1. Introduction
1.1. Procedure
1. On 27 April 2012, the Bureau of the Parliamentary
Assembly decided to transmit the topic of “The future of the European
Court of Human Rights and the Brighton Declaration” to the Committee
on Legal Affairs and Human Rights for report,

mandating it to follow up on the
implementation of the
Declaration adopted at the High Level Conference on the future of
the European Court of Human Rights (“the Court”) which was organised by
the United Kingdom chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers in
Brighton on 19 and 20 April 2012. At its meeting on 21 May 2012,
the committee designated me as rapporteur.
2. On 11 December 2012, the committee considered a
background
memorandum prepared by the Secretariat upon my instructions. Upon
my request, the committee agreed to change the title of the report
to “The effectiveness of the European Convention on Human Rights:
the Brighton Declaration and beyond”, which underscores that the
viability of the system of the European Convention on Human Rights
(
ETS
No. 5, “the Convention”) depends not only on the functioning
of the Court, but of the Convention mechanism as a whole.
3. With the agreement of the committee, I organised two hearings
on the longer-term future of the system encapsulated in the European
Convention on Human Rights. On 28 May 2013, the committee held an
exchange
of views with the participation of Ms Nina Vajić, Professor of
International Law at the University of Zagreb, Croatia, and former
judge and Section President of the European Court of Human Rights,
and Mr Vít Schorm, then Chairperson of the
Committee
of Experts on the Reform of the Court (DH-GDR), and Agent of the Government of the Czech Republic
to the European Court of Human Rights. The second
exchange
of views, likewise with the participation of Mr Vít Schorm, then
Chairperson of the
Steering
Committee for Human Rights (CDDH), and Mr Morten Ruud, Chairperson of the DH-GDR
and Senior Advisor to the Norwegian Ministry of Justice, was held
on 25 June 2014. These experts provided valuable insights and helped
me identify the most pertinent challenges that will need to be addressed
in the future so as to consolidate and reinforce the effectiveness
of the Convention mechanism. I also drew guidance from the
responses to the “
open
call for information, proposals and views” of the
DH-GDR on the longer-term reform of the Convention system, which, in
my view, provide a very wide and nuanced picture of the challenges
likely to face the Convention system in the years, and possibly
decades to come, as perceived by various civil society actors and
academics from across Europe.
1.2. The issues at stake
4. I wish to note at the outset that I profoundly regret
that ongoing reform debates at both national and European levels
still largely revolve around the future of the European Court of
Human Rights. Especially in light of the criticism currently facing
the Court, this sends a dangerously misleading message that the
prevailing problems can be attributed, first and foremost, to the
Court itself.
5. I recall that the Convention system is based upon the premise
of a shared responsibility between the Council of Europe institutions
and the High Contracting Parties for ensuring the viability of its
mechanisms, as was reaffirmed in the Brighton Declaration (paragraph
4). Ensuring the long-term authority and effectiveness of the system
will naturally have to be a joint enterprise for the executive,
legislative and judicial organs, at both national and European levels.
6. As regards the scope of this report, I recall that the CDDH
is expected to submit to the Committee of Ministers its report containing
opinions and possible proposals concerning the longer-term future
of the Convention system and the Court, in accordance with paragraphs
35(c)-(f) of the Brighton Declaration, by the end of 2015. Pending
the final proposals at the inter-governmental level,

I
intend to provide, in this report, an interim assessment of follow-up
action that has been taken subsequent to the Brighton Declaration
of 20 April 2012. I also identify areas which, in my view, require
further action by both the Council of Europe institutions and member
States.
7. The Assembly has repeatedly affirmed its commitment to guaranteeing
the long-term authority and effectiveness of the Strasbourg mechanism
for the protection of human rights.The
ongoing reform process has occupied a prominent place on the Assembly’s
agenda for several years, and the Committee on Legal Affairs and
Human Rights has examined a range of issues related to safeguarding
the effectiveness of the Convention system, such as the effectiveness
of the Convention at national level and the implementation of the
Court’s judgments by Contracting States. The Committee’s work has,
inter alia, culminated in the adoption,
by the Assembly, of
Resolution
1856 (2012) and
Recommendation
1991 (2012) on guaranteeing the authority and effectiveness of the
European Convention on Human Rights,
Resolution 1982 (2014) and
Recommendation 2039
(2014) “The European Convention on Human Rights: the need to
reinforce the training of legal professionals”,

and of
Resolution 2009 (2014) and
Recommendation
2051 (2014) on the reinforcement of the independence of the European
Court of Human Rights.

In preparing the present
report, I was therefore able to draw extensively from the work of
several of my colleagues.
8. With a view to addressing the main concerns evoked at the
Brighton Conference, the report focuses on two issues that I perceive
to be the most pertinent when dealing with the long-term future
of the Convention system: first, the need to reinforce the implementation
of Convention standards at national level and, second, ways and
means to foster the full, effective and prompt execution of judgments
of the European Court of Human Rights.
2. Background:
the Brighton Conference and Declaration
9. I should like to recall that the 2012 Brighton High-Level
Conference on the Future of the European Court of Human Rights was
a continuation of the reform process set in motion with the adoption
of Protocol No. 14 to the Convention (
CETS
No. 194) in 2004, and the
Report of
the Group of Wise Persons submitted to the Committee of Ministers in 2006, which,
in turn, was followed by the high-level conferences in
Interlaken (2010) and
Izmir (2011). In both the
Interlaken
Declaration and the
Izmir
Declaration, member States reaffirmed their commitment to the Convention
system and their intention to give new impetus to the reform process.
10. In this connection, I share the reaction voiced by many –
among them our former Committee Chairperson, Ms Herta Däubler-Gmelin,
in her
conclusions of our committee meeting held in Paris in December 2009,
and echoed by Morten Ruud during the committee’s
exchange
of views in June 2014 – with regard to the title of these conferences,
which is misleading for it suggests that the current challenges
facing the Convention mechanism can be remedied by reforming the
Court alone.
11. The Brighton Declaration reaffirmed the pre-eminent role of
the Court in protecting human rights in Europe, while at the same
time highlighting each State’s responsibility to effectively implement
the Convention domestically and the subsidiary role of the Court
in cases where violations were not remedied at the national level.
It covered a variety of issues that had been identified as prerequisites
for the effective functioning of the Convention mechanism, ranging
from the implementation of the Convention at national level and
the execution of the Court’s judgments, to interaction between the
Court and national authorities, the lodging and processing of individual
applications to the Court as well as issues pertaining to the latter’s
judges and case law, and to the long-term future of the Convention
system.
3. Follow-up to the
Brighton Declaration
3.1. Reforms tied directly
to the working of the European Court of Human Rights
12. It is apparent that the reforms introduced by virtue
of Protocol No. 14 to the Convention (which entered into force already
before the Brighton Conference), in particular the single-judge
mechanism and the creation, by the Court, of a special filtering
section within its Registry to make full use of that mechanism,

