IX.
CASES BEFORE THE CHAMBER IN 2001
This section
of the Report is intended to provide a broad picture of the
Chamber's work during the year, and to highlight some of the
main developments in its case-law. A list of all the decisions
taken by the Chamber during the year, on the admissibility
or merits, requests for review, striking out of cases and
decisions on review, is attached to this Report as Annex F.
Summaries of a selection of decisions dealing with the merits
of cases are attached as Annex G. The full texts of all decisions
on the merits, and a selection of decisions on admissibility,
are included in the two companion volumes of decisions (January
- June 2001 and July - December 2001). Copies of the Chamber's
decisions are available from the Secretariat on request.
1. Provisional Measures
Article X, para.
I, of Annex 6 empowers the Chamber to order provisional measures.
This can be done at any stage of the proceedings. Generally
speaking the Chamber will only order a provisional measure
where there is a prima facie indication that a protected right
has been infringed, or is threatened with infringement, and
it appears likely that the applicant will suffer serious or
irreparable harm if an order is not made. Such orders are
most frequently used to preserve the status quo pending the
Chamber's determination of a case and are legally binding.
The Chamber also has specific power under Article XI, para.
l (b) of Annex 6 to include an order for provisional measures
in its final decision on the merits of a case. This power
can be used to regulate the position of the parties before
a decision becomes final and binding, or pending the full
implementation of a decision.
During the year
the Chamber has continued to receive substantial numbers of
requests for provisional orders, particularly in housing cases
where the applicant is threatened with eviction. Following
changes in the housing laws, including in particular the repeal
of abandoned property legislation, the majority of such requests
have been refused. Many such requests relate to evictions
lawfully ordered to enable the pre-war occupant of property
to return. In such cases a provisional order will be made
only in exceptional circumstances. All cases involving such
requests are, however, reviewed as a matter of priority in
accordance with Article VIII, para. 2(f) of Annex 6.
2. Questions
of Admissibility
When a case comes
before it the Chamber must decide whether or not to accept
it, taking into account the admissibility criteria set out
in Article VIII, para.2 of Annex 6. The principal criteria
relate to: the exhaustion of any effective domestic remedies;
the introduction of the application within six months from
the date of the final domestic decision; whether the application
is compatible with Annex 6 and whether it is manifestly ill-founded.
These provisions are similar, but not identical, to the provisions
of the European Convention on Human Rights concerning the
admissibility of applications to the European Court of Human
Rights.
In all cases
(apart from any case submitted by a Party to the Annex 6 Agreement)
the Chamber carries out a preliminary examination of the admissibility
of the application before deciding on the further procedure.
It may reject the application as inadmissible at that stage
without communicating the case to the respondent Party. If,
however, the case is communicated to the respondent Party
for observations, the Chamber expects the Party concerned
to set out in its written observations any objections it has
to the admissibility of the case, failing which it may be
precluded from raising such objections at a later stage.
A number of significant
decisions have been taken on admissibility issues during the
year in which the scope of the Parties' responsibilities under
the Agreement has been considered. In the case of Zornic (Case
No. CH/99/1961) the applicant complained that she was unable
to recover possession of an apartment situated in an area
of Dobrinja whose status was disputed between the Federation
and the Republika Srpska. The area was under the de facto
control of the Republika Srpska, but the Federation claimed
that it was de jure part of Federation territory. A question
arose as to whether the Republika Srpska was responsible for
the matters complained of. Following case-law of the European
Court of Human Rights the Chamber held that the responsibility
of a Party could be engaged by acts of its authorities producing
effects outside its own boundaries. Accordingly, regardless
of whether the area in question was located within the territory
of the Republika Srpska or not, its responsibility was engaged
by virtue of its effective occupation of the area. The case
of Spahalic and Others (Case No. CH/00/4116 et al.) concerned
inter alia housing matters in the District of Brcko. The Chamber
held that the Republika Srpska had been responsible for such
matters until 19 September 2000, when a Memorandum of Understanding
had been signed by the Parties which effected the transfer
of responsibility for such matters to the authorities of the
District. Responsibility thereafter rested with Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
In the case of
Miholic and Others (Case No. CH/97/60 et al.) the question
arose as to whether the Federation could be held responsible
for legislation which had been imposed by decision of the
High Representative. The applicants complained that they had
been prevented from registering themselves as owners of, and
repossessing, apartments they had purchased from the Yugoslav
National Army (JNA). They maintained that this situation arose
from the application of amendments to the law imposed by the
High Representative. The Federation pointed out that the Chamber
had previously declared inadmissible, as incompatible with
the Agreement ratione personae, complaints concerning decisions
of the High Representative on such matters as the removal
of officials from office. It maintained that it should follow
the same course in the case in point. The Chamber, referring
to case-law of the Constitutional Court, held that in enacting
legislation the High Representative was substituting himself
for the national authorities. The law he enacted had the status
of Federation law in both form and substance and the Federation
was the appropriate respondent Party in the case.
