1. Procedure to date
1. This report stems from the
motion for a resolution presented by Mr Txueka and others.
After the departure from the Parliamentary
Assembly of the previous rapporteur, Mr Holger Haibach (Germany,
EPP/CD), the committee appointed me at its meeting in Strasbourg
on 13 April 2011.
2. Following my appointment as rapporteur, I met many non-governmental
organisations (NGOs), human rights defenders, their lawyers and
journalists and took part in the “Round table on Human Rights Defenders in
the Council of Europe area”, organised by the former Council of
Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, Mr Thomas Hammarberg, in Strasbourg
on 27and 28 October 2011. This event was an excellent opportunity to
gather first-hand information from human rights defenders from more
than 20 member States, to have discussions with them and learn about
their current problems.
3. Furthermore, on 26 January 2012, the committee held an exchange
of views with the participation of the following:
- Mr Thomas Hammarberg, Council
of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights;
- Ms Tanya Lokshina, Deputy Director, Human Rights Watch,
Moscow Office, Russia;
- Ms Brigitte Espuche, General Delegate, Anafé (Association
nationale d’assistance aux frontières pour les étrangers/National
Association of Assistance for Foreigners at the Borders), Paris,
France;
- Mr Milan Antonijevic, YUCOM (Lawyers’ Committee for Human
Rights), Belgrade, Serbia.
4. I am grateful to our experts for their contribution, which
has enabled me to better understand the situation of human rights
defenders, in particular in Russia and the Western Balkans, and
the situation of those protecting the rights of vulnerable groups
such as migrants, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons (LGBT
persons) or members of national minorities. I am also grateful to
Mr Thomas Hammarberg for having taken part in this exchange of views.
His experience in defending the rights of human rights defenders
is most valuable and I appreciated discussing this subject with
him on several occasions in Strasbourg. Moreover, I would like to
pay tribute to the work accomplished by my predecessor, and in particular
his 2009 report on the “Situation of human rights defenders in Council
of Europe member States”,
which remains a reference in this field.
2. The
situation of human rights defenders in general and the obstacles
they face
5. There is no established legal
definition of a “human rights defender”, but it is now generally
agreed that “human rights defenders are those who, individually
or together with others, act to promote and protect human rights”.
They may be individuals,
groups, NGOs, lawyers, journalists – what characterises a human
rights defender is not the legal qualification, but the nature of
his or her work.
6. Although in most European countries human rights defenders
are generally well protected in law and practice, they often face
obstacles in their daily activities.
Therefore the 2011 round table organised
by the Commissioner for Human Rights focused on “hindrances to the
work of human rights defenders and possible solutions”. In 2009,
my predecessor, Mr Haibach, noted that human rights defenders had
been confronted – occasionally or on a more regular basis – with
obstacles or a hostile environment, in particular in Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, the Russian Federation, Serbia,
Turkey and Ukraine.
Today, in 2012, I am obliged
to say that his findings are still valid. The situation of human
rights defenders has even deteriorated in some of these countries
.
7. Human rights defenders face various obstacles to their work,
including attacks on their physical and psychological integrity,
arbitrary arrest and detention, unfair trials, including criminal
prosecutions on trumped-up charges, administrative obstacles (in
particular concerning the registration process of human rights associations),
public defamation, restrictions on their freedom of movement and
to access to funds, etc. The authorities of certain Council of Europe
member States even put illicit pressure on legal representatives
of applicants before the European Court of Human Rights. Moreover,
human rights defenders face particular difficulties when they work
on sensitive issues such as fighting impunity for serious crimes,
exposing corruption, or defending the rights of LGBT persons, migrants,
and members of national or ethnic minorities.
8. Below I will provide some concrete examples of the obstacles
and restrictions human rights defenders face in Europe. I will focus
in particular on: threats and attacks on life and health, judicial
harassment (including arbitrary arrests and detention), administrative
obstacles, defamation campaigns, various restrictions on freedom
of assembly, freedom of association and freedom of expression and
impunity of the perpetrators of attacks against them. The examples
of hindrances mentioned in my report are not exhaustive; they were provided
by NGOs specialising in monitoring the situation of human rights
defenders (in particular the Observatory for the Protection of Human
Rights Defenders – “the Observatory”),
from
human rights defenders themselves and from the Office of the Council
of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights. As regards the geographical
scope of my report, I should like to explain that I will not cover
the (very troubling) situation of human rights defenders in Belarus,
as my mandate refers only to member States of the Council of Europe.
