African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights - 2000 May

8 judgments
  • Filters
  • Alphabet
Sort by:
8 judgments
Citation
Judgment date
May 2000
Communication alleging arbitrary detention declared inadmissible for failure to exhaust local remedies under Article 56(5).
Human rights – Communications – Admissibility – Exhaustion of local remedies (Article 56(5)) – Alleged arbitrary detention – Availability/undue prolongation of domestic remedies.
11 May 2000
Repeated politically motivated arrests and detention without judicial recourse violated equality, life, liberty and association rights.
Human rights — Arbitrary arrest and detention; right to life and personal integrity; equal protection; freedom of association; ineffectiveness of domestic remedies under Decree No.2 (1984); State silence treated as admission of facts.
11 May 2000
The Commission closed the communication after the applicant and State reached an amicable settlement.
Human rights violations alleged (extrajudicial executions, torture, rape, forced displacement) – Admissibility and exhaustion of local remedies (Art.56(5)) – Effect and verification of amicable settlement – Interim measures (Rule 109) – Closure of case on settlement.
11 May 2000
The Commission found a complaint inadmissible due to the complainant's failure to exhaust local remedies before applying to the African Commission.
African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights – admissibility of communications – requirement to exhaust domestic remedies – failure to contest expulsion order locally – inadmissibility of communication.
11 May 2000
Communication declared inadmissible for failure to exhaust domestic remedies and failure to provide requested information.
Human rights — Admissibility — Exhaustion of local remedies (Article 56(5) African Charter) — Warrantless arrest and search, ill‑treatment and prosecution under anti‑terror law alleged — Failure to respond to Commission requests and prolonged pendency rendered communication inadmissible.
11 May 2000
Suspension of domestic rights and decrees enabling arbitrary detention and political restrictions violated multiple African Charter rights.
Human rights law — admissibility — media-sourced information not dispositive; exhaustion of local remedies excused where courts' competence ousted and remedies unavailable — suspension of domestic Bill of Rights does not absolve State of Charter obligations — arbitrary and indefinite detention, retroactive laws, restrictions on expression, association, assembly, movement and political participation — breach of judicial independence — insufficient proof for extra-judicial killings/torture.
11 May 2000
A deportation complaint was declared inadmissible for failure to exhaust available domestic remedies.
Human rights – Deportation – Admissibility – Exhaustion of local remedies under Article 56(5) – Deported victims may pursue domestic remedies through counsel – NGO complaint declared inadmissible.
11 May 2000
Commission finds grave, systemic human rights violations in Mauritania (1989–1992) and recommends inquiry, reparations and eradication of slavery-like practices.
Human rights — Massive violations (1989–1992): arbitrary arrest and detention; torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment; extra‑judicial executions; unfair trials before special/military tribunals; discrimination and expulsions of black Mauritanians; practices analogous to slavery; domestic amnesty does not bar international responsibility.
11 May 2000