1. Introduction
1. In September 2012, the Commissioner
for Human Rights of the Council of Europe, Nils Muižnieks, published
his Human Rights Comment about internally displaced persons (IDPs)
in Europe, in which he spoke of another lost generation of IDPs
struggling to cope in many European countries with the consequences
of past military-political crises – often for decades. More than
five years later, the situation has dramatically worsened through
the war in eastern Ukraine, pushing the number of IDPs in member
States to more than four million people. Faced with such immense
human tragedy, it is high time for European governments, parliaments
and civil society to address the humanitarian needs of IDPs resolutely
and comprehensively at national and international levels.
2. Twenty years ago, the United Nations Commission on Human Rights
adopted the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement (1998).
They define IDPs as persons or groups of persons who have been forced
or obliged to flee or to leave their homes or places of habitual
residence, in particular as a result of or in order to avoid the
effects of armed conflict, situations of generalised violence, violations
of human rights or natural or human-made disasters, and who have
not crossed an internationally recognised State border. In contrast, refugees
and migrants have left their home country. These Guiding Principles
contain a number of basic standards which must be respected globally
and are referred to in this report.
3. Under the Statute of the International Criminal Court, the
deportation or forcible transfer of civilian population is a crime
against humanity, and it constitutes a war crime for an occupying
power to transfer, directly or indirectly, parts of its own civilian
population into the territory it occupies, or to deport or transfer
all or parts of the population of the occupied territory within
or outside this territory, as well as to intentionally direct attacks
against buildings dedicated to religion, education, art, science
or charity work, historic monuments, hospitals and places where
the sick and wounded are assembled, provided they are not military
objectives.
4. The Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre in Geneva found
that there were 31.1 million new internal displacements by conflict,
violence and disasters globally in 2016, which meant that every
second, one new person was forced to flee within his or her country,
amounting to a total number of 40.3 million people internally displaced
as a result of conflict and violence in the world, plus more than
20 million due to natural disasters such as flooding and drought.
5. The motion for a resolution (
Doc. 13973) at the origin of this report expressly states that
the United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement are
the primary general reference on how to respond to the humanitarian
needs of IDPs. Hence, this report looks at the concrete situation
of IDPs in member States, identifies positive examples and points
to ways of assisting member States in addressing shortcomings.
6. The focus of this report is on Europe and internal displacements
which fall within the human rights protection afforded by the European
Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5, “the Convention”), in particular the
right to life (Article 2), the prohibition of torture (Article 3),
the right to liberty and security (Article 5), the right to respect
for private and family life (Article 8) and the protection of property
(Article 1 of the Protocol to the Convention (ETS No. 9)). Past
displacements dating from before the adoption of the Convention
are therefore outside the scope of this report. This does not mean
that humanitarian problems of others are forgotten; IDPs continue
to reside in their home country and have the same rights and obligations
as other citizens. Asylum seekers, refugees and migrants have a
different legal status with different rights.
7. This report would be overburdened if it attempted to resolve
the various causes of internal displacement in Europe, which are
mostly armed conflicts. This would also go beyond its mandate. Therefore,
I will focus on the humanitarian needs of IDPs, which comprise the
respect of human rights and social rights of IDPs, as well as international
humanitarian law.
8. In 2009, the African Union adopted the Convention for the
Protection and Assistance of Internally Displaced Persons in Africa
(Kampala Convention), which contains a number of legal obligations
for its signatory States. It is unfortunate that a comparable legal
instrument or treaty does not exist in Europe and that the Kampala
Convention was drafted for member States of the African Union only.
Nevertheless, my report is guided by the spirit of the Kampala Convention
in its analysis of the humanitarian needs of IDPs in Europe.
9. Beyond a narrow definition of these needs, it is also important
to look at related issues, such as the human suffering from missing
family members or from being separated from family members. If lessons
are to be learned and future challenges to be met, Europe must pay
much greater attention to ending the violent causes and tragic humanitarian
consequences of internal displacement, while building up resilience
against such displacement.
2. Relevant work by the Council of Europe
10. The Parliamentary Assembly
has previously addressed the humanitarian situation of IDPs in Europe
in reports focused on a country, a region or a conflict. This report
is the first to seek a comprehensive approach. This being said,
it is important to follow up the earlier resolutions and recommendations
adopted by the Assembly.
11. I therefore wish to recall
Resolution 2133 (2016) on legal remedies for human rights violations on the Ukrainian
territories outside the control of the Ukrainian authorities,
Resolution 1648 (2009) on the humanitarian consequences of the war between
Georgia and Russia,
Resolution
1628 (2008) on the situation in Cyprus,
Resolution 1416 (2005) on the conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region dealt
with by the Minsk Conference of the Organization for Security and
Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) as well as
Resolution 1879 (2012) on the situation of IDPs and returnees in the North
Caucasus region and
Resolution
1240 (2001) on the humanitarian situation of refugees and internally
displaced persons from Chechnya. Particular references shall be
made below in the chapters dealing with the respective countries.
