1. Introduction
1. The displacement of millions of people worldwide
by conflict, as well as, inter alia,
situations of generalised violence, violations of human rights and
natural or human-made disasters, has been recognised as one of the
key human rights and humanitarian challenges of our time. For both
refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs), the loss of access
and rights to housing, land and property is the foremost challenge to
the achievement of durable solutions to displacement.
2. In Europe, the failure to provide legal redress with regard
to this issue is a central factor perpetuating the displacement
of some 2.5 million IDPs in Europe, as well as thousands more refugees.
Restitution
and compensation measures for displaced persons have been attempted
on the territory of at least nine member states of the Council of
Europe. While some of these programmes have come to be seen as international precedents,
others have been less successful and great inconsistencies persist
related to their scope, effectiveness and level of implementation.
3. The United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement
confirm that displacement itself is “arbitrary” in situations in
which it takes place in a manner incompatible with international
human rights and humanitarian law.
Arbitrary
displacement thus gives rise to violations of international obligations
and must be treated as a phenomenon in need of remedy and redress.
The process of housing, land and property restitution is a key component
thereof and a precondition for bringing displacement to a permanent,
sustainable and just end.
4. Restitution in the form of restoration of legal rights and
physical possession of abandoned property is the optimal response
to dispossession because it, alone among legal remedies, facilitates
free choice between three commonly accepted “durable solutions”
to displacement: return to one’s original home or place of origin in
safety and dignity; local integration at the site of displacement;
or resettlement either at some other site within the country of
origin or outside its borders. Housing, land and property restored
through restitution can be either returned to and lived in or sold,
leased or exchanged to support integration or resettlement elsewhere.
5. Legal remedies and redress for the arbitrary loss of access
and rights to housing, land and property are also an essential component
for restoring the rule of law in post-conflict situations. Such
remedies and redress are directly linked to stability, reconciliation,
transitional justice, governance, and economic development, and are
therefore widely viewed as indispensable elements for any constructive
peace-building strategy.
6. It is in the light of the above, that the rapporteur has prepared
this report. The rapporteur took over the rapporteurship from Mr
Nikolaos Dendias (Greece, EPP) in January 2009. As part of the preparations,
between 8 and 10 June 2009, the rapporteur conducted a study visit
to Bosnia and Herzegovina where he met with representatives of the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),
the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE),
as well as with local, national and international authorities, all
of whom provided a great deal of valuable information. The rapporteur
was also greatly assisted by an independent expert, Mr Rhodri C.
Williams, whose study paper on the topic is the foundation of this report.
The rapporteur would like to warmly thank all those mentioned for
their valuable contributions.
2. Solving
the property problems of refugees and internally displaced persons:
key issues
2.1. Restitution may
not be sufficient
7. Restitution is seen as the preferred form of redress
in the case of human rights violations involving property and possessions.
The European Court of Human Rights has demonstrated an increasing
tendency to express such a preference in property-related cases.
However, durable solutions for refugees and displaced persons will
inevitably require additional remedies beyond restitution. The most
vulnerable refugees and displaced persons may never have had a formal
title to property in their places of origin (for example, Roma) and
will therefore require other solutions such as allocation of public
housing and/or land.
8. For refugees and displaced persons whose properties were destroyed
or badly damaged during their displacement, the restitution of title
will need to be complemented with compensation in kind or cash so
as to allow for the reconstruction or repair of their property.
For those who never formally lost the right to their properties
but who have been unable to benefit from the exercise of their property
rights during their displacement, compensation for loss of income
may need to be provided.
9. Furthermore, return and restitution may need to be accompanied
by adequate social and economic policies to allow for the full reintegration
of refugees and displaced persons. Similar policies may be needed
to assist communities in affected return areas to “absorb” the returnees.
10. In a post-conflict situation, return and restitution efforts
should be integrated into a broader transitional justice effort
to provide redress to all victims of severe human rights violations.
Reconciliation efforts are crucial for the reintegration of returnees.
2.2. Available state
capacity and resources
11. It is important to consider already at the outset
the available state capacity and resources to ensure a fair and
expedient property restitution process. Regular courts will seldom
have the capacity to deal with an additional caseload of restitution
cases. It may be necessary to establish special property commissions
that use streamlined administrative procedures to decide restitution
claims expediently so as to provide redress quickly.
12. The capacity and resources of other state institutions that
need to be involved in the property restitution process should be
assessed at the outset and, where required, reinforced so that they
do not hold up or delay the restitution process. This is of particular
importance in respect of the enforcement of restitution decisions.
13. Sufficient resources should be allocated to train staff involved
to be familiar with the rights of refugees and displaced persons
and with human rights law and standards generally in order to provide
adequate assistance.
2.3. Secondary occupancy
14. The properties of refugees and displaced persons
are often occupied in their absence. While “secondary occupancy”
should not delay or stand in the way of restitution, it is an important
issue to consider at the outset of the restitution effort. Policies
may need to be developed to ensure that secondary occupants who
have no access to other housing options are provided with temporary
or permanent housing after they leave the property they have been
occupying. This is particularly relevant if there is a housing shortage.
It is also important that rules and procedures are in place so as
to deal with possible evictions in a way that respects the rule
of law and that provides the persons subject to eviction with adequate
safeguards and effective remedies.
2.4. Evidence and property
records
15. The lack of documentary evidence and absence of property
records should not prevent the restitution of property rights. Refugees
and displaced persons may often not be in a position to present
documentary evidence in support of their restitution claims. A property
restitution process should use flexible evidentiary standards and
all efforts should be made to assist refugees and displaced persons
to obtain evidence.
16. Alterations of title or cadastral records concerning properties
of refugees and IDPs which occurred during the period of displacement
should be scrutinised for irregularities. Where indications exist
that they were carried out without the consent of the refugees and
displaced persons concerned, they should be given no legal effect.