3. Examples
of hindrances and restrictions to the work of human rights defenders
3.1. Threats
and attacks on physical integrity
9. In his 2009 report,
Mr Haibach referred to abductions, ill-treatment
and even murders of human rights defenders, including the journalists
Hrant Dink in Turkey in 2007, Anna Politkovskaia in Russia in 2006
and Stanislav Markelov, a prominent Russian human rights lawyer,
who was shot dead in Moscow together with a trainee journalist in
2009. Against this background, the Assembly was particularly shocked
by the brutal murder in July 2009 of Natalia Estemirova, a highly
respected human rights defender and leading member of the Human
Rights Centre “Memorial” in Grozny (Chechnya). This murder took
place before the committee’s meeting of September 2009, to which
Ms Estemirova had been invited as an expert to speak about impunity in
the North Caucasus.
10. Since then, new attacks and even murders have been documented
in the North Caucasus region. At the committee’s hearing in January
2012, Ms Lokshina presented the situation of human rights defenders, including
lawyers and independent journalists, which caused special concern,
notably in Dagestan.
In December 2011, Mr Ganzhimurad
Kamalov, the publisher of a leading independent weekly, was murdered. The
start of 2012 was marked by the killing of a lawyer (Mr Umar Saidmagomedov)
and another local resident (Mr Rasul Kurbanov) by law enforcement
officials in Dagestan. Recently, Amnesty International expressed concern
about the intimidation of staff members of the human rights NGO
“Mashr” in the Republic of Ingushetia (in particular about the placement
of individuals in unacknowledged custody, without registering the
detainees and notifying their families, and about allegations of
torture and other ill-treatment of detainees in custody).
11. The general situation of human rights defenders in other parts
of Russia is worrying too. According to Human Rights Watch, activists
in various Russian cities were attacked by unidentified people in
the period between the December 2011 parliamentary elections and
the presidential election of 4 March 2012.
Moreover, on 24
March 2012, an arson attempt was committed against the office of
the NGO “Group of Free People” in Nizhny Novgorod.
12. According to Mr Hammarberg, in 2011, the situation was also
worrying in Turkey because of a number of attempts at intimidation,
attacks and murders perpetrated against journalists and human rights
defenders.
Moreover,
cases of physical attacks or threats against human rights defenders
working on sensitive issues have also been reported in south-eastern
Europe, namely in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia.
In Greece, some human rights defenders
and lawyers received direct threats against their physical integrity
and racist messages, following a complaint they had lodged about
racist statements made by Greek coastguards.
3.2. Judicial
harassment and arbitrary arrests and detention
13. Human rights defenders sometimes
face arbitrary arrests and detention and/or judicial harassment
– unfair trials, including criminal prosecutions on trumped-up charges.
14. Again, several worrying cases have been reported in Russia,
and in particular the North Caucasus region. For instance, a staff
member of the Joint Mobile Group of human rights organisations in
Chechnya (JMG), Mr Anton Ryzhov, was arbitrarily detained for several
hours during the night of 21 January 2012 and his laptop containing
files on human rights violations was seized.
Moreover, in
January 2012 a criminal investigation for disclosure of State secrets
was opened against Mr Igor Kalyapin, Chairperson of the Committee
against Torture and winner of the Assembly’s Human Rights Prize
in 2011,
and head of
the JMG. Fortunately, according to the JMG, a local court ordered
the return of Mr Ryzhov’s laptop and no criminal case has been opened
against Mr Kalyapin. I will continue to monitor both cases, as well
as that of Mr Oleg Orlov, Chairperson of the Executive Committee
of the Human Rights Centre “Memorial”. He was accused of slandering
Mr Ramzan Kadyrov, President of the Republic of Chechnya, expressing
his opinion on the responsibility for the murder of Natalia Estemirova.
After two and half years, Mr Orlov was finally acquitted on 20 January
2012. As noted by the Observatory, during that time, Human Rights
Centre “Memorial” was obliged to “use its resources and energy to
defend the legitimacy of its fight for human rights before courts
of law, instead of continuing their vital work”.
That said, the judgments of several
Russian courts in favour of embattled human rights defenders deserve
to be commended.
