VI.
STRATEGIES FOR DEALING WITH THE CASELOAD
The Chamber has
considered over the years various strategies and procedures for
dealing efficiently with its huge caseload and developed several
"model" decisions for use in certain types of cases. Scarce
resources, especially in terms of staffing, have meant that these
strategies, procedures and mechanisms for dealing with its caseload
could only be partially implemented. Only in 2003 have additional
resources been given to the Chamber to facilitate the processing of
these cases. Time is of the essence, however, as the Chamber's
mandate expires at the end of 2003 and the organisation,
coordination and legal and administrative work involved in the
ultimate processing of many thousands of cases is considerable.
Moreover, other important considerations relating to the purpose and
legal mandate of the Chamber and its role in contributing to the
rule of law in Bosnia and Herzegovina influence the Chamber's
strategic approach.
According to Article VIII(2)(e) of Annex 6 to the Dayton Peace
Agreement, "the Chamber shall endeavor to accept and to give
particular priority to allegations of especially severe or
systematic violations and those founded on alleged discrimination on
prohibited grounds".
In pursuance of this principle set forth in its founding instrument,
the Chamber has adopted the following informal guidelines in
addressing its caseload:
- Priority is given to allegations of systematic violations of human
rights;
- priority is given to allegations of particularly severe violations
of human rights, such as violations of the right to life, unlawful
detention, disappearances, serious violations of the principle of
fair trial;
- priority is given to allegations of discrimination;
- moreover, although not expressly mentioned in Article VIII(2)(e),
the Chamber gives priority to applications
which either
(a) raise novel legal issues of particular relevance for Bosnia and
Herzegovina, so that the Chamber's decision can serve as a precedent
or guideline for domestic decision-makers, including the
administrative authorities and the courts; or
(b) are particularly important for the promotion of the rule of law
in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
A. SYSTEMATIC VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS
As to the mandate to give priority to allegations of systematic
violations of human rights, the Chamber has noted that most of the
cases it deals with are individual instances of systematic (at least
in the sense of widespread) violations of human rights. This is,
e.g., the case of obstruction of the refugee return process
resulting in violations of the right to respect for a person's home
and property, the freezing of foreign currency bank accounts,
employment discrimination, failure to investigate war-time
disappearances and systematic failure of courts to decide within a
reasonable time cases brought by members of minorities. These types
of cases account for approximately two-thirds of the applications
registered with the Chamber. With regard to these systematic
violations of human rights, the Chamber sees its role as deciding
"lead cases" or precedent-setting cases, which provide domestic and
international decision-makers with the principles to be applied in
order to address the remaining cases sharing the same fact pattern.
B. CATEGORIES OF CASES THAT SIGNIFICANTLY CONTRIBUTE TO THE
CHAMBER'S CASELOAD
(i) Applications that fit model decisions on admissibility and to
strike out
The Chamber has developed model decisions for standard
inadmissibility decisions and strike out decisions, which
significantly expedite the drafting process in standard situations.
These model decisions concern, e.g., cases that are outside the
Chamber's competence ratione temporis, where the applicant has
failed to exhaust domestic remedies, where the applicant asks the
Chamber to act as an additional appeals instance to the domestic
judicial system, or cases in which the applicant complains about
his/her eviction from an apartment he/she has to vacate in order to
allow the return of the pre-war occupant.
(ii) Right to respect for one's home and right to property in the
context of the repossession of pre-war apartments and houses
As of the end of the year 2002, more than 3,000 applications lodged
with the Chamber concerned the applicants' right to respect for
their home and their right to property in the context of the
repossession of pre-war apartments and houses, often coupled with
complaints of unreasonable length of proceedings and allegations of
discrimination.
During 2002, the Chamber's strategy to more effectively deal with
this huge caseload has had three prongs: the grouping of cases by
the Municipality in which the pre-war property is located; the
exchange of information on repossessions with the Commission for
Real Property Claims of Displaced Persons and Refugees (CRPC) as
part of a pro-active approach towards identifying cases in which the
applicant has repossessed his or her pre-war dwelling; and strike
out decisions under Article VIII(3) of the Human Rights Agreement
where an applicant has repossessed his or her pre-war home.
