Case
No.: CH/01/7952
Applicant: Suada SELIMOVIĆ and 7 others
Respondent Party: Federation
of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Date Delivered: 11 January 2002
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
The applicants are eight former judges of
the Supreme Court of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
whose five-year term of office had expired in 2001. They were
born between 1933 and 1937 and thus eligible for
reappointment, as Federation judges may continue to serve
until the mandatory retirement age of 70. The case concerns
the decision by the House of Peoples of the Federation of
Bosnia and Herzegovina not to approve the nomination by the
President of the Federation for their re-appointment as judges
to the Supreme Court. The applicants alleged that age was the
decisive factor in the rejection of their re-appointment. They
claim that the decision by the House of Peoples of the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina constitutes
discrimination on the ground of age in the enjoyment of their
right to public service in violation of Article 25(c) of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ("ICCPR")
in conjunction with Article II(2)(b) of the Human Rights
Agreement.
Admissibility
The respondent Party did not object to the admissibility of
the applications and, in fact, indicated that it was inclined
to believe that the applicants had been discriminated against.
Finding that no effective remedies were available to the
applicants and thus that the question of non-exhaustion did
not arise, the Chamber declared the applications admissible.
Merits
Article 25(c) of the ICCPR
Applying a three-step analysis to the discrimination claim,
the Chamber first found that age was a prohibited
discrimination basis covered under "other status" in Article 2
paragraph 1 of the ICCPR.
Second, the Chamber found that the applicants were, in fact,
subjected to differential treatment based on their age. For
this purpose, the Chamber looked at the transcript of the
session of the House of Peoples, in which the applicants'
appointment was voted on. It found that the speakers of both
the Bosniac and the Croat Clubs in the House of Peoples had
stated that judges aged 65 or more should not be re-appointed.
These statements, coupled with the fact that all but one
applicant were aged 65 or above, while none of the confirmed
judges had reached the age of 65, led the Chamber to conclude
that their age was the reason for the refusal to re-appoint
the applicants.
Third, the Chamber examined whether differential treatment had
any reasonable and objective justification, whether it pursued
a legitimate aim and whether the means employed and aims
sought were proportionally related. The Chamber noted that in
the debate in the House of Peoples it had been stated that the
courts of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina were not
working in a satisfactory way, and that renewing the
composition of the Supreme Court could improve their
performance. The Chamber found that this was a reasonable aim
for the House of Peoples to pursue. However, the insistence on
the "age structure", instead of an approach based on the
assessment of merits, the Chamber observed, highlighted the
unreasonableness of the criteria chosen. The Chamber found
that the House of Peoples had failed to establish a reasonable
relationship of proportionality between the aim pursued and
the means adopted and concluded that the applicants had been
discriminated against in the enjoyment of their right to have
access on general terms of equality, to public service in
their country.
Remedies
The Chamber ordered the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
to include the applicants in the current round of selection to
fill vacancies on the Supreme Court, without requiring them to
reapply or to be interviewed again. The Chamber rejected the
applicants' claim for monetary compensation on the ground that
its finding of discrimination constituted sufficient
compensation for the moral damage suffered by the applicants.
Dissenting Opinions
Mr. Rona Aybay, joined by Mme. Michèle Picard and Messrs.
Dietrich Rauschning and Viktor Masenko-Mavi, dissented in
part, writing that the Chamber should not have found a
violation of Article 25(c) of the ICCPR. Mr. Aybay argued that
the question of whether some of the nominated judges who were
over a certain age should or should not be approved and
appointed by the House of Peoples was beyond the judicial
review of any court unless serious procedural defects existed
in the voting process. In reaching this conclusion, Mr. Aybay
noted that a significant number of members of the House of
Peoples did not take part in the decision, that the individual
motives of all those who voted against the applicants could
not be ascertained, and that the decisions of members of a
parliamentary body should not be scrutinised or subjected to
external pressures.
In a separate dissent, Mr. Victor Masenko-Mavi, joined by Mr.
Dietrich Rauschning argued that Article 25(c) creates no
entitlement to occupy a particular office. He pointed out that
the applicants were not deprived of access to the public
office, but instead were allowed to participate in the
selection process up until its last stage. During this last
stage, Mr. Masenko-Mavi argued, the House of Peoples used its
legislative discretion properly to appoint other candidates of
more suitable qualifications and age.
Mr. Mehmed Dekovic also dissented from the Chamber's
conclusion that its finding of discrimination was sufficient
to address the moral harm resulting from the violation. Mr.
Dekovic instead concluded that monetary compensation was
appropriate.
In a fourth dissenting opinion, Mr. Andrew Grotrian, joined by
Mr. Jakob Möller, expressed the view that the House of Peoples
was entitled to take the view that the imposition of an age
threshold was an appropriate means of bringing new blood into
the Supreme Court. Arguably, such an approach was preferable
to the alternative suggested by the majority, namely an
assessment of the judicial performance of the individual
candidates. Mr. Grotrian did not consider a parliamentary
body, such as the House of Peoples, well-equipped to conduct
such an assessment which might carry the risk of unacceptable
political interference with the judiciary. He was not
satisfied, therefore, that the House of Peoples went beyond
its margin of appreciation and would have found no violation
of the Agreement.
Decision adopted 8 January 2002
Decision delivered 11 January 2002
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