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  • Access Denied? Many Claim European Court Reforms Actually Restrictiv

    ACCESS DENIED? MANY CLAIM EUROPEAN COURT REFORMS ACTUALLY RESTRICTIVE
    Sara Petrosyan

    http://hetq.am/en/court/eu-court/
    2010/ 03/01 | 16:24

    After Interlaken ECHR Will Resemble Kafka's "The Castle"

    On February 18-19, in the Swiss city of Interlaken, the Council
    of Europe's Committee of Ministers met to devise ways to reform the
    overburdened European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). A joint declaration
    was issued setting the course for the future reform of the ECHR.

    The Interlaken Declaration cites the necessity of reaching a balance
    between the incoming cases and the settled ones and to reduce the
    volume of approximately 120,000 outstanding cases. It also states
    that new appeals should be dealt with in reasonable time

    Ara Ghazaryan, an attorney with the firm "ARNI Consult", describes
    the Interlaken Declaration as resembling Franz Kafka's "The Castle"; a
    novel about alienation and bureaucracy that portrays the protagonist's
    endless struggle to gain access to the mysterious authorities of a
    castle who govern the village where he wants to work.

    Mr. Ghazaryan argues that the procedural process for cases to be
    accepted by the ECHR has been fundamentally altered by the Declaration,
    and not necessarily for the better.

    A need to streamline court procedure and case backlog

    At Interlaken, the Committee of Ministers were tasked with discussing
    and debating Protocol 14, a reform which would enable a single judge
    to decide on the admissibility of applications and a panel of three
    judges to rule on routine cases. Current court procedures require a
    three-judge committee to rule on the admissibility of applications and
    a seven-judge panel to hear routine cases. Essentially, Protocol 14 was
    a fast-track procedure first proposed in 2004. Prior to the February
    meeting, all 47 Council members, bar Russia, had ratified Protocol 14.

    Russia was a hold out even though it was the accession of Russia,
    Ukraine and Romania to the Council of Europe in the 1990s precipitated
    a flood of court applications. These states now account for 45 per
    cent of all pending applications and, at current levels, the backlog
    will grow to 300,000 applications within five years.

    It was this backlog and the fact that it can take seven years for
    a ruling to be issued by the judges that prompted the urgency for
    streamlining ECHR procedures. The Court's credibility was being
    questioned.

    Russia's Duma finally voted in favor of Protocol 14 on January 15,
    2010 and The Minister of Justice of the Russian Federation, Alexander
    Konovalov, presented the instruments of ratification to the Secretary
    General of the Council of Europe, Thorbjørn Jagland, at the Interlaken
    meeting. Protocol 14 will thus come into force for all CoE members
    on June 1, 2010.

    In order that the ECHR be able to handle an ever increasing workload of
    cases in a reasonable timeframe, especially those involving serious
    human rights violations, the Interlaken Declaration highlighted
    several areas in need of review.

    Inadmissible applications need to be filtered out rapidly and
    efficiently Point 6 of The Declaration reads, "The need for effective
    measures to reduce the number of clearly inadmissible applications,
    the need for effective filtering of these applications and the need
    to find solutions for dealing with repetitive applications."

    The Declaration also calls on all CoE member states to "fully,
    effectively and rapidly execute the final judgments of the Court"
    and "invites the Court to make maximum use of the procedural tools
    and the resources at its disposal".

    Evidently the Committee of Ministers wanted to grant the ECHR the
    procedural power to effectively cut the number of "Unworthy" cases
    and to bolster the actual execution of its verdicts. In a word -
    operational efficiency and cost-cutting.

    To strengthen future collaboration between intra-state courts and
    the courts, the Committee of Ministers called for the creation of a
    network that would allow intra-state courts to petition the European
    Court for consultations regarding the legal interpretation of the
    European Convention of Human Rights.

    With regard to the high number of inadmissible applications, the
    Conference invites that Committee of Ministers to consider measures
    that would enable the ECHR to concentrate on its essential role of
    guarantor of human rights and to adjudicate well-founded cases with
    the necessary speed, in particular those alleging serious violations
    of human rights.

