1. Introduction
1. The Danish Chairmanship of
the Committee of Ministers organised a “meeting of ministers of
justice on the European human rights system in the future Europe”,
which took place in Copenhagen on 12 and 13 April 2018. The outcome
of this conference was the Copenhagen Declaration. The conference
was the fifth in a series that began in Interlaken (Switzerland)
in 2010 and continued at Izmir (Turkey) in 2011, Brighton (United Kingdom)
in 2012 and Brussels (Belgium) in 2015. The so-called “Interlaken
Process”, launched following the report of the Group of Wise Persons
that was commissioned after the adoption of Protocol No. 14 to the European
Convention on Human Rights (CETS No. 194) in 2004 and in response
to alarming delays in the Protocol's entry into force, has seen
the entry into force of Protocol No. 14 and its creatively vigorous implementation
by the European Court of Human Rights (“the Court”), and produced
two further protocols, Nos. 15 (CETS No. 213) and 16 (CETS No. 214)
(of which the latter will enter into force on 1 August 2018), several
non-binding Committee of Ministers' instruments and numerous expert
reports with recommendations concerning all aspects of the system
of the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5, “the Convention”).
2. The Parliamentary Assembly, at its Standing Committee meeting
on 16 March 2018, adopted a declaration on the first draft Copenhagen
Declaration as published by the Danish authorities on 5 February.
In its declaration, the Assembly
recalled that the effectiveness of the system of the Convention
depended on the proper functioning of each of its constituent parts,
which in turn depended primarily on the attitude and conduct of
the States Parties. The Assembly was deeply concerned that the draft
Copenhagen Declaration put into question certain fundamental principles
of the Convention system, in particular the universality of rights protected
by the Convention; the independence of the Court; the scope of the
Court's jurisdiction over all matters concerning the interpretation
and application of the Convention; and the States Parties' obligation
to implement the Court's judgments. The Assembly concluded by calling
on the States Parties to maintain a focus on the Court's excessive
caseload and its principal cause, inadequate national implementation
of the Convention in many States, as the targets of intergovernmental
work. It also called for the States Parties to ensure that the Court
is sufficiently resourced to discharge its function, including through
an extraordinary injection of funds to allow it to absorb its backlog
of applications.
2. The
Copenhagen Declaration as adopted
3. The Copenhagen Declaration,
as finally adopted following two months of intense negotiations
between the States Parties, no longer contained many of the provisions
of the initial draft that had so alarmed the Assembly, along with
many other stakeholders and interested parties in civil society,
including the Council of Europe Conference of International Non-Governmental
Organisations, and academia. From a radical and potentially destructive
challenge to key fundamental principles of the Convention system,
the text had evolved towards a more supportive and constructive
position, although still not without certain problematic elements.
4. The Declaration's preambular statements of commitment and
appreciation are now strong and unequivocal. Previously ambiguous
references to improving “balance” in the Convention system have
been properly clarified, and the importance of national implementation
is given its due weight. The preamble also places the Declaration
in the wider context of the Interlaken Process, whose next step,
expected before the end of 2019, will be a stock-taking of the measures
taken so far, after which the Committee of Ministers will decide
whether “more profound changes are necessary”.
5. The Declaration then continues to address the issue of “shared
responsibility”, meaning “the link between the role of the Court
and the States Parties”, which “aims at achieving a balance between
the national and the European levels, and an improved protection
of rights, with better prevention and effective remedies at national
level”. The implications in earlier drafts that “shared responsibility”
and “balance” implied or even required an inappropriately deferential
Court are no longer apparent, and the resulting threats to the Court's independence
have dissipated.
6. The Declaration's next section deals with “Effective national
implementation – the responsibility of States”. It is symbolically
significant that this section has been moved up the text from its
less prominent place in earlier drafts. The Declaration acknowledges
that ineffective national implementation “remains the principle challenge
confronting the Convention system” and that “the overall human rights
situation in Europe depends on States' actions and the respect they
show for Convention requirements”, which echoes the language of
the Assembly's statement. The role of parliaments is recognised,
alongside those of the government and administrative authorities,
the judicial system and civil society. Amongst the policy recommendations
are a call on governments to ensure, “with appropriate involvement
of national parliaments”, that policies and administrative practice
are Convention compliant.