State authorities should protect the physical integrity of title
and cadastral records throughout periods of conflict.
3. Legal standards
17. Rights to property, possessions, housing and homes
have come to be recognised as integral for the exercise of many
other rights. Without legal security in the enjoyment of one’s most
basic assets, the ability to live normal family lives, to participate
equally in the life of the broader community and to pursue independent and
voluntary economic activities is severely undermined. The importance
of this complex of rights is reflected in their protection in international
human rights standards, as well as in several soft-law instruments.
These can be roughly broken down into two key areas: property and
possessions, and housing and homes.
3.1. Property and possessions
18. The general right to “own property alone as well
as in association with others” is protected in Article 17 of the
1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). This provision
sets out a flat prohibition against “arbitrary” deprivation of property,
referring to expropriation or confiscation that lacks: 1. a basis
in law; 2. fair procedures; 3. a public purpose; and/or 4. just
and timely compensation.
19. The same basic protections are affirmed at the European level
in Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the European Convention on Human
Rights. The Court has clearly established that “possessions” protected
under the Convention include not only property held in full title,
but also individualised economic assets, such as bank account savings,
shares in a company or legal claims arising from domestic laws.
3.2. Housing and homes
20. International law protects rights to residential
property even in cases where the occupants do not enjoy legal title
or formally lawful possession of such homes. The UDHR prohibits
arbitrary interference with the home (Article 12) and sets out the
right to adequate housing (Article 25). These rights are further
protected by Article 17 of the 1966 Convention on Civil and Political
Rights (CCPR), and Article 11 of the 1966 Convention on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), respectively. The United Nations
committee which has the mandate to interpret the CESCR has stated
that the right to adequate housing entails a guarantee of secure tenure
to homes, meaning that those living there cannot be arbitrarily
evicted even if they do not have ownership rights.
Similar
protections are set out under Article 8 of the European Convention
on Human Rights, which prohibits arbitrary interference with the
home and Article 31 of the revised European Social Charter, which
protects the right to housing.
3.3. Effective remedy
21. States are obliged under Article 13 of the European
Convention on Human Rights, to provide effective remedies to parties
harmed by states’ failure to respect their obligations under the
Convention. This applies when states directly violate the human
rights of individuals within their jurisdiction, as well as when
failing to take steps to prevent foreseeable violations by non-state
actors.
The right to an effective
remedy basically means that the person who claims to be the victim
of a human rights violation, and who has an arguable case, must
have a mechanism, for example a court, to which he or she can turn
and which can provide redress. In the case of property issues of
refugees and IDPs, the effective remedy, as will be discussed further
in the following, has consisted not only in the access to courts,
but also in the creation of specific commissions for dealing with
property claims. It is normally the prerogative of the state to
decide which form the redress should take.
4. Soft-law standards
4.1. Pinheiro Principles
22. The United Nations has led efforts to ensure more
consistent and effective approaches to the problem at hand. One
such initiative is the Principles on Housing and Property Restitution
for Refugees and Displaced Persons. The United Nations Sub-Commission
on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights adopted these so-called
“Pinheiro Principles” in 2005.
23. This document is designed to provide practical guidance to
states, United Nations agencies and the broader international community
on how best to address the complex legal and technical issues surrounding remedies
for loss of access and rights to housing, land and property. In
doing so, the principles draw on established rules of international
human rights law including rights to property, privacy in the home,
adequate housing, freedom of movement and choice of residence, effective
remedies and equality and non-discrimination.
24. Drawing on these authorities, the Pinheiro Principles assert
a right to restitution, in the form of restoration of any housing,
land or property of which displaced persons were arbitrarily deprived,
or compensation where this is factually impossible as determined
by an independent, impartial tribunal. States are encouraged to prioritise
the right to restitution as redress for those deprived of their
property and as a key element of restorative justice.
25. The principles link the exercise of the right of restitution
to the right of all refugees and displaced persons to return voluntarily
to their former homes, lands and places of habitual residence, in
safety and dignity. However, they note that the right to restitution
exists as a distinct right, and is prejudiced neither by the actual return
nor non-return of refugees and displaced persons.
26. The Pinheiro Principles provide recommendations on the establishment
and implementation of restitution procedures, including guidelines
on national procedures and mechanisms, accessibility of restitution procedures,
consultation and the participation of affected persons, property
records and documentation, the rights of tenants and other non-owners,
the rights of secondary occupants of claimed property, legislative measures,
the prohibition of arbitrary or discriminatory laws, enforcement
of restitution decisions and compensation.
27. The Pinheiro Principles also address the responsibility of
the international community to promote and protect the right to
housing, land and property restitution, as well as the right to
voluntary return in safety and dignity. They specifically recommend
that international organisations should work with national governments, share
expertise on the development of national restitution policies and
programmes, help to ensure their compatibility with international
law and relevant standards, and support the monitoring of their
implementation.
28. The rapporteur considers that the Council of Europe should
endorse the Pinheiro Principles and develop guidelines to assist
member states to implement them in the European context, taking
into account the existing Council of Europe instruments.
4.2. Committee of Ministers
recommendation on internally displaced persons
29. In light of the United Nations Guiding Principles
on Internal Displacement and in follow-up to several recommendations
of the Parliamentary Assembly,
the Council
of Europe Ad hoc Committee of Experts on the Legal Aspects of Territorial
Asylum, Refugees and Stateless Persons (CAHAR) produced a recommendation
on internally displaced persons which was subsequently adopted by
the Committee of Ministers.
30. Endorsing the United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement, Recommendation Rec(2006)6 of the Committee of Ministers
on internally displaced persons clearly spells out that IDPs are entitled
to the enjoyment of their property and possessions in accordance
with human rights law (Principle 8): “In particular, internally
displaced persons have the right to repossess the property left
behind following their displacement. If internally displaced persons
have been deprived of their property, such deprivation should give rise
to adequate compensation.”