Regarding the latter prong, in the course of the year 2002 the
Chamber has changed its approach to cases in which the applicant has
been reinstated into possession of his or her pre-war home but asks
the Chamber to still issue a decision recognising the past violation
of his or her rights and ordering the respondent Party to pay
compensation. Under Article VIII(3) of the Annex 6 Human Rights
Agreement, the Chamber may strike out an application from its case
list when "the matter has been resolved" and it is compatible with
respect for human rights not to further pursue consideration of the
matter. The previous approach of the Chamber, as set forth in the
case of S.P. (case no. CH/99/2336, decision to strike out of 2 July
2001), was that the Chamber would in each case of repossession
balance several elements when deciding whether to decide on
admissibility, merits and possible remedies of a case of
reinstatement into the pre-war home or rather decide to strike the
case out. These elements included the difficulties faced by the
domestic authorities in implementing the property legislation in
force in a timely manner, the stage the proceedings have reached
when the Chamber is informed of the applicant's reinstatement, and
the circumstances of the applicant's reinstatement, such as "the
length of time the applicant has had to wait for reinstatement;
other exceptional suffering incurred by the applicant ... and the
proven effectiveness, in a particular locality, of the domestic
remedies".
In October 2002 the Chamber decided to adopt a slightly different
approach. In Vujicic (case no. CH/99/2198, Vujicic v. the Federation
of BiH, decision to strike out of 10 October 2002), the applicant
had been reinstated into possession of his pre-war apartment in
Sarajevo after nearly four years of proceedings before the domestic
authorities. He asked the Chamber to continue consideration of his
case, to find a violation of his human rights and to award him
compensation. In its decision to strike out the application, the
Chamber recalled its obligation to give particular priority to
allegations of especially severe or systematic violations and of
discrimination. The Chamber further observed that there are
presently over 10,000 undecided applications pending before it, and
that this number is growing month by month, at an increasing rate.
The Chamber also noted the significant progress in the return and
property law implementation process in Bosnia and Herzegovina since
it adopted the S.P. decision. The Chamber observed that, the
applicant having been reinstated, the ongoing alleged human rights
violation has been brought to an end and the main issue of the
application solved. In the light of all these considerations, the
Chamber decided to strike the application out, notwithstanding the
understandable request of the applicant, on the ground that "it is
no longer justified to continue the examination of the application"
within the meaning of Article VIII(3)(c) of the Agreement. The
Chamber finally found that this result is "consistent with the
objective of respect for human rights, as this "objective" must be
understood to embrace not only the individual applicant's human
rights, but also the Chamber's more general mandate to assist the
Parties in securing to all persons within their jurisdiction the
highest level of internationally recognised human rights".
(iii) Applications with a clear failure to exhaust domestic
remedies
The Chamber has continually received a great number of cases in
which applicants file an application to the Chamber without awaiting
a final decision in their case by the domestic authorities. Under
Article VIII(2)(a) of the Human Rights Agreement, applicants are
required to exhaust effective domestic remedies before applying to
the Chamber. The Chamber has in its case-law stressed the
requirement that the remedies available be effective, and has
considered on the merits many applications in which domestic
remedies had not formally been exhausted, because the prospect of
their providing relief to the applicants' complaints was
non-existent in practice.
However, the Chamber receives a significant number of applications
in which the applicants completely disregard the existence of a
domestic court system competent to deal with their grievances, or
address the Chamber more or less at the same time as they initiate
proceedings before domestic authorities. In most of these cases,
there is prima facie no reason to doubt that the domestic remedy
could be effective. These applications therefore appear to be
clearly inadmissible.
The Chamber could increase the number of decisions issued by
identifying these cases and declaring them inadmissible. However, it
may be questioned whether the Chamber's resources are well-invested
in issuing numerous decisions rejecting clearly inadmissible
applications. The argument could be made that an increased number of
such inadmissibility decisions could discourage future applications
of the same kind. However:
(a) most applicants are not represented by lawyers, and therefore
not aware of admissibility requirements; and
(b) submitting an application to the Chamber does not involve any
costs, while lawyers' fees and court expenses are for many persons
an obstacle to litigation before domestic courts. They are therefore
not easily discouraged from filing applications with the Chamber
instead of the domestic court system.
