Case
No.: CH/00/6143 and 6150
Applicant: Mara TURUNDZIC and Smiljka FRANCIC
Respondent Party: Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Date Delivered: 8 February 2001
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
The applicants
are citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina. They are both the
pre-war occupancy right holders of apartments in Mostar. Both
applicants left their apartments due to the war hostilities.
The cases concern their attempts to regain possession of their
apartments. Both applicants lodged applications to the Commission
for Real Property Claims ("CRPC"), which issued
decisions recognising their occupancy rights. Both applicants
filed requests for the execution of the CRPC decisions before
the competent municipal organ, but did not receive any response.
At the time of the Chamber's consideration, the CRPC decisions
had not been executed.
Admissibility
Noting that the
applicants had made repeated attempts to have the CRPC decisions
enforced and they had been unsuccessful, the Chamber was satisfied
that the applicants could not be required to pursue any further
remedy provided by domestic law, and declared the case admissible.
Merits
Article 8
of the Convention
The Chamber noted
that under the Law on Implementation of the Decisions of the
Commission for Real Property Claims the competent administrative
organ is obliged to issue a conclusion on permission of enforcement
within a period of 30 days from the date when the request
for enforcement is submitted. At the time of the Chamber's
consideration, the applicants had still not received a decision
on their requests to have the CRPC decisions enforced, despite
the time-limit for this having expired 15 months before. Thus
the failure of the competent administrative organ to decide
upon their requests was not "in accordance with the law"
and there was a violation of the rights of the applicants
to respect for their home as guaranteed by Article 8.
Article 1
of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention
For the same
reasons as given in the context of its examination of the
case under Article 8, the Chamber found that the failure of
the competent administrative organ to decide upon the applicant's
requests was contrary to the law, and thus that there was
a violation of their right to peaceful enjoyment of their
possessions as guaranteed by Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
Remedies
The Chamber ordered
the Federation to enable the applicants to regain possession
of their apartments without further delay; to pay to each
of the applicants KM 2,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
to pay to each of the applicants KM 1,600 as compensation
for the loss of use of the apartments and for any extra costs
during the time the applicants have been forced to live in
alternative accommodation; and to pay to each of the applicants
KM 100 for each further month that they continued to be forced
to live in alternative accommodation as from 1 March 2001
until the end of the month in which they would be reinstated.
Decision adopted
5 February 2001
Decision delivered 8 February 2001
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