3. Striking
Out etc.
The Chamber has
continued to make frequent use of its powers under Article
VIII, para. 3, of Annex 6. Under this provision the Chamber
may suspend consideration of, reject or strike out an application
on the ground that the applicant does not intend to pursue
the application, that the matter has been resolved, or that
for any other reason continued examination of the application
is no longer justified. It can only take such a decision if
satisfied that the result is consistent with the objective
of respect for human rights. 96 strike-out decisions have
been taken during the year. Such decisions have most commonly
been based on specific withdrawal by the applicant, failure
of the applicant to respond to communications from the Chamber,
leading to the conclusion that he or she does not intend to
pursue the case, or resolution of the case, where the primary
aim of the applicant (such as the recovery of property) has
been achieved.
4. Questions
Arising on the Merits
The Chamber continues
to deal with a large and diverse case-load. The following
is a selective outline of some of the more significant matters
the Chamber has dealt with.
a) Property
and Housing Matters
As in previous
years the Chamber has dealt with a substantial number of cases
relating to housing matters. Numerous cases have been received
from temporary occupants threatened with eviction on the one
hand, and from persons complaining that they have not been
able to recover possession of their property on the other.
In most cases, in the absence of any exceptional circumstances,
the Chamber has rejected as manifestly ill-founded complaints
of the former category where it appears that the domestic
authorities have acted lawfully for the purpose of reinstating
the pre-war occupant. As to the latter category, the Chamber
has frequently found violations of the Agreement arising from
the failure of the domestic authorities to comply with time
limits and other legal obligations relating to the reinstatement
of pre-war occupants, including in particular failure to enforce
decisions of the Commission for Real Property Claims of Displaced
Persons and Refugees established under Annex 7 to the Dayton
Agreement.
One case decided
during the year, Miholic and Others (Case No. CH/97/60 et
al.), concerned the measures taken in the Federation following
earlier decisions relating to the annulment of sales of JNA
apartments. The applicants complained that they were unable
to register themselves as owners of, and repossess, apartments
which they had purchased from the JNA. Their purchase contracts
had been annulled by legislation passed in 1995. In the case
of Medan and Others (Case No. CH/96/3 et al., Decision of
3 November 1997, Decisions, March - December 1997) the Chamber
had held that the legislation in question had infringed the
applicants' rights under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the
European Convention. Following the Medan decision legislation
was passed which allowed most persons whose purchase contracts
had been annulled by the 1995 legislation to be registered
as owners and to repossess the apartments in question. However,
certain classes of persons, including the applicants in the
Miholic case, were excluded from these rights. Essentially
the legislation, as applied, excluded persons who were not
registered citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina on 30 April
1991 and were in active service with the JNA on that date,
and also excluded persons who were in active military service
of any armed forces outside Bosnia and Herzegovina after December
1995. Following a hearing, and having considered amicus curiae
submissions by the OHR and the UNHCR, the Chamber held that
the applicants' rights to peaceful enjoyment of their possessions
under Article 1 of the Protocol had been violated and that
they had also been discriminated against.
Another case,
Ubovic and Others (Case No. CH/99/2425 et al.) related to
the attempts of the applicants to return to properties situated
in an area at Glamoc, which had been designated a military
training range for the Federation army. The Chamber found
that some of the applicants had been de facto deprived of
certain properties in that the Federation entered into possession
and carried out various works on them. As to certain other
properties the Chamber found that, although the applicants
had not been deprived of the properties, there had been interference
with their right to peaceful enjoyment of their possessions
resulting from decisions declaring the general interest for
expropriation and allowing the Ministry of Defence to enter
into possession. These decisions had significantly reduced,
in practice, the applicants' ability to use and dispose of
their properties. Since the authorities had not complied with
procedural requirements of domestic law in any of the cases,
the Chamber found that the interferences with the applicants'
rights under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention
could not be justified and that this provision had been violated.