(iv) CRPC decision implementation cases
The Chamber developed a model decision on admissibility and merits
for cases concerning the failure of the housing authorities to
implement decisions of the Annex 7 Commission for Real Property
Claims of Refugees and Displaced Persons (CRPC). In the course of
2002 about 30 cases were decided on the merits using this model
decision. Subsequently, the Chamber abandoned the use of such model
decisions, for reasons connected to the explicit and mandatory
introduction of the "chronological order" requirement for the
reinstatement process in the new property law implementation
legislation, imposed by the High Representative in December 2001. In
issuing such decisions, - if issued in the streamlined procedure -
the implementation of the Chamber's decisions within the deadlines
set by the Chamber risked being at odds with the respect of the
statutory chronological order requirement. This illustrates a
circumstance in which an approach to the Chamber's caseload aiming
at the expeditious decision of as many cases as possible might prove
counterproductive when viewed within the larger context.
(v) JNA apartment cases
A common theme of the Chamber's case-law has been the decisions
concerning the right to respect for home, the right to property, and
the right to access to a court and to fair and expeditious
proceedings in the context of the so-called "JNA apartment cases".
More than 1,000 such cases had been lodged with the Chamber as of
the end of 2002, and the Chamber has decided on the merits more than
125 of them. However, the reluctance of the Federation legislature,
administration and judiciary to implement the Chamber's decisions in
this matter, means that only a part of these cases can be struck out
as a result of the matter being resolved, while the Chamber again
and again has to examine JNA apartment applications on the merits.
The changes to the legislation and/or to the administrative practice
necessary to implement the Chamber's decision of December 2001 in
Miholic & Others (case nos. CH/97/60 et al., decision on
admissibility and merits of 4 December 2001) have not been put in
place during the entire year 2002 (and the first third of the year
2003). Moreover, even where the legislation concerning JNA
apartments has been changed to implement the Chamber's decisions,
the authorities continue to obstruct the implementation of the
amended laws in individual cases (see, e.g., the Chamber's decision
in case no. CH/99/2028, Crnogorcevic v. the Federation of BiH,
decision on admissibility of 11 October 2002).
(vi) Right to property in frozen foreign currency account cases
About 2,000 "frozen foreign currency account cases" have been lodged
with the Chamber. All but about 30 of these cases concern foreign
currency savings deposited with banks now located in the Federation,
the remaining accounts with banks in the Republika Srpska and the
Brcko District of BiH. In May 2000 the Chamber delivered its
decision in the first four of these cases. In order to comply with
the Chamber's remedial orders issued in that decision, the
government and legislature of the Federation have amended the
relevant legislation. However, a decision of the Constitutional
Court of the Federation and the lack of response thereto of the
government and legislature have put into question the steps taken by
the Federation authorities to implement the Chamber's May 2000
decision. In October 2002, the Chamber issued a new decision
concerning old foreign currency savings in the Federation, in which
it found that:
"[T]aken together, the decision of the Federation Constitutional
Court, the lack of responsive legislative action, and the continued
application of the Citizens' Claims Law have led to a state of legal
confusion with regard to the applicants' old foreign currency
savings accounts. There is no justification for the current
uncertainty, which leaves the applicants' claims to their property
in a state of oblivion and neglect. Meanwhile, as the privatisation
process moves forward without clarification of the law, the
potential consequences of the applicants' insistence on their
property rights become more severe."
(Case nos. CH/97/104 et al., Todorovic & 6 Others v. BiH and the
Federation of BiH, decision on admissibility and merits of 10
October 2002, paragraph 148).
As a consequence, the remaining 2,000 "old foreign currency account
cases" pending before the Chamber remain unresolved. The Chamber
will in the course of 2003 again examine whether the Federation
legislature has created a legal framework that strikes an acceptable
balance between the rights of the individual applicants (holders of
old foreign currency accounts) and the public interest. The
prospects of resolving the remaining frozen foreign currency account
cases in a standardised and expedited procedure are, at the current
stage, remote.
(vii) Employment discrimination cases
More than 500 applications pending before the Chamber allege
discriminatory termination of labour relations, mostly on grounds of
ethnic/national origin. Although in most of these cases the
termination or suspension of the employment is linked to the armed
conflict, the Chamber has found that it is competent ratione
temporis in a majority of the cases considered until now. As several
decisions of the Chamber during the year 2002 have shown, the
current legal framework and practice of the authorities, both
administrative and judicial, do not provide any effective remedy for
these applicants. On the contrary, these cases show that
systematically a violation of the right to fair trial within a
reasonable time is added to the alleged violation of the right not
to be discriminated against in the right to work in the aftermath of
the armed conflict (see case no. CH/98/948 Mitrovic v. the
Federation of BiH, decision on admissibility and merits of 9 June
2002; case no. CH/01/7351 Kraljevic v. the Federation of BiH,
decision on admissibility and merits of 12 April 2002; and case no.