5. The right to redress
for loss of access and rights to property
31. The Assembly, drawing on international law and standards
and the experience of property restitution and compensation programmes
carried out in Europe to date, has invited the Committee of Ministers
to make a number of recommendations to member states regarding redress
for loss of access and rights to housing, land and property in the
European context. As these recommendations would also provide an
appropriate departure point for the proposed development of detailed
guidelines on how to provide redress for the loss of property rights,
the rapporteur considers that the Committee of Ministers should
examine the issue of redress further.
5.1. A preference for
restitution
32. Where human rights violations involve deprivations
of rights in property and homes, redress should, whenever possible,
consist of the restitution of the asset in question.
Restitution
involves the physical restoration of possessions, with all the rights
held to them previously. Where restitution is not possible under the
circumstances (for example, the property in question has been destroyed),
compensation in cash or in-kind (in the form of an equivalent home
or property) can provide an alternative redress. In order to provide
full redress, the above measures should be accompanied by compensation
for other associated harms such as non-pecuniary damage, costs of
reconstruction of destroyed properties and lost income.
33. Restitution is, however, not automatically prioritised over
compensation in responding to human rights violations generally.
However, it is clearly
seen as the preferred form of redress in the case of violations involving
property and possessions, as reflected in both the United Nations
guiding principles and the Pinheiro Principles.
Indeed, post-conflict
property restitution is now viewed as an emerging right in itself.
The Court has demonstrated an increasing tendency to express a preference
for restitution in property-related cases, thus departing from its
practice of deference to states parties regarding national implementation
of its judgments.
34. In a 2001 judgment, for instance, the Court ordered Romania
to “return to the applicant the house and land at issue”, or, “failing
such restitution”, provide specified compensation.
In
a 2004 judgment concerning Poland, the Court found that an individual
violation of Article 1 of the Additional Protocol to the Convention “originated
in a systemic problem” affecting numerous claimants and ordered
the respondent to take measures to “secure the implementation of
the property right in question
in
respect of the remaining … claimants or provide them with equivalent
redress in lieu”.
The
Court has also ordered compensation to be paid in some cases in
which the applicants to the Court had regained access to their property
but required redress for harms arising from prior denial of access
to their homes and lands over a number of years.
5.2. Adequate compensation
where restitution is impossible
35. Although the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement
do not more closely define the circumstances under which restitution
may be considered impossible, Pinheiro Principle 21 limits this contingency
to cases of factual impossibility “in exceptional circumstances,
namely when land and/or property is destroyed or when it no longer
exists, as determined by an independent, impartial tribunal”, as
well as cases “when the injured party knowingly and voluntarily
accepts compensation in lieu of restitution, or when the terms of
a negotiated peace settlement provide for a combination of restitution
and compensation”.
36. Pinheiro Principle 17.4 implies a restrictive view of the
legal impossibility of restitution through the formation of subsequent
private property rights on the part of secondary occupants. This
provision stipulates that good faith third-party purchasers of abandoned
property may be deemed entitled to compensation, but that particularly
egregious cases of underlying displacement may be seen as giving
rise to “constructive notice of the illegality of purchasing abandoned
property, pre-empting the formation of bona fide property interests
in such cases.”
37. The Court has recently expressed a preference for restitution
over compensation in a number of property-related judgments, as
discussed above. In a 2005 admissibility decision concerning Turkey,
the Court ruled that a legal mechanism set up to address property
claims could not be viewed as providing an effective remedy for
the purposes of the requirement of exhaustion of domestic remedies,
in part because it precluded the possibility of restitution in favour
of sole reliance on compensation.
38. Annex 7 of the 1995 Dayton Peace Accords (DPA), which ended
the conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina, has been viewed as a precedent.
This instrument not only affirmed the right of refugees and displaced
persons to voluntary return to their homes of origin but also to
“have restored to them property of which they were deprived in the
course of hostilities … and to be compensated for any property that
cannot be restored to them”.
In
practice, the impossibility of restitution was construed narrowly
in Bosnia and Herzegovina with displaced persons encouraged to seek
physical restitution of their property and then dispose over it
as they wished upon resumption of possession. Compensation funds
discussed elsewhere in Annex 7 of the DPA were, as a matter of policy,
not funded by donors and therefore could not be implemented.
39. The UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement do not
explicitly define “adequate compensation” for the purposes of Principle
29.2, but equate such compensation with other forms of “just reparations”, implying
that the goal of compensation, like that of restitution, should
be to restore victims as closely as possible to the original situation
before the violations occurred.
40. The Court treats the provision of compensation as a factor
in weighing the proportionality of interferences with property rights.
While compensation need not be at full market value, it must be
reasonably related to this standard with lower reimbursement justified
through legitimate objectives of public interest.
5.3. The obligation
to provide redress notwithstanding political negotiations
41. In accordance with the UN Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement, states have the primary duty to provide protection
and assistance to internally displaced persons within their jurisdiction
and to establish the conditions for the achievement of durable solutions.
States
should meet this duty through both their own efforts and the acceptance
and facilitation of the services of international humanitarian actors
and other appropriate actors.
Principle 2.1 notes that the guiding
principles “shall be observed by all authorities, groups and persons
irrespective of their legal status and applied without any adverse
distinction” and that such observance “shall not affect the legal
status of any authorities, groups or persons involved”.
42. The Court has repeatedly held that the obligation on authorities
with jurisdiction over abandoned properties to respect property
rights and provide legal remedies applies notwithstanding the existence
or status of political negotiations meant to resolve conflicts that
may have constituted the root cause of the human rights violations
concerned.
Where
such redress is arbitrarily withheld, the Court has ordered the
payment of “measures of compensation in respect of losses directly
related to this violation” of displaced persons’ rights.