continue to produce
positive effects. The number of pending cases has strongly decreased,
from 151 600 on 1 January 2012 to 78 000 as at 1 November 2014.
13. These procedures have led to a more efficient filtering of
incoming applications and allocation of meritorious cases. In addition,
the Court’s prioritisation of applications and its increasingly
frequent use of the pilot judgment procedure – both internal reforms
that pre-date the Interlaken Conference – likewise continue to show
positive effects. Certain pilot judgments have led to the creation
of new, effective remedies in a number of member States.

The Court has made progress in
improving the dissemination of its case law and it should be congratulated
for the continuous development of its information policy. Its
annual
reports highlight judgments and decisions which establish new
or clarify existing principles, or raise issues of general interest on
which the Court had not previously had a chance to pronounce itself.
The Court maintains its practice of regularly publishing up-to-date
thematic and country-specific
factsheets, and has recently made available a Turkish and Russian
version of its case law database HUDOC. The latter, moreover, now
contains more than 10 000 translations covering 27 languages. Last
but not least, the Court has also ensured that information for people
wishing to apply to the Court is now available
online in all the official languages of the States Parties
to the Convention.
14. The fact that the Court has demonstrated its ability to maintain
a high quality in its legal reasoning while at the same time significantly
reducing the backlog of inadmissible applications bears witness
to the effectiveness of its working methods. External auditors have
highlighted that “[t]he Court is one of the best performing bodies
we have ever audited”,

and
the overall tenor at a recent conference on the long-term future of
the Convention system, held in Oslo on 7 and 8 April 2014 (
Oslo
Conference), was that, as far as the working methods of the Court
were concerned, there merely remained some “fine-tuning” to be done.

These developments
are likely to continue, and the backlog of manifestly inadmissible
cases pending before single- judge formations is expected to be
eradicated by late 2015.

With broader tasks
now being assigned to the filtering section,

there
is reason to be confident (as was said during the committee’s
exchange
of views in June 2014) that a balance can be achieved between
incoming applications and cases disposed of, which will enable the
Court to further reduce delays in issuing judgments without compromising
the quality of its reasoning. Against this background, it does not
come as a surprise that the Court’s Registrar, Erik Fribergh, asserted
that the Court could continue to work efficiently for many years
with roughly the same set-up as today.

15. Can we regard these achievements and the steps undertaken
to date as reassurance that the Court is capable of effectively
tackling the remaining challenges? As was outlined at the
Oslo
Conference,

these challenges include
the long time lapse between submitting an application to the Court
and getting a judgment (commonly referred to as the “Brighton backlog”),

a lack of reasoning,
in particular in inadmissibility decisions, and a lack of effective
implementation of certain of the Court’s judgments and interim measures.
16. But most importantly, the considerable backlog of admissible
and potentially well-founded applications remains a problem, as
acknowledged by the Committee of Ministers.

The Court’s
2013
statistics suggest that the impressive number of decisions issued
by single judges (more than 160 000 over the past two years

) could
only be achieved to the detriment of the treatment of Chamber cases:

whereas in 2010, 1 499
Chamber judgments were rendered, this figure dropped to 916 in 2013.
The backlog is particularly worrying with regard to meritorious,
non-repetitive cases of a lower priority and repetitive cases.

17. As regards the latter, however, I note with satisfaction that
the Court is starting to proactively tackle its growing backlog
of repetitive cases, having devised a swifter procedure for communicating
to governments cases that correspond to well-established case law
and may be disposed of by means of friendly settlement. I also understand
that the Court is in the process of devising procedures to deal
with repetitive cases in a more streamlined way, supported by the
use of information technology tools, and that it has already introduced
an approach of specialisation, within the Court’s Registry, which
allows for a speedier handling of certain groups of cases. The Court’s
Registrar has confirmed that the Court will be able to deal with
the annual influx of cases, respecting the time limits set by the
Brighton Declaration, once the backlog has been eradicated.

This
can be regarded as yet a further confirmation (if that were necessary)
that the Court is living up to its responsibility to strive for
enhancing the efficiency of its working methods and allocating its
scarce resources in a manner that allows it to effectively respond
to the most pressing general issues, while not abandoning other
cases.
18. Moreover, the backlog of well-founded applications could be
of a temporary nature. The Registrar of the Court presented a strategy
that would allow it to swiftly eradicate this backlog. He argued
that the Court should be given a temporary extraordinary budget
of a total of 30 million euros as from 2015/16, to be used over
a period of eight years during which an additional 40 or so lawyers
would be able to clear a substantial part of the remaining backlog.
The Registrar made a convincing case for the need for these additional
resources. I fully endorse his proposal and hope that the Assembly
will call on the Committee of Ministers to ensure that the stated
amount is made available to the Court. Given that member States
have repeatedly confirmed their commitment to strengthen the effectiveness
of the Court’s functioning, this is an opportunity to put rhetoric
into practice and discharge their responsibilities under the Convention.
19. Another solution would be to call for a stricter interpretation
of the existing admissibility criteria and the idea that amendments
to the Rules of Court should be subject to the approval of governments.
But this question falls squarely within the Court’s competence to
design its own procedures in a manner that will allow for tailor-made
responses to challenges. I concur with Professor Føllesdal that
“[f]or the Court to maintain its authority in pursuit of its objectives,
it must thus enjoy independence from particular States, and a broad
scope of discretion”.

20. Moreover, an examination of the most pressing outstanding
issues listed above reveals that these must first and foremost be
tackled by the member States of the Council of Europe, rather than
the Court.

