1. Introduction
1. The present report stems from
a motion for a resolution tabled on 13 October 2016 by former Parliamentary
Assembly President Anne Brasseur, which recalled the derogations
then in force in France, Turkey and Ukraine and the particular risk
of human rights abuses occurring during states of emergency, and called
on the Assembly to “study proportionality issues regarding derogations
under Article 15 of the Convention” (namely the European Convention
on Human Rights (ETS No. 5, “the Convention”)). I was appointed
rapporteur on 23 January 2017.
2. The aim of the report is to examine how these derogations
were justified in the context of the underlying situations in the
countries concerned; the notifications given to the Secretary General
of the Council of Europe; the constitutional provisions regulating
states of emergency; the legal measures introduced under the state
of emergency to which the derogation was intended to apply; the
legal and political context in which these measures were applied,
including the degree of independent oversight and the availability
of domestic remedies; and, in the case of France, how the state
of emergency was brought to an end and the derogation withdrawn.
The report will not consider whether measures taken in individual
cases were proportionate. It will, however, make general recommendations
both to States and to organs of the Council of Europe, with a view to
encouraging good practice and, where necessary, possible reforms
in the way that states of emergency and derogations are applied
by States and overseen by the Council of Europe.
3. I carried out fact-finding visits to all three countries concerned
during the preparation of the report: from 12 to 14 April 2017 in
Ukraine; on 24 May 2017 and again on 4 and 6 September in France;
and from 31 October to November 2017 in Turkey. I would like to
thank all those I met for their time and contributions, and the
national delegations of the countries concerned for their assistance
in organising these visits.
2. The
legal framework permitting derogations during states of emergency
4. The drafters of the European
Convention on Human Rights were conscious of the fact that there
may be situations in which the application of certain rights must
be adapted to prevailing circumstances. The most far-reaching such
mechanism is the possibility allowed to States Parties to derogate
from their obligations under the Convention in time of emergency.
Article 15 of the Convention sets out the conditions under which
States may avail themselves of this possibility:
- in time of war or other public
emergency threatening the life of the nation any High Contracting
Party may take measures derogating from its obligations under this
Convention to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of
the situation, provided that such measures are not inconsistent
with its other obligations under international law;
- no derogation from Article 2, except in respect of deaths
resulting from lawful acts of war, or from Articles 3, 4 (paragraph
1) and 7 shall be made under this provision;
- any High Contracting Party availing itself of this right
of derogation shall keep the Secretary General of the Council of
Europe fully informed of the measures which it has taken and the
reasons therefor. It shall also inform the Secretary General of
the Council of Europe when such measures have ceased to operate and
the provisions of the Convention are again being fully executed
5. A derogation does not mean that the situation covered by a
state of emergency no longer falls within the jurisdiction of the
European Court of Human Rights (“the Court”), nor that the Convention
no longer applies to it at national level. Individuals retain the
rights to an effective domestic remedy under Article 13 and to apply
to the Court under Article 34. The domestic pronouncement of a state
of emergency and the notification of derogation to the Secretary
General of the Council of Europe may, however, affect the extent
of the State’s obligations to respect and protect certain Convention
rights.
6. When examining cases involving derogations, the Court will
first consider whether the impugned act would violate a Convention
right. Should this be the case, it will then consider whether the
derogation satisfied the requirements of Article 15.
In particular,
it will consider whether a “war or other public emergency threatening
the life of the nation” exists; the measures taken were “strictly
required by the exigencies of the situation”; the derogation is
not inconsistent with other international legal obligations; it
does not concern non-derogable rights; and the notification requirement
has been met. If these requirements are satisfied, the derogation
will be valid and the State will not have violated its obligations.
7. Although several States Parties have been involved in extra-territorial
armed conflicts, none has derogated in respect of them.
The
Court has thus not had to interpret the meaning of “war” within
Article 15, and has not determined, for example, whether such a
“war” must “threaten the life of the nation” in the same way that
an “other public emergency” must do.
8. The Court has stated that the expression “public emergency
threatening the life of the nation” should be given its “natural
and customary meaning” in accordance with a four-part test: i) an
exceptional situation of crisis or emergency; ii) affecting the
whole population (although not necessarily all of the territory
)
of the State; iii) constituting a threat to the organised life of
the community of which the State is composed; iv) for which the normal
measures or restrictions, permitted by the Convention for the maintenance
of public safety, health and order, are plainly inadequate.
Although the threat must
be imminent, the authorities need not wait, for example, for an
actual terrorist attack before derogation can be justified.
The
emergency situation may be protracted, as in the case of terrorism
in Northern Ireland, for which the Court found the United Kingdom’s derogation,
lasting many years, to be acceptable. On the other hand, the Court
has made clear that derogations are valid only within the territorial
area for which they have been specified and only until the emergency
to which they relate has ended.
9. The Court has recognised that “[b]y reason of their direct
and continuous contact with the pressing needs of the moment, the
national authorities are in principle in a better position than
the international judge to decide both on the presence of such an
emergency and on the nature and scope of derogations necessary to
avert it. In this matter Article 15.1 leaves those authorities a
wide margin of appreciation”.
On this basis, the Court has, with one exception,
consistently deferred to national authorities’ assessment of whether
or not a “public emergency threatening the life of the nation” exists.
10. The Court has shown less deference on the question of necessity,
recalling that “the States do not enjoy an unlimited power in this
respect. The Court, which … is responsible for ensuring the observance
of the States’ engagements, is empowered to rule on whether the
States have gone beyond the ‘extent strictly required by the exigencies’
of the crisis. The domestic margin of appreciation is thus accompanied
by a European supervision”.
11. Some rights cannot be subject to derogation. Article 15.1
contains a list of such rights, in particular Articles 2 (right
to life), except in respect of deaths resulting from lawful acts
of war, 3 (prohibition of torture or inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment), 4.1 (prohibition of slavery or servitude) and 7
(no punishment without law). Other considerations, notably peremptory
norms of international law, also condition the scope of permissible
derogations. The Court has found derogating measures that were unjustifiably
discriminatory to be disproportionate.
The
United Nations Human Rights Committee has noted that “the category
of peremptory norms [of international law] extends beyond the list
of non-derogable provisions as given in Article 4, paragraph 2 [International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)]. States parties
may in no circumstances invoke Article 4 … as justification for
acting in violation of humanitarian law or peremptory norms of international
law, for instance by taking hostages, by imposing collective punishments,
through arbitrary deprivations of liberty, or by deviating from
fundamental principles of fair trial, including the presumption
of innocence”. Furthermore, “[t]he provisions of the Covenant relating
to procedural safeguards may never be made subject to measures that
would circumvent the protection of non-derogable rights”.
Thus, for example, “[t]he
procedural guarantees protecting liberty of person may never be
made subject to measures of derogation that would circumvent the
protection of non-derogable rights…, including [the right to life
and the prohibition on torture].”
The same approach should be taken
in relation to derogations from the Convention, to ensure consistency
with other obligations under international law.
12. Article 15.3 of the Convention requires a derogating State
to “keep the Secretary General of the Council of Europe fully informed
of the measures which it has taken and the reasons therefor”. The
jurisprudence of the Court and of the former European Commission
of Human Rights requires notification “without any unavoidable delay”.
Delays
of three and four months have been found to be excessive, but 12
days to be acceptable.
Whilst
it is clear that the Court cannot apply Article 15 in the complete
absence of due notification of derogation,
the consequences
of unduly delayed notification are less clear. In
Greece v. United Kingdom, having
found that a three-month delay in notification did not invalidate
the derogation, the Commission stated that it was “not to be understood
as having expressed the view that in no circumstances whatsoever
may a failure to comply with paragraph 3 of Article 15 attract the
sanction of nullity or some other sanction”. In the
“Greek case”, the applicant States
argued that a four-month delay in notification should “strike with
nullity” the derogations; whilst the Commission agreed that the
requirements of Article 15.3 had not been met, it did not directly
answer the question of whether the derogation should be nullified
– although since it proceeded to examine the case under Article
15.1, by implication it could be said not to have accepted the applicants’ arguments.
3. The
position of the Assembly
13. The Assembly has devoted close
attention to the issue of derogations in recent years, most extensively in
Resolution 1659 (2009) on protection of human rights in emergency situations.
The Assembly recalled that “it is the State's responsibility to
take preventive measures to protect the interests of society 'in
time of war or other emergency threatening the life of the nation'
… In very specific circumstances linked specifically to Article 15
…, the declaration of a state of emergency can be a legitimate legal
method to respond quickly to such threats. However, as it entails
restrictions on the rights and freedoms of individuals, it must
be used with utmost care and as a means of last resort only. Declaring
a state of emergency must not become a pretext to unduly restrict
the exercise of fundamental human rights”. Furthermore, “allegations
of abuse of such derogations must be effectively and thoroughly
investigated, and the government must be fully accountable”. In
order to ensure effective oversight, the parliament “should have
effective control” over the emergency legislative process. Essential
safeguards also include clear time limits on the duration of emergency
powers, for example a “sunset clause” with the possibility of extension
subject to new parliamentary approval, and judicial scrutiny of
the validity of the state of emergency and its implementation. The
Assembly also noted that “an abusively declared or improperly conducted
state of emergency often results in excessive use of force and, in
particular, the stifling of the freedoms of assembly and of expression”.
4. Current
derogations from the Convention
14. There are at present two States
Parties to the Convention which have notified the Secretary General
of derogations, in chronological order, Ukraine and Turkey, and
one, France, that has recently withdrawn its derogation.
4.1. The
Ukrainian derogation
4.1.1. Notification
of the Secretary General
15. Ukraine notified the Secretary
General of its derogation on 9 June 2015 (date of registration).