15. Unfortunately, judicial harassment and arbitrary arrest or
detention intensified after the crackdown on peaceful protests denouncing
alleged manipulations of the parliamentary elections in December
2011 in Russia. This might be illustrated by the case of Ms Evgenia
Chirikova, an environmental activist, who was searched and detained
at Moscow airport without reason on her return from a trip abroad
or that of Mr Philipp Kostenko,
a member of the Anti-Discrimination Centre “Memorial”, who in December
2011 was placed in administrative detention because of his participation
in a peaceful rally denouncing electoral irregularities.
16. The situation of human rights defenders in Turkey calls for
special concern too. For instance, Mr Halil Savda was prosecuted
and imprisoned for being a conscientious objector to military service
and for giving his public support to other conscientious objectors.
Another
example might be that of Ms Pinar Selek, a writer and sociologist
who actively supports the rights of women and disadvantaged communities,
such as the Kurdish and Armenian minorities. According to the Observatory,
since 1998, she has been subjected to ongoing judicial harassment,
including a false accusation of planting a bomb in Istanbul’s Egyptian
bazaar. Although she had been acquitted three times, the General
Prosecutor again requested the court to sentence her to life imprisonment.
The proceedings are still pending.
In October 2011,
a new wave of arbitrary arrests and detentions targeted, in particular,
members of associations of families of victims of abusive anti-terrorism policies
who struggle for the right to obtain the truth on enforced disappearance
cases and for a peaceful settlement of the Kurdish issue.
17. Other cases of harassment against human rights defenders have
been reported in Armenia,
Azerbaijan
(for
example, the recent arbitrary detention and judicial harassment
of Mr Ogtay Gulaliyev, an local activist of an organisation providing
civil assistance to populations affected by environmental catastrophe
) and Ukraine
(for example, in October 2010, searches and confiscation of case
documentation and computer equipment in the office of Vinnitsa Human
Rights Group).
A drastic example of such harassment
is the sudden demolition of the house of human rights defender Ms Leyla
Yunus in Baku (see paragraph 23 below).
3.3. Administrative
obstacles, restrictions on access to funds and other hindrances
18. Administrative burdens, in
particular ones that impose excessive administrative formalities,
including reporting or translation requirements, may have a nefarious
impact on the ability of NGOs and individuals to promote and defend
human rights.
One example is the imposition of
excessive formal requirements for the registration of NGOs, which
will be examined in more detail below.
19. Administrative obstacles may be also aimed at limiting human
rights defenders’ and NGO access to funding, especially from abroad.
For
instance, according to Human Rights Watch, there are plans in the Russian
Parliament to introduce new restrictions on foreign funding for
NGOs and the government may introduce a new inspection regime allowing
“unplanned” inspections of NGOs.
At
worst, human rights activists’ bank accounts may be frozen and the
transfer of foreign funds blocked.
20. Obstacles to freedom of movement may also hinder the work
of human rights defenders. For example, Mr Oleg Orlov (Human Rights
Centre “Memorial”) was prevented from travelling to Strasbourg for
the hearing in January 2012 due to the restrictions imposed because
of the above-mentioned criminal proceedings for slander.
3.4. Restrictions
on freedom of assembly, freedom of association and freedom of expression
21. Freedom of assembly, freedom
of association and freedom of expression, which are essential to
the work of human rights activists, are threatened in some member
States, as their exercise is often criminalised.
22. As regards freedom of expression, the situation in Azerbaijan
raises special concerns due to the harassment and selective prosecution
of journalists and youth activists expressing critical opinions.
My committee colleague Mr Christoph
Strässer, rapporteur on “The follow-up to the issue of political
prisoners in Azerbaijan”, will report on these cases in more detail.
In Turkey, the above-mentioned case of Mr Halil Savda, who was sentenced
to 100 days in prison for publicly supporting conscientious objection,
is clearly an example of a violation of freedom of expression.
The criminal prosecution of non-violent
expressions of support for conscientious objection (on the basis
of Article 318 of the Turkish Criminal Code) has given rise to several condemnations
of Turkey by the European Court of Human Rights and critical comments
by the Commissioner for Human Rights.