The challenges largely
stem from the flood of repetitive cases reaching the Court from
certain member States with systemic problems. These States Parties,
most notably Italy, Ukraine, Turkey, the Russian Federation, Serbia, Romania
and the United Kingdom (all of which have more than 1 000 repetitive
cases pending before the Court),

bear
primary responsibility for this unacceptable situation.

I agree with the Court
that it cannot be the case that the Court must invest a significant
proportion of its scarce resources in dealing with repetitive applications.

21. But repetitive applications are not the sole cause for concern.
A careful perusal of the Court’s case law database HUDOC has shown
that, for example, over a period of one year (October 2013 – October
2014), the Court has found major human rights violations – that
is (substantial and procedural) violations of Articles 2 (right to
life) and 3 (prohibition of torture, inhuman and degrading treatment
or punishment) of the Convention – in respect of 23 Contracting
States, most notably Russia (130), Turkey (82), Romania (68), Ukraine
(43), the Republic of Moldova (42), Bulgaria (35) and Greece (30).

22. In other words, in order for the ongoing reform process to
be successful, “improvements in Strasbourg must be reflected by
improvements at the national level, through better observance of
the Convention and the existence of effective domestic remedies
in case of breach”, as the President of the European Court of Human Rights,
Dean Spielmann, aptly stated in an
address in May 2014. It is crucial that we now shift our focus
to the responsibility of member States, in conformity with the principle
of subsidiarity upon which the Convention system is based. This
is all the more true since it is only a small number of States that
are burdening the Court, accounting for 67.5% of all applications;
in 2013, these were Russia, Ukraine, Italy, Serbia and Turkey.

Action needs
to be taken to remedy this situation.
23. The Brighton Declaration also called for a number of specific
amendments to be made to the Convention. These are reflected in
Protocols Nos. 15 and 16 to the Convention, which were opened for
ratification in 2013.
24. By virtue of amending Protocol No. 15

(
CETS
No. 213) to the Convention, an explicit reference to the principle
of subsidiarity and the margin of appreciation doctrine will be
inserted in the Preamble of the Convention. In this connection,
I recall the reservations expressed by the
Court and acknowledged in Assembly
Opinion 283 (2013) on draft Protocol No. 15 amending the Convention for
the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms about the
wording of the new recital. The reference to the margin of appreciation doctrine
must be understood as being “consistent with the doctrine of the
margin of appreciation as developed by the Court in its case law”,
as emphasised in the
explanatory
report to Protocol No. 15 (paragraph 7).
25. The remaining changes introduced by Protocol No. 15

relate to the extension of the age
limit for judges, admissibility criteria and objections to a decision
of relinquishment of a case to the Grand Chamber. I endorse the
Assembly’s view, expressed in its above-mentioned
Opinion 283 (2013), that the amendments to the Convention will have a positive
impact on the Court’s workload and will contribute to further strengthening the
quality and independence of (candidates for) judges to the Court.
I therefore encourage all the High Contracting Parties to swiftly
sign and ratify this amending Protocol.
26. Additional
Protocol
No. 16 
(CETS No. 214) to the Convention
introduces the possibility for the highest national courts to request
the Court to give a non-binding

advisory
opinion on a question of principle relating to the interpretation
or application of the rights and freedoms defined in the Convention
or its protocols. As rightly stated in Assembly
Opinion 285 (2013) on “Draft Protocol No. 16 to the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms”, the entry
into force of Protocol No. 16 will create new opportunities for
judicial dialogue between the Strasbourg Court and higher national
courts of those States which opted to ratify it, besides adjudication
of individual and inter-State applications.

It
will allow the Court to clarify
ex ante the
scope of certain Convention rights, elucidate its own case law

and
pronounce itself on recurring problems in a non-adversarial procedure.
In so doing, it has the potential to ameliorate both the quality
of national courts’ judgments and the implementation of the judgments
of the European Court of Human Rights, as observed by Julia Laffranque,
Judge at the Court in respect of Estonia.

Last
but not least, active interaction between courts

will secure the margin of appreciation
while ensuring that it is not excessively wide. It accommodates
the repeated calls for reinforcing the notion of subsidiarity. I
therefore believe that the entry into force of Protocol No. 16 will
foster a positive perception of the Court as well as the feeling
of “ownership” of the Convention among national courts, as it will
create another forum for national authorities to explain any particularities
of their respective national legal systems that the Court should
have regard to, leaving the choice of means to achieve the goal
set by the Court to the domestic authorities. This is why I draw attention
to the Assembly’s call on States Parties to swiftly sign and ratify
this additional Protocol.
3.2. Accession of the
European Union to the European Convention on Human Rights
27. As stated by the Assembly in its
Resolution 1610 (2008) on the accession of the European Union/European Community
to the European Convention on Human Rights and reflected in
Recommendation 1834 (2008), human rights protection in Europe will be further strengthened
by the forthcoming
accession of the European Union to the Convention. The Assembly
has repeatedly acknowledged that the intensified partnership between
the Council of Europe and the European Union will enhance the coherent
application of human rights in Europe and “should ultimately lead
to a common space for human rights protection across the continent
in the interest of all people in Europe”.

28. The Committee on Political Affairs and Democracy is currently
following up on this issue and will present its text on “The Memorandum
of Understanding between the Council of Europe and the European
Union – evaluation 5 years after”
![(38)
Doc. 13655 (rapporteur: Ms Kerstin
Lundgren, Sweden, ALDE). [See also Resolution 2029 (2015) and Recommendation 2060 (2015)),
adopted on 27 January 2015.]](/nw/images/icon_footnoteCall.png)
to the Assembly
at its 2015 first part-session. For the Committee on Legal Affairs and
Human Rights, my colleague Mr Jordi Xuclà (Spain, ALDE) will, when
the time comes, prepare a report on “Accession of the European Union
to the European Convention on Human Rights: election of judges”;

and my colleague Mr Michael McNamara
(Ireland, SOC) is preparing a report on “European institutions and
human rights in Europe”.

