Cyprus v. Turkey (2002) 35 E.H.R.R. 30
Before the European Court of Human Rights
10 May 2001
*731 Cyprus v. Turkey
Application No. 25781/94
(Alleged violations concerning Turkish invasion and occupation of northern
Cyprus)
Before the European Court of Human Rights
ECHR
( The President, Judge L. Wildhaber; Judges Palm, Costa, Ferrari Bravo,
Caflisch, Fuhrmann, Jungwiert, Fischbach, Zupancic, Vajic, Hedigan, Tsatsa-
Nikolovska, Pantîru, Levits, Kovler, Fuad, Marcus-Helmons)
10 May 2001
H1 Relying on Articles 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 17, and 18 of the
Convention as well as Articles 1 and 2 of Protocol No. 1, Cyprus alleged that
these articles were violated as a matter of administrative practice by the
Turkey who had invaded and occupied northern Cyprus. The allegations concerned
the following issues:
(a) Greek-Cypriot missing persons and their relatives;
(b) the homes and property of displaced persons;
(c) living conditions of Greek Cypriots in the Karpas region of northern Cyprus;
and
(d) complaints relating to Turkish Cypriots, including members of the Gypsy
community, living in northern Cyprus.
Cyprus also claimed just satisfaction under Article 41.
Held,
I. Preliminary Objection.
H2
1. unanimously that it had jurisdiction to examine the preliminary issues raised
in the proceedings before the Commission;
2. unanimously that the applicant Government had locus standi to bring
the application;
3. unanimously that the applicant Government had a legitimate legal interest in
having the merits of the application examined;
4. by 16 votes to one that the facts complained of in the application fell
within the "jurisdiction" of Turkey within the meaning of Article 1 of
the Convention and therefore entailed the respondent State's responsibility
under the Convention;
5. by 10 votes to seven that, for the purposes of former Article 26 of the
Convention, remedies available in the "TRNC" should be regarded as
"domestic remedies" of the respondent State and that the question of
the effectiveness of these remedies was to be considered in the specific
circumstances where it arises;
6. unanimously that situations which ended more than six months before the date
of introduction of the present application (22 May 1994) fell outside the scope
of the Court's examination. *732
II. Alleged violations of the rights of Greek-Cypriot missing persons and their
relatives.
H3
1. unanimously that there had been no breach of Article 2 of the Convention by
reason of an alleged violation of a substantive obligation under that Article in
respect of any of the missing persons;
2. by 16 votes to one that there had been a continuing violation of Article 2 of
the Convention on account of the failure of the authorities of the respondent
State to conduct an effective investigation into the whereabouts and fate of
Greek-Cypriot missing persons who disappeared in life-threatening circumstances;
3. unanimously that no breach of Article 4 of the Convention had been
established;
4. by 16 votes to one that there had been a continuing violation of Article 5 of
the Convention by virtue of the failure of the authorities of the respondent
State to conduct an effective investigation into the whereabouts and fate of the
Greek-Cypriot missing persons in respect of whom there was an arguable claim
that they were in Turkish custody at the time of their disappearance;
5. unanimously that no breach of Article 5 of the Convention had been
established by virtue of the alleged actual detention of Greek-Cypriot missing
persons;
6. unanimously that it was not necessary to examine the applicant Government's
complaints under Articles 3, 6, 8, 13, 14 and 17 of the Convention in respect of
the Greek-Cypriot missing persons;
7. by 16 votes to one that there had been a continuing violation of Article 3 of
the Convention in respect of the relatives of the Greek- Cypriot missing
persons;
8. unanimously that it was not necessary to examine whether Articles 8 and 10 of
the Convention had been violated in respect of the relatives of the
Greek-Cypriot missing persons, having regard to the Court's conclusion under
Article 3.
III. Alleged violations of the rights of displaced persons to respect for their
homes and property.
H4
1. by 16 votes to one that there had been a continuing violation of Article 8 of
the Convention by reason of the refusal to allow the return of any Greek-Cypriot
displaced persons to their homes in northern Cyprus;
2. unanimously that, having regard to its finding of a continuing violation of
Article 8 of the Convention, it was not necessary to examine whether there had
been a further violation of that Article by reason of the alleged manipulation
of the demographic and cultural environment of the Greek-Cypriot displaced
persons' homes in northern Cyprus;
3. unanimously that the applicant Government's complaint under Article 8 of the
Convention concerning the interference with the right to respect for family life
on account of the refusal to allow the return of any Greek- Cypriot displaced
persons to their homes in northern Cyprus fell to be considered in the context
of their allegations in respect of the living conditions of the Karpas Greek
Cypriots;
4. by 16 votes to one that there had been a continuing violation of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 by virtue of the fact that Greek-Cypriot owners of property in
northern Cyprus were being denied access to *733
and control, use and enjoyment of their property as well as any compensation for
the interference with their property rights;
5. by 16 votes to one that there had been a violation of Article 13 of the
Convention by reason of the failure to provide to Greek Cypriots not residing in
northern Cyprus any remedies to contest interferences with their rights under
Article 8 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1;
6. unanimously that it was not necessary to examine whether in this case there
had been a violation of Article 14 of the Convention taken in conjunction with
Articles 8 and 13 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, by virtue
of the alleged discriminatory treatment of Greek Cypriots not residing in
northern Cyprus as regards their rights to respect for their homes, to the
peaceful enjoyment of their possessions and to an effective remedy;
7. unanimously that it was not necessary to examine whether the alleged
discriminatory treatment of Greek-Cypriot displaced persons also gave rise to a
breach of Article 3 of the Convention, having regard to its conclusions under
Articles 8, 13 and 14 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
8. unanimously that it was not necessary to examine separately the applicant
Government's complaints under Articles 17 and 18 of the Convention, having
regard to its findings under Articles 8 and 13 of the Convention and Article 1
of Protocol No. 1.
IV. Alleged violations arising out of the living conditions of Greek Cypriots in
northern Cyprus.
H5
1. by 16 votes to one that no violation of Article 2 of the Convention had been
established by reason of an alleged practice of denying access to medical
services to Greek Cypriots and Maronites living in northern Cyprus;
2. by 16 votes to one that there had been no violation of Article 5 of the
Convention;
3. by 11 votes to six that no violation of Article 6 of the Convention had been
established in respect of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus by reason of
an alleged practice of denying them a fair hearing by an independent and
impartial tribunal in the determination of their civil rights and obligations;
4. by 16 votes to one that there had been a violation of Article 9 of the
Convention in respect of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus;
5. unanimously that no violation of Article 9 of the Convention had been
established in respect of Maronites living in northern Cyprus;
6. by 16 votes to one that there had been a violation of Article 10 of the
Convention in respect of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus in so far as
school-books destined for use in their primary school were subject to excessive
measures of censorship;
7. unanimously that no violation of Article 11 of the Convention had been
established by reason of an alleged practice of denying Greek Cypriots living in
northern Cyprus the right to freedom of association;
8. unanimously that the applicant Government's complaint under Article 8 of the
Convention in respect of an alleged practice of restricting the participation of
Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus in bi-communal or inter-communal events
fell to be considered in the context of the global assessment of whether or not
there had been a violation of that Article;
9. by 16 votes to one that there had been a continuing violation of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 in respect of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus in that
their right to the peaceful enjoyment of *734
their possessions was not secured in case of their permanent departure from that
territory and in that, in case of death, inheritance rights of relatives living
in southern Cyprus were not recognized;
10. unanimously that no violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 had been
established by virtue of an alleged practice of failing to protect the property
of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus against interferences by private
persons;
11. by 16 votes to one that there had been a violation of Article 2 of Protocol
No. 1 in respect of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus in so far as no
appropriate secondary-school facilities were available to them;
12. by 16 votes to one that, from an overall standpoint, there had been a
violation of the right of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus to respect
for their private and family life and to respect for their home, as guaranteed
by Article 8 of the Convention;
13. unanimously that no violation of Article 8 of the Convention had been
established by reason of an alleged practice of interference with the right of
Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus to respect for their correspondence;
14. unanimously that it was not necessary to examine separately the applicant
Government's complaint under Article 8 of the Convention concerning the effect
of the respondent State's alleged colonization policy on the demographic and
cultural environment of the Greek Cypriots' homes, having regard to its overall
assessment of the latter population's living conditions under that Article;
15. by 16 votes to one that there had been a violation of Article 3 of the
Convention in that the Greek Cypriots living in the Karpas area of northern
Cyprus have been subjected to discrimination amounting to degrading treatment;
16. unanimously that it was not necessary to examine whether there had been a
violation of Article 14 of the Convention taken in conjunction with Article 3 in
respect of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus, having regard to its
finding under Article 3;
17. by 14 votes to three that, having regard to the particular circumstances of
this case, it was not necessary to examine whether there had been a breach of
Article 14 of the Convention taken in conjunction with the other relevant
Articles;
18. by 11 votes to six that no violation of Article 13 of the Convention had
been established by reason of the alleged absence of remedies in respect of
interferences by private persons with the rights of Greek Cypriots living in
northern Cyprus under Article 8 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No.