23. As regards freedom of association, numerous NGOs dealing with
the protection of human rights face administrative obstacles, in
particular concerning the registration process, due to restrictive
laws. Various impediments to the work of national and international
NGOs have been reported in Azerbaijan. For instance, the Human Rights
House Association in Baku was closed in March 2011 as, following
changes to the Azeri legislation on foreign NGOs; this organisation
had not concluded an agreement with the Ministry of Justice. The European
Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission)
and
the Expert Council on NGO Law of the Conference of International
Non-governmental Organisations of the Council of Europe (INGOs)
found that the new legislation on
NGOs did not meet international standards on democracy and human
rights.
Moreover, on 11 August 2011, the
property of Ms Leyla Yunus (a prominent human rights defender),
used as the office of the NGO Institute for Peace and Democracy
(IPD) and other NGOs, was totally demolished by bulldozers in the
framework of the “embellishment” of the city of Baku.
Thus
the situation in Azerbaijan gives, once again, rise to special concern.
24. In 2011, in some member States, holding peaceful assemblies
dedicated to human rights issues became more difficult (notably
in Armenia and Ukraine) and human rights defenders taking part in
them faced acts of violence from law enforcement authorities and
were sometimes imprisoned or fined (in particular in Azerbaijan –
in connection with protests held in Baku in March and April 2011
and
in Georgia).
Moreover, the judicial harassment, arrest
and, in some cases, arbitrary detention (like, as mentioned above,
that of Mr Philip Kostenko
) and the beating up by police
of some protesters
following the last two elections in Russia are other examples of
restrictions to the freedom of assembly. It goes without saying
that such acts discourage individuals, including human rights defenders,
from exercising this fundamental freedom.
3.5. Defamation
campaigns
25. Human rights defenders also
face attempts by the authorities and other actors to discredit their
work publicly. They are often accused of being “enemies”, “traitors”,
“spies” or “extremists”, after reporting human rights violations,
or having communicated with international organisations or domestic
or foreign media; they are also accused of being financially dependent
on foreign States or international organisations. Sometimes such
accusations are followed by slander and libel suits.
In fact, human rights defenders
have little recourse against such accusations, especially when the
media are controlled or influenced by the State.
26. In Russia, for instance, verbal attacks aimed at discrediting
human rights defenders, also through the mass media, increased in
the context of the recent elections. As reported by the Observatory,
in November and December 2011, Golos (“the Voice”), a major Russian
NGO specialising in election monitoring, became the target of a
State-organised defamation campaign and was accused of making money
from and acting upon the instructions of foreign governments.
This
defamation campaign was followed by cyberattacks and acts of judicial
harassment.
27. In Serbia, according to Mr Antonijevic, the situation of human
rights defenders is characterised by constant stigmatisation in
the media and by some politicians. Although the harassment of human
rights defenders by State actors had stopped as of 2008, several
incidents of hate speech by members of the government and parliamentarians
have been reported and intimidation of human rights defenders by
non-State actors, including certain media, still persists.
3.6. Impunity
28. The continued impunity of the
perpetrators of the most serious crimes against human rights defenders, such
as the murders of Natalia Estemirova in Russia
and Hrant Dink in Turkey
is particularly shocking. The “lack
of appreciable results” in the investigation into the murder of
Natalia Estemirova was criticised by Mr Hammarberg
and
the Assembly (including by my former committee colleague, Mr Dick
Marty).
As stated by the Human Rights Commissioner
during the January 2012 part-session of the Assembly, the conviction
of only the immediate perpetrators of Hrant Dink’s murder is not
satisfactory, as further investigation into the case would be needed
in order to shed more light on the background of the crime.
29. As Ms Lokshina explained during the hearing in January 2012,
impunity for murders of human rights activists in the North Caucasus
(such as Natalia Estemirova, Zarema Sadulaeva and Alik Dzhabrailov
)
still prevails. The murder of publisher Khadzhimurat Kamalov (in
Dagestan, in December 2011),
and
the beating of journalists Mikhail Beketov (in November 2008) and
Oleg Kashin (November 2010) also still await elucidation.
30. Recently, in March 2012, several NGOs were concerned about
the closure of proceedings concerning an assault by police officers
on Ms Sapiyat Magomedova, a lawyer dealing with human rights violations
in Dagestan. In June 2010, Ms Magomedova was beaten by police officers
when she was visiting a client and lost consciousness; the case
against the accused officers was dismissed, as “no objective data
has been produced to establish the truth”, according to the public
prosecutor.