In
order not to prejudge the outcome of ongoing work, I shall restrict
my comments regarding the European Union’s accession to the Convention
to recalling the current state of play in the accession proceedings.
29. Concluding extended negotiations, the
draft
accession agreement was finalised in April 2013. Its adoption requires the
completion of internal procedures by the 47 member States of the
Council of Europe and the European Union on the one hand, and the
Council of Europe on the other hand. In so far as the European Union
is concerned, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU)
was seized by the European Commission for Opinion on the draft text,
and the Opinion is expected before the end of 2014. Provided that the
Luxembourg Court finds the draft Accession Agreement to be compatible
with EU law, the European Parliament must then give its consent
and the Council of the European Union will have to unanimously adopt the
decision authorising the signature of the accession agreement. All
EU member States and the European Union itself will have to ratify
the agreement. On the part of the Council of Europe, the Accession
Agreement will have to be adopted by the Committee of Ministers
and be opened for signature and ratification by all 47 member States
after having received the (formal) opinions on the text(s) from
both the Strasbourg Court and the Parliamentary Assembly.

3.3. Election of judges
to the European Court of Human Rights
30. In response to the call, in Section E of the Brighton
Declaration, that the Assembly and the Committee of Ministers, respectively,
reflect upon possible improvements of the procedures for electing
judges to the European Court of Human Rights, the Assembly unanimously
adopted
Resolution 2009
(2014) and
Recommendation
2051 (2014) on the reinforcement of the independence of the European
Court of Human Rights,

in which it reiterated that “[t]he
authority and effectiveness of the European Court of Human Rights are
contingent on the genuine independence and impartiality of its judges
…” (paragraph 1).
31. In the present circumstances, where the Court is facing criticism,
it is important that States Parties do their utmost to improve,
where necessary, their national selection procedures for examining
candidatures for the election of judges to the Court. In 2015, we
will need to elect 15 new judges onto the Court: see, in this connection,
the Assembly’s
website on which is provided a country-by-country “
Table
of progress” of the election procedure.
32. Also, given the uncontested importance of ensuring that candidates
are of the highest calibre so as to safeguard the quality, clarity
and consistency of the Court’s case law and the latter’s authority,
it is commendable that the Assembly has agreed to establish a new
general Committee on the Election of Judges to the European Court
of Human Rights

which will replace
the current Sub-Committee on the Election of Judges. The committee,
which is due to take up its work at the end of January 2015 and
which will be composed of parliamentarians with demonstrable legal
knowledge and experience, will be responsible for assessing the
qualifications of and conducting interviews with candidates for
the post of judge. I have no doubt that, in performing this task,
the new committee will exercise the same scrutiny as the current
sub-committee, and will not hesitate to reject a list submitted
in respect of a particular State – if necessary, more than once
– if persons on the list are deemed to not meet the criteria set
out in Article 21.1 of the Convention.
3.4. Implementation
of the Convention at the national level
33. As I emphasised above, enhancing the effectiveness
of the Convention will, first and foremost, be contingent on member
States’ commitment to making the Convention rights “practical and
effective” within their respective national legal orders. There
is universal agreement that the Convention system is based on the notion
of subsidiarity. Article 1 of the Convention places primary responsibility
on States Parties to secure fundamental rights and freedoms to everyone
within their jurisdiction. As has been stressed by our former colleague,
Marie-Louise Bemelmans-Videc, “the principle of subsidiarity has
two aspects: one procedural, requiring individuals to go through
all the relevant procedures at national level before seizing the
Court, and the other substantive, based on the assumption that States
Parties are, in principle, better placed to assess the necessity
and proportionality of specific measures”.

A margin of appreciation
is left to States in both the interpretation and the application
of the Convention, as well as in choosing the measures for implementing adverse
judgments by the Court. Crucially, however, it is the Court that
has the power to authoritatively interpret the Convention and its
application to all cases brought before it.
34. The principle of subsidiarity finds further reflection in
the requirement for applicants to exhaust domestic remedies, and
during the reform process strong emphasis has been placed on achieving
improvements in this respect. In pursuit of this aim, the Committee
of Minsters adopted, in September 2013, a
Guide
to good practice in respect of domestic remedies, as well as a recommendation (
Recommendation
CM/Rec(2010)3) on effective remedies for excessive length of proceedings.
At their 124th Session held in Vienna from 5 to 6 May 2014, the
Committee of Ministers
noted that significant progress had been achieved in the execution
of judgments (including pilot judgments) concerning important structural
or systemic problems. A noteworthy positive example supporting this
observation is that of Turkey, which had long occupied second place
in terms of applications pending before the Court, and is currently
the country with the fifth-highest case-count. What has proven particularly
effective in reducing the number of pending cases was – in addition
to the creation of a Compensation Commission with respect to the
situation in Cyprus, which permitted the “repatriation” of cases –
the introduction of a procedure of individual complaints to the
Constitutional Court.

While States are of course free
to choose among a variety of possible means to comply with their
obligation under Article 13 of the Convention, this example corroborates
the assumption, based on the experience of a number of member States,
that granting individuals a right to petition before the national
Constitutional Court can prove to be an effective means to resolve
structural problems that would otherwise continue to produce large
numbers of repetitive applications to the Strasbourg Court.

35. Still, as indicated above (see paragraphs 20-22), some major
issues need to be resolved on the domestic plane. In this regard,
I take note with interest of the observations by the committee’s
rapporteur on the implementation of judgments of the Court, Mr Klaas
de Vries, who has pointed out that his mandate is limited to only
certain States (Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Poland, Romania, the Russian
Federation, Turkey and Ukraine), which precludes him from following
up on similar issues which are coming up in respect of a considerable
number other States that are seemingly failing to comply with their
duty to ensure the respect of Convention rights and adhere to the
final judgments of the Court.

It
is worrying to learn that at the end of 2013, 18 Contracting States
had leading cases pending execution before the Committee of Ministers
for more than five years, under both standard and enhanced supervision
procedures.

A review of the average execution
time yields a similarly worrying picture.
36. In light of this and the challenges identified above, it is
important that the Convention standards become better entrenched
in the laws and practice of member States, and that Strasbourg case-law
principles are better internalised. Belgium, which has assumed the
Chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers for the duration of six
months in November 2014, has underlined its dedication to contributing
to the reform process commenced at Interlaken, with a special focus
on capacity-building for the purpose of strengthening the effective
implementation of the Convention at national level. In pursuit of
this aim, the Belgian Chairmanship will organise a conference entitled
“The implementation of the European Convention on Human Rights,
our shared responsibility”, which will be held in Brussels in March
2015.