12. The Committee of Ministers adopted on 5 April 2006 its Recommendation
Rec(2006)6 on internally displaced persons. Whereas this recommendation
lists a number of basic principles, its final principle 13 states: “In
order to address existing gaps in international law as far as the
treatment of internally displaced persons is concerned, member States
should consider the elaboration of additional international instruments.”
It is clear that gaps must not exist regarding the humanitarian
situation of IDPs in Europe.
13. Following the decisions in the case of Loizidou
v. Turkey since 1995, the European Court of Human Rights
(“the Court”) has established through several judgments clear case
law on the human rights of IDPs regarding property rights and other
rights. However, the execution of the respective judgments is often
delayed or lacking. Justice delayed is justice denied. The humanitarian
needs of IDPs cannot be put on hold. Therefore, it is an important
challenge for all member States to ensure that judgments regarding
the humanitarian needs of IDPs be implemented rapidly and effectively.
14. The European Social Charter (revised) (ETS No. 163) of 1996
contains, inter alia, the
right to housing (Article 32) and family housing (Article 16), which
is a vital right regarding the humanitarian needs of IDPs. In its
Resolution CM/ResChS(2011)6 of 5 May 2011, regarding the Collective
Complaint No. 52/2008 by the Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions
(COHRE) against Croatia, the Committee of Ministers found that Article
16 of the Charter imposed obligations upon the Government of Croatia
in respect of those families who had expressed their clear wish
to return to Croatia, or those for whom the lack of an effective
and meaningful offer of housing and other forms of economic, legal
or social protection had constituted an obstacle to return, in particular
for ethnic Serb families who comprised the bulk of the families
affected by non-satisfaction of their housing needs and who constituted
a particularly vulnerable group on account of their ethnicity. While
the latter case concerned returning refugees who had left Croatia,
the findings can also be applied to IDPs who wish to return to their
homes within their country or who cannot return due to forced internal
displacement.
15. Most internal displacements of people in Europe are due to
armed conflicts, which involve armed groups and trafficking of heavy
weaponry to these groups. The latter obviously perpetuates the (human)
suffering of IDPs and seriously threatens their security and their
humanitarian situation. Therefore, all member States should fully
apply the Convention on Laundering, Search, Seizure and Confiscation
of the Proceeds from Crime and on the Financing of Terrorism of
2005 (CETS No. 198) as well as the Convention on the Prevention
of Terrorism (CETS No. 196) and its Additional Protocol of 2015
(CETS No. 217).
16. Besides this standard-setting work, the Council of Europe
also supports member States in practical terms. Through its Migrant
and Refugee Fund, for instance, the Council of Europe Development
Bank supports projects aimed at shelter, food, medical aid and personal
security of migrants and refugees. Since 2015, approximately €24
million have been allocated. Projects for IDPs could be supported
by the Bank. 41 States have joined the Bank as shareholders and
are thus eligible for funding; they include Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cyprus,
Georgia and Turkey. Among the other countries with high numbers
of IDPs, Azerbaijan and Ukraine are unfortunately not members. Membership
with the Bank is open to Council of Europe member States and observers.
17. The EUR-OPA Major Hazards Agreement is a partial agreement
with 25 States dealing with co-operation in the field of major natural
and technological disasters through exchange of knowledge, development
of prevention strategies, risk management, post-crisis analysis
and rehabilitation co-operation. It is open to membership for Council
of Europe member States and non-member States. Therefore, Algeria,
Lebanon and Morocco were able to join EUR-OPA. Among its activities,
action by member States may for instance be supported through its
Virtual Library on psychosocial assistance after disasters as well
as its policies for reducing the vulnerability of migrants, refugees
and IDPs after and during disasters.
3. Relevant
action by other international bodies
3.1. European
Union
18. The European Union is a major
donor for humanitarian projects for IDPs within and outside Europe.
The Directorate-General for International Cooperation and Development
of the European Commission has financially supported humanitarian
projects for IDPs in Ukraine. Under the mandate of the European Commissioner
for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management, the European Civil Protection
and Humanitarian Aid Operations department contributed to the Disaster
Relief Emergency Fund of the International Federation of Red Cross
and Red Crescent Societies for the victims of flooding in southern
Albania in 2017. 87% of the annual EU Civil Protection and Humanitarian
Aid budget, €1 972 million, were donated to projects for forcibly displaced
persons in 56 countries globally.
19. Although the overall figures of EU funding are very high,
specific projects for IDPs in member States might not receive the
financial support necessary, given the often difficult budgetary
situation of countries affected by armed conflict or disasters which
have led to massive internal displacement of persons. It is, therefore,
necessary to maintain a focus on the current humanitarian needs
of IDPs in Europe.
20. On a normative level, all EU members are Parties to the European
Convention on Human Rights. In addition, the Charter of Fundamental
Rights of the European Union contains a number of rights which may
be invoked by IDPs within the European Union, such as the right
to property (Article 17) and the right to health care (Article 35).