1;
19. by 16 votes to one that there had been a violation of Article 13 of the
Convention by reason of the absence, as a matter of practice, of remedies in
respect of interferences by the authorities with the rights of Greek Cypriots
living in northern Cyprus under Articles 3, 8, 9 and 10 of the Convention and
Articles 1 and 2 of Protocol No. 1.
V. Alleged violation of the right of displaced Greek Cypriots to hold elections.
H6 Unanimously that it was not necessary to examine whether the facts disclosed
a violation of the right of displaced Greek Cypriots to hold free elections, as
guaranteed by Article 3 of Protocol No. 1.
*735 VI. Alleged violations in respect
of the rights of Turkish Cypriots, including members of the gypsy community,
living in northern Cyprus.
H7
1. unanimously that it declined jurisdiction to examine those aspects of the
applicant Government's complaints under Articles 6, 8, 10 and 11 of the
Convention in respect of political opponents of the regime in the TRNC as well
as their complaints under Articles 1 and 2 of Protocol No. 1 in respect of the
Turkish-Cypriot Gypsy community, which were held by the Commission not to be
within the scope of the case as declared admissible;
2. unanimously that no violation of the rights of Turkish Cypriots who are
opponents of the regime in northern Cyprus under Articles 3, 5, 8, 10 and 11 of
the Convention had been established by reason of an alleged administrative
practice, including an alleged practice of failing to protect their rights under
these Articles;
3. by 16 votes to one that no violation of the rights of members of the
Turkish-Cypriot Gypsy community under Articles 3, 5, 8 and 14 of the Convention
had been established by reason of an alleged administrative practice, including
an alleged practice of failing to protect their rights under these Articles;
4. by 16 votes to one that there had been a violation of Article 6 of the
Convention on account of the legislative practice of authorizing the trial of
civilians by military courts;
5. unanimously that no violation of Article 10 of the Convention had been
established by reason of an alleged practice of restricting the right of Turkish
Cypriots living in northern Cyprus to receive information from the
Greek-language press;
6. unanimously that no violation of Article 11 of the Convention had been
established by reason of an alleged practice of interference with the right to
freedom of association or assembly of Turkish Cypriots living in northern
Cyprus;
7. unanimously that no violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 had been
established by reason of an alleged administrative practice, including an
alleged practice of failing to secure enjoyment of their possessions in southern
Cyprus to Turkish Cypriots living in northern Cyprus;
8. by 11 votes to six that no violation of Article 13 of the Convention had been
established by reason of an alleged practice of failing to secure effective
remedies to Turkish Cypriots living in northern Cyprus.
VII. Alleged violations of other Articles of the Convention.
H8 Unanimously that it was not necessary to examine separately the applicant
Government's complaints under Articles 1, 17, 18 and former Article 32(4) of the
Convention.
VIII. The issue of Article 41 of the Convention.
H9 Unanimously that the issue of the possible application of Article 41 of the
Convention was not ready for decision and consideration thereof be adjourned.
1. Preliminary Objection; admissibility; locus standi;
"jurisdiction"; exhaustion of domestic remedies; scope of case; six
month rule.
H10 (a) In the proceedings before the Commission, the respondent Government
raised several objections to the admissibility of the application. The
Commission, at the admissibility stage of the proceedings, considered these
objections under the following heads: (1) alleged lack of jurisdiction and
responsibility of the respondent State in respect of the acts complained of; (2)
alleged identity of the present application with the previous applications *736
introduced by the applicant Government; (3) alleged abuse of process by the
applicant Government; (4) alleged special agreement between the respective
Governments to settle the dispute by means of other international procedures;
(5) alleged failure of aggrieved persons concerned by the application to exhaust
domestic remedies; and (6) alleged failure by the applicant Government to comply
with the six-month rule.
H11 (b) The Commission, in its admissibility decision of 28 June 1996, rejected
the respondent Government's challenges under the third and fourth heads and
decided to reserve to the merits stage the issues raised under the remaining
heads. [56-57]
H12 (c) The objections which Turkey relied on before the Commission have not
been re-submitted for consideration because the respondent Government failed to
participate in the written and oral proceedings before the Court. Although the
Court could refuse to entertain the respondent Government's pleas of
inadmissibility, it nevertheless considers it appropriate to examine them in the
form of preliminary issues, especially when the applicant Government has devoted
a substantial part of its written and oral pleadings to these issues, including
their relevance to the merits of their various allegations. [58]
H13 (b) The respondent Government's claim cannot be sustained: In line with
Loizidou v. Turkey, the Court notes that the international community does not recognize
the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus ("the TRNC") as a
State under international law. The Republic of Cyprus has remained the sole
legitimate government of Cyprus and on that account her locus standi as
the government of a High Contracting Party cannot therefore be in doubt.
H14 (c) The Court concludes that the applicant Government has locus standi
to bring an application under former Article 24 of the Convention against the
respondent State. [61-62]
H15 (d) Without prejudice to the question of whether and in what circumstances
the Court has jurisdiction to examine a case which was the subject of a decision
taken by the Committee of Ministers pursuant to former Article 32 of the
Convention, it must be noted that, in respect of the previous inter-State
applications, neither Resolution DH (79) 1 nor Resolution DH (92) 12 resulted in
a "decision" within the meaning of Article 32(1). The respondent
Government accepted in her pleadings on their preliminary objections in Loizidou
v. Turkey that the Committee of Ministers did not endorse the Commission's
findings in the previous inter-State cases.