The notification states that “[o]ngoing armed aggression of the
Russian Federation against Ukraine, together with war crimes and
crimes against humanity committed both by regular Armed Forces of
the Russian Federation and by the illegal armed groups guided, controlled
and financed by the Russian Federation, constitutes a public emergency
threatening the life of the nation in the sense of … Article 15,
paragraph 1 of the Convention” as a result of which the Ukrainian
authorities had had “to adopt legal acts, which constitute derogation
from certain obligations of Ukraine under the … Convention”.
16. In this context, I would recall that the Parliamentary Assembly
has consistently condemned “Russia’s role in instigating and escalating
[the] developments [in eastern Ukraine]”,
finding
that “the military intervention by Russian forces in eastern Ukraine
violate[s] international law and the principles upheld by the Council
of Europe”
and
noting the “credible reports of violations of international human
rights and humanitarian law by all sides to the conflict, including
persistent abductions, summary killings, arbitrary detention and
torture of civilians in the areas under the control of the pro-Russian
separatists and Russian troops”.
17. The 9 June 2015 notice of derogation also specifies the laws
whose implementation necessitates derogation from the Convention,
as well as the rights from which derogation is necessary in each
case.
18. The first, “On Amendments to the Law of Ukraine ‘On Combatting
Terrorism’ regarding the preventive detention of persons, involved
in terrorist activities in the anti-terrorist operation area for
a period exceeding 72 hours”, allows (as the name suggests) persons
suspected of involvement in terrorist activities who have been arrested
in the “anti-terrorist operation area” exceptionally to be detained
for a period exceeding 72 hours but not exceeding 30 days, on the
decision of a prosecutor but without the decision of a court. Implementation of
this law requires derogation from Articles 5, 6 and 13 of the Convention.
The notification also explains that what is required by the relevant
danger (Russian armed aggression and the actions of Russian-backed separatist
groups) is limited to application of this law in exceptional cases
for the purpose of prevention of grave crimes.
19. The second, “On Amendments to the Criminal Procedure Code
of Ukraine regarding the special regime of pretrial investigation
under martial law, in state of emergency or in the anti-terrorist
operation area”, temporarily transfers the powers of investigating
judges, along with additional procedural rights, to prosecutors, on
condition that it is impossible for the investigating judge to perform
his/her duties under the Criminal Procedure Code. Implementation
of this law requires derogation from Articles 5, 6, 8 and 13 of
the Convention. The notification explains that the relevant danger
requires application of this law only “where courts do not actually
function in certain areas of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts”.
20. The third, “On Administering Justice and Conducting Criminal
Proceedings in Connection with the Anti-Terrorist Operation”, changes
the territorial jurisdiction over cases otherwise falling in the
jurisdiction of courts located in the anti-terrorist operation area
and investigative jurisdiction over criminal offences committed
in the anti-terrorist operation area, where pretrial investigation
is impossible. Implementation of this law requires derogation from
Article 6 of the Convention. The notification explains that application
of this law is limited to the extent to which courts and pretrial
investigation bodies do not actually function in those areas.
21. The fourth and final law, “On Military and Civil Administration”,
establishes “military and civil administrations” “as temporary State
bodies functioning within the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, within
the Anti-Terrorist Centre of the Security Service of Ukraine”. In
addition to general duties to maintain law and order, the civil
and military administrations were given powers to impose curfews,
restrict or prohibit free movement of vehicles or pedestrians, and
conduct identity checks and searches of persons and property. Implementation of
this law requires derogation from Articles 5 and 8 of the Convention.
The notification explains that the temporary restrictions on freedom
of movement and the right to private life are limited to what is
necessary “to prevent the threat of destruction of the nation because
of the Russian Federation armed aggression”.
22. The notification then continues to indicate the intended duration
of the derogation: “for the period until the complete cessation
of the Russian Federation armed aggression, the restoration of constitutional
order and orderliness in the occupied territory of Ukraine and until
further notification to the Secretary General”. As to the geographical
scope of the derogation, the notification indicates that this information
will be communicated at a later stage, once determined according
to Ukrainian law.
23. Three further notifications have been given. On 4 November
2015, Ukraine notified the Secretary General of the precise localities
in the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts to which the derogation applied.
The notification of 30 June 2016 stated that one year after introduction
of the measures in question, the Ukrainian authorities had reviewed
the security situation in the relevant areas. It then gave an overview
of recent events and the current situation and stated that the Ukrainian
authorities, “having established that the circumstances which led
to submitting the derogation still prevail, found it necessary to
continue to exercise … the powers described” in the relevant legal
acts, adding that “to the extent that the exercise of these powers
may be inconsistent with the obligations imposed by the Convention
… [Ukraine] has availed itself of the right of derogation … and
will continue to do so until further notice”. The notification concluded
with a revised list of the localities to which the derogation applied.
The most recent notification of 31 January 2017 was to the same effect
as that of 30 June 2016.
24. It should be noted that the derogation does not apply to those
parts of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts that are outside the control
of the Ukrainian authorities, or to Crimea, which the Assembly considers
to have been illegally annexed by the Russian Federation.
The Ukrainian position on these
territories, as explained in the notification of derogation, is
that the Russian Federation is fully responsible for respect for
and protection of human rights in these territories. The unstated
implication is that these territories are no longer within Ukraine’s effective
jurisdiction, as defined by Article 1 of the Convention. As a matter
of law, this may ultimately be a matter for the European Court of
Human Rights to determine.
25. At this stage, I would make certain comments on the form and
content of Ukraine’s notification of derogation to the Secretary
General. The notification is admirably clear on the factual background,
the reasons why the situation in Ukraine should be considered a
“public emergency threatening the life of the nation”, the measures
taken whose implementation require a derogation and the articles
of the Convention from which Ukraine is derogating.
26. I have concerns, however, about the delays involved. Firstly,
in passing the parliamentary resolution on derogation, which was
done on 21 May 2015, nine months after three of the four laws were
adopted; secondly, in notifying the Secretary General, which was
done more than two weeks after the parliamentary resolution on derogation
was passed; and thirdly, notifying the Secretary General of the
geographical scope of the derogation, which was done on 4 November,
almost five months after the main notification was received. The explanation
I received during my meetings in Ukraine was that the aftermath
of the February 2014 “Revolution of Dignity”, in particular the
flight of former president Viktor Yanukovych and the collapse of
his government, followed by the imperative need to respond to the
annexation of Crimea and the separatist military threat in eastern
Ukraine, so disrupted the work of the government and parliament
that earlier notification was not practically possible. It would
be for the Court to determine whether measures taken under the relevant
laws before receipt of notification by the Secretary General are
covered by the derogation or not.
4.1.2. Overview
of the general legal situation and specific measures taken in the
context of the derogation
27. The Constitution of Ukraine
regulates the declaration of a state of emergency, the limits to
which emergency measures may interfere with human rights and roles
of the parliament (Verkhovna Rada) and judicial system.
Ukraine has not, however, declared
a state of emergency in relation to the derogation under Article
15 of the Convention. The provisions relating to a state of emergency
foreseen by the Ukrainian Constitution therefore do not apply. That
said, the Constitution contains other provisions relating to control
of the human rights compatibility of measures taken in application
of the laws mentioned in the notification of derogation.
28. The Constitutional Court shall resolve issues of conformity
of laws and other legal acts with the Constitution and shall provide
the official interpretation of the Constitution and the laws (Article
147). The Constitutional Court shall consider such issues upon request
from the President, at least 45 deputies, the Supreme Court or the
Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights (Article 150).
Laws
or other legal acts considered unconstitutional by the Constitutional
Court shall lose legal force from the day of adoption of the Court's
decision; persons suffering damage due to acts or actions found
to be unconstitutional shall be compensated by the State under a
procedure established by law (Article 152).
29. Certain other provisions are also of interest in the present
context. The public prosecution is entrusted with supervision of
the observance by executive and administrative bodies of human rights
and the observance of laws regulating them (Article 121). Everyone
has the right to appeal for the protection of their rights to the Parliamentary
Commissioner for Human Rights (Article 55).
30. It should be noted that the four laws which gave rise to the
derogation contain additional and more detailed provisions not mentioned
in either the resolution of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine on the
Declaration “On Derogation from Certain Obligations under the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms” of 21 May 2015
or the notification to the Secretary General. Some of those in the
Law on Amendments to the Law of Ukraine on Combating Terrorism may
have consequences for full enjoyment of human rights.
31. One such provision states that persons not engaged in the
anti-terrorist operation may stay in the area of such operation
only with the permission of the chief of the operations headquarters.
This may have consequences under Article 4.1 (freedom of movement)
of Protocol No. 4 to the Convention (ETS No. 46), to which Ukraine
is a Party. It can be noted, however, that Article 4 of Protocol
No. 4 sets out qualified rights, and in principle the provision
in question could be applied in accordance with the requirements
of Article 4.3 without the need for derogation.
32. Another provision states that enterprises, organisations and
institutions operating in the anti-terrorist operation area may
be required to discontinue their activities partially or in full.
This may have consequences under, for example, Articles 9 (freedom
of religion), 10 (freedom of expression) and 11 (freedom of assembly and
association). Again, it can be noted that these are qualified rights
with which the authorities are in certain circumstances permitted
to interfere, even in the absence of a derogation.
4.1.3. Domestic
safeguards
33. I was informed by the parliamentarians
whom I met at the Verkhovna Rada that a range of parliamentary committees
are involved in oversight of the emergency measures, especially
the human rights committee, the committee on public order and the
committee on national security and defence. These and other committees held
a round table in early 2017 with government ministers, representatives
of the police, security services and prosecutor’s office and the
presidents of the Donetsk and Luhansk military and civil administrations
to discuss the situation in the conflict and adjacent areas. Parliamentarians
had also held meetings outside Kyiv, in the affected areas, including
visits to the crossing points. One may still question, however,
whether parliamentary control of the emergency measures is sufficiently
structured and rigorous. The Ukrainian Parliament would do well
to examine this matter further, in particular the preparation of
periodic reports on the follow-up of emergency measures.