3.2. Organisation
for Security and Co-operation in Europe
21. The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly
has established an Ad Hoc Committee on Migration which may also look
at IDP issues. In addition, specific action is pursued by its Special
Representative on the South Caucasus who regularly visits IDPs.
Regarding the situation of IDPs in Ukraine, the OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly adopted in Helsinki (at its annual session from 5 to 9
July 2015) its Resolution on the Continuation of Clear, Gross and
Uncorrected Violations of OSCE Commitments and International Norms
by the Russian Federation.
22. Through the OSCE Minsk Group, France, the Russian Federation
and the United States have been assisting Armenia and Azerbaijan
since 1995 in working towards a peaceful solution to the conflict
over Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding districts. A Special Representative
of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office has been monitoring the military
situation along the line of contact.
23. Following a request by the Russian Government, the OSCE provides
an Observer Mission at the Russian checkpoints in Gukovo and Donetsk
in eastern Ukraine. Such checkpoints and their regular reports are
also relevant for evaluating the humanitarian situation of IDPs.
24. The OSCE Mission in Georgia existed from 1992 until 2008,
when its mandate expired and could not be extended due to the veto
by the Russian Federation in the wake of its second war with Georgia.
Together with the United Nations, it had monitored the situation
in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
25. The OSCE also set up a Court of Conciliation and Arbitration
in Geneva, which is a non-permanent body that can create conciliation
commissions and arbitral tribunals on an ad hoc basis for the settlement
of conflicts among OSCE participating States. Its Convention has
been ratified by 34 States, but not by Azerbaijan, Georgia, the
Russian Federation and Turkey, for instance.
3.3. United
Nations
26. Following an initiative by
the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in 1992, the United
Nations created the position of Special Rapporteur on the Human
Rights of Internally Displaced Persons in 1994 and has since renewed
its mandate. The current Special Rapporteur, Ms Cecilia Jimenez-Damary,
had an exchange of views with our committee in Paris on 20 September
2017.
27. Several resolutions by the United Nations Security Council
as well as by the United Nations General Assembly are relevant for
the humanitarian situation of IDPs during specific conflicts and
in general, such as the Resolution on protection of and assistance
to internally displaced persons. All United Nations member States
are obliged under Article 25 of the Charter of the United Nations
to accept and carry out the Security Council’s decisions, but the
functioning of the UN Security Council is hampered whenever a permanent member
is directly involved in a conflict and does not abstain from voting.
The UN Human Rights Council adopted in 2012 its Resolution on human
rights of internally displaced persons.
Already in 1998, the United Nations
prepared its Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement.
The Office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has published an extensive
Handbook for the Protection of Internally Displaced Persons.
28. The International Court of Justice of the United Nations in
The Hague can be asked by a State to rule, for instance, on the
application of the International Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Racial Discrimination in a territory where another
State exercises
de facto authority.
On 19 April 2017, following legal proceedings by Ukraine against
the Russian Federation,
the International Court of Justice
found that the Russian Federation must refrain from imposing limitations
on the ability of the Crimean Tatar community to conserve its representative
institutions, including the Mejlis, and ensure the availability
of education in the Ukrainian language.
Similar proceedings are pending before
the International Court of Justice in the case of Georgia against
the Russian Federation.
29. Under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court,
it is considered a crime against humanity to forcibly displace persons
by expulsion or other coercive acts from the area in which they
are lawfully present, without grounds permitted under international
law (Article 7). Article 8 of the Rome Statute considers a war crime
“the transfer, directly or indirectly, by the Occupying Power of
parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies,
or the deportation or transfer of all or parts of the population
of the occupied territory within or outside this territory” (Article
8.2.b.xiii) as well as “intentionally directing attacks against
buildings dedicated to religion, education, art, science or charitable
purposes, historic monuments, hospitals and places where the sick
and wounded are collected, provided they are not military objectives”
(Article 8.2.b.ix). These provisions protect the humanitarian situation
of IDPs during armed conflicts.
3.4. African
Union
30. The African Union Convention
for the Protection and Assistance of Internally Displaced Persons
in Africa (Kampala Convention) of 2009 establishes a legal framework
for preventing internal displacement and for protecting and assisting
internally displaced persons in member States of the African Union.
Only member States of the African Union can accede to this convention,
but member States of the Council of Europe should adhere to the
same fundamental principles enshrined in the Kampala Convention.
31. For Europe, Articles 3 (1.g, h and i) and 7 (4 and 5) of the
Kampala Convention seem particularly relevant by requiring individual
responsibility for acts of forced internal displacement, including
criminal responsibility of members of armed groups for violating
the rights of IDPs, accountability of non-State actors, including multinational
companies and private military and security companies, as well as
the accountability of non-State actors involved in the exploration
and exploitation of economic and natural resources leading to displacement.
32. While countries have tried to shed light on the exploitation
of natural resources in Africa in the wake of conflicts
and indigenous people are displaced
globally for natural resources,
media reports can also be found about
the exploitation of natural resources in the territories affected
by conflicts leading to internal displacement in Europe.
