Case
No.: CH/01/7351
Applicant: Ana KRALJEVIĆ
Respondent Party: Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Date Delivered: 12 April 2002
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
The
applicant is a citizen of Bosnia and Herzegovina of Croat
origin. Before the armed conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina
she was an ambulance driver at the Medical Center in Ilidža.
During the war she was unable to reach her workplace. After
the war the applicant unsuccessfully requested to resume her
work.
In June 1996 the Medical Center issued a decision terminating
the applicant's employment as of 2 May 1992 for not reporting
to work for more than twenty days without providing a reason.
The decision was posted on a bulletin board within the Medical
Center's premises.
In 1996 after the reintegration of Ilidža into the territory
of the Federation the Medical Center employed two new drivers.
They had not worked at the Medical Center before and were of
Bosniak origin.
In January 2000, after the Law on Labour entered into force,
the applicant filed a request to the Medical Center seeking
reinstatement into her employment position. In February 2000
the Medical Center requested her to present her personal
dossier which could be found at the Ilidža Municipality. In
the dossier, which the applicant received from the Ilidža
Municipality, she discovered, for the first time, the decision
terminating her employment, dated 13 June 1996.
In March 2000 the applicant filed an objection against the
decision of 13 June 1996 to the Medical Center. On 1 June 2000
the Medical Center sent a notification to the applicant that
in accordance with the instructions on Article 143 paragraph 2
of the Law on Labour her request of January 2000 was
considered ill-founded and accordingly rejected.
Admissibility
The Chamber observed that although the applicant was prevented
from resuming work before 14 December 1995 (the date of entry
into force of the Dayton Peace Agreement), the decision on
employment termination was issued in 1996, so the Chamber had
competence ratione temporis to hear the case. The Chamber also
noted that the applicant could not regain employment through
the relevant domestic courts, and concluded that no remedy was
available to the applicant for the purpose of obtaining
re-employment. The Chamber, however, observed that the
applicant did have access to domestic courts and so it found
the applicant's claims under Article 6 of the Convention
inadmissible as manifestly ill-founded.
Merits
Examining the evidence, the Chamber first determined that the
applicant was treated differently from others in the same or
relevantly similar situations. The Chamber then concluded that
the Medical Center's decision to hire two new drivers instead
of the applicant had discriminatory motives and was influenced
by her Croat descent. The Chamber observed that during the
armed conflict the applicant was absent from work for good
cause, and did not have to provide a timely explanation for
her absence. In addition, the decision concerning her
termination was not delivered to the applicant as provided by
domestic law, so it did not become effective until later, when
the applicant found it in her personal file. The Chamber thus
concluded that the respondent Party failed to meet its burden
of demonstrating that its actions were reasonably and
objectively justified. The Chamber found that the applicant
had been discriminated against in the enjoyment of her right
to work and to just and favourable conditions of work as
defined in Articles 6 paragraph 1 and 7(a)(i) and (ii) of the
ICESCR and Article 5(e)(i) of CERD.
Remedies
The Chamber ordered the Federation to ensure that the
applicant was no longer discriminated against in her right to
work and to just and favourable conditions of work, and that
she was offered an opportunity to resume her work on terms
appropriate to her former position and equal to those enjoyed
by other employees.
Addressing the applicant's request for compensation, the
Chamber took into account the applicant's unsuccessful
attempts to resume work and the Medical Center's inappropriate
responses to her efforts from the date the Chamber obtained
ratione temporis jurisdiction, 14 December 1995, until the
delivery of this decision on 12 April 2002. For these reasons
the Chamber awarded the applicant, on an equitable basis, a
total of KM 15,000 by way of compensation for pecuniary and
non-pecuniary damages.
Decision adopted 5 March 2002
Decision delivered 12 April 2002 |