Latvia.svg Latvia | Ad Litem Judge | 2005 | 2011 |
| Mark Villiger | Image:Flag of Liechtenstein.svg Liechtenstein | Ad Litem Judge | 2006 | 2012 |
| Isabelle Berro-Lefevre | Image:Flag of Monaco.svg Monaco | Ad Litem Judge | 2006 | 2012 |
| Päivi Hirvelä | Image:Flag of Finland.svg Finland | Ad Litem Judge | 2007 | 2013 |
| Giorgio Malinverni | Image:Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland | Ad Litem Judge | 2007 | 2013 |
The Plenary Court elects the Registrar and one or more Deputy Registrars. The Registrar is the head of the Registry, which performs legal and administrative tasks and drafts decisions and judgments on behalf of the Court. The Registrar and Deputy Registrar as of 4 January 2007[2] are:
- Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Erik Fribergh, Registrar
- Image:Flag of Ireland.svg Michael O’Boyle, Deputy Registrar
[edit] Sections
| Position | Section I | Section II | Section III | Section IV | Section V |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Section President | Mr C.L. Rozakis | Mrs F. Tulkens | Mr B.M. Zupančič | Sir Nicolas Bratza | Mr P. Lorenzen |
| Section Vice-President | Mr L. Loucaides | Mr A.B. Baka | Mr C. Birsan | Mr J. Casadevall | Mrs S. Botoucharova |
| Judge | Mrs N. Vajić | Mr I. Cabral Barreto | Mr J.-P. Costa | Mr G. Bonello | Mr K. Jungwiert |
| Judge | Mr A. Kovler | Mr R. Türmen | Mrs E. Fura-Sandstrom | Mr K. Traja | Mr V. Butkevych |
| Judge | Mrs E. Steiner | Mr M. Ugrekhelidze | Mrs A. Gyulumyan | Mr S. Pavlovschi | Mrs M. Tsatsa-Nikolovska |
| Judge | Mr K. Hajiyev | Mr V. Zagrebelsky | Mr E. Myjer | Mr L. Garlicki | Mr R. Maruste |
| Judge | Mr D. Spielmann | Mrs A. Mularoni | Mr D. Björgvinsson | Mrs L. Mijović | Mr J. Borrego Borrego |
| Judge | Mr S. E. Jebens | Mrs D. Jočienė | Mrs I. Ziemele | Mr J. Šikuta | Mrs R. Jaeger |
| Judge | Mr G. Malinverni | Mr D. Popović | Mrs I. Berro-Lefèvre | Mrs P. Hirvelä | Mr M. Villiger |
| Section Registrar | S. Nielsen | S. Dollé | S. Quesada | L. Early | C. Westerdiek |
| Deputy Section Registrar | A. Wampach | F. Elens-Passos | S. Naismith | F. Araçi | S. Phillips |
[edit] Reform
Due to the increase in awareness of European citizens of their rights under the Convention, the Court was becoming a victim of its own success. Some cases were taking up to five years before being heard and there was a significant backlog. For example, according to the Human Rights Information Bulletin (issued by the Council of Europe), between 1 November 2003 and 29 February 2004 the Court dealt with 7315 cases, of which 6255 were declared inadmissible.
Working on the principle that 'justice delayed is justice denied', the Council of Europe set up a working party to consider ways of improving the efficiency of the Court. This resulted in an amendment to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, Protocol 14. This new protocol, which requires universal ratification by all Council of Europe member states to come into force, makes a number of changes:
- A single judge can decide on a case's admissibility. Before, three judges decided.
- Where cases are broadly similar to ones brought previously before the Court, and are essentially due to a member state failing to change their domestic law to correct a failing highlighted by that previous judgement, the case can be decided by three judges rather than the seven-judge Chamber.
- A case may not be admissible if it is considered that the applicant has not suffered 'significant disadvantage'. However, this is not a 'hard and fast' rule.
- A member state can be brought before the court by the Committee of Ministers if that state refuses to enforce a judgment against it.
- The Committee of Ministers can ask the Court for an 'interpretation' of a judgement to help determine the best way for a member state to comply with it.
Amnesty International has expressed concern that these changes to the admissibility criteria will mean individuals may lose the ability to 'gain redress for human rights violations'[4]
[edit] Special Case Germany
The official translation of an extract of the German Federal Constitutional Courts's decision of 14th Oct 2004 [5] reads:
"As a result of the status of the European Convention on Human Rights as ordinary statutory law below the level of the constitution, the ECtHR was not functionally a higher-ranking court in relation to the courts of the States parties. For this reason, neither in interpreting the European Convention on Human Rights nor in interpreting national fundamental rights could domestic courts be bound by the decisions of the ECtHR.”
Thus neither German State Authorities nor its judges recognize the authority and the international contract it signed of the ECtHR, whereas the relevant Article and sub-article of the treaty granting this authority read:
Article 46 - Binding force and execution of judgments
1. The High Contracting Parties undertake to abide by the final judgment of the Court in any case to which they are parties.
Thus it is irrelevant, how German judiciaries think the decisions of the ECtHR should be ranked in their national legal hierarchy at home: The ECtHR has, by treaty, to be obeyed. Germany is, therefore, open to sanctions to be determined by the Council of Ministers for her unilateral action.