5.4. Recognition of
de facto property rights
43. The requirement to give effect to rights in housing,
land and property that are established de facto but not recognised
de jure is related to the internationally
recognised right to adequate housing. According to the United Nations
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, a key component
of respect for this right is the provision of tenure security, or
“legal protection against forced eviction, harassment and other
threats” in homes, whether or not their residents own them.
As
discussed above, comparable rights in the home and to housing are
protected in the European Convention on Human Rights and the revised
European Social Charter.
44. In displacement settings, Principle 16 of the Pinheiro Principles
calls upon states to ensure that “the rights of tenants, social-occupancy
rights holders and other legitimate occupants or users of housing,
land and property are recognised within restitution programmes”
and that holders of such rights are “able to return to and repossess
and use their housing, land and property in a similar manner to
those possessing formal ownership rights.”
45. Recognition of de facto rights in housing, land and property
is also an important component of the protection of indigenous and
other minorities. This is reflected in the “particular obligation”
asserted in Principle 9 of the UN Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement to protect against the displacement of “indigenous peoples,
minorities … and other groups with a special dependency on and attachment
to their lands”. Pinheiro Principle 15.3 similarly encourages states
to “recognise the rights of possession of traditional and indigenous communities
to collective lands”.
46. In the European context, wilful failure to recognise such
rights on the part of displaced minority groups may raise issues
under Article 16 of the Framework Convention for the Protection
of National Minorities, which prohibits “measures which alter the
proportions of the population in areas inhabited by persons belonging
to national minorities … aimed at restricting the rights and freedoms
enshrined [in the Convention]”.
47. The Court has ruled in a number of cases that formally invalid
or even technically illegal property rights will be recognised as
possessions protected under Article 1 of the Additional Protocol
to the European Convention on Human Rights in cases in which the
authorities have treated them as de facto valid or tolerated their
exercise for a significant time period and no competing private
interest is at stake.
Similarly,
the Court has ruled that unchallenged rights to family homes and
lands, including common lands, give rise to protected possessory
interests even where they remain officially unregistered.
5.5. Occupancy and tenancy
rights
48. Displacement-related claims for the restitution of
apartments held in occupancy and tenancy rights in formerly communist
systems represent a challenge particular to the European context.
Such rights were held by individuals, together with their family
household, and entailed exclusive occupation of a specific apartment for
a long or indefinite period of time, subject to obligations such
as the payment of rent and/or contributions to housing funds and
continuous use of the apartment for residential purposes barring
justified grounds for absence.
49. While such apartments were almost undoubtedly homes in the
sense of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, questions
surrounding their status as possessions under Article 1 of the Additional
Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights may not be amenable
to authoritative resolution by the Court. In most affected countries,
systematic displacement-related confiscation of apartments held
under such rights occurred before accession to the Council of Europe,
preventing the Court from assuming jurisdiction over them.
50. The political circumstances surrounding cancellations of occupancy
and tenancy rights also throw into question the appropriateness
of seeking an exclusively judicial determination of their status.
It must be recalled that the nature of such rights underwent a profound
transition throughout central and eastern Europe and the former
Soviet Union during the 1990s – precisely at the time that many
such rights were being cancelled in the context of ethnic conflict.
For both economic and political reasons, it was a foregone conclusion
at the time that the bulk of apartments held in such tenure would
be privatised through sale on beneficial terms to their occupants.
It is now a matter of record that privatisation in favour of sitting
tenants at prices below market value is precisely what occurred,
as a rule, throughout the region.
51. Occupancy and tenancy rights arguably constitute possessions
protected under Article 1 of the Additional Protocol to the European
Convention on Human Rights even in the absence of a right to their eventual
privatisation. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, for instance, a High Court
set up under the Dayton Peace Accords with jurisdiction to apply
the Convention found that occupancy rights constituted “possessions”
in the sense of the Convention in their own right.
This understanding
facilitated the systematic restitution of such rights in Bosnia
and Herzegovina and Kosovo
, as well as provisions
of law in Georgia intended to provide remedies for the loss of analogous
rights (see the case studies, below).
52. The argument for viewing occupancy and tenancy rights as protected
possessions is strengthened by the observation that the near universal
expectation of privatisation in the early 1990s arguably transformed these
rights into a latent form of ownership. For instance, the Court
has found protected possessions to be at stake in a number of cases
involving interferences with occupancy and tenancy rights that occurred
after legislation permitting privatisation was already in force.
53. However, in situations where privatisation laws had not yet
entered into force by the time that conflict forced occupancy and
tenancy rights holders out of their apartments, the Court would
not necessarily be able to take victims’ expectation of future legislative
privatisation rights into account, however well-founded they were.
As a judicial institution, the Court is bound to focus on the circumstances
of individual cases before it and the law in force at the time of
alleged violations, rather than broader political and contextual
factors.
54. In this context, the rapporteur submits that political bodies
of the Council of Europe are well placed to articulate views on
the legal weight to be accorded to occupancy and tenancy rights
that take into account historical context and invoke member states’
political as well as legal commitments to achieve greater unity, including
by means of the maintenance and further realisation of human rights.
55. The failure to provide redress for wrongfully cancelled occupancy
and tenancy rights is rightly seen as one of the key factors preventing
a solution to protracted displacement situations in Europe.
As the Representative of the Secretary-General
on the Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons, Walter Kälin, noted
in a recent address to the Committee on Migration, Refugees and
Population, the failure to protect property left behind, including
tenancy rights, is a factor “hindering IDPs in their efforts to
resume their lives and remaining a serious source of grievance and
a trigger-point for future conflict”.
56. It is undeniable that apartments held in occupancy and tenancy
rights were viewed as homes and valuable assets by thousands of
persons who currently remain displaced; that their displacement
in situations of armed conflict or human rights violations was involuntary;
and that but for their displacement, many would have long since
acquired full legal ownership of their apartments. Redress for these
losses should be seen as a legal obligation and a benchmark of European
integration in the spirit of the European Convention on Human Rights
and the Copenhagen Criteria.
