Human
rights news: February 2004
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27 February 2004 |
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ERRC and BHC welcome landmark decision of the European Court of Human Rights |
Additional information: |
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On 26 February 2004, the European Court of Human Rights announced its judgment in the case of Nachova vs. Bulgaria. The Court unanimously found the Bulgarian state responsible for the deaths of two Romani men as well as its subsequent failure to conduct an effective official investigation, in violation of Article 2 (right to life). For the first time in its history, the Court also found a violation of the guarantee against racial discrimination contained in Article 14 taken together with Article 2, and in doing so stressed that the Bulgarian authorities have "failed in their duty ... to take all possible steps to establish whether or not discriminatory attitudes may have played a role" in the events at issue. On 19 July 1996 military police Major G. shot dead two Romani men, Mr Kuncho Angelov and Mr Kiril Petkov, conscripts in the Construction Force of the Bulgarian army, in the village of Lesura, north-west Bulgaria. Mr Angelov and Mr Petkov had escaped from prison and hid in the house of Mr Angelov's grandmother in Lesura. Four military police officers under the command of Major G. were dispatched to locate and arrest the two men. Mr Angelov and Mr Petkov, both unarmed, were shot with an automatic rifle by Major G. while trying to escape from the house of Mr Angelov's grandmother and running through a neighbor's yard. The wounded men were then taken to hospital where they were pronounced dead. Subsequent investigation into the case by the Bulgarian authorities found that the use of firearms had been lawful. The applicants, Ms Anelia Nachova, Ms Aksiniya Hristova, Ms Todorka Rangelova and Mr Rangel Rangelov, all Bulgarian Roma, represented by lawyers of the European Roma Rights Center, in cooperation with the Bulgarian Helsinki Committee and the Human Rights Project, alleged that their relatives Mr Kuncho Angelov and Mr Kiril Petkov were deprived of their lives in violation of Article 2 of the Convention, as a result of inadequate legislation and practice which permitted the use of lethal force without absolute necessity. They also complained that the authorities failed to conduct an effective investigation into the deaths, in violation of Article 2 and Article 13 (right to an effective remedy). Finally, the applicants alleged that prejudice and hostile attitudes towards people of Roma origin played a decisive role in the events leading up to the deaths of Mr Angelov and Mr Petkov and that no meaningful investigation was carried out, relying on Article 14 in conjunction with Article 2. The European Roma Rights Center (ERRC) also intervened in the case requesting the Court to reassess its approach to interpreting Article 14 of the European Convention. In its written comments the ERRC argued that:
Consequently, the Court should impose an obligation on the respondent state to conduct an investigation capable of proving or disproving the discrimination complaint. The state's failure to do so should support an inference that Article 14 has been violated. In its judgement the European Court of Human Rights agreed with the applicants. With respect to the inadequacy of Bulgarian legislation it observed that:
Finally, the Court then went on to explain its historic ruling under Article 14 taken together with Article 2:
For additional details regarding the above case, please contact Branimir
Plese, Legal Director, European Roma Rights Center (email: branko@errc.org,
phone:+361 413 2200), and Krassimir Kanev, Chair, Bulgarian Helsinki Committee
(email:krassimir@bghelsinki.org,
phone: +3592 943 9060). The Bulgarian Helsinki Committee was established in July 1992. The Committee monitors the human rights situation in Bulgaria and engages in litigation before domestic and international courts. The European Roma Rights Center is an international public interest law organisation which monitors the rights of Roma and provides legal defence in cases of human rights abuse. For more information about the European Roma Rights Center, visit the ERRC on the web at http://www.errc.org. European Roma Rights Center |