Case
No.: CH/99/3196
Applicant: Avdo and Esma PALIC
Respondent Party: Republika Srpska
Date Delivered: 11 January 2001
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
The application
was brought before the Chamber by Ms. Esma Palic in her own
right and on behalf of her husband, Colonel Avdo Palic. The
applicant's husband was a military commander of the Army of
the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Zepa enclave.
In July 1995, when intensive fighting with Bosnian Serb forces
was going on in that area, Colonel Palic was negotiating with
the Bosnian Serb Army, on UN premises and under UN safety
guarantees, about the evacuation of civilians. On 27 July
1995 Colonel Palic was forcibly taken away by Bosnian Serb
forces in the presence of UN soldiers and monitors and taken
in the direction of Bosnian Serb General Ratko Mladic's command
position. As of the date of the Chamber's consideration, Colonel
Palic was still registered as a missing person.
Admissibility
The Chamber found
that there was strong circumstantial evidence that Colonel
Palic was held in detention after 14 December 1995. Thus,
insofar as an ongoing violation of his rights was claimed,
the Chamber found that the application came within the competence
of the Chamber ratione temporis. The Chamber noted that the
applicant Ms. Palic filed, inter alia, a claim with the competent
commission in the Republika Srpska, but never received any
information on the whereabouts of her husband. No investigation
was ever carried out in respect of the arrest and detention
of Colonel Palic, and the Chamber found that a complaint to
the Republika Srpska police would not have been effective.
The Chamber therefore found that Ms. Palic did not have to
report to the police authorities of the respondent Party what
had happened to her husband, and that she had exhausted all
effective domestic remedies. Thus the Chamber declared the
application admissible.
Merits
Article 5
of the Convention
The Chamber found
that the evidence before it confirmed beyond doubt that Colonel
Palic was forcibly taken away by Bosnian Serb forces, prior
to 14 December 1995, and subsequently detained, and that it
must be assumed that Colonel Palic was either still kept in
captivity or that he had been killed. Noting that the authorities
of the respondent Party had failed to offer any credible and
substantiated explanation for the whereabouts and fate of
Colonel Palic and that no investigation was conducted when
Ms. Palic presented credible indications that her husband
was in detention and that she was concerned for his life,
the Chamber found that the respondent Party had failed to
discharge its responsibility to account for him and that it
must be accepted that he had been held in unacknowledged detention
in the complete absence of the safeguards contained in Article
5. Thus the respondent Party violated Colonel Palic's right
to liberty and security of person under Article 5.
Article 2
of the Convention
The Chamber noted
the total absence of action on the part of the respondent
Party to investigate the fate of Colonel Palic and to make
all relevant information about him, particularly as to whether
he was still alive, available to Ms. Palic and to the Chamber.
The Chamber also noted that, according to the European Court
of Human Rights, the period of time which has elapsed since
a person was placed in detention, although not decisive in
itself, is a relevant factor to be taken into account in determining
the likelihood that he or she has died. Taking into account
that about five years had passed without information as to
Colonel Palic's whereabouts or fate the Chamber concluded
that the respondent Party had violated Colonel Palic's right
to life as guaranteed under Article 2.
Article 3
of the Convention
Regarding Colonel
Palic, the Chamber found that the facts surrounding his deprivation
of liberty disclosed that he was a victim of enforced disappearance
within the meaning of the UN Declaration on the Protection
of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, Article 1 of which
holds that any act of enforced disappearance constitutes a
violation of the right not to be subjected to torture and
other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
The Chamber found that this incommunicado detention and the
suffering and fear of Colonel Palic that may safely be presumed
to have been caused by it revealed inhuman and degrading treatment
in violation of Article 3 in relation to Colonel Palic.
Regarding Ms.
Palic, the Chamber noted that she had suffered uncertainty,
doubt and apprehension for more than five years. Although
she had filed an application with the competent commission
of the respondent Party requesting the investigation of her
husband's fate she had been left with the anguish of knowing
that her husband was detained on 27 July 1995 and that there
was a complete absence of official information as to his fate.
No steps had been taken by the respondent Party to remedy
these matters. Thus the Chamber found that the respondent
Party was in breach of Article 3 in respect of Ms. Palic.
Article 8
of the Convention
The Chamber noted
that Ms. Palic had shown that her husband was arrested by
the respondent Party on 27 July 1995 and that he was apparently
never released, and that she had, without any success, filed
an application with the competent commission of the respondent
Party and taken various other steps to get information from
the respondent Party about the whereabouts of her husband.
The Chamber therefore found that Ms. Palic had sufficiently
substantiated that the respondent Party was arbitrarily withholding
from her information, which must be in its possession, concerning
the fate of her husband, including information concerning
her husband's body, if he was no longer alive. Thus the respondent
Party violated her right to respect for her family life under
Article 8.
Remedies
The Chamber ordered
the Republika Srpska to carry out immediately a full investigation
capable of exploring all the facts regarding Colonel Palic's
fate from the day when he was forcibly taken away with a view
to bringing the perpetrators to justice; to release Colonel
Palic, if still alive, or otherwise, to make available his
mortal remains to Ms. Palic; to make all information and findings
relating to the fate and whereabouts of Colonel Palic known
to Ms. Palic; to pay to Ms. Palic KM 15,000 by way of compensation
for her mental suffering; and to pay to Ms. Palic in respect
of her husband, by way of compensation for non-pecuniary damage,
KM 50,000, to be held by her for her husband or his heirs.
Dissenting/Concurring
Opinions
Mr. Vitomir Popovic
attached a dissenting opinion in which he argued that the
Chamber should have declared the application inadmissible
as incompatible ratione temporis and for failure to exhaust
domestic remedies.
Decision adopted
9 December 2000
Decision delivered 11 January 2001
DECISION ON REQUEST FOR REVIEW
The respondent
Party submitted a request for review. As for the respondent
Party's argument that the Chamber went beyond the claims set
out in the application by considering the application as having
been submitted by Ms. Palic in her own right as well as on
behalf of her husband, the Chamber found that nothing suggested
that Ms. Palic did not wish to apply in her own name as well
as in that of her husband. As for the argument that the application
ought to have been declared inadmissible on the ground of
non-compliance with the six-month rule, the Chamber considered
that since the application complained of a continuing situation,
this objection should be rejected. As for the respondent Party's
disagreement with the award of monetary relief made in favour
of the applicant, the Chamber found that it involved neither
a serious issue affecting the interpretation of the Human
Rights Agreement nor an issue of general importance. Thus
the Chamber considered that the request did not meet the two
conditions required for the Chamber to accept such a request
pursuant to Rule 64(2), and decided to reject the request
for review.
Decision adopted
8 March 2001
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