Similarly, in February 2012, in
Saint Petersburg, Mr Philip Kostenko was seriously beaten by unidentified
individuals and then threatened by e-mail. The police nevertheless
refused to conduct an investigation into the assault.
31. As stated by Mr Antonijevic at the January 2012 hearing, investigations
are still pending concerning the murder of certain independent journalists
in Serbia. Although the new provisions of the Criminal Code allow
the public prosecutor to initiate cases when human rights defenders’
security is under threat, not a single case of that type has been
reported so far.
3.7. The
situation of human rights defenders dealing with specific issues
32. Lawyers, in particular those
working on politically sensitive cases or fighting against impunity
for serious crimes or corruption, might also be the target of pressures
and reprisals by those trying to escape being held to account, and
of judicial harassment. In Turkey, a recent campaign against lawyers
defending clients in anti-terrorism cases led to the arbitrary arrest
and detention on remand of 40 (forty!) lawyers.
In Azerbaijan, some lawyers have
been disbarred or publicly defamed (for example, Mr Elchin Sadikhov,
one of Eynulla Fatullayev’s defence lawyers).
Moreover, the authorities of some member
States still
put illicit
pressure on those who defend applicants and/or themselves before
the European Court of Human Rights, or when they assist victims of
human rights violations in exhausting national remedies before applying
to the Court in Strasbourg (for example in Ukraine or Turkey).
33. Human rights defenders dealing with “unpopular” issues, such
as fighting discrimination and upholding the rights of LGBT persons,
irregular migrants, women or members of national or ethnic minorities
(including Roma), meet indirect obstacles to their work throughout
Europe; I was made aware of particular cases in Belgium, Cyprus,
France and Greece.
34. In Cyprus, for instance, Mr Doros Polycarpou, Executive Director
of KISA (an NGO combating social discrimination and racism and promoting
aliens’ rights), is being prosecuted on charges of rioting: in November 2010,
his organisation organised a multicultural festival in Larnaca,
whose participants were attacked by extreme nationalist demonstrators.
As a result of this confrontation and insufficient preventive action
by the police, several people were seriously injured. According
to some NGOs, the proceedings against Mr Polycarpou are based on
false accusations and have strongly affected the organisation’s
capacity to support migrants in critical situations.
35. As stated at the January hearing by Ms Espuche, the situation
of defenders of aliens’ rights in France has also deteriorated recently.
Since 2007, activists denouncing forcible expulsions of foreigners
have been subject to criminal proceedings.
In Calais, the police used violence
against activists and journalists and wounded some of the immigrants
slated for expulsion. The situation is also worrying on the French
island of Mayotte, where some activists defending aliens’ and social
rights have been subjected to judicial and administrative harassment,
including non-prolongation of their residence permits.
37. Women human rights defenders remain a particularly vulnerable
group, especially in south-east Europe.
As stressed by Mr Antonijevic, they are particularly
vulnerable in Serbia.
3.8. Origin
of hindrances and restrictions
38. In many cases, State authorities
are directly responsible for impediments to the work of human rights defenders
and their harassment. However, as stressed by my predecessor, such
acts may also be committed by “a variety of ‘non-State’ actors (armed
groups, organised crime, businesses such as transnational corporations,
ultra-nationalist or other groups and individuals promoting hate
and intolerance)”.
As stressed by the Observatory
in its 2011 Annual Report, human rights defenders in France are
more often confronted with abuses of power by companies in a dominant
position (“strategic lawsuit against public participation – SLAPP”).
Media, especially those which are State-controlled,
can also play a very detrimental role vis-à-vis human rights defenders,
as they might tend to intimidate them in public for various political
or other reasons (see above). Moreover, it was also reported during
the October 2011 Round-table that so-called GONGOs (NGOs set up
by and loyal to the government) can impede the work of human rights
defenders, by creating serious rifts within civil society and spreading
misinformation (for example, in Azerbaijan and in Georgia).
39. Thus the situation of human rights defenders in Europe is
still far from satisfactory and it is important for the international
community to react swiftly to hostile acts directed against them.
4. Initiatives
taken at the international level to strengthen the protection and
promotion of human rights defenders
4.1. Initiatives
taken within the United Nations system and in Europe
40. Several initiatives have been
taken at the international and European level to protect human rights defenders
in carrying out their activities and recognise the importance of
their work. However, most of the adopted instruments, taking the
form of “declarations” or “guidelines”, are not legally binding.
