Case
No.: CH/00/5480
Applicant: Aziz DAUTBEGOVIC and 51 Other Villagers
from Duge
Respondent Party: Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Date Delivered: 6 July 2001
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
The applicants
are villagers of Bosniak origin living in Duge, Prozor-Rama
Municipality, the Federation. The village is located near
the Krupic Spring on the banks of the Buk River which flows
into the Duscica Stream, forming two waterfalls along the
way. The village is named for the rainbows that often appear
in the sky above the waterfalls and the area is renowned for
its natural beauty. The applicants consider the river and
its waterfalls to be an integral part of their lives. They
are farmers in a rural area who support themselves through
agricultural production for which they depend upon the river.
The case concerns
the alleged threat of imminent damage to the applicants' homes,
livelihood, and well-being resulting from the planned construction
of a hydro-electric power plant near their village and within
a protected site of natural heritage assets. This construction
was approved by the Prozor-Rama Municipality, and the investors
in the power plant project obtained, among other approvals,
a certificate on conditions of regional development issued
on 13 May 1996 and a building permit issued on 14 May 1996.
The applicants
claimed that if the planned construction of the power plant
was allowed to go forward, their rights protected under Articles
8, 6, and 13 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No.
1 to the Convention would be violated. The applicants further
alleged that they suffered discrimination based on their ethnic
origin in the enjoyment of these rights. On 4 September 2000,
the Chamber ordered the respondent Party, as a provisional
measure, to take all necessary measures to ensure that the
construction works on the planned hydro-electric power plant
near the village of Duge be stopped. The Chamber subsequently
extended the provisional order until such time as it would
adopt its final decision in the case or the order was withdrawn.
Admissibility
First, noting
that the permit for use of the land for construction of the
power plant was issued after the Dayton Peace Agreement entered
into force, the Chamber found that the application fell within
its competence ratione temporis. Second, the Chamber found
that the applicants could not be required to exhaust any further
domestic remedies. Third, noting that the power plant had
not been built, and that there had not been any substantiation
of the allegation that the power plant would interfere with
the property of the applicants, the Chamber declared the applicants'
claims under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 inadmissible as manifestly
ill-founded. Fourth, noting that the applicants had never
sought to have their rights determined in any civil court,
the Chamber declared their claims under Article 6 inadmissible
as manifestly ill-founded. Fifth, noting that a prima facie
case did not exist against the respondent Party for discrimination,
the Chamber declared the applicants' allegations of discrimination
inadmissible as manifestly ill-founded. Finally, the Chamber
declared the applicants' remaining claims admissible.
Merits
Article 8
of the Convention
The Chamber first
considered whether there was an interference with the applicants'
right to respect for private and family life and home. The
Chamber found that construction of the power plant would interfere
with the protected natural heritage assets near the village
of Duge. Considering the relevant case law of the European
Court of Human Rights, the Chamber found that it may be argued
that the applicants are entitled to protection under Article
8 for their traditional way of living as farmers in a rural
area protected as an asset of natural heritage. Thus the Chamber
found that the respondent Party's approval of construction
of the power plant near the village of Duge in a location
that would directly affect the applicants' traditional way
of living constituted an interference with their rights to
private and family life and home protected by Article 8.
The Chamber next
examined whether the respondent Party's interference with
the applicants' protected rights was justified by the requirements
of Article 8(2). The Chamber noted that at the time of the
interference, two sets of laws concerning the protection of
nature and physical planning were being applied on the territory
of the Federation: one set passed by the authorities of the
former Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the other set
passed by the authorities of the former "Croat Community
of Herceg-Bosna." The Chamber considered each set of
laws individually in analyzing whether the interference with
the applicants' rights was "in accordance with the law."
The Chamber found that under both sets of laws, the competent
authorities failed to obtain necessary approval for the protection
of nature from the governmental body responsible for such
protection service and failed to allow the applicants an opportunity
to participate in the administrative proceedings surrounding
issuance of the construction approvals. Thus the interference
with the applicants' protected rights was not in accordance
with the law and the respondent Party violated the applicants'
rights under Article 8.
Remedies
The Chamber ordered
the Federation, should further steps be necessary for the
protection of the applicants' rights in relation to the natural
heritage assets near the village of Duge, to prevent construction
of buildings or other objects at the site of protected natural
heritage assets unless permission for such construction was
granted in accordance with the law. The Chamber also ordered
the Federation to pay to the applicants one lump sum amount
of KM 2,000 for total compensation for their legal costs and
expenses.
Decision adopted
2 July 2001
Decision delivered 6 July 2001
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