It also found that the rights of some of the applicants to
respect for their homes, under Article 8 of the Convention,
had been violated.
b) Employment
Issues
The Chamber has
dealt with a significant number of cases relating to employment
during the year. The European Convention does not guarantee
any right to employment and generally speaking the Chamber
can therefore only deal with complaints relating to deprivation
or refusal of employment where it is alleged that there has
been discrimination contrary to Article II, para. (2)(b) of
Annex 6 in conjunction with one of the provisions relating
to employment in the other treaties referred to in Annex 6.
Cases in which the applicant has alleged a violation of employment
rights and either has not made, or has not sufficiently substantiated
an allegation of discrimination have frequently been declared
inadmissible.
In some cases
issues may nevertheless arise under the European Convention.
When for instance, an individual is deprived of a contractual
right to salary an issue may arise under the right to property
protected by Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention.
The Chamber found a violation of this provision in the case
of Softic (Case No. CH/97/76). Issues have also arisen regarding
court proceedings relating to employment matters, in particular
relating to the right to access to court in civil proceedings
and to determination of cases within a "reasonable time"
under Article 6 of the European Convention.
One case decided
by the Chamber during the year, the case of Kajtaz and Others
(Case No. CH/98/1309 et al.) related to the appointment procedures
in a Ministry of the State of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The
nine applicants had all been employed in the Ministry of Justice
and General Administration of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
After the establishment of the new Ministry for Civil Affairs
and Communication of the State in December 1997, the applicants
continued to work for the new Ministry. Some of the employees
of the old Ministry were formally assigned to the new Ministry,
but the applicants were not and were eventually removed from
employment in 1999. One of the factors taken into account
in deciding which employees should be assigned to the new
Ministry was the ethnic origin of the persons concerned. The
Chamber found that differential treatment arising from an
attempt to obtain representation of the major ethnic groups
in the public service might pursue a legitimate aim. However,
for this aim to be achieved in a legitimate manner the process
must be transparent, fair and objective. This had not been
the case here. Amongst other defects in the procedures, the
Chamber noted that no reasons had been given for the decisions
not to employ the applicants, nor had they been interviewed
or given formal decisions. No provision was made for the treatment
of persons of mixed ethnic origin, as some of the applicants
were. The Chamber concluded that the selection process had
been arbitrary and that the applicants had been discriminated
against in their enjoyment of the right of access to public
service under Article 25 (c) of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights. It also found that the applicants
had been denied the right of access to court under Article
6 of the Convention in view of the absence of any court at
the State level and uncertainties as to the jurisdiction of
the Entity courts.
c) Missing Persons
The Chamber has
received an increasing number of cases submitted by the relatives
of persons who have gone missing during the war in Bosnia
and Herzegovina. Whilst the Chamber has no competence ratione
temporis to deal with complaints concerning events before
14 December 1995, it can consider such cases where there is
evidence that the person concerned has been in the custody
of one of the Parties after that date. It can also consider
whether the authorities dealing with the requests of relatives
for information have treated the relatives in a manner that
is compatible with their rights under the Agreement. In this
respect issues may arise under Article 3 of the European Convention
(prohibition of inhuman and degrading treatment) and Article
8 (respect for private and family life).
One such case,
Palic (Case No. CH/99/3196), decided during the year concerned
a Colonel Palic, an officer in the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina,
who had been taken into custody by the Bosnian Serb Army in
July 1995. In an application brought before it by his wife,
both on her own behalf and on behalf of her missing husband,
the Chamber found on the evidence before it that it was established
that Colonel Palic had remained in the custody of the Republika
Srpska after 14 December 1995. It found that his right to
liberty and security of person had been violated, that he
had been subjected to inhuman and degrading treatment and,
in view of the length of time that had elapsed without information
as to his whereabouts or fate, that there had also been a
violation of his right to life. It also found that the applicant
herself had been the victim of inhuman and degrading treatment
arising from the fear and anguish she had suffered as a result
of her husband's unclarified fate and that the respondent
Party had also violated her right to respect for her private
and family life by arbitrarily withholding information as
to his fate and whereabouts. Amongst other orders, the Chamber
ordered the respondent Party to carry out a full investigation
and awarded compensation.
Another such
case, Unkovic (Case No. CH/99/2150), arose from the murder
of members of the applicant's family in 1992. The Second Panel
of the Chamber found that the applicant had been the victim
of inhuman and degrading treatment as the result of a failure
by the authorities of the respondent Party to investigate
and pursue the fate of the family in a timely manner. This
decision is not final and binding as at the year's end, in
view of pending review proceedings.
d) Freedom of
Religion
The plenary Chamber
reviewed a decision taken by the Second Panel in relation
to attempts by the Islamic Community to reconstruct mosques
on sites in and near Zvornik in the Republika Srpska (Islamic
Community Case No. CH/98/1062). This case raised important
issues in relation to the remedies which were appropriate.