41. In 1998, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the United
Nations Declaration on Human Rights Defenders (“Declaration on the
Right and Responsibility of Individuals, Groups and Organs of Society
to Promote and Protect Universally Recognized Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms”),
in
recognition of the critical role of human rights defenders and the
difficulties they face. This is the first United Nations instrument
that acknowledges the importance and legitimacy of the activities
engaged in by human rights defenders.
42. Other international regional organisations, such as the Organization
for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and the European
Union have also taken steps to reinforce the protection of human
rights defenders. In 2007, the Office for Democratic Institutions
and Human Rights of the Organization for Security and Co-operation
in Europe (OSCE/ODIHR) established a Focal Point for Human Rights
Defenders and National Human Rights Institutions,
which “closely monitors the situation
of human rights defenders, identifies issues of concern, and seeks
to promote and protect their interests”. ODIHR also used to issue annual
reports on human rights defenders in the OSCE region. In 2004, the
Council of the European Union adopted “European Union guidelines
on human rights defenders” (slightly revised in December 2008).
The purpose of these guidelines
is to identify ways and means to effectively work towards the promotion
and protection of human rights defenders in third countries, within
the context of the European Union Common Foreign and Security Policy.
They also recommend strengthening existing regional mechanisms for
the protection of human rights defenders.
4.2. The
role of the Council of Europe
43. Through its bodies and institutions,
the Council of Europe has well-established methods of co-operating with
human rights NGOs and activists and an array of human rights instruments
to create and promote an enabling environment for the work of human
rights defenders.
44. The Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights possesses
a specific mandate to protect human rights defenders in the Council
of Europe member States and to intervene in urgent cases, in particular
through his country visits and a constant dialogue both with human
rights defenders and the national authorities.
45. In February 2008, the Committee of Ministers of the Council
of Europe took an important step towards the effective protection
of human rights defenders by adopting the “Declaration on Council
of Europe action to improve the protection of human rights defenders
and promote their activities”.
This declaration further reinforced
the role of the Commissioner for Human Rights, who thus became “the
regional mechanism” for the protection of human rights defenders
in the Council of Europe member States. Moreover, in March 2011,
the Committee of Ministers adopted its “Guidelines on eradicating
impunity for serious human rights violations”.
The guidelines aim at preventing
and combating impunity, notably when it arises from inactivity of
State institutions, including the judiciary. They stress that impunity
should be fought “as a matter of justice for the victims”,
including human rights defenders
and their families.
46. Moreover, the Conference of International Non-governmental
Organisations of the Council of Europe, the voice of the civil society
within the organisation, includes more than 400 INGOs with participatory
status and encourages dialogue between NGOs and members of parliament
and local and regional authorities.
4.3. Inter-mechanisms
meetings
47. In 2008 in Brussels, the Observatory
for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders took the initiative
to gather for the first time all holders of institutional mandates
for the protection of human rights defenders: the United Nations
Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders, the
African Commission Special Rapporteur on the situation of human
rights defenders in Africa, the Functional Unit on Human Rights Defenders
of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the Office of
the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe, the
Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights of the Organisation for
Security and Cooperation in Europe and the European Union.
The meeting was aimed at drawing
a state of play of the existing means and techniques of protection
and finding ways to enhance co-ordination and complementarities.
48. So far, four such meetings have taken place. On 8 and 9 March
2012, the fourth “inter-mechanisms” meeting was hosted by the Office
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva.
This year some of the discussions
focused on how to ensure accountability for human rights violations
against human rights defenders. They also focused on the right to
receive and access funding, including foreign funding, reflecting
renewed preoccupations about restrictions by States in this regard.
5. The
role of national parliaments and the Parliamentary Assembly
49. States have a primordial responsibility
to protect human rights defenders’ integrity and ensure their safety
when they are at risk.
When other State powers
– namely the judiciary, administrative bodies, the police and public
prosecutors – fail to do so, it is up to parliamentarians to stand
up in support of human rights defenders, notably by enacting legislation
allowing them to carry out their activities in appropriate conditions and
by monitoring developments on the ground, pointing out abuses and
calling for accountability where necessary. Parliamentarians may
also involve human rights NGOs and defenders in the process of enacting legislation
that touches upon human rights issues, including “sensitive” ones
like the rights of minority groups.