H16 (e) The Court accordingly concludes that the applicant Government has a
legitimate legal interest in having the merits of the instant application
examined by the Court. [67-68]
H17 (f) In Loizidou v. Turkey, the respondent State denied that it had
jurisdiction in northern Cyprus and to that end invoked arguments similar to
those raised before the Commission in the instant case. The Court rejected those
arguments in its Loizidou v. Turkey with reference to the imputability
principles developed in its preceding judgment on the respondent State's
preliminary objections to the admissibility of the case. Having effective
overall control over northern Cyprus, its responsibility cannot be confined to
the acts of its own soldiers or officials in northern Cyprus but must also be
engaged by virtue of the acts of the local administration which survives by
virtue of Turkish military and other support. In terms of Article 1 of the
Convention, Turkey's *737
"jurisdiction" must be considered to extend to securing the entire
range of substantive rights set out in the Convention and those additional
Protocols which she has ratified, and that violations of those rights are
imputable to Turkey. [75] & [77]
H18 (g) The Court must have regard to the special character of the Convention as
an instrument of European public order (ordre public) for the protection
of individual human beings and its mission, as set out in Article 19 of the
Convention, "to ensure the observance of the engagements undertaken by the
High Contracting Parties". Having regard to the applicant Government's
continuing inability to exercise their Convention obligations in northern
Cyprus, any other finding would result in a regrettable vacuum in the system of
human- rights protection in the territory in question by removing from
individuals there the benefit of the Convention's fundamental safeguards and
their right to call a High Contracting Party to account for violation of their
rights in proceedings before the Court. [78]
H19 (h) Subject to subsequent considerations on the issue of private parties,
the matters complained of in the instant application fall within the
"jurisdiction" of Turkey within the meaning of Article 1 of the
Convention and therefore entail the respondent State's responsibility under the
Convention. [80]
H20 (i) As to the applicant Government's further claim that this
"jurisdiction" must also be taken to extend to the acts of private
parties in northern Cyprus who violate the rights of Greek Cypriots or Turkish
Cypriots living there, the Court considers it appropriate to revert to this
matter when examining the merits of the specific complaints raised by the
applicant Government in this context. The acquiescence or connivance of the
authorities of a Contracting State in the acts of private individuals which
violate the Convention rights of other individuals within its jurisdiction may
engage that State's responsibility under the Convention. Any different
conclusion would be at variance with the obligation contained in Article 1 of
the Convention. [81]
H21 (j) The Commission avoided making general statements on the validity of the
acts of the TRNC authorities from the standpoint of international law and
confined its considerations to the Convention-specific issue of the application
of the exhaustion requirement contained in former Article 26 of the Convention
in the context of the "constitutional" and "legal" system
established within the TRNC. The Court endorses this approach: although in
Loizidou v. Turkey the Court refused to attribute legal validity to such
provisions as "Article 159 of the TRNC Constitution", it did so with
respect to the Convention. This conclusion was all the more compelling since the
Article in question purported to vest in the TRNC authorities, irreversibly and
without payment of any compensation, the applicant's rights to her land in
northern Cyprus. [89]
H22 (k) Without in any way putting in doubt either the view adopted by the
international community regarding the establishment of the TRNC or the fact that
the Government of the Republic of Cyprus remains the sole legitimate government
of Cyprus, it cannot be excluded that former Article 26 of the Convention
requires that remedies made available to individuals generally in northern
Cyprus to enable them to secure redress for violations of their Convention
rights have to be tested. The developments which *738
have occurred in northern Cyprus since 1974 can be characterized in terms of the
exercise of de facto authority by the TRNC. International law recognizes the legitimacy of certain legal arrangements and transactions in situations such
as the one obtaining in the TRNC, for instance as regards the registration of
births, deaths, and marriages, "the effects of which can only be ignored to
the detriment of the inhabitants of the [t]erritory". [90]
H23 (l) Despite the reservations the Greek-Cypriot community in northern Cyprus
may harbor regarding the TRNC courts, the absence of such institutions would
work to the detriment of the members of that community. Moreover, recognizing the effectiveness of those bodies for the limited purpose of protecting the
rights of the territory's inhabitants does not, in the Court's view and
following the Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice, legitimize
the TRNC in any way. [92]
H24 (m) The Court cannot simply disregard the judicial organs set up by the TRNC
in so far as the relationships at issue in the present case are concerned. It is
in the very interest of the inhabitants of the TRNC, including Greek Cypriots,
to be able to seek the protection of such organs; and if the TRNC authorities
had not established them, this could rightly be considered to run counter to the
Convention. Accordingly, the inhabitants of the territory may be required to
exhaust these remedies, unless their inexistence or ineffectiveness can be
proved--a point to be examined on a case-by-case basis. [98]
H25 (n) The Court will thus examine, in respect of each of the violations
alleged by the applicant Government, whether the persons concerned could have
availed themselves of effective remedies to secure redress. It will have regard
in particular to whether the existence of any remedies is sufficiently certain
not only in theory but in practice and whether there are any special
circumstances which absolve the persons concerned by the instant application
from the obligation to exhaust the remedies which, as alleged by the respondent
Government before the Commission, were at their disposal. In this latter
respect, the exhaustion rule is inapplicable where an administrative practice,
namely a repetition of acts incompatible with the Convention and official
tolerance by the State authorities, has been shown to exist and is of such a
nature as to make proceedings futile or ineffective. [99]
H26 (o) In view of the above considerations, it is not necessary at this stage
to examine the applicant Government's broader criticism of the court and
administrative system in the TRNC under Articles 6 and 13 of the Convention.
[100]
H27 (p) The applicant Government's reliance on the illegality of the TRNC courts
seems to contradict the assertion made by that same Government that Turkey is
responsible for the violations alleged in northern Cyprus--an assertion which
has been accepted by the Court. It appears indeed difficult to admit that a
State is made responsible for the acts occurring in a territory unlawfully
occupied and administered by it and to deny that State the opportunity to try to
avoid such responsibility by correcting the wrongs imputable to it in its
courts. To allow that opportunity to the respondent State in the framework of
the present application in no way amounts to an indirect legitimization of a
regime which is unlawful under international law. [101]
H28 (q) For the purposes of former Article 26 of the Convention, remedies *739
available in the TRNC may be regarded as "domestic remedies" of the
respondent State and that the question of their effectiveness is to be
considered in the specific circumstances where it arises. [102]
H29 (r) In so far as the applicant Government has alleged continuing violations
resulting from administrative practices, the Court will disregard situations
which ended six months before the date on which the application was introduced,
namely 22 November 1994. Therefore, practices which are shown to have ended
before 22 May 1994 fall outside the scope of its examination. [104]
2. The establishment of the facts and assessment of the evidence.
H30 (a) The Commission had regard to written as well as oral evidence in order
to clarify and establish the facts underlying the allegations advanced by the
applicant Government. The Commission further relied on the findings contained in
its 1976 and 1983 reports as well as documentary materials obtained of its own
motion and, as a principal source, materials submitted by the parties. As to the
written evidence of the parties, the Commission admitted to the case file all
written submissions made by both Governments at the admissibility and merits
stages up until 14 September 1998. The Commission's strict adherence to this
deadline resulted in its decision of 5 March 1999 to reject the respondent
Government's request to have admitted to the file an aide-mémoire on
"measures relating to the living conditions of Greek Cypriots and Maronites
in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus": this was the only document
excluded by the Commission, all other materials having been admitted in
accordance with respect for the requirements of procedural equality between the
parties. [105]
H31 (b) Where it was impossible to guarantee full respect for the principle of
equality of arms in the proceedings before the Commission, the Commission took
this factor into account in its assessment of the evidential value of the
material at issue. Although the Court must scrutinize any objections raised by
the applicant Government to the Commission's findings of fact and its assessment
of the evidence, as regards documentary materials, both parties were given a
full opportunity to comment on all such materials in their pleadings before the
Court, including the above-mentioned aide-mémoire, which was admitted to
the file by virtue of a procedural decision taken by the Court on 24 November
1999. [106]
H32 (c) As regards oral evidence, the Commission appointed three delegates to
hear evidence on the Convention issues relating to the general living conditions
of the so-called "enclaved" Greek Cypriots and the situation of
Turkish Cypriots living in northern Cyprus, in particular political dissidents
and members of the Turkish-Cypriot Gypsy minority. [107]
H33 (d) The Court observes that the Commission delegates took all necessary
steps to ensure that the taking of oral evidence from unidentified witnesses
complied with the fairness requirements of Article 6 of the Convention. [108]
H34 (e) In so far as the respondent Government was critical of the arrangements
drawn up by the delegates to hear the evidence of the unidentified witnesses
proposed by the applicant Government, those arrangements were consistent with
the screening procedure requested by the respondent State itself to ensure the
security of unnamed witnesses in an earlier and unrelated case. Therefore, the
handicaps alleged by the *740
respondent Government in the proceedings before the Commission were sufficiently
counterbalanced by the procedures followed by the Commission. The Commission, in
its assessment of the evidence given by unidentified witnesses, adopted a
cautious approach by ascertaining its evidential value with reference to the
particular nature of each of the witnesses' testimony, and its findings were not
based either solely or to a decisive extent on anonymous witness statements.