4. The
situation of IDPs in Europe
33. The number of IDPs in a country
mirrors the magnitude of the humanitarian needs. The figures estimated for
2016 by the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre in Geneva differ
partly from the figures provided to me by the respective Assembly
delegations. These differences could be explained by different ways
of calculation based on IDP registrations as well as different recognitions
as IDPs.
Country
|
Estimated
figures by the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre
|
Figures
provided by the country’s delegation to the Assembly
|
Azerbaijan
|
582 000
|
789 000
|
Bosnia and Herzegovina
|
98 000
|
No reply
|
Cyprus
|
272 000
|
228 125
|
Georgia
|
208 000
|
275 000
|
Turkey
|
1 312 000
|
0
|
Ukraine
|
1 762 000
|
1 582 565
|
TOTAL
|
4 234 000
|
|
34. In addition, the Internal Displacement
Monitoring Centre estimates that there are 31 000 IDPs in Italy due
to disasters, 22 600 IDPs in the Russian Federation (19 000 due
to conflicts and 3 600 due to disasters) as well as 17 000 IDPs
in Kosovo*
due to conflict. The numbers of IDPs
are considerably smaller for other countries in Europe and mostly
related to natural disasters. In accordance with this numerical
importance of the situation of IDPs, national situations shall be
analysed below.
35. Ms Angela Cotroneo, Advisor on internal displacement of the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Geneva, explained
to the committee in Paris on 20 September 2017 that IDPs have specific
needs and vulnerabilities during armed conflicts, ranging from life-threatening
circumstances to the need for shelter, food, water, medicines and
clothing. After this emergency phase, access to housing, to livelihood
opportunities and to basic services is important. In protracted
conflict situations, IDPs often settle in disadvantaged urban areas,
which create new vulnerabilities. They often suffer from loss of
family members and therefore need also psychological help and assistance
in tracing their family. The primary responsibility for protecting
IDPs rests with their State authorities or the authorities controlling
their territory. States should have legislation guaranteeing the
rights of IDPs in accordance with international standards such as
the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement. Parliaments
are in a unique position to pass national laws and keep the situation
of IDPs high on the international agenda, but also to ensure the
respect of international humanitarian law in armed conflicts, for
instance by the criminalisation of serious violations.
4.1. Ukraine
36. With more than 1.7 million
IDPs, Ukraine has the largest number of IDPs in Europe at present
due to the armed conflict in eastern Ukraine and the annexation
of the Crimean Peninsula by the Russian Federation in 2014. The
Assembly addressed the situation in several reports leading to
Resolution 2028 (2015) on the humanitarian situation of Ukrainian refugees
and displaced persons,
Resolution
2067 (2015) on missing persons during the conflict in Ukraine,
Resolution 2112 (2016) on the humanitarian concerns with regard to people captured
during the war in Ukraine,
Resolution
2132 (2016) on political consequences of the Russian aggression
in Ukraine, and
Resolution
2133 (2016) on legal remedies for human rights violations on the Ukrainian
territories outside the control of the Ukrainian authorities. The
latest report on the humanitarian consequences of the war in Ukraine
(
Doc. 14463) and
Resolution
2198 (2018) again address in detail the humanitarian situation of
IDPs in Ukraine. It is therefore possible to focus in the present
report on only a few aspects.
37. The Advisory Committee of the Framework Convention for the
Protection of National Minorities found already in 2014 that people
belonging to the Crimean Tatar minority have been exposed to particular
risks following the Russian annexation of the Crimean Peninsula.
The European Court of Human Rights has been seized by Ukraine regarding
the rights of IDPs in the cases Ukraine
v. Russia (Application No. 20958/14), Ukraine v. Russia (II) (Application
No. 43800/14) and Ukraine v. Russia (IV) (Application
No. 42410/15).
38. In order to support Ukraine and its IDPs in this difficult
situation, EU member States and the European Commission have contributed
around €751.5 million in humanitarian aid.
The United Nations Development Programme
is co-ordinating national and international action in Ukraine aimed
at humanitarian demining, mine risk education and victim assistance.
According to declarations in the
Russian media by the First Deputy Permanent Representative of the
Russian Federation to the United Nations, the Russian Government
opposed such humanitarian demining until the conflict is over.
39. During our committee hearing in Paris on 2 June 2017, we heard
that access to health care was very poor in the conflict areas in
eastern Ukraine. Often, male adults were captured or forced to leave
their homes, while their elderly parents and children remained in
the conflict area, either in their own homes or alternative accommodation
if their own homes had been destroyed or were in the combat zone.
These elderly or very young people depended on health care through
mobile units, because they often could not walk long distances to
the few existing health-care facilities further away in the conflict
areas. The ongoing combat in eastern Ukraine exposed humanitarian
staff to serious threats.
40. As the conflict is relatively new and ongoing, the humanitarian
needs of IDPs include basic social needs such as housing, welfare,
health care and schooling for children. In addition, the registration
process of IDPs is ongoing, in order to determine who is entitled
to the various social programmes.