50. The issue of communication at national level between the government
and parliament, on the one side, and human rights NGOs, on the other,
was stressed during the January 2012 exchange of views before our committee
and also at the October 2011 Round-table organised by the Office
of the Commissioner for Human Rights. During the latter, several
representatives of NGOs complained that they were not involved in
drafting relevant legislation.
They stressed that human rights defenders’
participation in drafting legislation was permitted only when it
was politically expedient and that participation on a regular basis
for the purpose of improving human rights protection was more limited.
In
some cases, public consultation was perceived as a “formal paper
exercise”, mostly last-minute, rushed and lacking genuine interest
(for example in Bulgaria, Cyprus, Georgia and Hungary).
Human rights defenders are also sometimes
effectively excluded from the consultation process because of the
negative attitude of the authorities (for example in Azerbaijan),
or not consulted on some delicate issues such as minority rights
(for example, organisations promoting Roma rights in Hungary and
Romania).
51. It was proposed that NGOs dealing with human rights protection
and human rights defenders should be more involved in the process
of drafting legislation. A wide public consultation is a crucial
element of drafting legislation in a democratic society, as human
rights NGOs and activists are well placed to provide useful input. Therefore,
they should be consulted at the earliest stage of drafting legislation,
not only
pro forma and with appropriate
time limits. They should be consulted in particular on such delicate
issues as the rights of minority groups, including LGBT persons,
members of national minorities, aliens, Roma, etc. At the round-table,
it was suggested that public hearings on specific pieces of legislation
should be organised more often.
Moreover, it was proposed that in States,
where public consultation is very limited, international organisations
might “explore opportunities for increasing the participation of
human rights defenders and civil society through international structures
and mechanisms”.
52. At European level, parliamentarians may, through their membership
in the Assembly, support and protect human rights defenders across
the continent. This may be done in particular through:
- holding debates on relevant
human rights topics;
- awarding the Assembly’s Human Rights Prize;
- involving civil society representatives, including human
rights defenders in their work;
- making use of the mechanism of “parliamentary diplomacy”,
through contacts with their counterparts in other countries.
53. Our committee has a long tradition of co-operating with human
rights defenders. Through its chairpersons, rapporteurs and/or through
its Sub-Committee on Human Rights, it has always endeavoured to support
human rights defenders in difficult situations, by inviting them
for exchanges of views or “sponsoring” side events with their participation,
issuing ad hoc statements,
press releases and/or written interventions with the competent authorities.
My predecessor regularly reacted to urgent appeals from human rights
NGOs or individuals through confidential letters to the relevant
authorities – these are examples of parliamentary diplomacy. Such
initiatives have been taken in consultation with human rights defenders/NGOs
concerned or persons in direct contact with them in order to avoid
possible counter-productive results.
54. My predecessor’s practice in this respect must be pursued,
as I consider that early warning in cases of serious impediments
to the work of human rights defenders is of crucial importance.
Whether this be by me, as the current rapporteur, my successor,
or even a newly appointed General Rapporteur, will still have to
be determined. Parliamentarians, including the Assembly’s (possibly
General) Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders should also alert
their own networks (colleagues, Ministry of Foreign Affairs or embassy
in the country concerned, etc.) in appropriate cases.
6. Conclusion
55. In its
Resolution 1660 (2009) and
Recommendation
1866 (2009) of April 2009, the Assembly considered that the Council
of Europe should further increase its contribution to the protection
of human rights defenders. Today, the situation of human rights
defenders in Europe is far from satisfactory and it is important
for the international community to react swiftly to hostile acts
directed against them. Fortunately, many international organisations
are aware of the gravity of the problem and have already taken steps
to reinforce the protection and promotion of “those who work for
the rights of the others”. However, in the Council of Europe member States
still more efforts must be made to protect human rights defenders
and to remove hindrances to their work, notwithstanding the seriousness
of these obstacles. Whilst the situation of human rights defenders
in some member States (especially in the North Caucasus region of
the Russian Federation,
where it is also complicated by
the issue of terrorism) cannot be compared with that of activists
in other parts of Europe, this does not mean that the latter do
not need further protection.