5.6. Rapid, accessible
and effective procedures
57. The Pinheiro Principles call for the establishment
of “equitable, timely, independent, transparent and non-discriminatory
procedures, institutions and mechanisms to assess and enforce housing,
land and property restitution claims”.
Principle 12.3 calls on states
to take all necessary measures to support restitution processes,
including the provision of adequate human and other resources. Principle
12.4 calls for flexible procedures and Principle 12.5 states that
under exceptional circumstances, states should “request the technical
assistance and co-operation of relevant international agencies in
order to establish provisional regimes for providing refugees and
displaced persons with the procedures, institutions and mechanisms necessary
to ensure effective remedies”.
58. In order to assist domestic authorities in applying the UN
Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement at the domestic level,
the United Nations Representative of the Secretary-General on the
Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons, Walter Kälin, initiated
the drafting of a manual for law and policy makers.
Chapter 12 of the manual addresses
protection of the property and possessions of the displaced, and
sets out detailed recommendations related to the development of
facilitated procedures for property restitution in the wake of large-scale
dispossession.
5.7. Further measures
to ensure redress
59. Complementary forms of compensation for non-pecuniary
harm, as well as loss of access and damage to properties, can be
a crucial element in securing redress. The Pinheiro Principles note
at Principle 21.2 that in some situations, “a combination of compensation
and restitution may be the most appropriate remedy and form of restorative
justice.” The jurisprudence of the Court also supports the provision
of such supplementary forms of compensation, as well as measures
in support of ending displacement and establishing accountability in
situations of displacement related property violations.
60. The UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement stipulate
that national authorities have the primary duty and responsibility
to “provide protection and humanitarian assistance to internally
displaced persons within their jurisdiction” (Principle 3.1) as
well as to “to establish conditions, as well as provide the means”
that allow IDPs to achieve voluntary durable solutions (Principle
28.1).
61. With this in mind, the rapporteur outlines a few case study
examples to illustrate property issues facing refugees and displaced
persons in Europe. A more detailed analysis of the property issues
facing refugees and displaced persons in the case study countries
and other relevant member states could be carried out by the intergovernmental
sector of the Council of Europe.
6. Case studies
6.1. Introduction
62. As of 2009, more than 2.5 million Europeans in 11
of the 47 member states of the Council of Europe continue to be
deprived of their homes and possessions as the result of conflicts
lasting decades, or for other reasons, without resolution or due
to other factors that have forced people to leave their homes. The
rapporteur has chosen a limited number of case studies. He has not
attempted to cover all countries or regions in Europe where property
issues remain. To do this would have greatly enlarged the report
and changed the emphasis which seeks to deal with the principle
property issues facing refugees and internally displaced persons,
rather than the individual country situations.
The case studies he has chosen
are on Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Georgia, Kosovo and Turkey.
6.2. Bosnia and Herzegovina
63. In Bosnia and Herzegovina (“Bosnia”), Annex 7 of
the DPA
required the authorities throughout the country
to undertake specific measures to facilitate the return of refugees
and displaced persons, including restitution of property, compensation
where restitution was not possible, and co-operation with a quasi-international
Commission for the Real Property Claims of Refugees and Displaced
Persons (“CRPC”). Annex 10 of the DPA created the Office of the
High Representative to Bosnia and Herzegovina (“OHR”), with a mandate
to monitor civilian implementation of the peace settlement.
64. Under international pressure, the authorities in both “entities”
of Bosnia – the Muslim-Croat “Federation” and the Republika Srpska
– passed laws in 1998 repealing wartime rules allowing the reallocation
of abandoned property and creating procedures for the restitution
of such properties to their pre-war residents. These laws were extensively
amended by OHR decisions in 1999 and 2001 and their implementation
was closely monitored through a joint international effort referred
to as the “Property Law Implementation Plan” (“PLIP”).
65. The resulting restitution process was administrative rather
than judicial and largely decentralised. Claims were received and
processed by municipal or regional (“Cantonal”) offices in the federation
and by municipal offices of a central ministry in Republika Srpska.
Decisions issued by the CRPC could be fed into this process as binding
evidence in support of claims.
66. Upon the receipt of property restitution claims, Bosnian authorities
were required to issue decisions and enforce them within timelines
stipulated by law. Such decisions affirmed the rights of claimants
to repossess their property and included a determination of whether
secondary occupants were entitled to alternative accommodation.
Legally, claimants were prioritised through entitlement to the return
of their property according to legal deadlines regardless of whether
alternative accommodation was provided to entitled secondary occupants.
Secondary occupants could appeal decisions requiring them to vacate
properties, but such appeals did not automatically suspend enforcement.
67. As in much of the rest of the former Yugoslavia, most rural
or peri-urban houses in Bosnia were privately owned while urban
housing took the form of apartments in social ownership. Residents
of socially owned apartments held permanent tenancy/occupancy rights
to them that were conditioned on continuous residential use. In
1998, a high court for human rights set up under Annex 6 of the
DPA ruled that occupancy rights were possessions protected under
the European Convention on Human Rights.
68. Challenges to implementation of the restitution process included
a number of special conditions imposed exclusively on pre-displacement
occupancy right holders related to both the restitution and privatisation
of their apartments. These were largely removed through legal amendments
in 2001, effectively equating such apartments with private property
for the purposes of restitution. Other challenges included failures
to take basic steps to provide alternative accommodation and to
evict politically influential occupants from claimed properties.
69. One important component of property restitution in Bosnia
was the use of public information. The PLIP agencies contributed
to a number of information campaigns meant to ensure that both claimants
and secondary occupants were aware of their rights and obligations
under the property restitution laws. The publication of updated
monthly statistics tracking implementation in each municipality
of Bosnia also facilitated an open, transparent process.