41. In the annexed Crimean Peninsula, Crimean Tatars have been
deprived of their cultural rights, as found by the International
Court of Justice in 2017.
This has
contributed to new internal displacement of Crimean Tatars.
4.2. Turkey
42. Since 1994, the Turkish Government
has provided the Return to Village and Rehabilitation Project for IDPs
in Turkey. A survey by Hacettepe University in Ankara found between
950 000 and 1.2 million IDPs in Turkey in December 2006.
Today, the Internal Displacement
Monitoring Centre in Geneva still counts some 1.3 million IDPs in
Turkey.
43. Under Law No. 5233 on the Compensation of Losses Resulting
from Terrorist Acts and the Measures Taken Against Terrorism of
27 July 2004, 105 regional Damage Assessment and Compensation Commissions were
established and approximately €731 million was awarded as compensation
by 2010.
44. While it is difficult to evaluate the effectiveness of the
compensation programme and the current humanitarian situation of
IDPs in Turkey, it must be noted that the Committee of Ministers
closed the supervision of the execution of the judgment Doğan and Others v. Turkey (Application
No. 8803/02) because it was satisfied with the compensation awarded
to IDPs. In 2011, the European Court of Human Rights declared inadmissible
several hundred similar applications by IDPs in the cases Akbayir and Others v. Turkey, Fidanten and Others v. Turkey, Bingölbali and Others v. Turkey and Boğus and Others v. Turkey. However, the
group of cases Erdoğan and Others v.
Turkey (Application No. 19807/92) is still before the
Committee of Ministers, which in March 2016 urged the Turkish authorities
to intensify their efforts to ensure that effective investigations
are conducted in compliance with the standards of the European Convention
on Human Rights so that all those responsible for the violations
which occurred in these groups of cases are held accountable.
45. Following new anti-terrorist operations by the Turkish military
in south-eastern Turkey, the Commissioner for Human Rights published
in December 2016 a memorandum on his visit to this region
as well as a summary of his third
party interventions before the European Court of Human Rights.
In addition, the UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights published in 2017 a report on south-eastern Turkey,
where most internal displacement originated.
Both reports attest the massive destruction
of housing through air raids and other military action as well as
the human suffering from this action. Of course, one has to bear
in mind the politically difficult situation in Turkey after the
failed coup d’état of 2016
and the humanitarian situation in Syria
as expressed in UN Security Council Resolution 2393 (2017).
4.3. Azerbaijan
46. The armed conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh
and its surrounding regions started in 1992
and is still going one, despite a
ceasefire in 1994.
The Assembly addressed the humanitarian
aspects of the conflict in
Resolution
1416 (2005) as well as in
Resolution
2085 (2016) “Inhabitants of frontier regions of Azerbaijan are deliberately
deprived of water”.
47. The Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre estimates that
there are 582 000 IDPs in Azerbaijan, while the parliamentary delegation
of Azerbaijan to the Assembly comes to the higher number of 789
000 in accordance with official IDP records. The delegation informed
our committee that approximately 50 000 families or 250 000 IDPs
had received new housing, with 151 schools, 58 cultural centres,
59 health-care facilities and 60 childcare facilities. However,
many IDPs still live in public buildings, dormitories and other temporary
residential facilities with poor infrastructure.
48. During its meeting in Baku on 15 and 16 March 2017, the committee
held a hearing with Mr Furio De Angelis, Representative of the UNHCR
in Azerbaijan, and Ms Amanda Paul, Senior Policy Analyst, Turkey
and the Eurasia Region, European Policy Centre. Ms Paul informed
the committee that, besides the persistent lack of a political settlement
of the conflict, the return of IDPs was made difficult by the destruction
of their homes. Mr De Angelis stated that the Law of Azerbaijan
of 1999 on IDPs and refugees was in line with UNHCR standards and
more than US$6 billion had been allocated to IDPs in Azerbaijan,
ranging from lifesaving aid to integration assistance. According
to Mr De Angelis, there are approximately 630 000 IDPs in Azerbaijan
in addition to the more than 300 000 refugees from Armenia who received
Azerbaijani citizenship.
49. The committee also visited an IDP settlement in the Mushvigabad
District of Baku for 761 families, more than 3 400 people. It held
an exchange of views with Mr Ali Hasanov, Deputy Prime Minister,
Chairperson of the State Committee for Affairs of Refugees and Internally
Displaced Persons. Despite the funds provided by Azerbaijan’s petroleum
resources, the financial burden was very high to provide housing
and welfare for the huge number of IDPs. Therefore, international
humanitarian support was also needed.
50. This view was shared by Ms Cecilia Jimenez-Damary, United
Nations Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Internally Displaced
Persons, during her report to the committee in Paris on 20 September
2017, stating that good housing arrangements had been offered in
Azerbaijan, but ownership rights of IDPs were still problematic.