56. Impunity for those responsible for serious human rights violations
against human rights defenders is an important issue of concern,
as a number of serious human rights violations have not yet been
elucidated. It is therefore useful to recall Assembly
Resolution 1675 (2009) and
Recommendation
1876 (2009) on the state of human rights in Europe: the need to
eradicate impunity
and the Committee of Ministers’
Guidelines on “Eradicating impunity for serious human rights violations”
of March 2011. Impunity of State and non-State actors responsible
for such violations must not be tolerated. It should also be stressed
here that serious human rights violations committed against such
defenders has a chilling effect on the activity of the others –
for example, the murder of Natalia Estemirova had a chilling effect
on the activities of North Caucasus NGOs.
But,
as the example of Mr Polycarpou in Cyprus shows, judicial harassment
may also have a chilling impact on the activities of human rights
NGOs. As stressed by the President of the International Federation
for Human Rights (FIDH), Ms Souhayr Belhassen, “Legal harassment
is less spectacular than physical attacks, but it nonetheless participates
in instilling fear and strengthening the system of impunity”. This
statement was corroborated by that of Mr Gerald Staberock, Secretary
General of the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT): “The chilling
effect of these proceedings for human rights defenders can only
be repaired by clear and unambiguous stands by the authorities on
the legitimacy of critical human rights defenders’ work. Instead
of wasting legal resources on proceedings like this, efforts should
concentrate on ensuring legal accountability for human rights violations,
including the killing of human rights defenders”.
57. States, and national parliaments, should refrain from adopting
laws that impose direct or indirect restrictions (through judicial
and administrative requirements or obstacles) on human rights NGOs
and defenders. Laws allowing such restrictions should be abolished.
One example might be that of funding, which is fundamental for carrying
out human rights defenders’ activities. Since the right to “solicit,
receive and utilize resources for the express purpose of promoting
human rights” has been recognised in the United Nations Declaration
of 1999,
human rights activists should
continue to be allowed to receive external funding for their work
and they should certainly not be criminalised for receiving such
funds. As acknowledged by the Commissioner for Human Rights and
the OSCE, a call for an international “Human Rights Defenders Fund” could
be further investigated with the participation of various international
actors.
58. In order to reinforce the protection of human rights defenders,
all member States should give appropriate follow-up to the “Declaration
of the Committee of Ministers on Council of Europe action to improve
the protection of human rights defenders and promote their activities”
of 6 February 2008. The Council of Europe bodies and institutions
should continue contributing to the creation of a favourable environment
for human rights defenders, in particular through awareness-raising
and training activities, notably those targeting law enforcement
bodies and the media. Member States should also continue to give
the necessary political and financial support to the institution
of the Commissioner for Human Rights, the Council of Europe Conference of
International Non-Governmental Organisations and the Expert Council
on NGO Law. But all this is not new and therefore other ideas could
also be considered. For example, the Council of Europe could examine
the introduction of a systematic alert mechanism in the case of
human rights defenders at risk. This idea was already mentioned
in the report of my predecessor, Mr Haibach.
During the October 2011 Round-table, participants
stressed once again the importance of raising individual cases of
human rights defenders who are facing threats.
Thus, further consideration could be given
to the idea of establishing an international mechanism of rapid
response to serious violations perpetrated or threatened against
human rights defenders. Moreover, member States could also improve
the involvement of NGOs dealing with human rights protection in
the process of enacting legislation, as their participation in this
process could have a considerable impact on the quality of enacted
laws.
59. I am convinced that the Parliamentary Assembly has an important
role to play in promoting and protecting human rights defenders.
Political attention paid by an international parliamentary body
can increase the visibility and impact of their work, and can, when
the need arises, result in swift and strong condemnations – by the
international community – of any illegitimate action taken against
human rights defenders. By so doing it may help prevent violence
and hostility against human rights defenders, especially in countries
that still have a poor track record regarding human rights observance.
In this context, we, our committee and the Assembly as a whole,
may need to reflect upon the need to put in place a General Rapporteur
on Human Rights Defenders who could react rapidly – when the need
arises – by means of “parliamentary diplomacy” to urgent appeals
coming from human rights NGOs and activists all over Europe. The
Assembly, through such a rapporteur, should reinforce co-operation
with the Office of the Commissioner for Human Rights and the new Commissioner,
Mr Nils Muižnieks. As our mandates are complementary, we must concentrate
our efforts to support and consolidate the development of civil
society, including the indispensable work of human rights defenders.