37. Relatedly, I note that the Court has been living up to its
promise to strengthen its dialogue with States Parties to the Convention,
through visits to States Parties and meetings in Strasbourg with
high-level delegations of national judges as well as government
agents.

Additional ways must
be found to intensify dialogue between national authorities and
the Council of Europe institutions must be found, and to foster mutual
understanding and enhance the authority of Convention rights at
the national plane. One proposal which, in my view, merits closer
consideration, namely that national parliaments – or, where they
exist, the specialised parliamentary structures tasked with overseeing
their State’s compliance with the Convention and the Court’s judgments
– invite their national judge of the Court to inform parliamentarians
about relevant developments in the Court’s case law.

38. Mention should also be made of the positive experience with
regard to some States Parties with judges who, having completed
their term in office at the Court, reintegrate into the national
judicial system where they can contribute to fostering legal practitioners’
knowledge of the Convention. Looking into how best to make use of
former Strasbourg judges’ know-how and familiarity with the Convention
system merits the continuous attention of national authorities,
in line with
Resolution
2009 (2014) and
Recommendation
2051 (2014) on the reinforcement of the independence of the European
Court of Human Rights.
39. In order to avoid repetitive applications to the Court, it
is moreover necessary, as the Assembly has stressed on several occasions,

that both the Strasbourg organs
and member States make it a priority to enhance the
res interpretata authority of the
Court’s judgments. The principle of
res
interpretata refers to the duty (based on Articles 1,
19 and 32 of the Convention) for national legislators and courts
to take into account the Convention as interpreted by the Court
– beyond the binding effect of a particular judgment for the parties concerned.

I do not question that this necessitates
thorough reasoning on the part of the Court and that national courts
must have appropriate tools at their disposal to stay informed about
relevant case law developments in Strasbourg. While some progress
has been achieved in this respect – I will restrict myself to mentioning
the examples of the governments of Germany and the Netherlands which
regularly provide parliament with information on judgments against
other Contracting Parties which may have repercussions for their
own national legal system

– we cannot place enough
emphasis on reinforcing the interpretative authority of the Court’s
judgments, because the failure of member States to do so will give
rise to similar violations which should not have to be dealt with
in Strasbourg.

It is unfortunate
that the Committee of Ministers has not taken up the Assembly’s
proposal that it address a recommendation to member States calling
on them to reinforce without delay, by legislative, judicial or
other means, the
res interpretata authority
of the Court’s judgments. Both the Committee of Ministers and the
High Contracting Parties ought to reinforce their efforts in enhancing the
res interpretata authority, thus
harnessing the full preventive potential of the Court’s interpretative
function.
3.4.1. Capacity building
on the European Convention on Human Rights
40. The Assembly, by adopting
Resolution 1982 (2014) “The European Convention on Human Rights: the need to
reinforce the training of legal professionals”, acknowledged that
improving the application of the Convention at the national level
requires better training of legal professionals, adapted to the
legal system and general circumstances. Correspondingly, the
HELP (Human Rights Education
for Legal Professionals) Programme supports the Council of Europe member States in implementing
the Convention at the national level, in accordance with the Committee
of Ministers’
Recommendation
Rec(2004)4 on the European Convention on Human Rights in university
education and professional training, the Brighton Declaration and the
above-mentioned Assembly
Resolution
1982 (2014). This is done by enhancing the capacity of judges, lawyers
and prosecutors of all 47 member States to apply the Convention
in their daily work.
41. In this context, it is interesting to note that the Secretariat
of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights, jointly with
the Assembly’s
Parliamentary
Projects Support Division, organises – since 2013 - training seminars for both
national parliamentarians and parliamentary staff, with the two-fold
aim of promoting the establishment, in national parliaments, of
specialised structures and procedures for the supervision of the implementation
of the judgments of the Court, and fostering the understanding and
knowledge, among parliamentarians and staff of national parliaments,
of the Convention and the Court’s case law. To date, three seminars
have been held for parliamentarians, in co-operation with the Parliament
of the United Kingdom (October 2013), the Polish Sejm (February
2014) and the Spanish Parliament (October 2014), and three separate
seminars have been held for staff of national parliaments in Strasbourg
(in September 2013 and January and September 2014). These seminars
met with positive response from participants who appreciated these
for peer-to-peer exchange of practices and experience. Further capacity-building
activities are envisaged, possibly also with specific thematic foci,
and I can only encourage colleagues to make use of this opportunity.
42. Also, when adopting
Resolution
1982 (2014) “The European Convention on Human Rights: the need to reinforce
the training of legal professionals”, the Assembly, in its
Recommendation 2039 (2014) called on the Committee of Ministers to “ensure that
the budget allocated to the European Programme for Human Rights Education
for Legal Professionals (HELP Programme) is consistent with the
task assigned to it, namely to provide different types of co-operation
in the training of law professionals in any member State that requests it”.
I endorse the view expressed by my former colleague Mr Jean-Pierre
Michel (France, SOC),

that this can best be achieved
by allocating more funding from the Organisation’s ordinary budget
to the HELP Programme.
43. A critical concern in relation to capacity building on Convention
standards relates, more generally, to the Organisation’s budgetary
predicament. As the former European Commissioner for Human Rights,
Thomas Hammarberg, aptly stated, “it is amazing that so much has
been achieved in relation to the finances made available (to the
Council of Europe)”.

The
Organisation’s policy of a zero-increase-budget has been in place for
more than a decade, and the financial policy has been subject to
debate for a number of years. I recall that my colleague, Ms Bemelmans-Videc,
revealed that the annual contribution of 15 member States does not
even cover the expenditure needed to cover the costs for their own
judge.

Just as strikingly,
the Court’s budget is less than a quarter of that of the Court of
Justice of the European Union, which deals, I recall, with cases
from only 28 States.