51. The European Court of Human Rights established in its judgment Chiragov and Others v. Armenia (Application
No. 13216/05) that Armenia exercises effective control over Nagorno-Karabakh
and the surrounding territories, that the denial of access of the
applicants to their property and the lack of compensation for this
interference are unjustified, that the denial of access to their
homes violates their right to respect for their private and family
lives and that the applicants do not have access to any remedy capable
of providing redress in this respect, amounting to continuing violations
of Article 1 of the Protocol to the European Convention on Human
Rights, Article 8 and Article 13 of the Convention. The Committee
of Ministers has been considering this judgment and repeatedly invited
Armenia to provide information on the planned execution of it.
52. The Armenian Community Council of the United Kingdom in London
reported recently that “a growing number of Syrian-Armenians are
fleeing the escalating violence in their native land and resettling
in Nagorno-Karabakh”, where “29 refugee families, roughly 90 people
overall, have found new homes” in the area around Lachin/Berdzor.
If people under international protection
in Armenia are in fact transferred to Nagorno-Karabakh, the rights
to return and compensation of IDPs will become more complicated
and international humanitarian law will be violated. It is therefore
a positive step that Armenia and Azerbaijan consider mandating the
monitoring mission of the OSCE Minsk Group to conduct a follow-up
to its 2010 assessment mission to the territories affected by the
conflict.
4.4. Cyprus
53. Cyprus has a large number of
IDPs since the armed conflict with Turkey in 1974.
The UN Secretary- General reported
on 9 January 2018 to the UN Security Council about the situation
in Cyprus, and especially its buffer zone.
The United Nations Security Council
subsequently prolonged the mandate of the UN Peacekeeping Force
in Cyprus through its Resolution 2398 (2018).
54. The Assembly last dealt with this conflict in
Resolution 1628 (2008) on the situation in Cyprus. The Internal Displacement
Monitoring Centre in Geneva estimates that there are 272 000 IDPs
in Cyprus. I am grateful to the Assembly delegation of Cyprus for
their response to my questionnaire and oral presentations during
committee meetings, where also representatives of the Turkish Cypriot
community participated.
55. The European Court of Human Rights has dealt with applications
by Cypriot IDPs since the landmark judgment in the case of
Loizidou v. Turkey of 1998. In 2005,
the Turkish authorities created the Immovable Property Commission
for the restitution, exchange of property or compensation for displaced
Greek Cypriots who have lost their immovable property in the northern
part of Cyprus. However, in its judgment
Cyprus
v. Turkey (just satisfaction) of 12 May 2014 (Application
No. 25781/94), the Court found a violation because of the Turkish
authority’s complicity in unlawful sale or exploitation of Greek
Cypriot homes and property in the northern part of Cyprus. In addition,
information is still lacking about the payment of just satisfaction
awarded by the Court for non-pecuniary damages suffered by relatives
of missing persons.
4.5. Georgia
56. Internal displacement in Georgia
occurred during the armed conflicts in South Ossetia and Abkhazia
in 1991-1992 as well as in 2008.
The Assembly addressed this conflict
and the humanitarian situation in its
Resolutions 1633 (2008),
1647 (2009),
1648 (2009),
1664 (2009) and
1683
(2009). The European Court of Human Rights has been seized
and is dealing with humanitarian consequences of the war in the
case of
Georgia v. Russia (II) (Application
No. 38263/08), which is still pending.
57. The UN General Assembly has adopted resolutions regarding
Georgia, in particular on the right of return of all internally
displaced persons and refugees in Georgia and their descendants,
regardless of ethnicity.
In the same vein, Resolution 1808
(2008) of the UN Security Council reaffirms the right of return
for all the refugees and internally displaced persons to Abkhazia,
Georgia, and reaffirms that individual property rights have not
been affected by the fact that owners had to flee during the conflict.
The UN Special Rapporteur on the
Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons presented a report
on his mission to Georgia from 24 to 29 September 2016.
58. I am grateful to the Georgian delegation to the Assembly for
having enabled me to carry out a fact-finding visit to Tbilisi on
27 November 2017, when I met with Mr Sozar Subari, Minister of Internally
Displaced Persons from the Occupied Territories, Accommodation and
Refugees of Georgia, and other Georgian authorities and parliamentarians
as well as the EU Monitoring Mission and the UN Country Team. I
learned that some of the more than 200 000 IDPs in Georgia had been
able to return to their homes in South Ossetia. However, the recent
closure of crossing points on the administrative boundary lines
to South Ossetia and the suppression of the Georgian language in
schools are likely to cause new internal displacement. The situation
for IDPs from Abkhazia and South Ossetia became worse after the
Russian Federation signed treaties with both de
facto entities in 2009, under which Russian military
guards the administrative lines of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, including
in maritime waters.
59. The Georgian delegation to the Assembly stated that 59% of
IDPs are not accommodated under the durable housing programme and
therefore needed humanitarian support. In addition, they depended
to a higher degree on welfare.
60. Georgia also introduced legal proceedings against the Russian
Federation in 2008 before the International Court of Justice,
which has been asked to rule on the
application of the International Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Racial Discrimination in South-Ossetia and Abkhazia.