70. The restitution process in Bosnia was largely completed in
2003, with nearly 200 000 homes, including a roughly equal number
of private and socially owned properties, returned to their pre-war
residents. This facilitated the return of some one million persons,
or nearly half the population displaced by the conflict, to their original
homes. At the end of 2003, national institutions formally assumed
full responsibility for the return process in Bosnia.
71. As many as 22 000 Croatian Serbs and a significant number
of Roma from Kosovo remain displaced in Bosnia. In recognition of
the regional dimension of the displacement problem, Bosnia joined
Croatia as well as the erstwhile Serbia and Montenegro in signing
the so-called “Sarajevo Declaration” in January 2005, committing
itself to resolving the remaining population displacement in the
region by the end of 2006.
72. A number of categories of property claimants were partly or
wholly excluded from the restitution process on disputable grounds.
These include persons who had initiated the process of privatising
military apartments in the early 1990s as well as persons who missed
early deadlines to claim socially owned property. In addition, displaced
members of the Roma minority were disproportionately housed in social
housing or informal settlements, both of which were largely excluded
from the restitution process.
73. Insufficient reconstruction of destroyed homes remains a key
obstacle to the achievement of durable solutions for many of the
remaining displaced persons.
A
revised strategy for implementation of Annex 7 of the DPA that is
currently under discussion is meant to address this problem.
6.3. Croatia
74. Although obliged to “comply fully” with the return
provisions of the DPA, Croatia is not a direct signatory to Annex
7 thereof.
Measures
allowing for the restitution of privately owned homes were adopted
through the repeal of wartime legislation allowing for reallocation
of abandoned housing as well as the enactment of a Programme for
Return in 1998, followed by further legal amendments in 2000 and
2002.
75. The restitution of privately owned homes was conceived of
as a decentralised process run by municipal commissions. However,
increasing involvement by the competent central-level ministry and
the state prosecutor’s office proved to be necessary over time in
order to ensure consistent issuance and enforcement of decisions.
76. The administrative restitution of some 20 000 private homes
claimed by ethnic Serb owners has now been largely completed. A
significant factor that delayed this process has been the prioritisation
of secondary occupants over claimants, with the former protected
from eviction for an open-ended period until alternative accommodation
was provided. The delays entailed by this practice have been found
to give rise to violations of the European Convention on Human Rights
in a number of cases.
77. Croatian Serbs still face obstacles to the enjoyment of their
restituted private homes, including delays in processing some 7 500
family appeals for reconstruction assistance, failure to address
claims for agricultural land in some areas, and, in a small number
of cases, lawsuits from prior occupants of their properties for
the cost of improvements made without their permission.
78. In addition, the long delays experienced by many claimants
prior to repossession of their private properties have given rise
to claims for compensation for losses incurred during the period
that claimants were arbitrarily denied access to their property.
Although such cases have been resolved by friendly settlement to date,
a more systematic approach may prove helpful in achieving legal
certainty.
79. Contrary to the practice in the rest of the region, no legal
remedies have been offered for the estimated 30 000 Serb households
stripped of occupancy/tenancy rights to socially owned apartments
after fleeing during the conflict. Instead, those who are willing
to return and do not have access to property elsewhere have been offered
housing assistance.
80. The process of providing housing care to Serb returnees whose
socially owned apartments were confiscated during the conflict has
been slow, with some 6 400 families still awaiting resolution of
their claims. Many potential claimants for housing care in urban
areas may have missed a 2005 claims deadline. Moreover, Croatia
has yet to meet its undertaking under the 2005 Sarajevo Declaration
to provide a “fair and just solution” for former occupancy right
holders who do not intend to return to Croatia or otherwise cannot
benefit from the housing care programme.
81. The Court indicated in a 2006 ruling that complaints involving
confiscations of occupancy rights in Croatia would be unlikely to
fall within the Court’s temporal jurisdiction.
However,
the European Committee of Social Rights recently found a collective
complaint against Croatia under the European Social Charter admissible.
The complaint
alleges violations of the right of the family to social, legal and
economic protection as well as discrimination in relation to Croatia’s
failure to provide a legal remedy for occupancy rights denied to
its ethnic Serb minority.
82. On 30 March 2009, the United Nations Human Rights Committee
found that the wartime termination of the occupancy right of a Croatian
Serb family that fled from their apartment following death threats
gave rise to violations of the rights to a fair trial, protection
from arbitrary interference with the home and non-discrimination
under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
The
committee found Croatia to be under an obligation to provide “an
effective remedy, including adequate compensation” to the affected family.
83. While concerns remain regarding durable solutions for many
of the 300 000 ethnic Serbs displaced during the conflict, Croatia
has largely reintegrated some 260 000 ethnic Croat internally displaced
persons and integrated up to 120 000 Bosnian Croat refugees. Ethnic
Croats were generally able to repossess both socially owned apartments
and private homes in areas of Croatia they had fled during the conflict.
Likewise, Bosnian Croats were
able to participate in Bosnian restitution programmes for socially
owned apartments and private property without impediment.
6.4. Georgia
84. Upon its 1999 accession to the Council of Europe,
Georgia pledged to “take the necessary legislative measures within
two years of its accession and administrative measures within three
years of its accession in order to permit restitution of ownership
and tenancy rights or the payment of compensation for the property
lost by people forced to abandon their homes”
during the 1990
to 1994 conflicts in the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia.
85. In the course of internationally brokered negotiations to
end the frozen conflicts in Georgia, formal commitments to permit
the return of displaced persons to their home of origin and restoration
of their properties have been undertaken between Georgia and both
of the above-mentioned breakaway regions.
86. The United Nations Security Council has reaffirmed the rights
of persons displaced by the conflict in Abkhazia to return to their
homes in numerous resolutions.