[edit] Non-Compliance in the case Görgülü v. Germany
Despite the statement [6] of Prof. Dr. Gertrude Lübbe-Wolff, LL.M. (Harvard), Judge of the Federal Constitutional Court, the ECtHR recognised [7] a serious violation of the father's right to family life by prevention of the Naumburg Court of Appeal's decision of 20 June 2001 and after this the rejection of the Constitutional Complaint the German Federal Constitutional Court the father Görgülü from living with and having access to his son. Since this decision the family had to fight in 50 court cases [8] and is already a second time at the ECtHR.
[edit] Notable cases
In December 1977, the court ruled that the government of the United Kingdom was guilty of "inhuman and degrading treatment", of men interned without trial, by the court, following a case brought by the Republic of Ireland (Case No. 5310/71). The court found that while their internment was a violation of the convention rights, it was justifiable in the circumstances; it however ruled that the practice of the five techniques and the practice of beating prisoners constituted inhumane and degrading punishment in violation of the convention, although not torture. Legally, Ireland v. United Kingdom is notable since the British government had already publicly admitted and promised to refrain from all the violations the court found it guilty of. The UK tried to argue that having done so, the Irish litigation was pointless, relying on principles of international law accepted by the ICJ; however, the ECHR held that even though the UK had already made these admissions and undertakings, the case could still be considered, since ruling on it would serve the purposes of the development of Convention law.[9]
In 1980, the court ruled out the foetal right to sue the mother carrying the foetus. In Paton v. United Kingdom, it was discovered that the life of foetus is "intimately connected with, and cannot be regarded in isolation from, the life of the pregnant woman".
In 2003 and 2004, the court ruled that "that sharia is incompatible with the fundamental principles of democracy" (13/02/2003) .[10], because the sharia rules on inheritance, women's rights and religious freedom violate human rights as established in the European Convention on Human Rights.
In 2006 the court denied admissibility of the applications of former USSR secret services operatives convicted in Estonia for Stalinist crimes against humanity after Estonia became independent in 1991.
For the first time since the Russian military invaded Chechnya in 1999, the court has agreed to hear cases of human rights abuse brought forward by Chechen civilians against Russia.
On June 21, 2007, the Court ruled that Russia was responsible for the killings of four Chechens. Russia was found guilty on the basis of eyewitness descriptions, the vehicles the perpetrators drove and their ability to travel during restricted hours.[11]
[edit] Other cases
- Dudgeon v. United Kingdom: sodomy and the right to privacy
- Steel v. United Kingdom, the McLibel case: legal aid in libel cases
- Murray v. United Kingdom: anti-terrorism laws
- John Murray v. United Kingdom: right to silence
- Funke v. France: right to a fair trial
- List of LGBT-related cases
- Alexei Mikheyev v. Russia [12]: €250,000 compensation for police brutality
- ASLEF v. United Kingdom: right of unions to expel members
- Church of Scientology Moscow versus Russia[13]
- Soering v. United Kingdom: Extradition, right against inhuman and degrading treatment
[edit] Architecture
The building, which houses the court chambers and Registry (administration), was designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership and completed in 1995. The design is meant to reflect, amongst other things, the two distinct components of the Commission and Court (as it then was). Wide scale use of glass emphasises the 'openness' of the court to European citizens.
[edit] See also
- European Court of Human Rights cases
- Human rights in Europe
- Capital punishment in Europe
- European Convention on Human Rights
- International Institute of Human Rights
- Inter-American Court of Human Rights - regional court established in 1979
- African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights - regional court established in 2006
- European Court of Human Rights cases on Occupation of Baltic States
[edit] Notes
- ^ ECHR · How the execution of judgments works
- ^ a b ECHR website - Composition of the Plenary.
- ^ ECHR website - Composition of the Sections.
- ^ European Court on Human Rights: Imminent reforms must not obstruct individuals' redress for human rights violations by Amnesty International News Service No: 120 11 May 2004
- ^ The decision of the German High Court of the Constitution 2 BvR 1481/04 of 14th Oct 2004
- ^ ECHR and national jurisdiction - The Görgülü Case
- ^ GÖRGÜLÜ v. GERMANY JUDGMENT of 26 May 2004
- ^ Listing of the court cases in the german Wikipedia
- ^ Search ECHR data base "In the case of Ireland v. the United Kingdom" (No. 5310/71)
- ^ [1] Refah Partisi (The Welfare Party) and Others v Turkey
- ^ "Russia Ruled Responsible For Killings Of Four Chechens" 21 June 2007
- ^ Alexei Mikheyev v. Russia
- ^ Court press release of 5 April 2007, Court judgment
[edit] External links
- Official website
- information for applicants
- Court judgements, decisions and case law website
- Rules of the Court (PDF)
- Case-processing flowchart (PDF)(before Protocol 14)
- Text of Protocol 14
- "Chechens taking Russia to court" - BBC News
- European Court of Human Rights condemns Russia in media case - IFEX
- How Russia hijacks the European Court of Human Rights (with references at Ilaşcu case)
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