Report | Doc. 12391 | 06 October 2010
National procedures for the selection of candidates for the European Court of Human Rights
Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights
Summary
It is the Parliamentary Assembly’s task, by virtue of Article 22 of the European Convention on Human Rights, to elect judges of the highest calibre to the European Court of Human Rights from a list of three candidates nominated by states parties. The Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights reiterates the Assembly’s call that national selection procedures be rigorous, consistent, fair and transparent, in order that candidates have the necessary standing and authority. Seen from this perspective, the committee welcomes the recent initiative of the President of the Court to set up a panel to advise governments before lists of candidates are transmitted to the Assembly.
A. Draft resolution
(open)B. Explanatory memorandum by Mrs Wohlwend, rapporteur
(open)1. Introduction
2. National procedures for the selection of candidates
“1. The Parliamentary Assembly, whose task, by virtue of Article 22 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5 – the Convention), is to elect judges of the highest calibre to the European Court of Human Rights (the Court) from a list of three candidates nominated by states parties, underlines the importance of appropriate national selection procedures in order to ensure and reinforce the quality, efficacy and authority of the Court.
2. Despite a marked improvement in national selection procedures in several countries, there is still significant variance as concerns fairness, transparency and consistency. Referring to its Recommendation 1649 (2004) on candidates for the European Court of Human Rights, the Assembly yet again reiterates that the process of nominating candidates to the Court must reflect the principles of democratic procedure, transparency and non-discrimination. In the absence of a real choice among the candidates submitted by a state party to the Convention, the Assembly shall reject lists submitted to it. In addition, in the absence of a fair, transparent and consistent national selection procedure, the Assembly may reject such lists.
3. In addition to the criteria set out in Article 21, paragraph 1, of the Convention (“The judges shall be of high moral character and must either possess the qualifications required for appointment to high judicial office or be jurisconsults of recognised competence”), the Assembly has introduced linguistic requirements based on Article 21, paragraph 1, of the Convention, the need for gender balance, as well as other requisites, such as the standard curriculum vitae for candidates. Before proceeding to the election of judges, the Assembly also invites candidates to take part in personal interviews before a sub-committee set up for that purpose.
4. Referring to the above-mentioned Recommendation 1649 (2004), the Assembly recalls that in addition to the criteria specified in Article 21, paragraph 1, of the Convention, as well as the gender requirement, states should, when selecting and subsequently nominating candidates to the Court, comply with the following requirements:
4.1. issue public and open calls for candidatures;
4.2. when submitting the names of candidates to the Assembly, describe the manner in which they were selected;
4.3. transmit the names of candidates to the Assembly in alphabetical order;
4.4. candidates should possess an active knowledge of one official language of the Council of Europe and a passive knowledge of the other (see model curriculum vitae appended hereto);
4.5. that, if possible, no candidate should be submitted whose election might result in the necessity to appoint an ad hoc judge.
5. The Assembly also strongly urges the governments of member states which have still not done so, to set up – without delay – appropriate national selection procedures to ensure that the authority and credibility of the Court are not put at risk by ad hoc and politicised processes in the nomination of candidates. Furthermore, it invites the governments of member states to ensure that the selection bodies/panels (and those advising on selection) are themselves as gender-balanced as possible ...”
“7. The authority of the Court is contingent on the stature of judges and the quality and coherence of the Court’s case law. In this context it is the Assembly’s responsibility to elect judges of the highest calibre to the Court from a list of three candidates nominated by states parties. Recalling its Resolution 1646 (2009) on the nomination of candidates and election of judges to the European Court of Human Rights, the Assembly reaffirms its call that national selection procedures must be rigorous, fair and transparent in order to enhance the quality, efficacy and authority of the Court.”