    With regard to access to the ECHR, the Conference calls upon the
    Committee of Ministers to consider any additional measures which
    might contribute to a sound administration of justice and to examine
    in particular under what conditions new procedural rules or practices
    could be envisaged, without deterring well-founded application. These
    measures, for example, may include the payment of court fees, attorney
    presence in all stages of a case, the obligatory use of official ECHR
    languages, etc.

    "Action Plan" calls for immediate implementation of verdicts

    In its Action Plan designed to cut the number of inadmissible
    applications and the more efficient review of these cases, the
    Conference also proposes that the Committee of Ministers also create
    a filtering mechanism, in addition to the one judge procedure, with
    possible alternatives.

    What the Conference has stressed in its Declaration is the need for
    a thorough analysis of the ECHR's practice relating to applications
    declared inadmissible

    Armenian attorney Ara Ghazaryan and Artak Zeynalyan presented their
    concerns about the draft Declaration to the Committee of Ministers.

    While welcoming the initiative of the Committee regarding a reasonable
    timeframe for the review of petitions to the ECHR, the attorneys
    noted that the concerns expressed in the Declaration's introduction
    merely substantiated the suspicions of Armenian lawyers about the
    continuous drop of quality of ECHR verdicts; something that has been
    evident during past years.

    "However, in our estimation, the proposed measures in the Declaration
    draft only serve to further distance average citizens from the ECHR
    and transform the Court into the castle depicted by Franz Kafka in
    his novel of the same name. In the book, the more individuals try
    to gain entry to the castle, the more it moves away from them,"
    the lawyers explained.

    The Armenian attorneys noted that according to statistics, 20% of
    all applications presented to the ECHR are clearly admissible and
    that 80% of the applications from Armenia are clearly admissible,
    but that only 4% are actually reviewed.

    We must take into account that the number of applications presented to
    the ECHR today numbers around 150,000. While welcoming the heightened
    role of the Committee of Ministers regarding the execution of Court
    verdicts, it is expected that intra-state courts requesting Convention
    interpretations will have to apply to the Committee of Ministers
    within specific work parameters.

    Appeal cases launched on the basis of European Court decisions can
    only serve as specific work. If this is so, it is incomprehensible why
    the possibility is being granted intra-state courts to petition the
    Committee of Ministers to receive advice on the legal interpretation
    of the Convention, while the citizen that wins in court cannot.

    Right to apply for interpretation should be universal

    In the opinion of the Armenian attorneys the right to apply for
    interpretation must be granted to all citizens, particularly when
    you consider that the Court, as a rule, rejects applications filed
    for receiving interpretation. (In its entire history, the Court has
    only passed three such decisions).

    "We strongly oppose that the ECHR set down state fees, the mandatory
    presence of attorneys and the use of official court language when
    presenting applications. Such procedures will essentially complicate
    applying to the Court and will increase associated costs. Even given
    today's conditions of accessibility when presenting applications,
    it's a costly process. There's attorney fees, postage costs, etc,"
    the Armenian attorneys argued.

    Regarding complaints that are considered inadmissible, the prospect to
    thoroughly review the Court's procedural process is an interesting
    initiative, especially when court documents of decisions ruling
    that petitions are inadmissible and court records registered in the
    decision-making process are not made available to the authors of
    the complaints.

    The most criticized feature of Protocol 14, according to the Armenian
    attorneys, is the new admission standard named "serious consequence",
    whose implementation has been vociferously opposed by all progressive
    organizations and individuals engaged in the defense of human rights.

    Nevertheless, considering the excessive workload of the Court to be
    the highest priority, it was decided to include this criterion. As
    a result, the Court is able to consider as inadmissible even those
    applications involving human rights violations but where the individual
    in question hasn't suffered serious damage as a result.

    Ara Ghazaryan and Artak Zeynalyan have correctly pointed out that
    for citizens, the problems confronting the European Court cannot be
    differentiated in terms of size if they relate to violations of the
    European Convention on Human Rights.
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