All courts - 2000 May

8 judgments
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8 judgments
Citation
Judgment date
May 2000
A complaint about detention without charge was declared inadmissible for failure to exhaust available local remedies.
Human rights – Admissibility of complaint – Requirement to exhaust local remedies – Detention without charge – Burden on complainant to prove unavailability of domestic remedies.
11 May 2000
The Commission found Nigeria in violation of multiple Charter rights due to arbitrary detention, harassment, and denial of remedies for political activity.
Human rights – Nigerian military regime – arbitrary detention – ouster clauses and lack of effective remedies – violations of rights to equality, liberty, security, free association, and protection from inhuman treatment under the African Charter – burden of proof when State is unresponsive to Communications.
11 May 2000
A communication alleging human rights abuses was closed after an amicable settlement between the parties was confirmed.
African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights – Alleged violations including extrajudicial executions, torture, and arbitrary detention – Amicable settlement – Closure of file by Commission following withdrawal of complaint.
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
Failure to exhaust domestic remedies renders the communication inadmissible before the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
Admissibility of communications – exhaustion of local remedies – Article 56(5) of the African Charter – insufficient evidence provided – inadmissible communication.
11 May 2000
The Commission found multiple violations of Charter rights in The Gambia after the 1994 military coup, including arbitrary detention and suppression of freedoms.
Human rights – military coup – derogation and suspension of constitutional rights – arbitrary arrest and detention – ousting of judicial jurisdiction – banning of political parties – restriction on movement, expression, association, assembly, and participation in government – denial of self-determination – African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights – state obligations and remedies.
11 May 2000
A communication was declared inadmissible for failure to exhaust domestic remedies before approaching the African Commission.
African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights – admissibility – exhaustion of local remedies – requirements for communication to be heard by the Commission – deportation – right to seek domestic remedies even if not physically present.
11 May 2000
The Commission found Mauritania responsible for grave and systemic human rights violations, including torture, discrimination, and slavery.
Human rights – Grave and massive violations – arbitrary detention – torture – extra-judicial executions – racial discrimination – slavery and forced labor – property and identity deprivation – right to fair trial – independence of judiciary – state responsibility under African Charter – non-derogable obligations – amnesty laws and non-justiciability – reparations and remedies.
11 May 2000