[109]
H35 (f) The applicant Government, in the proceedings before the Court, has not
contested the modalities used for hearing the evidence of unidentified witnesses
but did dispute the limits placed by the delegates on the number of witnesses
who could be heard by them. The Court does not consider that the Commission's
approach can be criticized from the standpoint of procedural fairness: first,
the delegates heard the testimony of five witnesses proposed by the applicant
Government and there is no reason to doubt that they were specifically selected
in accordance with the applicant Government's perception of the importance of
their testimony; secondly, the effective discharge of the Commission's
fact-finding role necessarily obliged it to regulate the procedure for the
taking of oral evidence, having regard to constraints of time and to its own
assessment of the relevance of additional witness testimony. [110]
H36 (g) For these reasons, the Court rejects the applicant Government's
criticism in this respect. [111]
H37 (h) In its assessment of the evidence in relation to the various complaints
declared admissible, the Commission applied the standard of proof "beyond
reasonable doubt", it being noted that such proof may follow from the
coexistence of sufficiently strong, clear and concordant inferences or of
similar unrebutted presumptions of fact. [112]
H38 (i) The Court endorses the application of this standard, all the more so
since it was first articulated in the context of a previous inter-State case and
has, since the date of the adoption of the judgment in that case, become part of
the Court's established case law. Moreover, as regards the establishment of the
existence of administrative practices, the Court does not rely on the concept
that the burden of proof is borne by one or the other of the two Governments
concerned. Rather, it must examine all the material before it, irrespective of
its origin. [113]
H39 (j) The applicant Government has disputed the appropriateness of applying
the above-mentioned standard of proof with respect to her allegations that the
violations of the Convention of which she complains result from administrative
practices on the part of the respondent State. In their submission, the
Commission erred in not having regard to the existence of "substantial
evidence" of administrative practices and its reliance on the "beyond
reasonable doubt" standard prevented it from reaching the correct
conclusion on the facts as regards a number of complaints. For the applicant
Government, the standard of proof applied by the Commission is at variance with
the approach followed by the Court in Ireland v. United Kingdom, an approach
which, they maintain, had already been anticipated in the Commission's decision
in the "Greek Case". [114]
H40 (k) In Ireland v. United Kingdom, the Court rejected the Irish Government's
submission that the "beyond reasonable doubt" *741
standard of proof was an excessively rigid standard for establishing the
existence of an administrative practice of violation of Article 3 of the
Convention. The "beyond reasonable doubt" standard was applied in that
case in order to determine whether the evidence bore out the allegation of a
practice of violation. The Court will accordingly assess the facts as found by
the Commission with reference to this standard. Furthermore, the Court will
apply the definition of an administrative practice incompatible with the
Convention set out in Ireland v. United Kingdom, namely an accumulation of
identical or analogous breaches which are sufficiently numerous and
inter-connected to amount not merely to isolated incidents or exceptions but to
a pattern or system. [115]
H41 (l) In the area of the exhaustion of domestic remedies, there is a
distribution of the burden of proof. In the context of the instant case, it is
incumbent on the respondent Government claiming non-exhaustion to satisfy the
Court that the remedy was an effective one available in theory and in practice
at the relevant time, that is to say, that it was accessible, was one which was
capable of providing redress in respect of the aggrieved individuals' complaints
and offered reasonable prospects of success. However, once this burden of proof
has been satisfied it falls to the applicant Government to establish that the
remedy advanced by the respondent Government was in fact exhausted or was for
some reason inadequate and ineffective in the particular circumstances of the
case, or that there existed special circumstances absolving the persons
concerned from the requirement of exhausting that remedy. One such reason may be
constituted by the national authorities remaining totally passive in the face of
serious allegations of misconduct or infliction of harm by State agents, for
example where they have failed to undertake investigations or offer assistance.
In such circumstances it can be said that the burden of proof shifts once again,
so that it becomes incumbent on the respondent Government to show what the
authorities have done in response to the scale and seriousness of the matters
complained of. [116]
H42 (m) Having regard to the above considerations, the Court recalls its settled
case law to the effect that under the Convention system prior to the entry into
force of Protocol No. 11 to the Convention on 1 November 1998, the establishment
and verification of the facts was primarily a matter for the Commission. While
the Court is not bound by the Commission's findings of fact and remains free to
make its own assessment in the light of all the material before it, it is
however only in exceptional circumstances that it will exercise its powers in
this area. [117]
H43 (n) The applicant Government has impugned the findings of the Commission as
regards certain of their allegations, considering them to be against the weight
of the evidence adduced. The Court proposes to address the applicant
Government's challenges when considering the merits of their allegations. [118]
3. Alleged violations of the rights of Greek-Cypriot missing persons and their
relatives (Arts 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 13, 14, 17).
A. Missing Persons
H44 (a) Cyprus has not contested the facts as found by the Commission. *742
The Court does not consider it appropriate to estimate the number of persons who
fall into the category of "missing persons". Figures are communicated
by the applicant Government to the United Nations Committee on Missing Persons
("CMP") and revised in accordance with the most recent information
which becomes available. [120]
H45 (b) The Court shares the Commission's concern to limit its inquiry to
ascertaining the extent, if any, to which the authorities of the respondent
State have clarified the fate or whereabouts of the missing persons. It is not
its task to make findings on the evidence on whether any of these persons are
alive or dead or have been killed in circumstances which engage the liability of
the respondent State. [120-121]
H46 (c) Cyprus contends first and foremost that the missing persons must be
presumed to be still alive unless there is clear evidence to the contrary.
Although the evidence adduced before the Commission confirms a very high
incidence of military and civilian deaths during the military operations of July
and August 1974, the Court cannot speculate as to whether any of the missing
persons have in fact been killed by either the Turkish forces or Turkish-Cypriot
paramilitaries into whose hands they may have fallen. Statements by the head of
the TRNC, Mr Denktas and others in the media are insufficient to establish the
respondent State's liability for the deaths of any of the missing persons. It is
mere speculation that any of these persons were killed in the circumstances
described in these accounts. [129]
H47 (d) The evidence given of killings carried out directly by Turkish soldiers
or with their connivance relates to a period which is outside the scope of the
present application. Indeed, the Commission was unable to establish on the facts
whether any of the missing persons were killed in circumstances for which the
respondent State can be held responsible under the substantive limb of Article 2
of the Convention. The Court cannot therefore accept the applicant Government's
allegations that the facts disclose a substantive violation of Article 2 of the
Convention in respect of any of the missing persons. [130]
H48 (e) The applicant Government's allegations must, however, be examined in the
context of a Contracting State's procedural obligation under Article 2 to
protect the right to life. The obligation to protect the right to life under
Article 2 of the Convention, read in conjunction with the State's general duty
under Article 1 to "secure to everyone within [its] jurisdiction the rights
and freedoms defined in [the] Convention", requires by implication that
there should be some form of effective official investigation when individuals
have been killed as a result of the use of force by agents of the State or by
non- State agents. [131]
H49 (f) The Court recalls that there is no proof that any of the missing persons
have been unlawfully killed. However, in its opinion, and of relevance to the
instant case, the above-mentioned procedural obligation also arises upon proof
of an arguable claim that an individual, who was last seen in the custody of
agents of the State, subsequently disappeared in a context which may be
considered life-threatening. [132]
H50 (g) The evidence bears out the applicant Government's claim that many
persons now missing were detained either by Turkish or Turkish-Cypriot forces.