In a similar case concerning the
annexed Crimean Peninsula, the International Court of Justice found
in 2017 that Crimean Tatars have been deprived of their cultural
rights under the International Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Racial Discrimination.
4.6. Other
countries
61. Article 5 of the Statute of
the International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible
for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed
in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991 (ICTY) defines
as crimes against humanity the deportation of civilian population
and persecutions on political, racial and religious grounds. The
ICTY has developed jurisprudence on forced displacement in this respect.
62. According to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre in
Geneva, there are still 98 000 people displaced by conflict within
Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Unfortunately, I did not receive
a response to my written questions from the national delegation
to the Assembly. Nevertheless, one can conclude that the humanitarian situation
of IDPs still requires huge efforts by the national authorities
and the international community. Through the Regional Housing Programme
in Bosnia and Herzegovina,
435 housing units have been built
for IDPs and a further 1 200 units are planned for 2018.
In addition to the IDPs displaced
by conflict, some 90 000 persons were displaced by extreme rainfall
and flooding in Bosnia and Herzegovina in May 2014.
Several EU programmes have helped
the persons affected.
63. The number of persons displaced by the armed conflict in the
eastern part of the Republic of Moldova from November 1990 to July
1992 was estimated at around 130 000 from the region of Transnistria.
The UNCHR estimated that there were
2 300 IDPs in the Republic of Moldova in 2016.
While there is no information on
how the large number of IDPs received compensation and voluntarily
settled elsewhere, it is important to recall that the European Court
of Human Rights found in its judgment
Ilaşcu
and Others v. Moldova and Russia (Application No. 48787/99)
that the Russian Federation exercises jurisdiction in the region
of Transnistria for the purposes of Article 1 of the Convention.
As recently as 2017, the Government of the Republic of Moldova referred
a demand to the UN General Assembly for the withdrawal of Russian
troops from the Transnistrian region.
In the judgment
Catan and Others v. Moldova and Russia (Applications
Nos. 43370/04, 8252/05 and 18454/06), the European Court found a
violation of the right to education by prohibiting the use of the
Latin alphabet at school in the region of Transnistria, which has
the effect of further displacement of persons within the Republic
of Moldova on cultural grounds.
64. The Russian Federation has been found responsible for human
rights violations of IDPs within its borders by the European Court
of Human Rights in the cases of
Khamidov
v. Russia (Application No. 72118/01) and
Aslakhanova and Others v. Russia (Application
No. 2944/06). Other cases against the Russian Federation concern
its control over territory outside the Russian Federation, which
reflect the fact that the Southern Military District of the Armed
Forces of the Russian Federation extends beyond its borders to include Armenia,
Abkhazia and South Ossetia of Georgia and the Crimean Peninsula
of Ukraine.
65. Italy has approximately 31 000 IDPs due to natural disasters,
many of whom have been affected by serious
earthquakes. A report to the European Parliament found in 2013 that
financial resources by the European Union, which had been used for
the humanitarian needs of IDPs after the devastating earthquake
in Aquila in 2009, had been spent poorly and gone partially to organised
crime.
Nearly a decade after this earthquake,
only half of Aquila’s centre seems to be rebuilt.
Among the 80 000 original IDPs from
Aquila, many were moved to newly built housing facilities, but they
are dissatisfied with the conditions there.
Italy’s IDPs need continued international
support as well as strategies for resilience against future natural
disasters.
5. Lessons
to be learnt
66. The very high numbers of IDPs
in Europe require huge humanitarian and financial efforts by the countries
concerned. The conflicts which led to such numbers of IDPs have
caused enormous humanitarian hardship, which persists as long as
the conflicts have not been resolved. IDPs in conflict areas as
well as IDPs’ family members left behind in conflict areas are particularly
vulnerable and need special humanitarian assistance.
67. In order to avoid further destabilisation of these countries,
member States of the Council of Europe should continue co-ordinated
humanitarian assistance for IDPs. The relevant Assembly resolutions
and judgments by the European Court of Human Rights must be implemented
fully and without delay by all member States. The Committee of Ministers
should ensure that undue delays in the execution of judgments do
not occur.
68. Decisions and action by the United Nations regarding IDPs
in Europe should be supported by all member States. The 1998 United
Nations Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement must be respected.
The general principles of the Kampala Convention of the African
Union should be incorporated into domestic and international law
in Europe.
69. The work of humanitarian non governmental organisations (NGOs)
as well as of the International Committee of the Red Cross should
be facilitated and supported. Member States should co-ordinate their
bi- or multilateral humanitarian assistance to IDPs at European
level and monitor its effectiveness.
70. While the economic self-sustainability of IDPs should be a
fundamental objective of humanitarian assistance, the enforcement
of their human rights must be observed by all member States. Commissions
or other national bodies for the compensation of lost possessions
should be created as well as for damages for non-pecuniary losses
for victims and their surviving family members.
71. IDPs should be assisted and included in the decision processes
affecting their humanitarian situation, either before the courts
or during local, regional and national democratic processes. Political
representation of IDPs should also be maintained in their internal
exile.