34. As regards judicial oversight, it is perhaps unfortunate that
neither the government nor the parliament referred the emergency
laws to the Constitutional Court. The military and civil administrations
are under the jurisdiction of the local administrative courts, although
I was not informed of any particular cases brought against them.
4.1.4. Concerns
relating to the emergency measures
35. The security situation in the
parts of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts covered by the measures mentioned
in the notification will doubtless satisfy the Court’s requirements
for a “public emergency threatening the life of the nation”. The
question is whether or not the specific measures taken are “strictly
required by the exigencies of the situation”, in other words, proportional.
36. In this respect, the provision whereby a person suspected
of terrorist activities may be held in preventive detention for
up to 30 days “without a decision of the court” may be of concern.
It can be recalled that in the case of
Aksoy
v. Turkey, the Court was of the view that although “the
investigation of terrorist offences undoubtedly presents the authorities
with special problems, it cannot accept that it is necessary to
hold a suspect for fourteen days without judicial intervention.
This period is exceptionally long”.
The
full text of the Law on Amendments to the Law of Ukraine on Combating
Terrorism, however, also states that a copy of the decision on preventive
detention shall be forwarded to the investigating judge or competent
court with a request for an appropriate preventive measure, and
that preventive detention may not be extended after that judge or court
has examined the request. At first sight, this would appear to introduce
some form of judicial control, although how this operates in practice,
and thus whether or not it would be effective, is not clear. The
Ukrainian authorities told me that at the beginning of the fighting,
they had been unable to bring a person detained in the conflict
area before a court for five days because of the security situation.
In my view, such an exceptional situation could be dealt with in
a less radical way, not requiring derogation from the Convention.
Various national authorities and Ukrainian non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) told me that, in fact, this provision had never been applied;
as a result, the Ombudsperson had been unable to challenge it before
the Constitutional Court, although she herself considered it to
be unconstitutional and unnecessary. As there are legal concerns
relating to the provision and it has never been necessary to use
it, perhaps the best solution would be simply to repeal it, as has
been suggested by, for example, the Ombudsperson, and rely on the existing
provisions of the ordinary Criminal Procedure Code – as was in fact
done in practice.
37. The operation of the checkpoints on the contact line between
the government-controlled area (GCA) and the non government-controlled
area (NGCA) has been widely criticised. The checkpoint system severely restricts
the freedom of movement of the tens of thousands of civilians who
must cross the contact line daily. Problems relate especially to
the strict permit system, lengthy queues (sometimes as much as 36
hours), material conditions for those forced to wait at the checkpoints
and security risks.
There were reports in 2016 of
acts of violent ill-treatment, including sexual and gender-based
violence, and of extortion by personnel staffing the checkpoints.
Although
the situation seems to have improved somewhat in 2017, and indeed
the government representatives whom I met were aware of and anxious
to address these concerns, problems at crossing points have persisted.
A recent report
noted that there were still problems of long queues and failures
to recognise crossing permits and inadequate waiting conditions
(including lack of shelter and poor sanitary facilities); that said,
incidents of verbal or physical abuse were very few in number, there
were no reported incidents of sexual and gender-based violence or
corruption, and no-one fell victim to hostilities in the vicinity
of crossing points.
38. As regards the transfer of the competence of courts in the
NGCA to the GCA, I was informed by civil society representatives
of various concerns. Some courts had not themselves been moved but
instead their cases had been transferred to existing courts, greatly
increasing the latters’ caseloads. Of the courts that had been moved,
I was told that many of their judges had left their posts, again
generating case-load problems, and only around two thirds, on average,
of these courts’ staff had moved with them. Premises for relocated courts
had not been specially prepared for their new use and were not always
suitable. Some relocated courts’ archives had not been transferred.
Overall, it was felt that insufficient follow-up had been given
to the implementation of this measure. Other practical problems
included difficulties in contacting people living in the NGCA who
were involved in litigation before the affected courts, and difficulties
in implementing their decisions in that area.
4.2. The
French derogation
4.2.1. Notification
of the Secretary General
39. The French derogation arises
from and has been maintained on account of the series of Daesh-related terrorist
attacks that have occurred in France since November 2015.
40. France notified the Secretary General of its derogation on
24 November 2015. The French declaration began by referring to the
fact that “on 13 November 2015, large-scale terrorist attacks took
place in the Paris region”, continuing to state that “the terrorist
threat in France is of a lasting nature, having regard to information from
the intelligence services and to the international context”. The
declaration noted that on 14 November 2015, the French Government
had adopted Decree No. 2015-1475 to apply Law No. 55-385 on the
state of emergency. Decrees Nos. 2015-1475, 1476, 1478 and 1494
defined measures that could be taken by the administrative authorities.
Law No. 2015-1501 of 20 November 2015 extended the state of emergency
for three months, beginning 26 November 2015. Finally, the declaration
noted that “some” of the measures set out in these decrees and laws
“may involve a derogation from the obligations under the Convention”.
The declaration specifies neither the measures that may involve
a derogation, nor the Convention rights affected.
41. France has subsequently made five more declarations to the
Secretary General, following extensions to the duration of the state
of emergency: on 26 February 2016 (extension for three months);
25 May 2016 (extension for two months), which referred also to the
significance of two forthcoming major sporting events; 22 July 2016
(extension for six months), which referred also to the 14 July terrorist
attack in Nice and the terrorist murder of two police officials
on 13 June; 21 December 2016 (extension for six months), which mentioned
that since July, 12 terrorist attacks had been countered, and drew
attention to the pre-electoral context (both presidential and legislative
elections were to take place during this six-month period); and
13 July 2017 (extension until 1 November), which mentioned five
separate attacks on military, security and police personnel during
the first half of the year.
42. Each of these declarations has stated that “the terrorist
threat, characterising ‘an imminent danger resulting from serious
breaches of public order’, which justified the initial declaration
and the first extension of the state of emergency remains at a very
alarming level”, and that “the review of the measures taken under
the state of emergency … has confirmed the need for such measures
in order to prevent any further attacks and to disrupt terrorist
networks”. Each notification from the second onwards has also recalled
that the emergency measures are “subject to effective judicial review,
as well as to a particularly attentive parliamentary monitoring and
control mechanism”, and that “the French Government will ensure
the proper information of and consultation with locally elected
representatives and intends to pursue the dialogue with civil society”.
43. Successive declarations also provided brief information on
the evolution of the emergency measures. The notification of 25
May 2016 stated that the measures no longer included administrative
searches in places suspected of being frequented by people who threaten
order and public safety. On 22 July 2016, however, France declared
that the administrative search power would be restored during the
period of the extension, as part of a “renovation plan” to include
also the “operation [sic; understood to mean copying] of computer
data after authorisation of a judge”. On 21 December 2016, the notification
stated that administrative searches would again be allowed and that
the duration of house arrest would be limited to 12 months, with
the possibility of judicial authorisation to extend for a further
three months; this was reiterated in the 13 July 2017 notification.
44. The 13 July 2017 notification, whilst stating that an immediate
exit from the state of emergency appeared premature, also announced
the intention to “provide the State with new instruments to enhance
the security of the people and property outside the special framework
of the state of emergency”, referring to a draft law then under
examination by the parliament. On 7 November 2017, a final declaration
was made announcing that the state of emergency had ended on 1 November
2017 – the unstated implication being clearly that the derogation was
no longer in force.
4.2.2. Overview
of the general legal situation and specific emergency measures
45. The French Constitution does
not provide for a declaration of a state of emergency. Instead,
the matter is regulated by Law No. 55-385 of 3 April 1955 (“the
1955 Law”).
This
law stipulates that the state of emergency is declared by the Council
of Ministers. Its extension beyond 12 days must be authorised by
law, which must fix its definitive duration.
46. The 1955 Law also sets out the measures that may be taken
under the state of emergency. These include the following: bans
on the circulation of persons or vehicles (Article 5.1); the establishment
of protection or security areas where the presence of individuals
is regulated (Article 5.2); residence bans in relation to all or
part of the country against any person seeking to hinder in any
way the action of the public authorities (Article 5.3); restricted
residence, or house arrest orders (“assignation
à résidence”) against persons in respect of whom there
are serious reasons to believe that their behaviour is a threat
to security and public order (Article 6); dissolution of associations
or groups participating in the commission of acts seriously undermining public
order or whose activities facilitate or incite the commission of
such acts (Article 6.1); temporary closure of concert halls/ theatres,
pubs and meeting places of any kind (Article 8.1); prohibition of
meetings likely to cause or maintain disorder (Article 8.2); obligation
to surrender, for reasons of public order, certain firearms and
ammunition legally held or acquired (Article 9); requisition of
people, goods and services (Article 10); house search during both
daytime and night-time (Article 11.I); and blocking websites which
incite the commission of acts of terrorism or glorify such acts
(Article 11.II). Some of these measures, such as restricted residence
or house orders and searches, would normally fall within the competence
of the judicial authority.
47. The 1955 Law has been amended and its application adjusted
on several occasions since the state of emergency was first declared.