44. The precariousness of the Council of Europe’s financial situation
is further aggravated by the fact that the past years have seen
a tendency towards allocating a greater portion of the Council of
Europe’s budget to the Court, to the detriment of the Organisation’s
other activities and programmes. What is urgently needed therefore
is a substantial increase not only of the budget of the Court as
well as that of the Department for the execution of judgments (or,
more generally, the enforcement machinery), but of the Organisation’s
overall budget. In this respect, I share the concern expressed at
the
Oslo
Conference 
that essential functions
of the Council of Europe in general, and the Court specifically,
are being covered by voluntary contributions instead of from the
ordinary budget. The Assembly must undoubtedly continue to take
a firm stance on the matter of the Organisation’s budget. Given,
however, that the Assembly’s calls for a budgetary increase have
thus far not met with strong support on the part of the Committee
of Ministers, we should also call on the Secretary General to more
proactively advocate improvements in this respect.
3.4.2. Ensuring the implementation
of Convention standards in national legislation and practice
45. The reduction of the number of cases coming before
the European Court of Human Rights, especially those of a repetitive
nature stemming from structural or systemic deficiencies in States
Parties, depends largely on enhancing the notion of subsidiarity
by effectively securing the full implementation of the rights enshrined
in the Convention at the domestic level. Strengthening the Convention
system for the protection of human rights in this manner does (and
will continue to) necessitate concerted efforts by a variety of
actors. Within the Strasbourg system, all bodies of the Council
of Europe must be engaged. At the national level, both the legislative
and executive branches of government and the judiciary, as well
as national human rights institutions (NHRIs), lawyers and civil
society should interact closely.
46. That said, national parliaments have, as already indicated
above, a specific role to play in preventing and remedying human
rights violations,

for
at least two reasons. First, parliaments have an obligation to ascertain
the compatibility of draft legislation with the Convention. Second,
in terms of remedial action, parliaments are capable of holding
governments to account for the swift and effective execution of
adverse judgments, and proactively engage in preparing those legislative
changes which are necessary to give effect to the Court’s judgments.

Besides, striving to strengthen
parliamentary involvement in and democratic discourse about implementing
human rights, including the Court’s judgments, appears particularly
vital in the current climate in certain member States, where the
adoption of legislation to remedy a situation that has been found
by the Court to violate the Convention is perceived by some as lacking
democratic legitimacy.

47. The Brighton Conference re-emphasised the fundamental importance
of the parliamentary dimension of safeguarding States’ Convention
compliance.

For several years, the Parliamentary
Assembly has been working to ensure more active involvement of parliaments
in issues relating to the European Convention on Human Rights. For
this purpose, a number of resolutions invited the national parliaments
to create mechanisms and procedures dedicated to ensuring effective
parliamentary oversight of the Convention standards.

48. Progress has been made in several member States in this respect.
I will limit myself to citing a recent example: in February 2014,
the Polish Sejm decided to set up a permanent sub-commission to
its Commission of Justice and Human Rights and its Foreign Affairs
Commission, tasked with supervising the execution of judgments issued
against Poland by the European Court of Human Rights. In so doing,
the 11 members of the sub-commission will,
inter
alia, monitor actions taken to amend laws and change
governmental practices.

3.4.3. Timely and effective
execution of judgments of the European Court of Human Rights
49. Just like the safeguarding of the protection of Convention
rights at the domestic level generally, the crucial importance of
States’ rapid and full compliance with the Court’s judgments for
guaranteeing the long-term viability of the Convention system appears
to be undisputed, and has been recognised by both the Committee
of Ministers

and
the Assembly.

The Brighton
Declaration, in Chapter F, places strong emphasis on improving the
supervision of the Court’s judgments, and the Court’s statistics
corroborate that the overall success of the reform process is contingent
on improvements in the execution process.

Crucially, the execution
of the Court’s judgments is also integral to the right of individual
petition laid down in Article 34 of the Convention.

50. Positive trends in this regard are discernible from the statistics
contained in the Committee of Ministers’
annual
report for the year 2013. In particular, the total number of
cases pending before the Committee of Ministers for supervision
has decreased for the first time ever, and a record number of 1 398
cases were closed through final resolutions in 2013.
51. At the same time, a considerable number of judgments are still
awaiting to be executed, which remains a cause of concern. On 16
September 2014, a total of 11 594 cases were pending before the
Committee of Ministers.

The latter’s 2013
annual
report also evidences an increase in the number of leading
cases (namely those pertaining to structural or systemic issues
or other complex problems) pending execution (which currently represent
14% of all cases). The number of leading cases on the Committee
of Minister’s docket that were closed by the adoption of a final
resolution has decreased in 2013 for the third consecutive year,

and the number of leading cases pending
before the Committee of Ministers for more than five years has increased significantly,
from 61 in 2007

to
483 in 2013.

52. Moreover, the situation of prolonged non-implementation of
general and individual measures, subsequent to a finding of a violation,
is intolerable and necessitates urgent action. It severely impedes
the Court’s essential task, stipulated in Article 32.1 of the Convention,
of interpretation and application of the Convention and its protocols.

There
is also a direct link between failures to comply with the Court’s
judgments – especially failures to implement general measures aimed
at effectively preventing similar violations from occurring – and
the unacceptably high number of repetitive applications burdening
the Court.

The execution of judgments
therefore deserves a prominent place in the ongoing reform process.
It necessitates a concerted effort by all actors involved, in particular
effective implementation by respondent States (taking due account
of the
res interpretata authority
of the Court’s case law), and effective supervision by the Committee
of Ministers. Not only the Committee of Ministers, but also the
Court, the Parliamentary Assembly and national parliaments, can
and must play a proactive role in the execution process.
3.4.3.1. Role of the Court
53. The Court, although not the principal body tasked
with supervising the execution of judgments, can and does facilitate
the execution process in three distinct ways, which were neatly
summarised as follows by Judge Helen Keller: “Firstly, the Court
[examines] whether a previous judgment was duly implemented in the
context of a new case related to the same underlying issue and resulting
in a fresh violation of the Convention.

Secondly, by dissociating the
examination of the merits from the award of just satisfaction, the
Court can inquire into whether the judgment on the merits was implemented
or not and take into account its finding in a separate judgment
on just satisfaction. Thirdly, under paragraphs 3 and 4 of Article
46 of the European Convention on Human Rights, the Court can be
seized with a question concerning the interpretation of a judgment
or with a view to establishing whether a State has failed to execute
a judgment (so-called infringement procedure).”