In
October 2007 and in April 2008, the Security Council reaffirmed
“the importance of [displaced persons’] return to their homes and
property and that individual property rights have not been affected
by the fact that owners had to flee during the conflict and that the
residency rights and the identity of these owners will be respected
….”
In May 2008, the United
Nations General Assembly emphasised “the importance of preserving
the property rights of refugees and internally displaced persons
from Abkhazia, Georgia,” and called on member states “to deter persons
under their jurisdiction from obtaining property within the territory
of Abkhazia, Georgia, in violation of the rights of returnees.”
The
Assembly, too, has considered this issue in two reports on the humanitarian
consequences of the war between Georgia and Russia. It has called
on Georgia, Russia and the de facto
authorities
in South Ossetia and Abkhazia to “… take measures to effectively
protect the property left behind by IDPs from both recent and previous
conflicts with a view to securing restitution of such property in
the future”.
87. Georgia has consistently affirmed the right of persons displaced
by the conflict to return and restitution of their homes in its
laws and policies related to internal displacement.
88. Since 2006, the Georgian Ministry of Refugees and Accommodation
has administered the My House programme, which seeks to register
the rights of internally displaced persons from Abkhazia to specific properties
left behind. Implementation of this programme has been incomplete
due to lacking documentation and the non-co-operation of the Abkhaz
de facto authorities.
89. In December 2006, Georgia passed a law on property restitution
and compensation in favour of persons displaced by the conflict
related to South Ossetia.
This
law foresees the creation of a commission, including international
members, which would take binding decisions ordering restitution
and compensation for immovable property lost during the conflict.
Under Article 4 of the law, claimants could seek review of decisions cancelling
occupancy and tenancy rights as well as loss of private property
rights.
The law has
yet to be implemented and has been rejected by the de facto authorities
of South Ossetia.
6.5. Kosovo
90. United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244,
adopted after the 1999 conflict in Kosovo, affirms the “right of
all refugees and displaced persons to return to their homes in safety”
and mandates the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) to assure
“the safe and unimpeded return of all refugees and displaced persons to
their homes in Kosovo”.
91. Restitution in Kosovo is complicated by multiple property
violations. Discriminatory laws before the 1999 conflict targeted
Kosovo Albanians, causing them to lose their occupancy rights or
resort to informal property transactions. The displacement of Kosovo
Serbs after the conflict led to widespread occupation of their homes and
lands by Kosovo Albanians. Since the conflict ended, new displacement
has occurred and property left behind remains subject to looting,
illegal expropriations and wrongful claims based on forged documents.
Lack of co-operation with the Serbian authorities further complicates
restitution and return.
92. The Housing and Property Directorate (HPD) was established
in 2001 by UNMIK to restore rights to residential property, including
occupancy rights, which were lost due to discrimination prior to
the 1999 conflict and during the violent displacement that resulted
from it. The HPD was replaced in 2006 by the Kosovo Property Agency
(KPA), which enjoyed an extended mandate to address claims to agricultural
land and business properties that had previously languished before
overburdened Kosovo courts. Together, the HPD and KPA resolved 29 000
cases, issuing 17 500 decisions confirming property rights, and
dismissing 2 500 claims. About 90% of claimants were Serbs whose
property was illegally occupied by ethnic Albanians. The KPA is
expected to address another 40 000 claims by 2010.
93. The HPD and KPA apply exceptional administrative procedures
for property restitution. Claims are investigated through the conduct
of interviews, searches of local property registries and verification
of contracts. Should claimants request enforcement of decisions,
secondary occupants are given thirty days to leave. Alternately,
the claimant may request the KPA to put the property under its administration
and collect rent on their behalf. This rental mechanism allows displaced
rights holders to receive an income from their properties while
holding the possibility of return open. In practice, its impact
has been limited by non-compliance by secondary occupants.
94. Significant obstacles remain to the implementation of the
KPA’s mandate and the broader protection of property rights. Evictions
have stopped in Serb-dominated areas in the north and looting and
destruction of claimed properties continue with virtual impunity.
The imposition of a short and poorly publicised deadline to make
a claim with the KPA has also left many displaced persons with recourse
only to slower judicial remedies.
Concerns also
remain regarding expropriations of property belonging to IDPs without
sufficient measures to inform and compensate those affected.
Recent
legislation on expropriations may not contain sufficient guarantees
that notice of such procedures will be accessible to affected persons
in a language that they understand.
95. The lack of co-operation between authorities in Serbia and
Kosovo undermines property restitution. Serbian authorities are
in possession of most cadastres from Kosovo, leaving the KPA and
local courts without independent access to such records. As a result
of Kosovo’s declaration of independence, Serbia suspended its co-operation
with KPA offices in Serbia in June 2008, blocking verification of
evidence, and forcing the suspension of many cases.
Lack of access
to cadastral information has also exacerbated the problem of fraudulent
land and property claims pursued in proceedings before domestic
courts in which interested parties are often absent.
96. Property-related claims also remain pending against components
of the international civilian and military presences in Kosovo,
including as many as 18 000 civil claims related to destruction
of the private property of Kosovo Serbs in 2004. Although steps
have been taken to provide a mechanism for the examination of alleged human
rights breaches in Kosovo by international actors, it is not clear
that they will provide an effective remedy in all property-related
cases.
97. The Roma Mahala reconstruction project in Mitrovica provides
an example of co-operation between international and local actors
to address loss of property by displaced members of the Roma minority
despite their lack of formal pre-war ownership rights. In this case,
the municipality provided land allowing the construction of apartments
provided with a ninety-nine year lease on the site of beneficiaries’
destroyed pre-war homes.
However, concerns remain regarding
the protracted failure to move many other displaced Roma out of
contaminated encampments.