Significant changes were made in the first law extending the state
of emergency of 20 November 2015, which notably introduced parliamentary
control, with compulsory, prompt notification by the authorities
of all measures taken under the 1955 law; reinforced judicial control,
by removing the requirement to bring complaints before an “advisory
commission” prior to the administrative courts, and allowing examination
of cases through an urgent procedure; and revised the conditions
under which measures could be ordered (on which more below). The
20 May 2016 law extending the state of emergency did not renew the
power to conduct administrative searches of property, on the basis
that it no longer presented the same interest, especially in the
light of the decision of the Conseil
constitutionnel prohibiting the making of copies of digital
information discovered during searches; any necessary searches could
be conducted on the basis of prior judicial authorisation. Initially
intended to last only until 20 July, the state of emergency was
again renewed on 21 July following the 14 July terrorist attack
in Nice. The 21 July law reinstated administrative searches with a
new legal regime governing the treatment of digital information;
prefects were empowered to order identity checks and searches of
bags and vehicles without prior authorisation from the prosecutor;
and regimes of judicial and parliamentary control were enhanced.
The 19 December law extending the state of emergency limited house
arrest to a maximum of 12 months, although the Minister of the Interior
could request extension for periods of three months. The 11 July
2017 law specified the circumstances permitting identity checks, searches
of bags and vehicles and exclusion orders.
4.2.3. Domestic
safeguards
48. An amendment of 21 July 2016
to the 1955 Law requires that the Assemblée
nationale and the Sénat be
informed without delay of the measures taken by the government during
the state of emergency, and be provided by the administrative authorities
with copies of all acts taken by the latter under the 1955 Law.
The Assemblée nationale and
the Sénat may demand any supplementary
information in the course of their evaluation of the emergency measures.
The French judicial system and parliament have been closely involved in
scrutiny of the declaration of a state of emergency and the implementation
of measures pursuant to it.
49. The Conseil d’État,
in addition to a series of decisions concerning individual measures,
has also issued binding consultative opinions on each of the five
extensions of the state of emergency to date. The following points
are particularly noteworthy. Firstly, the Opinion of 18 November
2015 noted the various limitations and safeguards circumscribing
application of the emergency measures, including improvements to
the 1955 Law – concerning, for example, the power to dissolve associations
and groups, and transferring posterior control from “commissions”
to administrative judges – made by the law extending the state of
emergency.
50. Secondly, the Opinion of 2 February 2016 strongly underlined
the fact that the state of emergency must remain temporary. It noted
that a state of emergency is a crisis situation, by its nature temporary,
and as a result cannot be indefinitely renewed. When, as seemed
to be the case, the “imminent danger” that justified the declaration
of a state of emergency is due to a permanent threat, recourse must
be had to permanent instruments. The government must therefore prepare
as of now the end of the state of emergency. The state of emergency
loses its purpose as the events that gave rise to it recede into
the past, or as instruments of a different nature are put into effect
as a permanent response to the underlying threat. The Opinion found
the particular extension to strike a fair balance between the protection
of constitutional rights, on the one hand, and of public order and
security, on the other, and to be compatible with France’s international
commitments, including under the Convention. It also found the extension
to be proportionate with respect to its geographical scope. The
Opinion of 28 April 2016 came to similar conclusions on the lawfulness
of the further extension, whilst reiterating the dicta of the 3
February Opinion on its temporary nature.
51. The Opinion of 18 July 2016, concerning the extension that
followed the Nice attack, found that despite the introduction in
March, June and July of various provisions reinforcing the administrative
and judicial tools available in the fight against terrorism, the
further application of emergency measures under the 1955 Law was in
the circumstances necessary, appropriate, proportionate and thereby
justified. It nevertheless recalled that the state of emergency
could not be renewed indefinitely, and that under the rule of law,
persistent or permanent threats should be dealt with by permanent
measures, reinforced by provisions such as those introduced in March,
June and July.
52. Finally, the Opinion of 8 December 2016 noted the reinforcement
of safeguards concerning seizure of data during searches and house
arrests. It considered the geographical scope of the extension of
the emergency powers to be proportionate and the duration of the
extension not to be inappropriate. It noted, however, that the succession
of extensions could lead to house arrest of excessive duration,
and found it necessary to fix in the law a maximum limit of 12 months’
uninterrupted house arrest. The Opinion allowed for renewed imposition
of house arrest should new facts or supplementary information come
to light. Finally, it reiterated the position on the temporary nature
of the state of emergency.
53. The Conseil constitutionnel has
also issued decisions on a series of “priority questions of constitutionality”
relating to the state of emergency.
54. On 22 December 2015, it ruled that the Constitution does not
exclude the possibility for the legislature to provide a state of
emergency regime (despite the fact that it is not provided for in
the Constitution). It also found that restricted residence orders
under the 1955 Law did not involve deprivation of personal freedom within
the meaning of the Constitution, and that the relevant provisions
of the Law did not disproportionately interfere with the “freedom
to come and go”.
55. On 19 February 2016, the
Conseil
constitutionnel ruled that the temporary closure under
the 1955 Law of concert halls/theatres, premises licensed for the
consumption of alcohol and meeting places of any kind, given the
conditions attached to exercise of this authority, was not a disproportionate
interference with the freedom of expression.
56. Also on 19 February 2016, it ruled that whilst the power under
the 1955 Law to search information stored on computer systems was
in conformity with the Constitution, the power to copy all information
accessible during the search without judicial authorisation lacked
proper legal safeguards and was unconstitutional.
57. On 23 September 2016, the
Conseil
constitutionnel ruled that provisions allowing the storage
of data seized following search of a computer system (adopted following
its decision No. 2016-536 QPC), although now including the necessary
judicial safeguards, were unconstitutional in that where they did
not reveal commission of an offence, there was no fixed delay other
than the end of the state of emergency for their destruction.
58. On 16 March 2017, the Conseil constitutionnel found
certain provisions set out in the law of 19 December 2016 extending
the state of emergency relating to house arrest, whereby house arrest
could be extended beyond 12 months by decision of a judge of the Conseil d’État, to be unconstitutional,
on the basis that the Conseil d’État could
subsequently be asked to rule on the legality of the same decision.
The Conseil constitutionnel then
in essence reiterated the position of the Conseil
d’État on limiting uninterrupted house arrest to 12 months
(see the Opinion of the Conseil d’État of
8 December 2016, above).
59. Finally, on 1 December 2017, the Conseil
constitutionnel found that the practice of identity checks
and searches of bags and vehicles in a generalised and discretionary
manner would be incompatible with the freedom to come and go and
the right to respect for private life, the legislator having allowed
the application of such measures without their necessarily being
justified by the particular circumstances underlying the threat
to public order in the relevant areas. The resulting lack of balance
between the constitutional objective of safeguarding public order
and the rights and freedoms in question led the Conseil constitutionnel to declare these
provisions unconstitutional and they were repealed with effect from
30 June 2018.
60. The French Parliament, in particular the Committee on Constitutional
Laws, Legislation and General Administration of the Republic of
the Assemblée nationale, has
been closely following the implementation of the state of emergency.
On 6 December 2016, it tabled a detailed, 244-page report on the
parliamentary oversight of the state of emergency (see below).
4.2.4. Concerns
relating to the emergency measures
61. The International Federation
for Human Rights (FIDH) published a detailed report on the state
of emergency in June 2016.
This report criticises various
aspects of the state of emergency and its implementation – for undermining
individual liberties (notably by replacing prior judicial control
by posterior review by administrative courts); use of anonymous,
undated
notes blanches provided
by the intelligence services as the only evidence to justify the
application of measures including house arrest and searches; weakening
the principle of equality (since almost all the measures enacted
concern only Muslims, in circumscribed areas, which generates a
feeling of discrimination exacerbated by the prolonged application
of such measures under the extended state of emergency); a regression
of the rule of law (due amongst other things to the Constitutional
Court's acceptance that judicial oversight beyond posterior review
by administrative courts is required only in relation to imprisonment,
and the “quasi-impunity” of State officials implementing emergency
measures); the negative consequences on individual rights (caused
notably by night-time searches of homes by armed police, involving
forced entry and, often, acts of violence and humiliation); and
the impact of house arrest on individuals' health, family lives
and employment). Put together, the quality of judicial oversight,
nature of the evidence relied upon and impact and duration of the
individual measures applied have in many cases raised legitimate
concerns about their proportionality.
62. Several commentators have also been consistently critical
of the repeated extensions and overall duration of the state of
emergency. The FIDH report claims that the state of emergency has
proved ineffective, with practically no visible consequences in
the fight against terrorism: no terrorist network had been dismantled, and
most of the prosecutions brought as a result of searches did not
relate to the anti-terrorist legislation; at the same time, it placed
the forces of order under great professional pressure, impeding
their capacity to act against terrorism, and could not be sustained
indefinitely. The December 2016 report of the Assemblée nationale,
however, reaches far more positive conclusions when considering
the emergency measures as part of the wider array of anti-terrorist
tools available to the authorities. The issue of (continuing) effectiveness
may be significant to the question of whether or not maintaining
the emergency measures is strictly required by the exigencies of
the situation. In this respect, it can be noted that there have
been 10 new laws on anti-terrorism and security since 2012, including
that of 3 June 2016, intended to create conditions for lifting the
state of emergency (which in the event was prolonged in the aftermath
of the 14 July 2016 Nice attack). The limited impact, in terms of
concrete results, of specific emergency measures, combined with
the reinforcement during the state of emergency of ordinary laws,
gradually undermined the argument that ordinary (i.e. non-emergency) measures
or restrictions were plainly inadequate.
63. A further criticism relates to the use of emergency powers
in relation to protesters during the COP21 Climate Change Conference
a week after the Paris attacks, and even during the 2016 demonstrations
against reform of the labour code (known as “
Nuit
debout”) and the dismantling of the unofficial migrant
encampment at Calais later that year. The French authorities argued
that application of emergency measures in the first two cases was
made necessary by the need to preserve the capacity of the police
and security forces, which would have been called upon to maintain
public order during these events, for anti-terrorism operations.