54. It is particularly noteworthy that, in recent years, the Court
has overcome its reluctance to indicate, on the basis of Article
46 of the Convention, what individual and general measures a respondent
State to a case before it should take to remedy a situation that
has been found to constitute a Convention violation.

In
line with what was stressed at the
Oslo
Conference,

such indications (or, in some instances,
orders), are of considerable value because, on the one hand, they
have proven to lead States to exercise special diligence in giving
effect to a judgment of the Court and, on the other, they give the
Committee of Ministers additional means of exerting political pressure.
The Court should be encouraged to resort more frequently and on
a more systematic basis to making such indications (including setting
out time limits for the implementation of the recommended measures),

while being mindful of the
principle of subsidiarity and the freedom of choice that States
enjoy regarding the means for executing a judgment. That way, the
Court can better harness its potential of influencing and facilitating
the repairing of structural deficiencies, especially in those countries
which account for a significant number of repetitive cases.
3.4.3.2. Role of the Parliamentary
Assembly and national parliaments
55. As regards the role of the Assembly and that of national
parliaments in the execution process, it should be noted the importance
of dedicated oversight mechanisms for effective parliamentary scrutiny
at the domestic level, which can help render the execution process
more efficient and contribute to institutionalising a democratic
human rights discourse, thus enhancing the (perceived) legitimacy
of human rights.

56. The past years have seen an ever-increasing involvement of
the Assembly in contributing to the effective and expeditious execution
of the Court’s judgments. The Committee on Legal Affairs and Human
Rights has proactively engaged in this process, for which it was
commended by the Committee of Ministers.

Its rapporteurs have repeatedly
underscored the need to reinforce the execution of judgments at
the national level, and the committee continues to issue regular
reports on the implementation of the Court’s judgments,

giving priority treatment
to the examination of major structural problems concerning cases
in which extremely worrying delays in implementation have arisen.
It has organised, in this context, a number of hearings (which are
open to civil society representatives) at which the national delegations
to the Parliamentary Assembly were called upon to account for their
States’ failure in complying with the Court’s judgments. These meetings
have proven to be very useful and it would be desirable for this
practice to continue, and ideally become more systematically employed.
57. In this connection, my colleague, Mr Klaas de Vries, has made
a proposal on how to make this practice even more efficient (and
less time-consuming). He suggested during the seminar on “The role
of national parliaments in the implementation of judgments of the
European Court of Human Rights” held in Madrid on 31 October 2014,
that the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights should set
up, as of 2015, a new Sub-Committee on “Implementation of Judgments
of the European Court of Human Rights”, which could, on a regular
basis, invite experts both from the parliamentary and inter-governmental
side, as well as relevant civil society actors, in order to discuss
topical implementation issues. The results of these meetings could
feed into the work of the committee’s rapporteur on the implementation
of judgments. I fully endorse this proposal which, in my view, will
allow us to address particularly salient cases of non-implementation,
especially those pointing to the existence of systemic problems,
or cases requiring urgent individual measures, in a more timely
and flexible way, and to share good practices.
58. As I outlined above, the commitment of Assembly members to
put pressure on their respective governments to diligently comply
with the Court’s adverse judgments too often falls short of what
would be needed to effectively accelerate the execution process.
3.4.3.3. Role of the Committee
of Ministers
59. The importance of a strong and permanent supervisory
mechanism for the execution of the Court’s judgments and the crucial
role played by the Committee of Ministers, assisted by the Department
for the Execution of Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights
(“Execution Department”), is well accepted.

It
should be noted that the monitoring of States’ compliance with the
Court’s judgments through peer review “creates collective ownership
of compliance processes, provides a range of opportunities for constructive exchange
regarding technical challenges to implementation, and exerts pressure
on unwilling compliers.”

Any reform undertaken with a
view to rendering the execution process and its supervision more
effective should therefore be designed to maintain the vital institutional
balance between the different stakeholders engaged.
60. My previous remark that both the Court’s and the Assembly’s
role in the execution process are – and should remain – complementary
to that of the Committee of Ministers is corroborated by the Convention
itself, which expressly stipulates in Article 46.2 that the Committee
of Ministers bears the primary responsibility for the supervision
of the execution of judgments.
61. The accumulation of cases pending examination before the Committee
of Ministers is worrying. What is particularly worrying in this
respect is that 80% of those cases emanate from just eight States,
namely Italy (2 593 cases pending), Turkey (1 727), the Russian
Federation (1 325), Ukraine (957), Poland (764), Romania (702),
Hungary (495) and Bulgaria (357) – accounting for 8 920 out of a
total of 11 018 cases

(most
of which moreover account for a large number of applications before
the Court). This situation underscores the need to remedy the systemic
dysfunctions in these countries.
62. In this context, I note that, through the establishment of
a twin-track system foreseeing a standard and an enhanced supervision
procedure, the Committee of Ministers is able to better focus its
attention on cases warranting particular focus.

Besides,
Protocol No. 14 created a new infringement procedure, set out in Article 46.4
of the Convention, allowing the Committee of Ministers, in exceptional
cases, to refer to the Court the question whether a Party has failed
to fulfil its obligation to give effect to an adverse judgment by
the Court. The actual impact of this procedure on a State’s readiness
to fully comply with an adverse judgment of the Court is difficult
to assess, since the procedure has not been tested to date. Similarly,
the Committee of Ministers has thus far been reluctant to set strict
time limits for the implementation of a particular measure, or to
refuse to allow the State concerned to occupy leading positions
at the level of the Organisation.

The fact that the Committee
of Ministers refrains from using the means at its disposal to exert
pressure on non-complying States may warrant closer examination
for failing to acknowledge some weakness on its part, which indirectly
weakens the action of the Court.
3.5. The long-term future
of the Convention system and the design of the Court
63. A report on the long-term future of the Convention
system cannot evade the question of whether more fundamental changes
will be indispensable for ensuring the viability of the Convention.
I note with satisfaction that intense deliberations are being held
about possible alternative models at the intergovernmental level
and that various options are being openly discussed, irrespective
of their political feasibility at this point in time.
64. The proposals advocating an alternative model all essentially
revolve around the argument that the Court should adopt a more constitutional
role, with some advocating a model where it could freely determine how
many cases it has the capacity to process, and pick and choose which
cases to adjudicate, and others being in favour of the Court dealing
exclusively with matters of law (namely the interpretation of the
Convention) rather than facts.