Their detention occurred at a time when *743
the conduct of military operations was accompanied by arrests and killings on a
large scale. The Commission correctly described the situation as
life-threatening. [133]
H51 (h) The Court notes that the authorities of the respondent State have never
undertaken any investigation into the claims made by the relatives of the
missing persons that the latter had disappeared after being detained in
circumstances in which there was real cause to fear for their welfare. [135]
H52 (i) The Court agrees with the applicant Government that the respondent
State's procedural obligation at issue cannot be discharged through its
contribution to the investigatory work of the CMP. The CMP's procedures are
undoubtedly useful for the humanitarian purpose for which they were established,
they are not of themselves sufficient to meet the standard of an effective
investigation required by Article 2 of the Convention, especially in view of the
narrow scope of that body's investigations. [135]
H53 (j) The Court concludes that there has been a continuing violation of
Article 2 on account of the failure of the authorities of the respondent State
to conduct an effective investigation aimed at clarifying the whereabouts and
fate of Greek-Cypriot missing persons who disappeared in life-threatening
circumstances. [136]
H54 (k) The Court agrees with the Commission's finding and has accepted the
facts as established by the Commission. It follows that no breach of Article 4
of the Convention has been established. [140-141]
H55 (l) The unacknowledged detention of an individual is a complete negation of
the guarantees of liberty and security of the person contained in Article 5 of
the Convention and a most grave violation of that Article. Having assumed
control over a given individual, it is incumbent on the authorities to account
for his or her whereabouts. It is for this reason that Article 5 must be seen as
requiring the authorities to take effective measures to safeguard against the
risk of disappearance and to conduct a prompt and effective investigation into
an arguable claim that a person has been taken into custody and has not been
seen since. [147]
H56 (m) The Court refers to the irrefutable evidence that Greek Cypriots were
held by Turkish or Turkish-Cypriot forces. There is no indication of any records
having been kept of either the identities of those detained or the dates or
location of their detention. From a humanitarian point of view, this failing
cannot be excused with reference either to the fighting which took place at the
relevant time or to the overall confused and tense state of affairs. Seen in
terms of Article 5 of the Convention, the absence of such information has made
it impossible to allay the concerns of the relatives of the missing persons
about the latter=s fate. Notwithstanding the impossibility of naming those who
were taken into custody, the respondent State should have made other inquiries
with a view to accounting for the disappearances. As noted earlier, there has
been no official reaction to new evidence that Greek-Cypriot missing persons
were taken into Turkish custody. [148]
H57 (n) The Court has addressed this allegation from the angle of the procedural
requirements of Article 5 of the Convention and the obligations devolving on the
respondent State as a Contracting Party to the Convention. [149]
H58 (o) The Court concludes that, during the period under consideration, *744
there has been a continuing violation of Article 5 of the Convention by virtue
of the failure of the authorities of the respondent State to conduct an
effective investigation into the whereabouts and fate of the missing Greek-
Cypriot persons in respect of whom there is an arguable claim that they were in
custody at the time they disappeared. [150]
H59 (p) However, it has not been established that during the period under
consideration any of the Greek-Cypriot missing persons were actually being
detained by the Turkish-Cypriot authorities. [151]
H60 (q) At the merits stage of the proceedings before the Commission, the
applicant Government submitted that the facts of the case disclosed violations
of the above-mentioned Articles. The Commission concluded that these complaints
were outside the scope of its admissibility decision and on that account could
not be examined. [152]
H61 (r) The Court further observes that Cyprus has not pursued these complaints
either in the memorial or at the public hearing; nor sought to dispute the
Commission's interpretation of the scope of its admissibility decision. In these
circumstances, there is no reason to consider either its jurisdiction to examine
these complaints or their merits. It is therefore that not necessary to examine
the applicant Government's complaints under Articles 3, 6, 8, 13, 14 and 17 of
the Convention in respect of the Greek-Cypriot missing persons. [153]
B. Greek-Cypriot missing persons' relatives.
H62 (a) The question whether a family member of a "disappeared person"
is a victim of treatment contrary to Article 3 will depend on the existence of
special factors which give the suffering of the person concerned a dimension and
character distinct from the emotional distress which may be regarded as
inevitably caused to relatives of a victim of a serious human-rights violation.
Relevant elements will include the proximity of the family tie--in that context,
a certain weight will attach to the parent-child bond --, the particular
circumstances of the relationship, the extent to which the family member
witnessed the events in question, the involvement of the family member in the
attempts to obtain information about the disappeared person and the way in which
the authorities responded to those enquiries. The essence of such a violation
does not so much lie in the fact of the "disappearance" of the family
member but rather in the authorities' reactions and attitudes to the situation
when it is brought to their attention. It is especially in respect of the latter
that a relative may claim directly to be a victim of the authorities' conduct.
[156]
H63 (b) The authorities of the respondent State have failed to undertake any
investigation into the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of the
missing persons. In the absence of any information about their fate, the
relatives of persons who went missing during the events of July and August 1974
were condemned to live in a prolonged state of acute anxiety which cannot be
said to have been erased with the passage of time. The Court does not consider,
in the circumstances of this case, that the fact that certain relatives may not
have actually witnessed the detention of family members or complained about such
to the authorities of the respondent State deprives them of victim status under
Article 3. It recalls that the military operation resulted in a considerable
loss of life, large-scale arrests and detentions and enforced separation of *745
families. The overall context must still be vivid in the minds of the relatives
of persons whose fate has never been accounted for by the authorities. They
endure the agony of not knowing whether family members were killed in the
conflict or are still in detention or, if detained, have since died. The fact
that a very substantial number of Greek Cypriots had to seek refuge in the south
coupled with the continuing division of Cyprus must be considered to constitute
very serious obstacles to their quest for information. The provision of such
information is the responsibility of the authorities of the respondent State.
This responsibility has not been discharged. For the Court, the silence of the
authorities of the respondent State in the face of the real concerns of the
relatives of the missing persons attains a level of severity which can only be categorized
as inhuman treatment within the meaning of Article 3. [157]
H64 (c) The Court concludes that, during the period under consideration, there
has been a continuing violation of Article 3 of the Convention in respect of the
relatives of the Greek-Cypriot missing persons. [158]
H65 (d) In view of its conclusion under Article 3, with its emphasis on the
effect which the lack of information had on the families of missing persons, the
Court finds it unnecessary to examine separately the complaints which the
applicant Government have formulated in terms of Articles 8 and 10 of the
Convention. [161]
4. Alleged violations of the rights of displaced persons to respect for their
home and property (Arts.8, 13, 14, 17, 18 and Art.1 of Protocol No.1).
H66 (a) There are no exceptional circumstances which would lead the Court to
take a different view of the facts established by the Commission. Further, the
respondent Government did not contest the accuracy of several allegations of
fact made by the applicant Government in the proceedings before the Commission.