The
Conseil d’État, followed
by the
Conseil constitutionnel,
has ruled that whilst the state of emergency was in effect, the 1955
Law did not require a link between the danger underlying the state
of emergency and the particular threat to public order or security
that justified the use of an emergency measure. It is not clear
whether this analysis is valid from the perspective of the Convention,
which, in determining whether States have gone beyond “the extent
required by the exigencies of the situation”, requires that emergency
measures be used for the purpose for which they were granted.
Indeed, the
Assemblée nationale report asks
whether it would not be “preferable” to reserve the use of such
measures to exceptional cases with an undeniable link to the threat
that led to the state of emergency, and suggests launching a reflection
on how this could be done. From a Convention perspective, I share
the concerns of the
Assemblée nationale.
4.2.5. The
end of the state of emergency and withdrawal of the derogation
64. As noted, the 30 October 2017
law on “reinforcing domestic security and the fight against terrorism”
was adopted so as to reinforce the arsenal of measures available
to the French authorities under the ordinary law and permit the
lifting of the state of emergency and the withdrawal of the derogation.
In fact, the French Government followed the strict letter of Article
15 of the Convention, simply informing the Secretary General on 6
November 2017 of the end of the state of emergency upon the expiration
of the last extension, without mentioning either the 1955 Law or
that of 2017. The French authorities have explained to me that this formulation
implies the end of the emergency measures, whose applicability was
inherently linked to the state of emergency, and thus necessarily
also of the derogation. Whilst this is an elegant and logical approach,
the situation may have been more easily understood if the notification
had explicitly stated that the 1955 Law was no longer in force,
the Convention was again being fully applied and the derogation
was withdrawn. But this is a minor criticism; formally speaking,
the 6 November notification was satisfactory.
65. There have been criticisms of the 2017 Law, perhaps most significantly
that it makes the state of emergency measures permanent by normalising
and generalising what had been exceptional powers entrusted to the
administration to address a limited emergency. Further criticisms
include objectivity and lack of precision in the definition of circumstances
that allow establishment of a “protection zone” to which access and
within which movement may be limited under the control of private
security guards for an unspecified duration. The power given to
prefects to close places of worship has also been criticised for
using imprecise definitions. Whilst house arrest is not possible
under the 2017 Law, new “individual surveillance measures”, allowing
restrictions on freedom of movement – lesser than those available
under the 1955 Law – may be imposed following adversarial administrative
proceedings. Again, these have been criticised for use of imprecise,
objective definitions.
66. Of course, I welcome the end of the state of emergency in
France and the withdrawal of the derogation, which were clearly
a matter of particular importance for the new President of the French
Republic, Mr Emmanuel Macron, as he emphasised in his speech before
the judges of the European Court of Human Rights on 31 October 2017.
I also recall that many commentators, including the Council of Europe Commissioner
for Human Rights as early as February 2016, had long been calling
for an end to the state of emergency, and that President François
Hollande was prepared to bring it to an end in July 2016, had it
not been for the Nice attacks. Whilst recognising that the threat
continued to make it necessary to take security measures, I tend
to agree with those who consider that the state of emergency may
have been maintained for longer that absolutely necessary. Perhaps
above all, this situation shows that once a state of emergency is declared,
it becomes far easier – and less politically risky – to justify
its continuation than its end. It is, however, beyond the scope
of the present report to take position on the 2017 Law, since it
is neither an emergency measure, nor has it been considered to necessitate
derogation from the Convention. I hope that the criticisms of the
2017 Law will prove unfounded and that it will always be applied
in strict compliance with Council of Europe standards, including
those of the Convention.
4.3. The
Turkish derogation
4.3.1. Notification
of the Secretary General
67. The Turkish derogation arises
from the attempted coup d’état of
15 July 2016, as detailed in the original notification to the Secretary
General of 21 July 2016. The Assembly, along with leading Council
of Europe officials including the President of the Assembly, the
Chair of the Committee of Ministers, the Secretary General, the
Commissioner for Human Rights and the President of the Venice Commission,
firmly condemned the attempted coup and fully acknowledged its traumatic
impact on Turkish society. I share these views. I also recall that
Turkey suffered numerous terrorist attacks in 2016 and 2017, including
the New Year’s Day Istanbul nightclub shooting; these too I unreservedly
condemn.
68. This notification described the attempted coup as an attempt
“to overthrow the democratically-elected government and the constitutional
order … The coup attempt and the aftermath together with other terrorist acts
have posed severe dangers to public security and order, amounting
to a threat to the life of the nation in the meaning of Article
15 of the Convention … The Republic of Turkey is taking the required
measures as prescribed by law, in line with the national legislation
and its international obligations … [M]easures may involve derogation
from the obligations under the Convention …, permissible in Article
15”. It was accompanied by translations of the relevant legal texts,
including Articles 15, 119, 120 and 121 of the Constitution, Law
No. 2935 of 25 October 1983 on State of Emergency and the Council
of Ministers Decision No. 2016-9064.
69. Subsequent notifications have informed the Secretary General
of extensions to the state of emergency and provided copies of documents,
including the Joint Declaration of the Turkish Grand National Assembly
and most of the 31 “decrees with force of law” (decree-laws) introduced
by the government under its emergency powers. Most of these notifications
were accompanied by explanatory “information notes”. They did not
explain why it had been considered necessary to extend the state
of emergency.
70. It should be noted that Turkey did not communicate information
on decree-laws 688 (published on 29 March 2017), 689 (published
along with decree-law 690 on 29 April 2017) and 691 (22 June 2017)
to the Secretary-General until 27 December 2017, and on decree-law
692 (published 14 July 2017) until 3 January 2018. Only minimal
information was communicated on decree-law 681, on the basis that
it regulated issues such as national defence and administration
of security forces which “are not related to the human rights field”. At
the time of writing, no information had yet been communicated on
decree-laws 695 and 696, published on 24 December 2017, or 697,
published on 12 January 2018.
4.3.2. Overview
of the general legal situation and specific emergency measures
71. The Constitution of the Republic
of Turkey regulates the declaration and extension of a state of emergency,
the introduction of emergency measures and human rights safeguards.
72. Article 120 states that “[i]n the event of the emergence of
serious indications of widespread acts of violence aimed at the
destruction of the free democratic order established by the Constitution
or of fundamental rights and freedoms, or serious deterioration
of public order because of acts of violence, the Council of Ministers,
meeting under the chairmanship of the President of the Republic,
after consultation with the National Security Council, may declare
a state of emergency in one or more regions or throughout the country
for a period not exceeding six months”.
73. This decision shall be published in the Official
Gazette and submitted immediately to the Turkish Grand National
Assembly for approval, which if in recess shall be summoned immediately.
The Grand National Assembly may alter the duration of the state
of emergency, extend the period for a maximum of four months each
time at the request of the Council of Ministers, or lift it. During
the state of emergency, the Council of Ministers, under the chairmanship
of the President of the Republic, may issue decrees having force
of law on matters necessitated by the state of emergency. These
decrees shall be published in the Official
Gazette and submitted to the Grand National Assembly
on the same day for approval, according to a time limit and procedure
set out in the Rules of Procedure (Article 121). They shall be debated
and decided upon by the Grand National Assembly “immediately and
within thirty days at the latest” (Article 128).
74. Certain “fundamental rights, individual rights and duties”
and “political rights and duties” cannot be regulated by decrees
having force of law except during periods of martial law and states
of emergency. Furthermore, decrees having force of law that are
not submitted to the Grand National Assembly on the day of their
publication shall cease to have effect on that day (Article 91).
75. The partial or entire suspension of fundamental rights and
freedoms or introduction of measures that “derogate the guarantees
in the Constitution” are permitted during a state of emergency,
provided that obligations under international law are not violated.
The right to life (except in respect of deaths occurring through
lawful acts of war) and “integrity of material and spiritual entity”
are “inviolable”; certain religious freedoms as well as the prohibition
on retroactivity of criminal laws and the presumption of innocence
are also (in effect) non-derogable (Article 15 of the Constitution).
76. The Constitutional Court shall examine the constitutionality
of laws, decrees having the force of law, and the Rules of Procedure
of the Turkish Grand National Assembly. There is a right of individual
application to the Constitutional Court for complaints of violations
of the rights contained in the European Convention on Human Rights
by the authorities.
It
must be noted, however, that “no action shall be brought before
the Constitutional Court alleging unconstitutionality … of decrees
having the force of law issued during a state of emergency” (Article
148).