CH/99/1714 Vanovac v. the Federation of BiH, decision on
admissibility and merits of 8 November 2002).
As a consequence, the Chamber also has found that the considerable
backlog of cases falling into this category cannot be addressed in
any standardised, summary or otherwise expedited procedure.
(viii) Srebrenica cases
In November 2001 the Chamber has begun to receive applications that
can be classified as "Srebrenica cases". In the course of the year
2002 more than 1,500 of these applications have been lodged with the
Chamber. The applicants complain of the disappearance of the spouse
or one or several relatives in the aftermath of the fall of
Srebrenica in July 1995, of the failure of the government of the
Republika Srpska to take any steps to clarify the fate of these
persons or the whereabouts of their mortal remains, to punish the
perpetrators and to compensate the relatives of the victims. The
Chamber has issued a decision on admissibility and merits concerning
49 of these cases in March 2003.
C. BALANCING QUANTITY OF DECIDED CASES V. IMPACT OF DECISIONS
The Chamber's output, in numerical terms, has been considerably
increased in the course of the year 2002: 675 applications have been
decided, 80 percent more than the 377 decided in 2001. During the
year 2003 the number of cases decided will be further increased by
allocating a significant portion of its resources (i.e. lawyer and
translator working hours) to the issuance of decisions in strike-out
cases, cases permitting the drafting of standardized decisions, and
clearly inadmissible cases. However, in pursuing such a
"quantity-oriented" approach, the Chamber is aware of the risk that
it is mostly deciding cases which either are already decided from a
substantive point of view (because the matter is solved in fact, or
because the Chamber has stated the law in a lead decision addressing
the same issue, thereby substantially deciding the other identical
cases), or which do not even come close to revealing a violation of
the Human Rights Agreement.
Therefore, to balance quantity with quality and impact, the Chamber
will continue to allocate most of its resources during the remaining
part of 2003 to deciding:
(a) cases involving requests for provisional measures, which by
their nature have to be dealt with urgently; and
(b) cases involving allegations of particularly serious violations
of human rights and discrimination, and cases raising new legal
issues, where the Chamber's decision can function as a precedent for
domestic courts, and, finally, other cases which promise to have a
particular impact on the rule of law in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
It is fair to say that the overall procedure (written procedure
involving the parties, possibly oral hearing, legal research of both
domestic and international law, drafting of memoranda and decisions,
deliberations of the judges) in deciding one important case on
admissibility and merits on average involves the same amount of
resources (lawyers', translators' and judges' time) required to
decide perhaps 40 or 50 of the applications that could be solved by
a standardised decision.
Nonetheless, the Chamber's impact on respect for human rights and
the rule of law in Bosnia and Herzegovina is secured primarily by
these "big", resource-intensive decisions, and not by the sixty to
one hundred inadmissibility and strike-out decisions the Chamber
issues every month.
It is therefore necessary for the Chamber to balance two conflicting
necessities: on the one hand, to solve the important and urgent
cases it is mandated to give priority to or novel cases that will
set precedents or cases that are of particular importance for the
rule of law in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and, on the other hand, to
decide as many of the "smaller", "standard", strike-out and
inadmissible cases as possible, in order to limit the uncontrolled
growth of its backlog of unsolved cases.
D. LIMITATIONS ON STREAMLINING
It is worth mentioning that the Chamber has considered the legal
feasibility of more radical measures for the streamlining of its
procedures, which would touch the very core of the judicial process
before the Chamber, e.g. introducing a judge rapporteur system, or
small panels for standard inadmissibility and strike out decisions
(possibly composed only of domestic judges). However, the provisions
of Annex 6 place severe limitations on the legal possibility to
validly change proceedings before the Chamber in these respects.
Moreover, other practical difficulties associated with these changes
leave open to doubt whether they would actually increase the
Chamber's ability to solve substantially more cases.
|