The Court will accordingly examine the merits of the applicant Government's
complaints with reference to the facts established by the Commission. [163-4]
H67 (b) In the proceedings before the Commission the respondent Government did
not dispute the applicant Government's assertion that it was not possible for
displaced Greek Cypriots to return to their homes in the north. It was their
contention that this situation would remain unchanged pending agreement on an
overall political solution to the Cypriot question. In these circumstances the
Court, like the Commission, considers that the issue of whether the aggrieved
persons could have been expected to avail themselves of domestic remedies in the
TRNC does not arise. [171]
H68 (c) The official policy of the TRNC authorities to deny the right of the
displaced persons to return to their homes is reinforced by the very tight
restrictions operated by the same authorities on visits to the north by Greek
Cypriots living in the south. Accordingly, not only are displaced persons unable
to apply to the authorities to reoccupy the homes which they left behind, they
are physically prevented from even visiting them. [172]
H69 (d) The situation impugned by the applicant Government has existed since the
events of 1974 in northern Cyprus. It would appear that it has never been
reflected in "legislation" and is enforced as a matter of policy in
furtherance of a bi-zonal arrangement designed to minimize the risk of conflict
which the intermingling of the Greek and Turkish-Cypriot communities in the
north might *746 engender. That
bi-zonal arrangement is being pursued within the framework of the inter-communal
talks sponsored by the United Nations Secretary-General. [173]
H70 (e) The Court observes: first, the complete denial of the right of displaced
persons to respect for their homes has no basis in law within the meaning of
Article 8(2) of the Convention; secondly, the inter-communal talks cannot be
invoked in order to legitimate a violation of the Convention; thirdly, the
violation at issue has endured as a matter of policy since 1974 and must be
considered continuing. [174]
H71 (f) In of these circumstances, there has been a continuing violation of
Article 8 of the Convention by reason of the refusal to allow the return of any
Greek-Cypriot displaced persons to their homes in northern Cyprus. [175]
H72 (g) As to the further allegation concerning the alleged manipulation of the
demographic and cultural environment of the displaced persons' homes, the Court
considers that it is not necessary to examine this complaint in view of its
above finding of a continuing violation of Article 8 of the Convention. [176]
H73 (h) Furthermore, it is appropriate to examine the applicant Government's
submissions on the issue of family separation in the context of their
allegations in respect of the living conditions of the Karpas Greek Cypriots.
[177]
H74 (i) The Court agrees with the Commission's finding that at least since June
1989 the TRNC authorities no longer recognized any ownership rights of Greek
Cypriots in respect of their properties in northern Cyprus. This purported
deprivation of the property at issue was embodied in a constitutional provision.
The legality of the interference with the displaced persons' property is
unassailable before the TRNC courts. Accordingly, there is no requirement for
the persons concerned to use domestic remedies to secure redress for their
complaints. [184]
H75 (j) The essence of the applicant Government's complaints is not that there
has been a formal and unlawful expropriation of the property of the displaced
persons but that these persons, because of the continuing denial of access to
their property, have lost all control over, as well as possibilities to enjoy,
their land. The physical exclusion of Greek-Cypriot persons from the territory
of northern Cyprus is enforced as a matter of TRNC policy or practice. The
exhaustion requirement does not accordingly apply in these circumstances. [185]
H76 (k) In Loizidou v. Turkey that particular applicant could not be deemed to
have lost title to her property by operation of "Article 159 of the TRNC
Constitution", a provision which it held to be invalid for the purposes of
the Convention. This conclusion is unaffected by the operation of "Law No.
52/1995". Although the latter was not invoked before the Court in Loizidou
v. Turkey cannot be attributed any more legal validity than its parent
"Article 159" which it purports to implement. [186]
H77 (l) The reasoning and conclusion in Loizidou v. Turkey apply with equal
force to displaced Greek Cypriots who, like Mrs. Loizidou, are unable to have
access to their property in northern Cyprus by reason of the restrictions placed
by the TRNC authorities on their physical access to that property. The
continuing and total denial of access to their property is a clear interference
with the right of the displaced Greek Cypriots to the peaceful enjoyment of *747
possessions within the meaning of the first sentence of Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1. It further notes that, as regards the purported expropriation, no
compensation has been paid to the displaced persons in respect of the
interferences which they have suffered and continue to suffer in respect of
their property rights. [187]
H78 (m) The Court notes that the respondent Government, in the proceedings
before the Commission, sought to justify the interference with reference to the
inter-communal talks and to the need to rehouse displaced Turkish-Cypriot
refugees. However, similar pleas were advanced by the respondent Government in
Loizidou v. Turkey and were rejected. The Court sees no reason in the instant
case to reconsider those justifications. [188]
H79 (n) For the above reasons the Court concludes that there has been a
continuing violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 by virtue of the fact that
Greek-Cypriot owners of property in northern Cyprus are being denied access to
and control, use and enjoyment of their property as well as any compensation for
the interference with their property rights. [189]
H80 (o) The Court notes that in the proceedings before the Commission the
respondent Government pleaded that, pending the elaboration of an agreed
political solution to the overall Cyprus problem, there could be no question of
a right of displaced persons either to return to the homes and properties which
they had left in northern Cyprus or to lay claim to any of their immovable
property vested in the TRNC authorities by virtue of "Article 159 of the
TRNC Constitution" and allocated to Turkish Cypriots with full title deeds
in accordance with implementing "Law No. 52/1995". The respondent
Government did not contend before the Commission that displaced persons could
avail themselves of local remedies to contest this policy of interference with
their rights. Indeed, the Court considers that it would be at variance with the
declared policy to provide for any challenge to its application. The Court
further recalls in this connection that, as regards the violations alleged under
Article 8 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, it concluded that
no issue arose in respect of the exhaustion requirement. [193]
H81 (p) For these reasons, there has been a violation of Article 13 of the
Convention by reason of the respondent State's failure to provide to Greek
Cypriots not residing in northern Cyprus any remedies to contest interferences
with their rights under Article 8 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1. [194]
H82 (q) The Court considers that, in the circumstances of the present case, the
applicant Government's complaints under this heading amount in effect to the
same complaints, albeit seen from a different angle, as those which the Court
has already considered in relation to Articles 8 and 13 of the Convention and
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. It has found that those Articles have been
violated. In considers that it is not necessary to examine whether in this case
there has been a violation of Article 14 taken in conjunction with those
Articles by virtue of the alleged discriminatory treatment of Greek Cypriots not
residing in northern Cyprus as regards their rights to respect for their homes,
to the peaceful enjoyment of their possessions and to an effective remedy. [199]
H83 (r) Bearing in mind its own conclusion on the applicant Government's
complaints under Article 14 of the Convention as *748
well as its finding of a violation of Articles 8 and 13 of the Convention and
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, it is not necessary to examine whether the facts
alleged also give rise to a breach of Article 3 of the Convention. [203] &
[206]
5. Alleged violations arising out of the living conditions of Greek Cypriots in
northern Cyprus (Arts. 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, Art.1 of Protocol
No.1).
H84 (a) The Commission established the facts with reference, inter alia,
to the oral evidence given by witnesses proposed by both sides. It further
recalls that it rejected the applicant Government's criticism of the manner in
which the delegates heard the evidence and reaffirms that the hearing of
witnesses was organized in a way which respected the principle of procedural
equality between both parties. It is to be noted in addition that, with a view
to its establishment of the facts, the Commission made extensive use of
documentary materials including the "Karpas Brief" on the living
conditions of the enclaved Greek-Cypriot population in northern Cyprus and the
UN Secretary-General's progress reports on the proposals for remedial action
formulated in the Brief. [211]
H85 (b) The applicant Government accepts much of the Commission's findings of
fact. Its criticism is directed at certain conclusions which the Commission drew
from those facts. The Court does not consider that there are any exceptional
circumstances which would lead it to depart from the facts as established by the
Commission. It will, on the other hand, scrutinize carefully whether the facts
bear out all of the applicant Government's complaints. It will do so using the
"beyond reasonable doubt" standard of proof including with respect to
the alleged existence of an administrative practice of violating the Convention
rights relied on. [212]
H86 (c) As to the applicant Government's request that the Humanitarian Review
dealing with the living conditions of the Maronite community in northern Cyprus
be obtained, the respondent Government objected to the release of the document.
