III.
MANDATE AND JURISDICTION OF THE CHAMBER
The
mandate of the Human Rights Chamber is set out in Article II
of Annex 6 to the Dayton Peace Agreement. The Chamber has the
mandate to consider alleged or apparent violations of human
rights as provided in the European Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the
Protocols thereto, and alleged or apparent discrimination
arising in the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms provided
for in the Convention and 15 other international agreements
listed in the Appendix to Annex 6. The Chamber may only
receive applications concerning matters which are within the
responsibility of one of the Parties to Annex 6 (the State of
Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina and the Republika Srpska), and which occurred or
continued after entry into force of the Dayton Peace Agreement
(14 December 1995). Particular priority is given to
allegations of especially severe or systematic violations, as
well as those founded on alleged discrimination on prohibited
grounds.
The Chamber may receive applications concerning such human
rights violations directly from any Party to Annex 6 to the
Dayton Peace Agreement or from any person, non-governmental
organisation or group of individuals claiming to be the victim
of a violation by any Party or acting on behalf of alleged
victims who are deceased or missing.
Under the terms of Annex 6, when the Chamber receives an
application it must decide whether to accept or reject it,
taking into account a number of criteria listed in Article
VIII. These criteria include: (a) whether effective remedies
exist, and the applicant has demonstrated that they have been
exhausted and that the application has been filed with the
Commission Šthe Chamber or the BiH OmbudsmanC within six
months from such date on which the final decision was taken;
(b) whether the application is substantially the same as a
matter that the Chamber has already examined; c) whether the
application is incompatible with the Human Rights Agreement,
manifestly ill-founded, or an abuse of the right of petition;
and d) whether the application concerns a matter currently
pending before another international human rights body or
another Commission established by the Annexes to the General
Framework Agreement.
The Chamber's procedures are modeled on those of the European
Court of Human Rights. Unless the Chamber decides at the
outset that an application is inadmissible or should be struck
out, written observations are requested from the applicant and
respondent Party, after which the Chamber deliberates and
decides on the case. In addition to the written procedure, the
Chamber may decide to schedule a public hearing for oral
argument by the parties and submission of evidence by
witnesses and experts. The Chamber may also invite written or
oral amicus curiae submissions. If the Chamber finds a
violation, it may, in its written decision on the merits,
issue an order or orders indicating the steps that the
respondent Party or Parties must take to remedy the breach,
including orders to cease and desist or grant monetary relief.
At any stage of the proceedings, it may also order provisional
measures or attempt to facilitate an amicable resolution based
on respect for human rights.
The decisions of the Chamber are final and binding and the
respondent Parties are obligated to implement them fully.
Chamber decisions on the merits are forwarded to the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE)
and the Office of the High Representative (OHR) for monitoring
of compliance.
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