77. The 31 decree-laws to date (Nos. 667-697, as at 12 January
2018) are extremely detailed and cover a wide range of issues, including
the following:
- dismissals of civil servants
and members of the court staff, public services, armed forces, coast
guard and national police (gendarmerie), with ancillary provisions
including prohibition on employment by public bodies, eviction from
accommodation, cancellation of passports (including spouses’ passports), loss
of rank, loss of rights connected to employment, etc.; also, establishment
of special procedures within public authorities for the administrative
dismissal of such persons (decree-laws 667, 668, 669, 670, 672,
673, 675, 679, 683, 686, 688, 689, 692, 693, 695 and 697);
- closure of private health institutions and organisations,
private education institutions and organisations as well as private
dormitories and lodgings for students, foundations and associations
and their commercial enterprises, foundation-run higher education
institutions, unions, federations and confederations where it is
found that “they belong to, are connected to or are in communication
with the Fethullah Terrorist Organisation (FETÖ/Parallel State Structure)”
or other terrorist organisations identified by the authorities as
a threat to State security. All movables, real estate assets, receivables and
rights, and all documents and papers of foundations closed down
are seized and transferred to the General Directorate of Foundations
(decree-laws 667, 668, 670, 675, 677, 679, 687, 689 and 693);
- closure of private radio and television stations, newspapers
and periodicals and seizure and transfer to the government of their
assets (decree-laws 668, 670, 675, 683 and 689);
- criminal procedure, including issues relating to duration
of police custody, detainees’ access to a lawyer, detention review
procedure, arrest warrants, search and seizure, rights of the defence,
legal professional privilege and confidentiality of lawyer–client
communications, the circumstances in which persons are described
as “suspects”, proceedings relating to human trafficking, provision
of legal aid, extension of pretrial detention periods, including
a possible maximum of seven years in terrorism-related cases, establishing
immunity for criminal acts committed by civilians who resisted the
coup attempt and actions that can be deemed as the continuation
of it, and special uniform requirements for provisionally detained or
imprisoned persons attending court (decree-laws 667, 668, 671, 674,
675, 676, 684, 690, 694 and 696);
- parliamentary immunity, in particular the possibility
of investigating and prosecuting crimes allegedly committed before
or after elections (decree-law 694);
- the judicial system, including the military courts, judicial
appointments, internal organisation of courts, courts’ jurisdictions,
recruitment examinations, the High Council of Judges and Prosecutors,
judges’ health-care benefits and the number of judges on the Court
of Cassation and the Council of State (decree-laws 668, 669, 671,
673, 674, 680, 690, 694 and 696);
- the penitentiary system, including the membership of prison
monitoring boards and temporary leave from prisons (decree-laws
673 and 674);
- local authorities, including replacement “by the authorities”
of mayors or local council members who have been suspended from
office on terrorism-related grounds, transfer of competences and
related budget to the regional governor by decision of the governor,
confiscation of municipal property by decision of the governor (decree-laws
674 and 677);
- the armed forces, including the Supreme Military Council,
the Gendarmerie, the Coast Guard, the War College and military high
schools and training schools, disciplinary proceedings and sanctions,
military service for certain former police officers and the creation
of 32 000 new posts (decree-laws 668, 669, 681, 682, 691 and 694);
- the intelligence services, including by placing them under
the direct control of the President (decree-law 694);
- the civil service, including selection examinations, retirement
and the internal organisation of the Ministries of Justice and Defence
(decree-laws 670, 673 and 694);
- the education system, including direct appointment of
university rectors by the President, appointment of teachers, “dismissal”
of students studying abroad, appointment of associate university
professors and recognition of foreign diplomas (decree-laws 668,
673, 675, 677, 679, 683, 689 and 690);
- media regulation, including closure of the Presidency
of Telecommunication and Communication and transfer of its competences
to the Information and Communication Technologies Authority (ICTA),
Prime Ministerial authority over the ICTA, loosening controls and
spending restrictions on political broadcasting during electoral
and referendum campaigns, broadcasting restrictions, licencing,
regulatory sanctions and certain commercial and advertising practices
(decree-laws 671, 680, 687 and 690);
- labour law, in particular suspension of the right to strike
(decree-law 678);
- data protection, including in relation to inquiries into
missing children and cybercrime (decree-laws 670 and 680);
- public procurement (decree-law 678);
- bankruptcy (decree-laws 669 and 673);
- criminal law, in particular penalties for drug smuggling
and gambling offences (decree-law 694);
- migrant smuggling, in particular seizure of vehicles used
by smugglers (decree-law 690);
- immigration law, in particular carrier liability for persons
without permission to enter or transit the country (decree-law 694);
- family law, in particular recognition of foreign decisions
concerning marriages (decree-law 690);
- building regulations, in particular an obligation to provide
information on structures that may affect flight safety (decree-law
691);
- the use of winter tyres (decree-law 687, according to
a statement by the Ministry of Transport ).
4.3.3. Domestic
safeguards
78. As noted above, the Constitution
gives the Turkish Grand National Assembly an essential role in the declaration
and prolongation of a state of emergency and in the adoption of
emergency measures by way of “decrees having force of law” (hereafter
“decree-laws”). The way in which the Grand National Assembly has fulfilled
this function in relation to the present state of emergency shall
be examined further in the “concerns” section below.
79. As to judicial oversight, the Constitution limits the role
of the Constitutional Court. The Constitutional Court has thus rejected
a request by opposition parliamentarians for an
in abstracto review of the decree-laws. It
has departed from its case law by which it would first examine whether
regulations made under the title “decree-laws” were “limited to
the reasons and goals behind the state of emergency”, including
whether they had permanent effects. It would then conduct a constitutionality
review of those that failed this test. Instead, the court now considers
it to be “clear that decree laws issued under a state of emergency
cannot, under any name, be subject to constitutionality review”.
The Venice Commission
had supported the previous jurisprudence, in so doing noting that
“[t]he Constitution may give to the Government very large emergency
powers. However, those powers cannot be limitless – otherwise the
Constitution would contain a mechanism of self-destruction, and
the regime of the separation of powers would be replaced with the
unfettered rule of the executive”. The Constitutional Court has
yet to rule on whether it is precluded also from examining individual
applications
in concreto.
This uncertainty has now been resolved
by the creation of a special Inquiry Commission (see below). Following
adoption of decree-law 685, those dismissed by the special administrative
procedures established by Article 3(1) of decree-law 667 had the
possibility of challenging their dismissal before the administrative
courts, within 60 days of entry into force of decree-law 685.
80. In the absence of effective judicial control over dismissals
of officials and closures of bodies listed in appendices to various
decree-laws, decree-law 685 of 23 January 2017, as amended by decree-laws
690 of 29 April and 694 of 25 August, established a special Inquiry
Commission on the State of Emergency Measures. Presented as a result
of the dialogue between Turkey and the Council of Europe, this commission
is intended as an effective domestic remedy. Its role is to assess
and give decisions on applications submitted within 60 days of 17
July, the date on which the Commission began to receive applications,
or of the date of subsequently adopted decree-laws. It is composed
of three public officials assigned by the Prime Minister, one judge
or prosecutor holding office in the Ministry of Justice assigned
by the Minister of Justice, one chief of civil administration assigned
by the Minister of the Interior and two judges from the Court of
Cassation or the Council of State assigned by the Supreme Board
(Council) of Judges and Prosecutors. The Commission’s members were
appointed on 16 May 2017 and it commenced functioning on 22 May
2017. It shall operate for two years as from the date of publication
of decree-law 685, with the possibility of one-year extensions by
the Council of Ministers. By late December 2017, over 103 000 cases
were pending before the Commission. Decisions in favour of applicants
must be executed by the administration within 15 days. Applicants
may challenge unfavourable decisions before the administrative courts,
with further challenge possible before the Constitutional Court.
The European Court of Human Rights has found the Inquiry Commission
to constitute “in principle an accessible remedy”, for which there
was “no reason to believe that it did not offer a reasonable chance
of success … [E]ven if the commission in question is, strictly speaking,
a non-judicial organ, its decisions nevertheless remain subject
to judicial review”.
4.3.4. Concerns
relating to the emergency measures
81. Whilst there can be no doubt
that the failed coup attempt of July 2016 satisfied the constitutional requirements
for declaration of a state of emergency, there are many serious
concerns about its implementation.
82. As of late February 2017, despite the provisions of the Constitution,
14 of the then 19 decree-laws that had been published more than
30 days previously had still not been examined by the Turkish Grand
National Assembly, and two more were pending within the 30-day limit:
only five out of 21 (Nos. 667, 668, 669, 671 and 674) had been examined.
As a result, many decree-laws had taken effect before being subject
to any parliamentary scrutiny. At the time of my visit in November
2017, the Grand National Assembly had still not examined any more
decree-laws; no progress had been made in the intervening months
even on decree-laws previously published, let alone the 10 subsequent
ones. In this connection it can be noted that the Grand National
Assembly managed to approve all of the government’s decisions to
prolong the state of emergency within a few days, often on the very
same day.
83. The number of individuals and bodies affected by the emergency
measures is strikingly large:
- more than 150 000 public servants
have been dismissed from their jobs and banned from public service, including
more than 33 000 teachers and other employees of the Ministry of
Education, more than 24 000 police officers and other employees
of the Ministry of Interior, more than 8 000 members of the armed
forces, more than 6 000 doctors and other employees of the Ministry
of Health, more than 5 000 academics and other higher education
employees and more than 3 000 employees of the office of the Prime
Minister and connected institutions. As recently
as 24 December 2017, a further 2 756 officials were dismissed by
decree-law, and a further 262 on 12 January 2018, almost 18 months after
the failed coup attempt;
- almost 170 000 people under criminal investigation, of
which over 55 000 arrested (in mid-December 2017 );
- 4 560 judicial officers dismissed ,
including (at least) 173 higher court judges and 17 members of the High
Council of Judges and Prosecutors, and almost 4 000 suspended;
- 177 media outlets closed, including many Kurdish media,
as well as Kemalist and left-wing outlets; as a result 2 500 journalists
had lost their jobs;
- around 2 100 schools, student dormitories and universities
closed;
- around 1 800 associations and foundations were closed
down, including 370 civil society organisations accused of links
to “terrorism”, 199 of which are Kurdish. All of their property
and other assets, as well as documentation, were seized and transferred
to the General Directorate of Foundations.
84. The Vice-chair of the Committee on Human Rights Inquiry of
the Turkish Grand National Assembly told me that “FETÖ is a ‘sui
generis’ criminal organisation … more dangerous than other terrorist
organisations because of its organized structure and its capacity
of deception … a terrorist organization that locates itself within
the State, hides itself and aims to harm the State from within …
If any of the public officials is found to have no loyalty [to the
State], the State has the power to dismiss those public officials…
Because of the clandestine working method of FETÖ, prior to 15 July,
it was not possible for people to guess that these people would
hide themselves until they bombed the parliamentary complex with
F16s, run over people with tank and kill the people who oppose them.