It observes that, in any event, major aspects of the Review have been made
public and have been included in the case file. [213]
H87 (d) The Commission, in its examination of the merits of the applicant
Government's complaints, made an overall assessment of the living conditions of
Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus from the standpoint of Articles 3, 8
and 14 of the Convention. At the same time, the Commission examined the merits
of the complaints about the living conditions under the relevant Convention
Article, while addressing in the framework of its global assessment the specific
complaints raised by the applicant Government under Article 8 concerning
interferences with the right of the Karpas Greek Cypriots to respect for their
private and family life, home and correspondence. Having regard to the fact that
the applicant Government's arguments on the latter aspects of Article 8 are
interwoven with their broader submissions on the violation of that provision,
the Court considers that it is appropriate to discuss those arguments in the
context of the living conditions of the Karpas Greek Cypriots seen from the
angle of Article 8. [214-5]
H88 *749 (e) An issue may arise under
Article 2 of the Convention where it is shown that the authorities of a
Contracting State put an individual's life at risk through the denial of health
care which they have undertaken to make available to the population generally.
Article 2(1) of the Convention enjoins the State not only to refrain from the
intentional and unlawful taking of life, but also to take appropriate steps to
safeguard the lives of those within its jurisdiction. The Commission, however,
was unable to establish on the evidence that the TRNC authorities deliberately
withheld medical treatment from the population concerned or adopted a practice
of delaying the processing of requests of patients to receive medical treatment
in the south. During the period under consideration medical visits were indeed
hampered on account of restrictions imposed by the TRNC authorities on the
movement of the populations concerned and that in certain cases delays did
occur. However, it has not been established that the lives of any patients were
put in danger on account of delay in individual cases. Neither the Greek-Cypriot
nor Maronite populations were prevented from availing themselves of medical
services including hospitals in the north. The applicant Government is critical
of the level of health care available in the north. However, the Court does not
consider it necessary to examine in this case the extent to which Article 2 of
the Convention may impose an obligation on a Contracting State to make available
a certain standard of health care. [219]
H89 (f) The Court further observes that the difficulties which the Greek-
Cypriot and Maronite communities experience in the area of health care under
consideration essentially stem from the controls imposed on their freedom of
movement. Those controls result from an administrative practice which is not
amenable to challenge in the TRNC courts. On that account, the Court considers
that the issue of non-exhaustion need not be examined. [220]
H90 (g) The Court concludes that no violation of Article 2 of the Convention has
been established by virtue of an alleged practice of denying access to medical
services to Greek Cypriots and Maronites living in northern Cyprus. [221]
H91 (h) The applicant Government has not claimed that any members of the
enclaved Greek-Cypriot population were actually detained during the period under
consideration. The complaint relates to the vulnerability of what is an aged and
dwindling population to the threat of aggression and criminality and its overall
sense of insecurity. However, the Court considers that these are matters which
fall outside the scope of Article 5 of the Convention and are more appropriately
addressed in the context of its overall assessment of the living conditions of
the Karpas Greek Cypriots seen from the angle of the requirements of Article 8.
For the above reason, the Court concludes that there has been no violation of
Article 5 of the Convention. [226-7]
H92 (i) The applicant Government has confined its submissions under this head to
the civil limb of Article 6 of the Convention. The first paragraph of Article 6
embodies the right of access to a court or tribunal in respect of disputes over
civil rights or obligations which can be said, at least on arguable grounds, to
be recognized under domestic law; it does not of itself guarantee any particular
content for such rights and obligations in the substantive law of *750
the Contracting State. Furthermore, a court or tribunal is characterized in the
substantive sense of the term by its judicial function, that is to say
determining matters within its competence on the basis of rules of law and after
proceedings conducted in a prescribed manner. It must also satisfy a series of
further requirements--independence, in particular of the executive;
impartiality; duration of its members' terms of office; guarantees afforded by
its procedure--several of which appear in the text of Article 6(1). [233]
H93 (j) It is the applicant Government's contention that the enclaved Greek-
Cypriot population is prevented, as a matter of administrative practice, from
asserting civil claims before the TRNC courts. However this assertion is at
variance with the testimony of witnesses heard by the delegates, including
witnesses proposed by the applicant Government. It is also contradicted by the
written evidence adduced before the Commission. It is clear that Greek Cypriots
living in the north have on occasion successfully taken court actions in defence
of their property rights, and they are not barred for reasons of race, language
or ethnic origin from using the local courts. The Commission accepted this on
the facts and the Court does not dispute the Commission's conclusion. The
applicant Government is required to show that the courts have been tried and
found wanting. Absent this, it is being asked to speculate on the merits of
their claim. [234]
H94 (k) This conclusion is not affected by the fact that certain matters which
may weigh heavily on the daily lives of the enclaved Greek Cypriots are not
amenable to challenge in the TRNC courts, for example restrictions on their
freedom of movement or their right to bequeath property to family members in the
south. However, in the Court's opinion those measures, whether embodied in
policy or "legislation", are to be addressed from the standpoint of
the effectiveness of remedies within the meaning of Article 13 of the Convention
and their compatibility with other relevant substantive provisions of the
Convention and its Protocols. The existence of such measures does not improve
the applicant Government's case concerning the alleged administrative practice
of violating Article 6. It recalls in this connection that the applicability of
Article 6 is premised on the existence of an arguable cause of action in
domestic law. [235]
H95 (l) As to the applicant Government's challenge to the very legality of the
TRNC court system, the Court observes that they advanced similar arguments in
the context of the preliminary issue concerning the requirement to exhaust
domestic remedies in respect of the complaints covered by the instant
application. The Court concluded that, notwithstanding the illegality of the
TRNC under international law, it cannot be excluded that applicants may be
required to take their grievances before, inter alia, the local courts
with a view to seeking redress. It further pointed out in that connection that
its primary concern in this respect was to ensure, from the standpoint of the
Convention system, that dispute-resolution mechanisms which offer individuals
the opportunity of access to justice for the purpose of remedying wrongs or
asserting claims should be used. [236]
H96 (m) The Court observes that there is a functioning court system in the TRNC
for the settlement of disputes relating to civil rights *751
and obligations defined in "domestic law" and which is available to
the Greek- Cypriot population. The court system in its functioning and
procedures reflects the judicial and common-law tradition of Cyprus. In its
opinion, having regard to the fact that it is the "TRNC domestic law"
which defines the substance of those rights and obligations for the benefit of
the population as a whole it must follow that the domestic courts, set up by the
"law" of the TRNC, are there for their enforcement. For the Court,
and for the purposes of adjudicating on "civil rights and obligations"
the local courts can be considered to be "established by law" with
reference to the "constitutional and legal basis" on which they
operate.
In the Court's opinion, any other conclusion would be to the detriment of the
Greek-Cypriot community and would result in a denial of opportunity to
individuals from that community to have an adjudication on a cause of action
against a private or public body. It is to be noted in this connection that the
evidence confirms that Greek Cypriots have taken successful court actions in
defence of their civil rights. [237]
H97 (n) The Court's conclusion on this matter in no way amounts to a
recognition, implied or otherwise, of the TRNC's claim to statehood. [238]
H98 (o) The Court notes that the applicant Government contests the independence
and impartiality of the TRNC court system from the perspective of the local
Greek-Cypriot population. However, the Commission rejected this claim on the
facts. Having regard to its own assessment of the evidence, the Court accepts
that conclusion. [239]
H99 (p) For the above reasons, the Court concludes that no violation of Article
6 of the Convention has been established in respect of Greek Cypriots living in
northern Cyprus by reason of an alleged practice of denying them a fair hearing
by an independent and impartial tribunal in the determination of their civil
rights and obligations. [240]
H100 (q) It has not been contended by the applicant Government that the TRNC
authorities have interfered as such with the right of the Greek-Cypriot
population to manifest their religion either alone or in the company of others.