72. Social and cultural rights of IDPs must be respected in accordance
with the European Social Charter or other conventions and the respective
bodies of the Council of Europe should pay particular attention
to the situation of IDPs.
6. Future
challenges
73. Remembering the numerous cases
of forced internal displacements of people in the history of Europe, one
has to note that international agreements which settled conflicts
have become the foundation for reconciliation, the recognition of
the rights of IDPs and due compensation. Without such agreements,
the human rights of IDPs continue to be at stake. Therefore, future
agreements should duly address the rights of IDPs.
74. International law must become the preeminent yardstick for
assessing the humanitarian situation of IDPs. In this respect, the
following rights of IDPs must be respected and enforced:
- the right to the protection
of life, liberty and security under Articles 2 and 5 of the European
Convention on Human Rights;
- the right to respect for family life under Article 8 of
the Convention, which includes the right to receive information
about the whereabouts of missing family members and the right to
family reunification;
- the right to the protection of their possessions and property
under Article 1 of the Protocol to the Convention;
- the right to housing, health care and other social rights
under the European Social Charter (revised) which, in accordance
with the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights on
extra-territorial obligations, binds also member States which exercise
control outside their own territory;
- the right to education under Article 2 of the Protocol
to the Convention and the right to the preservation of their cultural
identity and other cultural rights under Article 27 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights as well as the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination;
- the protection of their cultural property under the Hague
Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event
of Armed Conflict, as well as the Council of Europe Convention on
Offences relating to Cultural Property (CETS No. 221);
- the right to maintain their nationality, in accordance
with the European Convention on Nationality (ETS No. 166), which
also applies to IDPs and their families and descendants who are
in conflict areas;
- the right to free elections without discrimination based
on displacement under Article 3 of the Protocol to the Convention
and Article 14 of the Convention, which also requires that local
and regional political bodies, which were elected by the population
before its internal displacement, be maintained in their internal
exile;
- the right to return voluntarily, in safety and with dignity,
to their homes or places of habitual residence, or to resettle voluntarily
in another part of their country, as well as the right not to be
expelled from the territory of their country under Article 3 of
Protocol No. 4 to the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No.
46).
75. Member States should regularly assess, together with the United
Nations, the European Union and the ICRC, the humanitarian needs
of their IDPs and publish those assessments, which should allow
the international community to provide assistance to the countries
and persons concerned.
76. Any financial exploitation of the homes and territory of IDPs
by armed groups, de facto authorities
and private companies must be prohibited and prosecuted in accordance
with the Council of Europe Convention on Laundering, Search, Seizure
and Confiscation of the Proceeds from Crime and on the Financing
of Terrorism (CETS No. 198). Where States or non-State actors profit
financially from such exploitation, they should be held liable.
77. Member States should assist IDPs in obtaining restitution
of, or compensation for, their lost or looted property. In this
respect, a historical example can be found in the Terezín Declaration
on Holocaust Era Assets and Related Issues of 30 June 2009 as well
as the Holocaust Era Asset Restitution Taskforce (HEART) established
by Israel.
78. As the forced internal displacement of persons constitutes
a grave violation of international humanitarian law or even a crime
against humanity, other member States should permit under their
domestic law procedures for the recognition and enforcement of relevant
judgments by the European Court of Human Rights and the seizure
of assets of a respondent State held in another State, if the respondent
State refuses to pay the financial compensation awarded by the Court.
79. Through modern high-resolution satellite images, military
aggressions can be made visible, including the displacement or persons
by the destruction of their houses, medical buildings, schools,
religious sites and other civilian infrastructure.
Such satellite images are an increasingly
important tool for assessing the humanitarian situation and establishing
the ensuing rights of IDPs.
80. Besides the assessment of the humanitarian needs and rights
of IDPs after their forced displacement, it is extremely important
to prevent future forced displacements and build up the resilience
of the population. In this regard, member States should combat any
propaganda aimed at the dehumanisation of populations. Such propaganda
against a group of people typically serves the purpose to seemingly
justify violence against them, the violation of their rights, their
forced displacement or ethnic cleansing, and even their killing.
81. Member States should react reasonably to well-calculated provocations
aimed at escalating the situation in a region in order to have a
pretext for a premeditated military intervention by another State
and the forced displacement of people from that region. This requires
attention from the State concerned as well as from the international
community, in particular through international organisations such
as the United Nations, the OSCE, the Council of Europe and the European
Union. Otherwise, further internal displacement and human suffering
might be inflicted upon more Europeans for the unlawful purpose
of conquering territory and pursuing ethnic tensions.
82. Finally, humanitarian needs of IDPs can only be addressed
in a sustainable way by reducing the tensions underlying their forced
displacement. For this purpose, member States should establish scientific commissions
for the analysis of the humanitarian suffering and the individual
stories of IDPs. Assembly
Resolution
1613 (2008) “Use of experience of the ‘truth commissions’” can be
of guidance in this respect.