I.
INTRODUCTION
The year 2001 has been a
productive one for the Human Rights Chamber. At the Chamber's 11 sessions held
during the year, it issued 358 decisions of which 31 were substantive decisions
on admissibility and merits and 3 were decisions on review. The cases decided
related to property matters, employment discrimination, religious
discrimination, length of proceedings, non-enforcement of court decisions, fair
trial, expropriation, missing persons and ill-treatment in detention. Seven
public hearings, at which witnesses were heard and evidence was presented, were
held in 8 cases involving almost 100 applicants. Fewer applications were
registered than in the previous year, but still, on average, the Chamber
received 150 applications every month.
The backlog of cases has been steadily rising so that at the end of 2001, the
number of registered applications had reached 8,481. That number dramatically
increased during the first 4 months of 2002 so that by the end of April the
number of applications stood at 10,390. On average, the Chamber issues about 35
decisions at each of its monthly week-long sessions. Unfortunately, the huge gap
between applications received and decisions issued each month is not possible to
bridge with current resources. But the statistics do not reflect truly the
reality of the situation. Several thousands of applications are likely destined
for a "standard" strike-out or inadmissibility decision either because the
matter already has been resolved e.g., due to progress in the refugee return
process, because the Chamber has stated the law in a lead decision addressing
the same issue, because of a clear failure to exhaust effective domestic
remedies or because the application is manifestly ill-founded. Rather than
invest scarce resources in deciding these cases, however, the Chamber has made a
conscious decision to prioritize cases alleging discrimination and other severe
violations of human rights such as unlawful detention or violations of the
principle of fair trial, as well as cases which can serve as a precedent or are
particularly important for the promotion of the rule of law in Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
The high number of applications to the Chamber are a consequence of several
factors: domestic courts are perceived as inefficient and not impartial when
dealing with cases involving persons not belonging to the majority group; the
Chamber is recognised as an efficient and impartial tribunal whose orders are
complied with, albeit under pressure from the international community; and no
cost is involved, such as lawyers' fees and court expenses to file an
application with the Chamber. The reality is that until the ongoing reform of
the judiciary finally takes hold, the Chamber will continue to be perceived as
the ultimate guarantor of impartial and independent adjudication of human rights
violations.
The year 2001 has been particularly difficult for the judicial system of the
Federation: the Constitutional Court of the Federation did not function during
most of the year and the Supreme Court lost half its members during the last
four months of the year. Relations between the Chamber and the Federation were
particularly difficult towards the latter part of the year. The agent of the
Federation was strongly critical of certain decisions of the Chamber in the
media, trying thus to draw it into the domestic political arena. This kind of
behavior from a part of the executive branch is very unusual in democratic
societies and is another indication of the pressing need to strengthen the
judicial institutions.
The international community has been largely responsible for the progress made
in the authorities' compliance rate over the years as no enforcement mechanism
to ensure compliance with the Chamber's decisions exists in Annex 6 to the
Dayton Peace Agreement. The Federation has continued its trend towards full
compliance, although some specific orders are still ignored. The Republika
Srpska still executes the Chamber's decisions with great difficulty and mostly
under international pressure. Compliance by the State, which was ordered to
undertake positive actions in only a few cases due to its limited competence, is
non-existent.
Financially, the Chamber has been able to function due mainly to contributions
from the international community, as in all previous years. The State, despite
its obligation under Annex 6, was unable to spare more than 100,000 KM during
the whole year to support the Chamber.
The Chamber's mandate is set to expire at the end of 2003. With this in mind,
the Chamber will concentrate its resources on ensuring that the remaining cases
it solves will have the greatest impact on the protection of human rights in
Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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