3. Proposal to set up advisory panel to advise governments
Appendix - Letter from Mr Jean-Paul Costa, President of the European Court of Human Rights, addressed to member states’ Permanent Representatives (Ambassadors) on 9 June 2010
(open)Dear Ambassador,
As you know, point 8 of the Interlaken Action Plan calls upon the states parties and the Council of Europe to “ensure, if necessary by improving the transparency and quality of the selection procedure at both national and European levels, full satisfaction of the Convention’s criteria for office as a judge of the Court, including knowledge of public international law and of the national legal systems as well as proficiency in at least one official language.”
In terms of the future of the Court and therefore the Convention system, one of the decisive factors will be the quality of its Judges. Whatever reforms are undertaken, the system will fail if judges do not have the necessary experience and authority.
The quality of the Judges is important not only to guarantee the high standard of the decisions delivered and the jurisprudence developed. It is also essential because, in a subsidiary system where human rights protection falls primarily to the national courts, the European Court as the ultimate arbiter of human rights issues must be composed of persons of sufficient standing and authority to command the respect of national judges, including senior national judges. If this is not the case, the Court itself will suffer from a deficit of authority and the system will lose credibility and effectiveness.
This aspect is also particularly important in view of the prospect of the European Union’s accession to the Convention. One of the critical issues in this context will be the future relationship between the Court of Justice of the European Union and the Strasbourg Court. For that relationship to function it must be based on mutual respect. Since the entry into force of the Lisbon Treaty, appointments to the EU courts are subject to the opinion of an independent panel (Article 255 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union). It is true that the procedure under the Convention is not strictly comparable to the EU appointment process in view of the involvement of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and the additional guarantee which that provides.
It is worth recalling that the Group of Wise Persons in its 2006 report envisaged the screening of candidatures “by a committee of prominent personalities possibly chosen from among former members of the Court, current and former members of national supreme or constitutional courts and lawyers with acknowledged competence” (§ 118 of the report). Moreover, in his contribution to the Interlaken Conference the Secretary General made a similar proposal (§ 18).
As regards the Convention’s criteria for office, Article 21 § 1 provides that “judges shall be of high moral character and must either possess the qualifications required for appointment to high judicial office or be jurisconsults of recognised competence”. These requirements have remained unchanged since the adoption of the Convention in 1950.
These terms are susceptible to some degree of objective definition. High judicial office means that the persons concerned must be eligible for membership of one of the country’s senior courts. Thus, for example, members of Supreme, Constitutional, Supreme Administrative Courts clearly satisfy this requirement, whereas persons eligible for appointment only to the lowest level of jurisdiction in principle do not.
To be a “jurisconsult of recognised competence” requires extensive experience in the practice and/or teaching of law, the latter generally entailing publication of important academic works. One objective indication of this requirement would be the length of occupation of a professorial chair.
The states clearly have a fundamental role in ensuring that the three candidates whose names are submitted to the Parliamentary Assembly are all suitably qualified so as to offer the Assembly a real choice between candidates of an equivalent standing and to guarantee that, whichever of the candidates is elected, he/she will have a sufficient level of expertise in a relevant field of law (international law, criminal law, administrative law, humanitarian law, etc.). To achieve this means setting up a fair and transparent procedure at national level. This has already been recommended by the Parliamentary Assembly and it is important that this recommendation is fully implemented.
However, this is not enough. That is why I would urge the Committee of Ministers to set up rapidly a panel along the lines proposed by the Wise Persons and the Secretary General. Such a panel, which should be composed of senior figures from a relevant background, would intervene before a list was submitted to the PACE by the contracting party so as not to interfere with the PACE’s Convention responsibilities in this area. Moreover, its role would be advisory; in other words it would make recommendations to the nominating state including, as necessary, proposals to modify the list. Such a Panel could be set up without amending the Convention by a decision of the Committee of Ministers.
I intend to raise this matter as soon as possible with the President of the PACE. I very much hope that you and your colleagues, Ministers’ Deputies, will be able to discuss this important issue in the near future.
For my part, I am prepared to make more detailed proposals on the operation of the Panel and the appointment of its members.
With my very best wishes,
signed:
Jean-Paul Costa