7. Execution of Court judgments, logically, comes after national
implementation, and is described as “a key obligation”. Again, the
ambiguities of earlier drafts have been removed, with the States
reiterating their “strong commitment to the full, effective and
prompt execution of judgments” and calling on States to take further measures
to strengthen domestic capacity to execute judgments effectively
and rapidly. Regrettably, neither the role of national parliaments
nor the contribution of the Assembly receives its due recognition.
8. The role of the Court is examined in the next section. Some
of the most alarming and objectionable elements of the initial draft
Copenhagen Declaration related to this issue, and it is reassuring
to see that the combined wisdom of the States Parties has led to
their deletion. Elaborate and repetitive disquisitions promoting
an exaggerated interpretation of the principle of subsidiarity have
been excised, including one that would have made application of
the Convention subject to States' “constitutional traditions and
in the light of national circumstances”. Whilst the Declaration
does still include a somewhat lengthy discussion of subsidiarity and
the margin of appreciation, this is far more in line with the legal
mainstream and consistent with the Court's case law. It could, however,
be criticised for relying on extracts from Court judgments that
have been taken out of context, something that the Court itself
warns against in its opinion on the first draft of the Declaration.
Also of particular note is that the provisions
in earlier drafts that sought to limit the Court's role with respect
to immigration and asylum cases have been completely expunged.
9. The next section, “Interaction between the national and European
level – the need for dialogue”, contains the nexus for what were
many other problematic parts of the earlier drafts. Most of the
material that would have called on the Court to take into account
political positions expressed by ill-defined actors in various non-judicial fora,
which would have undermined its judicial independence and hence
its credibility and authority, has gone. A clear echo remains, however,
in the mention of «a constructive and continuous dialogue between
the States Parties and the Court on their respective roles in the
implementation and development of the Convention system, including
the Court's development of the rights and obligations set out in
the Convention», whose practical and legal implications are not
made clear. The Assembly should counsel States to act with the utmost caution
and restraint, should they be minded to pursue this idea any further,
including by way of the suggested “informal meeting” to discuss
“general developments in the jurisprudence of the Court”. The proper
context for States to discuss jurisprudential issues with the Court
is in the course of judicial proceedings, including – as mentioned
in the Declaration – through third-party interventions.
10. The fact that the Court's caseload “still gives reason for
serious concern” is acknowledged in the following section, with
a core challenge being the backlog of Chamber cases (i.e. cases
that are prima facie admissible and non-repetitive, potentially
raising serious human rights issues requiring full judicial examination).
The Declaration also recognises the constant problem of repetitive
cases and the need to resolve the underlying systemic and structural
problems at domestic level. Regrettably, nothing new is proposed
to address these issues; for example, the idea of financial penalties
for a State's persistent failure to resolve systemic or structural
problems that have been the subject of repeated Court judgments
seems to remain anathema, unless it is concealed behind the call
“to consider the most effective means to address the challenge”.
Potentially of concern is the call on the Court “to continue to
explore all avenues to manage its caseload, … including through
procedures and techniques aimed at processing and adjudicating the
more straightforward applications under a simplified procedure, while duly respecting the rights of all parties
to the proceedings”. The words I have italicised are
crucial: the Court must not diminish applicants' (or States') procedural
rights or the transparency of its procedures in its efforts to resolve
its caseload. In this respect, I recall the Court's practice of
not giving reasons for inadmissibility decisions taken by Single
Judges, which took five years to change despite persistent criticism
from applicants and their representatives. Finally, an earlier provision
that appeared to propose the removal of inter-State and conflict-related
cases from the Court's jurisdiction was rejected; the final Declaration
instead calls for exploration of ways to handle such cases more effectively,
“without thereby limiting the jurisdiction of the Court”. It would
have been preferable also to clarify that the right of individual
application in conflict-related cases will not be limited.