Especially before December 2013, this group was seen as an educational and
charity organisation”. This argument was said to justify, for example,
the number of people against whom measures have been taken, the
sufficiency of use of Bylock or the Bank Asya (see below) as evidence
of criminal behaviour, the revocation of passports and seizure of
property.
85. The concept of “connection to the Gülen movement” is loosely
defined and does not necessarily justify casting doubt on the loyalty
of public servants. Criteria applied to establish a connection have
included use of Bylock, an encrypted messaging service (which may
have had up to 220 000 users),
financial
transactions at the (legally regulated) Bank Asya or attendance
at certain (legally established) private schools. All these activities
were, however, perfectly legal. An innocent person – and everyone
has the right to the presumption of innocence – could not have known
that such activities would expose them to suspicion of criminal
conspiracy at a later date. Furthermore, although the Turkish notification
stated that “the purpose of the declaration of the state of emergency
is not to restrict fundamental freedoms but to eliminate the FETÖ
terrorist organisation”,
many
people and bodies who would appear to have no connection to this
movement, or whose connection is to unrelated causes (including
Kurds and Kurdish organisations, academics advocating a peaceful
settlement of the Kurdish issue, left-wing activists, and trade
unions and their members) have been affected by the decree-laws.
86. The relevant decision-making processes lacked procedural guarantees.
Those affected had no prior notification and no opportunity to respond
to allegations made against them. They were not given reasons for the
decision, or access to their files or the evidence on which the
decision was based. Furthermore, decisions were not justified on
the basis of individual reasoning related to the immediate case.
Such procedural failures have become ever less defensible as time
has passed since the failed coup attempt and continued recourse to
exceptional, emergency procedures has become less justifiable.
87. The rights of the defence have been restricted for persons
detained under the emergency powers in relation to a range of terrorism-related
offences, allowing police custody without judicial intervention
for up to seven days (previously 30 days, until reduced early last
year) that may be extended by a further seven on the decision of
a prosecutor, denial of access to a lawyer for up to five days (until
the relevant provision was repealed by decree-law 684) and restrictions
on the right to a lawyer of the detainee’s choice. Prison staff
may be present during consultations between lawyers and their clients
in custody, which may be recorded. Numerous other restrictions have
been introduced by way of permanent amendment to the Code of Criminal Procedure.
88. Concerning the impact of these measures on civil society,
the Council of Europe Conference of International NGOs’ Expert Council
on NGO Law found “serious substantial and procedural concerns with respect
to the [decree-law 667] as well as the other emergency decrees affecting
NGOs. With respect to substantial concerns, the language of Article
2, paragraphs 1-3 of the Decree goes beyond the legitimate measures
envisaged in Article 11 of the [Turkish] Law on State of Emergency
… the impugned measures in Article 2, paragraphs 1-3 of the Decree
(dissolution and confiscation of the asset of NGOs) fall short of
the requirement of proportionality, given that the same effect could
have been accomplished by temporary freeze of activities and asset
of NGOs. In particular given the perceived problems with available
legal remedies”.
89. The mass dismissals have been accompanied by other measures
having a significant impact on the affected persons, as well as
their family members, beyond the loss of job and income. These include,
for example, cancellation of passports, including those of spouses,
confiscation of assets, eviction from publicly owned housing and
loss of health-care coverage. Those dismissed are permanently barred
from any job connected with public services or tenders; dismissed
armed forces personnel are forbidden from working in security-related
jobs and, in practice, those dismissed find it impossible to obtain
work on account of their alleged status as “terrorists”. All of
those dismissed suffer the full range of consequences, whatever
the extent of any alleged connection to the failed coup. The Assembly’s
Monitoring Committee has described the result as “civil death” and
the impact on family members as “collective punishment”.
90. Given the opposition of the Venice Commission to the use of
emergency powers to make permanent changes to legislation, it is
difficult to accept that many of the provisions of the decree-laws
were strictly required by the need to respond to the emergency situation.
Some of the issues concerned are of exceptionally wide-ranging legal
and political significance, for example undermining of parliamentary
immunity, revision of criminal procedure, establishing immunity
for criminal offences, changes to the judicial system, limiting
the independence of municipal authorities, restricting the right
to strike and transferring control over the intelligence services.
Others are relatively speaking too minor and lacking in urgency
to justify circumvention of normal legislative procedure by recourse
to emergency powers, for example advertising of food supplements
(decree-law 690), seizure of migrant smugglers’ vehicles, recognition
of foreign decisions on marriages, carrier liability (decree-law
694), building regulations or even, apparently, use of winter tyres.
Furthermore, the government continued to issue decree-laws with
permanent effect to dismiss officials and close associations and
institutions as well as to reform ordinary legislation in a wide
variety of areas, more than a year after the attempted coup d’état;
indeed, some of the most far-reaching have been amongst the most
recent, for example decree-laws 694 of 25 August 2017 and 696 of
24 December 2017. In the meantime, the argument that “normal measures or
restrictions permitted by the Convention are plainly inadequate”
became less defensible by the day.
91. The resulting practice of government by emergency decree,
often in apparently unrelated areas, has bypassed effective scrutiny
by parliament and the Constitutional Court. This seems to have occurred
with an apparent unwillingness to exercise independent control of
State authorities that should, in a democracy, act as checks and
balances on the government. As previously noted, parliament has
failed to examine the great majority of decree-laws within the delay
set by its own Rules of Procedure, some remaining unexamined for over
a year; and the Constitutional Court has reversed its own previous
case law that would have allowed it to review the constitutionality
of emergency measures with permanent effect.
92. Although the European Court of Human Rights dismissed in June
2017 an application on the basis that the Inquiry Commission represented
an effective remedy to be exhausted, it must be noted that many
criticisms have been directed at the Commission. These include that
its members come from the same authorities which dismissed the officials
in question, putting in doubt their independence and impartiality;
its members are automatically dismissed should a terrorism-related
investigation be opened concerning them – given the very broad scope
of anti-terrorism law in Turkey and the potential for its arbitrary
abuse, this places the members’ positions on the Commission at the
mercy of the authorities; the secretariat of the Commission, responsible
for administrative and preparatory work, is appointed by the Prime
Minister, putting its independence in question; the basis of contested
decisions is unclear, making them difficult to contest; there is
no possibility of adversarial proceedings and there are no hearings,
making it difficult for applicants to articulate their cases; the
workload, working methods (each decision requires the participation
of four of the Commission’s seven members) and time-frame available
would seem to make it almost impossible “to give individualised
treatment to all cases”, as intended by the Venice Commission.
It should also
be noted that a decision of the Inquiry Commission in favour of
an applicant does not restore the prior situation (
restitutio in integrum), as those
concerned may not return to their former posts. Last but certainly
not least, although tens of thousands of people were dismissed as
long as 17 months ago, the Commission was established in January
2017 and it began functioning in May, it did not announce its first
decisions until late December – and by mid-January 2018, no further
information on these decisions had been published. This leaves,
in principle, little more than a year to resolve over 100 000 applications;
in the meantime, the applicants continue to suffer the harsh consequences of
the draconian measures taken against them.
93. I note that a certain number of dismissals and closures have
been overturned by subsequent decree-laws. Whilst this must of course
be welcomed from the point of view of the people and entities concerned,
it does not address the fundamental problems of disproportionality
and subversion of democratic process and the rule of law. The continuing
use of emergency executive powers, set against the growing concerns
in relation to domestic remedies, is not a proper way of resolving
earlier abuses of those same powers. What is needed is a return
to normality and recognition that emergency powers are exceptional
and temporary and their use should not have permanent effects.
94. The above analysis makes several references to the duration
of the state of emergency and the justifiability of continued recourse
to emergency powers. In this connection, the Venice Commission has
stated that, “as already indicated in [its March 2017] opinion adopted
in respect of Turkey, the Commission is not convinced that the further
prolongation of the state of emergency was/remains necessary. In
its view, ‘the longer the situation persists, the lesser justification
there is for treating a situation as exceptional in nature with the
consequence that it cannot be addressed by application of normal
legal tools’”.
95. In conclusion, I consider that the Turkish response to the
attempted coup and the ongoing terrorist threat has been disproportionate
on several grounds:
- the powers
granted to the government under the state of emergency have in many
cases been used for purposes and against objects unrelated to the
situation giving rise to the state of emergency; as a result, the
scope of measures taken under the state of emergency exceeds what
is strictly required by the exigencies of the situation;
- the duration of the state of emergency – in particular,
the continued use of emergency powers to regulate situations that
can no longer be considered to represent an exceptional danger to
the constitutional order – exceeds what is strictly required by
the exigencies of the situation;
- for many of the measures taken, there is no reason to
think that the normal measures or restrictions available under the
ordinary law and permitted by the Convention would have been plainly
inadequate – instead, what should be temporary powers have been
improperly used to introduce permanent changes to the legal status
of natural and legal persons and to legislation;
- the severe impact of many of the measures, in particular
summary administrative dismissal of public officials along with
related measures and the dissolution of associations and institutions
and the closure of media outlets along with seizure and transfer
of their assets, is indiscriminate and exceeds what is strictly
required by the exigencies of the situation – all the more so as
time passes and the probability that the objects of these measures
represent any real, imminent threat diminishes;
- in this context, the lack of a timely remedy in practice
for dismissed officials and closed associations and institutions
exacerbates disproportionality, as the severe adverse consequences
of these measures are prolonged.
