Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Turkey Worst Offender At European Court In 2007

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Turkey Worst Offender At European Court In 2007

    TURKEY WORST OFFENDER AT EUROPEAN COURT IN 2007

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 24 2008
    Turkey

    Turkey was the worst offender at the European Court of Human Rights,
    with its government found guilty of human rights violations in 319
    cases in 2007, notably concerning the right to a fair trial and the
    right to liberty and security, a survey said yesterday.

    Russia followed Turkey with 175 cases involving rights violations,
    according to the court's annual survey. Four countries -- Russia,
    Turkey, Romania and Ukraine -- accounted for more than half of the
    court's outstanding cases, reflecting their citizens' lack of trust
    in national courts.

    There has been a notable decline in the number of applications
    to the European Court of Human Rights concerning torture and the
    right to life in past years as part of the government's policy of
    zero-tolerance for torture. But despite overall improvement in its
    human rights record, Turkey, a candidate to join the European Union,
    is still heavily criticized at home and by the 27-nation bloc for
    persisting restrictions on freedom of expression. Article 301 of the
    Turkish Penal Code (TCK), under which a number of Turkish intellectuals
    including Nobel Prize winner novelist Orhan Pamuk and slain Turkish
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink had been tried, is particularly at
    the heart of the criticism.

    The survey also revealed that the European Court of Human Rights is
    facing a huge case backlog and at its current pace would need 46 years
    to rule on all complaints. The court, underfunded and lacking judges,
    is struggling with almost 80,000 cases, some of them pending from
    the mid-1990s, according to the survey.

    Last year, the court issued 1,503 verdicts and threw out more than
    27,000 complaints, the survey found. Its budget for 2007 was 49.6
    million euros ($72 million) -- inadequate for dealing with the
    deluge of cases, according to Slovak Foreign Minister Jan Kubis,
    whose country holds the rotating Council of Europe presidency.

    As a final appeals court for European citizens, the Strasbourg-based
    court hears cases challenging national courts' decisions that
    plaintiffs claim infringe on the 1949 European Charter of Human Rights,
    which applies in all European countries but Belarus.

    Implementing the European court's rulings, however, can sometimes
    take years, as the court cannot directly enforce compliance.

    The court has become popular with citizens of Eastern European and
    Balkan countries.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X