98. Restoring property rights does not automatically lead to durable
solutions, or even allow return. Due primarily to ongoing security
problems in minority return areas, only about 18 000 out of 250 000
persons displaced from Kosovo since 1999 have returned, and the
number of sustained returns is reportedly much lower. It appears
that many displaced persons seek to establish legal ownership of
their former homes in order to rent or sell them.
99. The UNHCR has been tasked with supervising the safe and dignified
return of refugees and displaced persons in Kosovo.
In exercising
this responsibility, the UNHCR has observed significant problems
and recommended a coherent systematic response to cover all issues
related to housing, property and land, including access to adequate
accommodation, effective responses to post-eviction security incidents,
and reconstruction policies.
100. Currently, a wide range of different international and local
actors deal with different property issues in Kosovo based on international
human rights instruments, UNMIK regulations, the former Kosovo Standards Implementation
Plan and the current European Partnership Action Plan. With the
ongoing hand over of competencies from international to local authorities,
the need for a central co-ordination and policy-making body is even
greater in order to address inconsistencies.
6.6. Turkey
101. In July 2004, the Turkish Parliament adopted Law
5233 on the compensation of damages that occurred “due to the terror
and the fight against terror”.
The
law grew out of some 1 500 cases brought against Turkey before the
European Court of Human Rights by Kurdish internally displaced persons
who alleged violations of their property rights related to their
inability to return to their villages of origin in south-eastern
Turkey and make use of their houses and land. The Court established
that this had constituted a violation in a June 2004 ruling.
102. Law 5233 provides compensation for certain defined losses
including loss of movable and immovable properties; losses caused
by injury, physical disability or death; and finally losses incurred
as a lack of access to property, such as loss of farming revenue
during displacement. Compensation is due irrespective of whether the
loss was caused by the state or by a non-state actor. Compensation
can be either in cash or in kind.
103. Law 5233 introduced a system of decentralised decision making
on compensation claims through damage assessment commissions established
at the provincial level. Each commission is chaired by a deputy provincial
governor and composed of five civil servants and one lawyer appointed
by the local bar association.
104. The law allows for flexibility related to the evidence necessary
to bring claims and does not impose strict formal requirements for
filing. Damage assessment commissions are empowered to appoint experts
to assist with valuation, to carry out site visits and to request
other public bodies including the police and security forces to
provide information concerning claims pending before them. A valuation
matrix was developed in order to assist the commissions in providing
standardised compensation amounts for identified losses.
105. Once a damage assessment commission has taken a decision,
a proposed settlement is sent to the claimant. The claimants have
thirty days to accept and sign the settlement. Once approved by
the governor of the province, the compensation should be paid within
three months. If the claimants reject the settlement, they may seek
judicial remedies.
106. In 2006, the Court found that Law 5233 was capable of providing
an effective domestic remedy, and that claimants to the Court were
therefore required to claim before the damage assessment commissions
before their claims could be found admissible before the Court.
In September 2008, the Committee of Ministers decided to close examination
of the issue of denial of access to property in Turkey in light
of the Court’s above-mentioned 2006 admissibility decision and insurances
given by the Turkish authorities on the availability of a wide range
of remedies for situations falling outside Law 5233.
107. The Turkish authorities have actively informed the Court on
the implementation of Law 5233. They have also invited the Representative
of the United Nations Secretary-General on Human Rights of Internally Displaced
Persons, Walter Kälin, to comment on the government’s policies concerning
displaced persons, resulting in changes to the law such as the extension
of the filing deadline.
108. As of August 2009, 361 238 applications have been made to
the damage assessment commissions, which have grown in number from
76 to 105. Over half of all claims have been decided, including
120 557 awards of compensation and 69 750 negative decisions. A
total of 1 717 659 323 Turkish lira (YTL) has been awarded to date,
of which YTL 1 068 137 805 have been paid out.
109. Concerns about Law 5233 remain. Observers have alleged that
compensation awards have been set at a low level and noted that
significant categories of claims such as those for non-pecuniary
damages and displacement prior to 1987 are not addressed.
Indeed,
the Court’s decision itself has been criticised as premature, and
is thought to have undermined confidence in the efficacy of the
Court among Turkey’s Kurdish people.
110. Law 5233 provides compensation for lack of access to property
rather than restitution per se. However, this appears to comport
well with the nature of displacement in Turkey, in which property
was often destroyed but rarely occupied by others. By all appearances,
the small number of situations in which the presence of secondary
occupants obstructs the exercise of displaced persons’ rights can
be addressed through ordinary domestic judicial remedies. Turkey’s
Return to Village and Rehabilitation project has facilitated the
return of 25 000 families to villages in 14 provinces since its
inception in 1994. However, Turkey has yet to fully disband paramilitary
“Village Guard” units, which would facilitate voluntary return in
safety and dignity.
7. Conclusions
and recommendations
111. The Parliamentary Assembly in the draft resolution
invites the member states concerned to implement the Pinheiro Principles
on Housing and Property Restitution for Refugees and Displaced Persons
in the light of the relevant Council of Europe instruments and Recommendation
Rec(2006)6 of the Committee of Ministers on internally displaced
persons. It calls on member states to provide restitution for the
loss of access to property, including occupancy and tenancy rights;
to provide adequate compensation for loss of such properties where
restitution is not possible, as well as for other related harms;
and to achieve these ends through rapid, accessible and effective
procedures.
112. The Parliamentary Assembly in the draft recommendation further
invites the Committee of Ministers to instruct the relevant body
of the Council of Europe to undertake a study examining European
standards and practice related to restitution of the property of
displaced persons in European post-conflict settings. The study should
focus on a series of key legal and operational questions of particular
relevance in the European context, providing the basis for the development
of detailed guidelines on how to provide legal remedies for conflict-related
loss of access and rights to housing, land and property in Europe,
taking into account the Pinheiro Principles, existing Council of
Europe instruments and international law.