96. The use of emergency powers to pass these decree-laws must
also be seen in the context of the wider situation in Turkey. For
example, the limitations on parliamentary immunity introduced through
decree-law 694 followed similar changes made by the constitutional
amendment on 20 May 2016. The Venice Commission noted that of 139
deputies concerned by the constitutional amendment, 111 were from
opposition parties, including up to 90% of HDP (a Kurdish-based
party) deputies. The application of decree-law 674 concerning local
democracy has also mainly affected the HDP, with a “vast majority”
of dismissed mayors being members of, or close to, the HDP.
These
mayors have reportedly been replaced by persons who are members
of or close to the ruling AK Party.
According
to the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities, previous waves of
arrests and dismissals of mayors in south-eastern Turkey were also
“connected to the Kurdish question”
and
raised “serious questions with respect to Turkey’s commitment to
local democracy”.
97. The dismissal of so many judges and prosecutors has had a
serious impact on the capacity of the courts and a chilling effect
on the willingness of judges to act independently and impartially
in proceedings involving the State. The Venice Commission has concluded
that the dismissals “may have adverse effects on the independence
of the judiciary and the effectiveness of the separation of powers
within the State”.
The President
of the Union of Turkish Bar Associations, commenting on the climate
of paranoia and fear amongst judges and prosecutors, has said that
“[j]ustice is now vested in a judge’s personal bravery”.
In
Resolution 2121 (2016) on the case for drafting a European convention on the
profession of lawyer, the Assembly observed that “amendments to
the law on the High Council of Judges and Prosecutors in 2014 raised
the issue of the lack of independence of the judiciary and undue
interference by the executive”. The deterioration of the situation
since the failed coup is reflected in the Venice Commission’s October
2016 reference to “the past and even more fragile current state
of the Judiciary in Turkey”.
98. The procedure to appoint new judges to replace those dismissed,
under the authority of the High Council of Judges and Prosecutors,
has also been criticised. In December 2016, the General Assembly
of the European Network of Councils for the Judiciary (ENCJ) voted
unanimously to suspend the observer status of the High Council of
Judges and Prosecutors for non-compliance with the ENCJ’s statutes.
The President of the Union of Turkish Bar Associations, whom I met,
mentioned the lack of a minimum score in the entrance exam and the
preponderant weight given to performance in subsequent unrecorded
oral interviews involving politically biased questions: as a result,
candidates with the “right” political profile who performed badly
in the written tests were nevertheless recruited. Judges are also
being appointed directly from the justice academy, without completing
their training. 5 000 of 15 000 first instance judges have less
than one year’s experience, and another 5 000 have less than five
years. It can also be noted that the Council of State has yet to
issue any decision in an appeal by a judge or prosecutor against
dismissal further to Article 3.1 of decree-law 667.
99. At the same time, lawyers are also coming under increasing
pressure when acting in politically controversial cases or in proceedings
against the State. I refer to my colleague Ms Sabien Lahaye-Battheu’s recent
report on “The case for drafting a European convention on the profession
of lawyer”, which notes that “by 13 September 2017, 1 343 lawyers
were subject to criminal prosecution and 524 had been arrested since the
coup”, for further information.
100. Human rights defenders, civil society activists and journalists
are also in an increasingly difficult situation dating back long
before the failed coup. Further information on the already alarming
situation of human rights defenders prior to the failed coup can
be found in the January 2016 report of my colleague, Ms Mailis Reps.
A
large number of NGOs have been closed by decree-laws, including
many dealing with issues such as children’s and women’s rights.
101. The authorities’ powers to regulate internet access have also
been criticised by the Venice Commission;
during
my visit, I was told that over 90 000 websites and over 120 000
URLs, including Wikipedia,
Charlie Hebdo and
international new agencies, had been blocked. A report by Freedom
House concluded that “Internet freedom sharply declined in Turkey
in 2017 due to the repeated suspension of telecommunications networks
and social media access, as well as sweeping arrests for political
speech online”.
Freedom of speech generally
was under attack even before the numerous closures of television
and radio stations, newspapers, journals and other publications
under the state of emergency. In
Resolution 2121 (2016), the Assembly had shared “the concerns of the Council
of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights about the alarming scale
of recourse to an overly wide notion of terrorism to punish non-violent
statements and criminalisation of any message that merely coincides
with the perceived interests of a terrorist organisation”. Commentary
on the country’s leadership has also become increasingly difficult.
In 2000, there were four prosecutions for insult to the President;
in 2015, there were 1 975; and in 2016, 4 187. Yet the European
Court of Human Rights has long been clear that “the limits of acceptable
criticism are … wider as regards a politician as such than as regards
a private individual”.
In
2007, the Assembly called on member States to apply defamation laws
“with the utmost restraint since they can seriously infringe freedom
of expression”.
102. This leads me to three further conclusions. First, the prolonged
exercise of emergency powers, already apparently disproportionate
in themselves, becomes even more problematic when seen against this
wider context. Second, the fact that a wide range of highly restrictive
security-related measures was already available to the government
undermines the case for normal measures being plainly inadequate.
And third, that the exercise of uncontrolled, disproportionate emergency
powers in such a context creates further challenges for Turkey’s
compliance with Council of Europe standards on democracy, human
rights and the rule of law. The failure of the Turkish authorities
to see the situation from this perspective – giving proper weight
to not only security imperatives, but also human rights obligations
– is a source of further concern.
5. Oversight
of derogations by the Council of Europe
103. Article 15 of the Convention
requires only that a derogating State “keep the Secretary General
fully informed of the measures which it has taken and the reasons
therefor”. It gives no particular role to the Secretary General,
nor does it require any dialogue between the derogating State and
the Secretary General or other Council of Europe organs and bodies.
In practice, however, the Secretary General has played a more engaged,
proactive role. In 1997, for example, the Secretary General requested
further information from Albania on the reasons for adoption of
the emergency measures, the texts of the relevant laws and measures and
– despite this not being a formal requirement of Article 15 – the
articles from which derogation was proposed. In 2005, the Secretary
General declined to accept as notification of derogation France’s note verbale concerning the state
of emergency declared in Paris following the November riots. In
2015, the Ukrainian authorities consulted the Secretariat General
when preparing the notification of derogation. One should also recall
the role already played after a State has derogated by the Parliamentary
Assembly, the Commissioner for Human Rights and the Venice Commission,
in particular.
104. The French
Défenseur des droits,
Mr Jacques Toubon, very helpfully shared with me his proposals for enhancing
Council of Europe supervision of derogations, which can be summarised
as follows:
- the Secretary General
should initiate a dialogue between the Council of Europe and the
derogating State Party to the Convention, involving relevant national
authorities and appropriate specialised bodies of the Council of
Europe, such as the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture
and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), the European
Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI), the European Committee
on Crime Problems, the Consultative Council of European Judges,
the Consultative Council of European Prosecutors and the European
Commission for the Efficiency of Justice;
- the Secretary General should open an Article 52 inquiry
asking for information on how the state of emergency is administered
and emergency measures applied, by reference to Article 15 and the
case law of the Court. In my view, since derogations are exceptional
measures taken in extreme circumstances, which should be very rare,
the Secretary General should systematically open such an inquiry
every time a State party notifies him/her of a derogation;
- in response, the State concerned should provide a periodic
review of the emergency measures taken (and, I would add, of the
reasons for them, including any new measures, as well as for any
extensions of the state of emergency/derogation), to form the basis
of a dialogue between the branches of domestic government and Council
of Europe organs, including the Committee of Ministers and the Venice Commission;
- the Council of Europe should identify good practices as
a basis for recommendations to member States on domestic and international
supervision of derogating measures;
- the Council of Europe should formulate recommendations
to member States on the information to be included in the notification
of derogation made to the Secretary General.
105. The rationale underlying these proposals is clear and convincing:
the Council of Europe should develop an articulated, multi-level
strategic response to derogations, which represent a particular
challenge to the coherence and quality of human rights protection
in Europe. To a large extent, this would formalise, systematise
and further develop things that have already happened in practice.
Of course, any developments in this sense would have to be fully
respectful of the potential role of the Court, should it be called
upon to examine derogating measures in the context of an individual
application. I see considerable merit in many of Mr Toubon’s proposals,
which should be further examined by the Committee of Ministers and
the Secretary General.
106. Whilst the Assembly has examined, in one way or another, all
of the derogations of recent years, it has not yet developed a systematic
response to such situations. Its report on the derogations notified
by Georgia in 2006 and by Armenia in 2008 was originally a response
to other events taking place elsewhere in 2005; and the present
report examines the situation in three different countries, which
has somewhat complicated its preparation. The legal and political
importance of derogations to the Convention justifies the Assembly examining
each and every one in separate reports.
6. Conclusions and recommendations
107. A state of emergency is a particular
situation of exceptional danger to public and the constitutional
order. In response to such a situation, a State may have recourse
to emergency measures, but only where normally available measures
are plainly inadequate. The exercise of such powers must be strictly
limited in time, place and circumstance. Any measures taken under
the state of emergency must be strictly proportionate, including in
the extent to which they are applied in practice, to the exigencies
of the situation giving rise to the state of emergency. They should
not have permanent effects extending beyond the period of emergency.
Action to protect the constitutional order must be lawful and not
itself undermine fundamental constitutional guarantees; States must
ensure a maximum of parliamentary and judicial scrutiny over the
exercise of emergency powers. To this extent, a State party may
derogate from some obligations under the European Convention on
Human Rights in order to exercise emergency powers, although without
excluding oversight by the European Court of Human Rights.
108. It is therefore a matter of great concern that there has been
increasing recourse to derogations in recent years. Such an exceptional
act must not become banal. The Assembly must insist that member
States exercise the utmost caution when adopting measures that may
necessitate derogation from the Convention.
109. The current and most recent examples of derogation give rise
to a range of concerns of varying gravity, and suggest also examples
of good practice that could be proposed for the future. A summary
of my findings and my recommendations are set out in the draft resolution
and draft recommendation.