Case
No.: CH/98/1309, CH/98/1312, CH/98/1314, CH/98/1318, CH/98/1319,
CH/98/1321, CH/98/1322, CH/98/1323 and CH/98/1326
Applicant: Almasa KAJTAZ, Dobrila BIJEDIC, Azira SIVCEVIC,
Altijana MESIC, Rasema BEGIC, Elvedin DEVIC, Radenka CVIJETIC,
Jasna SLJIVO, and Dzenana SEHOVIC
Respondent Party: Bosnia and Herzegovina
Date Delivered: 7 September 2001
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
The applicants,
who are of various ethnic origins, were employees in the Ministry
of Justice and General Administration of the Republic of Bosnia
and Herzegovina. In December 1997, a new Ministry for Civil
Affairs and Communication (the "Ministry") was established
and the applicants were not officially assigned to any post
within this new Ministry. The applicants allege that after
the establishment of the Ministry, they continued working
within the new Ministry, in the same positions until various
dates in the beginning of 1999. On 8 September 1998, they
learned that they had been relegated to the status of "unassigned"
workers and that as a result they received lower salaries
than other employees and stopped receiving benefits commencing
on or around June 1998. They stopped receiving any compensation
on 31 December 1998. They ceased working sometime between
January and March 1999, respectively. They had never received
procedural decisions terminating their working relations or
relegating them to the status of unassigned workers. In November
1998 all applicants but one initiated civil proceedings before
the Municipal Court I in Sarajevo requesting compensation,
but no decisions had yet been issued.
Admissibility
While all but
one of the applicants initiated lawsuits before the Municipal
Court I in Sarajevo, the respondent Party did not believe
the Municipal Court had jurisdiction and did not defend itself
in the lawsuits. Thus the respondent Party was barred from
arguing that this remedy was "effective." In addition,
since the applicants did not have the necessary procedural
decisions upon which to challenge the legality of the decision
effectively terminating their employment, there was no State
Court, and there was no State attorney appointed to represent
the State before the Federation courts, there was no effective
domestic remedy for the alleged violations of which the applicants
complained. Thus the applicants could not be required to exhaust
any further domestic remedies, and the Chamber declared the
applications admissible in their entirety.
Merits
Article 6
of the Convention
The Chamber concluded
that whether or not the Municipal Court declared itself competent
to hear the applicants' cases, the overall legal system for
adjudicating these claims was not sufficiently coherent or
clear. The applicants did not have a court in which to actually
have their claims heard. The opportunity to file a claim but
not have the claim determined does not satisfy the requirements
of Article 6(1). Thus Bosnia and Herzegovina violated the
applicants' practical, effective right of access to court.
Article 13
of the Convention
In view of its
decision concerning Article 6, the Chamber considered that
it did not have to examine the case under Article 13, which
guarantees the right to an effective remedy before a national
authority.
Discrimination
The Chamber considered
the applicants' allegation of discrimination in relation to
Article 25(c) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, which guarantees access to "public service"
without discrimination. The Chamber found that there was differential
treatment of all of the applicants based on ethnic origin
with the goal of promoting public confidence in the administration
of the government of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the aftermath
of the war through the "equal representation" principle.
While the differential
treatment arising from the attempt to obtain fair representation
may have been in pursuit of a legitimate aim, in order for
this aim to have been achieved in a legitimate manner the
process must have been transparent, fair and objective. No
clear reasons were given as to why these particular applicants
were not employed. Further evidence of the vague and inadequate
selection process was found with respect to the applicants
of mixed origin or mixed marriages, or the Serb applicant
living in the Federation. As the Chamber could not find that
the means employed were proportional to the aim pursued, it
held that the applicants were discriminated against on the
ground of national and ethnic origin in their enjoyment of
the right to access to public service, and thus that Bosnia
and Herzegovina violated its obligations under the Dayton
Peace Agreement.
Remedies
The Chamber ordered
Bosnia and Herzegovina to pay to the applicants various sums
as compensation for lost income, benefits and moral damages.
Decision adopted
4 September 2001
Decision delivered 7 September 2001
DECISION ON
REQUEST FOR REVIEW
As of 31 December
2001, the decision on request for review had not been decided.
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