11. The selection of candidates for judge at the Court and the
election of judges are examined in the next section. This is an
issue of particular interest for the Assembly, on which the Convention
confers responsibility for the election of judges, and which has
for many years worked to ensure that national selection procedures for
candidates are open, fair and transparent. The election procedure
in the Assembly has also been strengthened over time, including
by the setting-up of a special committee on the election of judges
to the Court, whose members are required to have a legal background.
More recently, the Committee on the Election of Judges has also
engaged with the Advisory Panel that assists States in putting forward
only candidates who meet the requirements of the Convention. Whilst
I have no doubt that the Assembly remains resolved to seek constantly
to improve its own procedures and to encourage States to enhance
theirs, the States Parties should be careful to respect the Assembly's
prerogatives under the Convention, which were deliberately established as
bulwarks of the Court's judicial independence from the States Parties.
12. The two following sections address various issues, including
European Union accession to the Convention and ratification of Protocols
Nos. 15 and 16. I fully support the Declaration's calls for EU accession.
13. The final provisions of the Copenhagen Declaration call for
further action, including for the Parliamentary Assembly “to give
full effect” to it. In this respect, I regret the Danish chairmanship's
failure to involve the Assembly in the drafting of the Declaration,
despite the Assembly having led the campaign for a human rights convention
in 1949 and its being a Convention body (electing the judges) that
has for decades played a politically important role in promoting
the Convention and its effective implementation by member States, including
by enhancing the contribution of national parliaments. The President
of the Assembly may have been invited to speak at the Copenhagen
Conference, but by that stage the text of the Declaration had already
been finalised. If the member States are serious about engaging
stakeholders such as the Assembly, as well as, for example, the
Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights (who also has a
specific Convention role) and civil society (especially applicants'
representatives), in the reform process, that process should be
made more open and inclusive throughout, including when drafting
important declarations. Nevertheless, the States Parties can be
assured that the Assembly will continue to support and defend the
Convention system, enhance its own contribution to it and encourage
all relevant national authorities to fulfil their obligations.
3. Conclusions
14. The Copenhagen Declaration
as adopted is very different from the first draft that was proposed
by the Danish Chairmanship two months earlier. One obvious conclusion
that can be drawn from this is that most member States do not share
the Danish Government's concerns about the Convention system and
the Court's case law; or if they do, they either recognise that
the enormous advantages of the current Convention system to both
individual rights and the maintenance of freedom, democracy, peace
and security in Europe outweigh the occasional inconveniences of
certain judgments, or were not prepared to accept the radical, potentially damaging
measures being proposed in response to those concerns (or both).
In any case, the outcome is that the member States have reaffirmed,
at high level, their commitment to the Convention system, their
will to implement their obligations under the Convention and their
recognition of the role of the Court as an independent judicial
body interpreting and applying Convention rights. This must be welcomed,
even if in an ideal world, it would all have gone without saying.
15. The Declaration is not without its faults, however, even if
these are now relatively minor. It recognises that ineffective national
implementation and inadequate execution of Court judgments are still
the main problems but offers little that can be called new by way
of solutions. It still contains vaguely defined but nevertheless
conceptually problematic ideas about “dialogue” between the States
Parties and the Court, including on the interpretation of Convention
rights, that could be developed in ways that would threaten the Court's
independence.
16. More generally, traces remain of the fundamental problem underlying
the initial draft, which was an apparent failure to appreciate the
complexity, subtlety and delicacy of the Convention system. Boilerplate statements
about the Court's independence and the role of other actors, including
the Assembly and civil society, do not entirely conceal the Declaration's
roots in a text that sought to give a preponderant influence to the
States Parties, in a way that would have drastically unbalanced
and reduced the effectiveness of the system as a whole. Whilst,
as noted above, the worst of that damage has been averted, the Assembly
and other stakeholders should be wary to ensure that the Copenhagen
Declaration is not abused in future to justify positions or action
that are inconsistent with the essential principles of the Convention
system, to the detriment of human rights protection in Europe.