Further
options that have been suggested include that the Court adopt a
two-track approach, with certain cases of particular importance
being adjudicated like under the present system, and a “leave-to-appeal”
system applying to the remainder of applications;

or that applications stemming
from systemic or structural deficiencies within member States should
be dealt with by the Committee of Ministers,

if it showed any interest for a minimum
of authority.
65. Most of these proposals, while seemingly entailing profound
changes to the current system, may in practice not be so very radical.
There exists broad consensus that the Court’s role, already today,
is not confined to that of being a “guardian of the rights of individuals”;
in some of its methods and functions – notably in the upholding
of constitutional values

– it resembles, to an extent,
a national constitutional court. By engaging with national constitutional
courts and interpreting the Convention, the Court (and especially
its Grand Chamber, as was pointed out by Morten Rudd at the committee’s
second
exchange
of views) creates a supranational human rights order across Europe,

determining
common European standards of human rights protection which all High
Contracting Parties must adhere to.

The Court itself regards
the Convention as “a constitutional instrument of European public
order”,

and has underlined that “[a]lthough
the primary purpose of the Convention system is to provide individual
relief, its mission is also to determine issues on public-policy grounds
in the common interest, thereby raising the general standards of
protection of human rights and extending human rights jurisprudence
throughout the community of the Convention States”.

Finally, the procedures
adopted by the Court in recent years, such as its prioritisation
policy, the pilot judgment procedure and the indication of general
measures to be taken by the respondent State under Article 46 of
the Convention, as well as the grouping of similar applications
for a single judgment or decision, underscore the validity of the claim
that the Court has already developed some constitutional characteristics.
66. While all of these proposals deserve to be explored, we must
be careful with any institutional re-design. I would make three
observations in this respect.
67. First, I agree with those who regard the two tasks of the
Court – that of adjudicating individual applications and that of
laying down common European human rights standards – as equally
important.

At the same time, I concur with
what was said at the committee’s second hearing, namely that, although
there is no doubt that the Court is capable of discharging both
of these functions, one should assess whether this is an efficient
way of handling the case load. I believe that we should engage in
a debate about whether or not these tasks should be handled by the
same judicial organ.

In
reflecting on this question, we might with to take up an idea mooted
as a response to the DH-GDR’s “
open
call for contributions”, namely to retain the single full-time Court, but supplement
it with a Grand Chamber tasked with examining cases raising constitutional issues.

Such
a Grand Chamber could, in my view, be composed of, for example,
15 to 17 part-time judges from the highest national courts of member
States, serving on a rotating basis. This would further intensify
the ties between the Strasbourg Court and national courts.
68. Second, in my view, there are certain basic features and mechanisms
characterising the Convention system that lie at the very heart
of its continuous success. I believe that we should be very cautious
not to make any drastic changes to the system that would in effect
bereave it of its strengths. The elements that I consider must at
all costs be preserved are:

the subsidiary nature of
the Court, the judicial determination of complaints and the compulsory
jurisdiction of the Court, and the system of collective enforcement
and effective supervision of the execution of judgments. Lastly,
and maybe most importantly, there can be no backsliding on the material
rights set out in the Convention (or an abandonment of the living
instrument doctrine, which would likely result in exactly such a
regression), and the right to individual application to the Court
must be upheld.
69. Finally, it has been recognised that the Court is working
well, and it is expeditiously tackling the outstanding issues that
need to be resolved. Against this backdrop, we should be cautious
not to prematurely enter into deliberations on any proposals which
in fact appear to be motivated not by a genuine endeavour to foster
the effectiveness of the system with a view to strengthening human
rights protection, but rather by a desire to dismantle the Court
and undermine its authority. As I stated above, we are currently
seeing that the Court has come to terms with the backlog and I believe
we can trust the Court’s Registrar, Erik Fribergh, when he assures
us that – subject to making available some additional resources
– the Court will soon be able to deal with all the applications
coming before it within the time limit set out in the Brighton Declaration.
This is a good achievement. I therefore concur with the Registrar
that “the Court should be allowed to continue with its steady progress
without the distraction of constant and sometimes confused calls
for further reform”.

Let us not
reform a system which works well, or, to put it even more bluntly:
“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”
4. Conclusions
70. It transpires from the foregoing examination that
the Court has made substantial progress in clearing the backlog
of manifestly inadmissible applications, and is moving to tackle
the outstanding challenges. Moreover, the Court deserves to be congratulated
for continuing to intensify its dialogue with national judges and
making its case law more widely accessible. Unfortunately, the achievements
within the Court have to date not been met by corresponding improvements
within Contracting Parties to the Convention. Indeed, serious violations must
still be looked into, with renewed urgency.

71. Certain States Parties have failed to eradicate (often long-standing)
systemic dysfunctions which result in a large number of repetitive
applications burdening the Court. Although progress has been made
in a few countries in recent years as regards, for example, the
setting up of supervisory mechanisms for the implementation of the
Court’s judgments, the situation is far from satisfactory. National
parliaments must more proactively engage in routinely monitoring
whether their (draft) laws are compatible with the Convention, as interpreted
by the Court in its case law, and scrutinise the remedial action
taken by the government following a judgment of the Court finding
a Convention violation.
72. Lastly, it transpires from the foregoing that ensuring the
long-term effectiveness of the Convention system will be contingent
on the commitment of all member States to ensure that the Council
of Europe, most notably the Court, the HELP Programme and the Execution
Department, be allocated appropriate funds to carry out their respective
tasks effectively.
73. In sum, seeking further improvements of the Convention system
will have to remain a priority for our Assembly and the Organisation
as a whole. It is important, however, that the purpose of the ongoing
reform debates remains to genuinely strengthen human rights protection
across Europe, while upholding the right of individual petition
to the European Court of Human Rights, which is – and should remain
– the ultimate arbiter of human rights in Europe. Thus, rather than
focusing on further possible ways to reform the Court, the reform process
must continue on the premise that States Parties bear the primary
responsibility for ensuring that the Convention is applied effectively
at national level, in conformity with the principle of subsidiarity
upon which the Convention system is based.