The Second Panel held that the Republika Srpska had infringed
the rights of the applicants by preventing them from using
the sites of destroyed mosques and reconstructing the mosques.
On two of the sites in question substantial new buildings
had been erected, a multi-storey building on one and an Orthodox
Church on the other. The Second Panel ordered the respondent
Party to make available suitable alternative sites. The applicants
maintained that it should have ordered the respondent Party
to remove the buildings so as to allow the reconstruction
of the mosques on their original sites. The Plenary Chamber
essentially upheld the decision of the Panel, drawing persuasive
guidance in the matter from domestic property law.
In another case
brought by the Islamic Community against the Republika Srpska
(Islamic Community Case No. CH/00/4889), the Chamber found
that the applicants' rights to freedom of religion and to
peaceful enjoyment of their possessions had been violated
as a result of the unauthorised burial in the Muslim cemetery
at Jakes of a number of deceased non-Muslim patients from
an institution housing mentally retarded persons.
5. Amicable
Resolutions
No formal settlements
have been achieved under Article IX of Annex 6 during the
year, but as in previous years many cases have been resolved
and struck off the Chamber's list.
6. Remedies
Article XI, para.
1(b) provides that if the Chamber finds a violation of the
Agreement it shall address in its decision "what steps
shall be taken by the respondent Party to remedy the breach,
including orders to cease and desist, monetary relief (including
pecuniary and non-pecuniary injuries), and provisional measures".
The remedies
most commonly awarded by the Chamber continue to be compensation,
and the restoration of property within a defined time limit
although a wide variety of other orders has also been made.
In the Ubovic case for instance, the Chamber gave the respondent
Party a choice of what action to take. It ordered the respondent
Party (a) to decide within six months either to pursue the
expropriation of the applicants' property in accordance with
the relevant domestic legislation or not to pursue the expropriations
and return the applicants' property to them and compensate
them for all damage suffered and (b) in either case to take
steps to comply with the consequences of its decision and
make available funds for compensation of the applicants.
In the Palic
case 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 and to bring the perpetrators to
justice, to release Colonel Palic, if still alive, or otherwise,
to make available his mortal remains to Ms. Palic, and to
make all information and findings relating to the fate and
whereabouts of Colonel Palic known to Ms. Palic. Compensation
in the amount of 65,000 KM was also awarded.
In Miholic and
Others, the Chamber ordered the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
to take necessary legislative or administrative action to
render ineffective the annulment of the applicants' purchase
contracts and enable them to register ownership over their
apartments.
7. Review
Proceedings
Where a case
is decided by a Panel, the plenary Chamber may decide, in
accordance with Article X, para. 2, of Annex 6, to review
the decision. Rule 64 of the Chamber's Rules of Procedure
provides that the Chamber shall not accept a request for review
unless it considers that the case raises a serious question
affecting the interpretation or application of the Agreement
or a serious issue of general importance, and that the whole
circumstances justify reviewing the decision. In practice
the Chamber has used its powers of review sparingly.
8. Implementation
of Decisions
Under Article
XI, para. 6, of Annex 6, the Parties must "implement
fully decisions of the Chamber". Generally speaking the
Chamber sets a deadline for the fulfilment of any order it
makes, running from the date of the decision or, in the case
of a decision taken by a Panel, from the date when the decision
becomes final and binding. The latter date is the date of
expiry of the time limit for the initiation of review proceedings,
or the date of completion of any review proceedings initiated.
It is also the practice of the Chamber to order the respondent
Party to report to it within a set time limit on the steps
taken to implement the decision. If an adequate response is
not received, the matter is taken up with the Office of the
High Representative (OHR). It is also the practice of the
Chamber to inform the OHR, as also the OSCE and UNMIBH/IPTF,
of all orders for provisional measures so that the Parties'
compliance with them can be monitored.
The situation
as regards implementation of the Chamber's decisions still
gives rise to concern. By the end of 2001 the Chamber had
taken a total of 122 decisions on admissibility and merits
(some relating to more than one application). In 111 of these
decisions, action of some kind by the respondent Party was
required. The Parties concerned had complied fully with 65
of these decisions. In the remaining 46 decisions, the Parties
concerned had complied partially with 22 and not at all with
24. In the vast majority of these latter decisions, the deadlines
for the respondent Parties to comply had expired.
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