Indeed there is no evidence of such interference. However, the restrictions
placed on the freedom of movement of that population during the period under
consideration considerably curtailed their ability to observe their religious
beliefs, in particular their access to places of worship outside their villages
and their participation in other aspects of religious life. The Court concludes
that there has been a violation of Article 9 of the Convention in respect of
Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus. [245-6]
H101 (r) The applicant Government requested the Court to make a similar finding
in respect of the Maronite community living in northern Cyprus. However, it
considers that the evidence before it is insufficient to prove beyond reasonable
doubt that members of this community were prejudiced to the same extent as the
Greek-Cypriot population in the north in the exercise of their right to freedom
of religion. It finds therefore that no violation of Article 9 has been
established in respect of the Maronite population living in northern Cyprus.
[246]
H102 (s) The Court confirms the Commission's finding that there has *752
been an interference with Article 10 on account of the practice adopted by the
TRNC authorities of screening the contents of school-books before their
distribution. It observes in this regard that, although the vetting procedure
was designed to identify material which might pose a risk to inter-communal
relations and was carried out in the context of confidence- building measures
recommended by UNFICYP, the reality during the period under consideration was
that a large number of school-books, no matter how innocuous their content, were
unilaterally censored or rejected by the authorities. It is to be further noted
that in the proceedings before the Commission the respondent Government failed
to provide any justification for this form of wide-ranging censorship, which far
exceeded the limits of confidence-building methods and amounted to a denial of
the right to freedom of information. It does not appear that any remedies could
have been taken to challenge the decisions of the TRNC authorities in this
regard. [252]
H103 (t) The applicant Government considers that the Commission erred in its
assessment of the evidence in respect of other categories of Greek-language
books as well as newspapers. It has given careful consideration to the matters
relied on by the applicant Government. However, the Court does not find that the
evidence of individual cases of confiscation at the Ledra Palace check- point
adduced before the Commission and highlighted by the applicant Government in its
memorial and at the public hearing substantiate its allegations with reference
to the "beyond reasonable doubt" standard of proof. [253]
H104 (u) The Court finds therefore that there has been a violation of Article 10
of the Convention in respect of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus in so
far as school-books destined for use in their primary school were subject,
during the period under consideration, to excessive measures of censorship.
[254]
H105 (v) The Commission found it impossible to conclude that during the period
under consideration there was any interference by the TRNC authorities with
attempts by Greek Cypriots to establish their own associations or mixed
associations with Turkish Cypriots, or interference with the participation of
Greek Cypriots in the activities of associations. The Court accepts the
Commission's finding. Like the Commission, the Court also considers that its
conclusion does not require it to examine whether any available domestic
remedies have been exhausted in relation to these complaints. [260-1]
H106 (w) It is more appropriate to consider complaints in respect of an alleged
practice of imposing restrictions on Greek Cypriots' participation in
bi-communal or inter-communal events from the standpoint of Article 8 of the
Convention. [262]
H107 (x) The Court concludes that no violation of Article 11 of the Convention
has been established by reason of an alleged practice of denying Greek Cypriots
living in northern Cyprus the right to freedom of association. [263]
H108 (y) As regards ownership of property in the north, the TRNC practice is not
to make any distinction between displaced Greek-Cypriot owners and Karpas
Greek-Cypriot owners who leave the TRNC permanently, with the result that the
latter's immovable property is deemed to be "abandoned" and liable to
reallocation to third parties in the TRNC. These facts disclose a *753
continuing violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 in respect of Greek Cypriots
living in northern Cyprus in that their right to the peaceful enjoyment of their
possessions was not secured in case of their permanent departure from that
territory. [269]
H109 (z) The evidence taken in respect of this complaint also strongly suggests
that the property of Greek Cypriots in the north cannot be bequeathed by them on
death and that it passes to the authorities as "abandoned" property.
The respondent Government contended before the Commission that a court remedy
could be invoked by an heir in order to assert inheritance rights to the
property of a deceased Greek-Cypriot relative. The Court is not persuaded that
legal proceedings would hold out any prospects of success, having regard to the
respondent Government's view in the proceedings before the Commission that the
property of deceased Greek Cypriots devolves on the authorities in accordance
with the notion of "abandoned" property. It further notes that heirs
living in the south would in fact be prevented from having physical access to
any property which they inherited.
H110 (aa) Accordingly, Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 has also been breached in
this respect, given that the inheritance rights of persons living in southern
Cyprus in connection with the property in northern Cyprus of deceased
Greek-Cypriot relatives were not recognized. [270]
H111 (bb) Concerning the applicant Government's allegation of a lack of
protection for Greek Cypriots against acts of criminal damage to their property,
the Court considers that the evidence adduced does not establish to the required
standard that there is an administrative practice on the part of the TRNC
authorities of condoning such acts or failing to investigate or prevent them.
The "domestic law" of the TRNC provides for civil actions to be taken
against trespassers and criminal complaints to be lodged against wrongdoers. The
TRNC courts have on occasion found in favor of Greek-Cypriot litigants. It has
not been established on the evidence that there was, during the period under
consideration, an administrative practice of denying individuals from the
enclaved population access to a court to vindicate their civil rights. [271]
H112 (cc) Accordingly, no violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 has been
established by reason of an alleged practice of failing to protect the property
of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus against interferences by private
persons. [272]
H113 (dd) Children of Greek-Cypriot parents in northern Cyprus wishing to pursue
a secondary education through the medium of the Greek language are obliged to
transfer to schools in the south, this facility being unavailable in the TRNC
ever since the decision of the Turkish-Cypriot authorities to abolish it.
Admittedly, it is open to children, on reaching the age of 12, to continue their
education at a Turkish or English-language school in the north. In the strict
sense, accordingly, there is no denial of the right to education, which is the
primary obligation devolving on a Contracting Party under the first sentence of
Article 2 of Protocol No. 1. Moreover, this provision does not specify the
language in which education must be conducted in order that the right to
education be respected. [277]
H114 (ee) However, the option available to Greek-Cypriot parents to *754
continue their children's education in the north is unrealistic in view of the
fact that the children in question have already received their primary education
in a Greek-Cypriot school there. The authorities must no doubt be aware that it
is the wish of Greek-Cypriot parents that the schooling of their children be
completed through the medium of the Greek language. Having assumed
responsibility for the provision of Greek-language primary schooling, the
failure of the TRNC authorities to make continuing provision for it at the
secondary-school level must be considered in effect to be a denial of the
substance of the right at issue. It cannot be maintained that the provision of
secondary education in the south in keeping with the linguistic tradition of the
enclaved Greek Cypriots suffices to fulfill the obligation laid down in Article 2
of Protocol No. 1, having regard to the impact of that option on family life.
[278]
H115 (ff) The applicant Government raises a further complaint in respect of
primary-school education and the attitude of the TRNC authorities towards the
filling of teaching posts. Taken as a whole, the evidence does not disclose the
existence of an administrative practice of denying the right to education at
primary-school level. [279]
H116 (gg) Having regard to the above considerations, the Court concludes that
there has been a violation of Article 2 of Protocol No. 1 in respect of Greek
Cypriots living in northern Cyprus in so far as no appropriate secondary-school
facilities were available to them. [280]
H117 (hh) During the period under consideration, the right of the enclaved Greek
Cypriots to family life was seriously impeded on account of the measures imposed
by the TRNC authorities to limit family reunification. Thus, it was not disputed
by the respondent Government in the proceedings before the Commission that Greek
Cypriots who permanently left the northern part of Cyprus were not allowed to
return even if they left a family behind. Although arrangements were introduced
by the TRNC authorities to facilitate to a limited extent family visits in 1998,
the period under consideration for the purposes of the instant application was characterized
by severe limitations on the number and duration of such visits.
Furthermore, during the reference period schoolchildren from northern Cyprus
attending schools in the south were not allowed to return permanently to the
north after having attained the age of 16 in the case of males and 18 in the
case of females. Certain restrictions applied to the visits of those students to
their parents in the north. [292]
H118 (ii) The imposition of these restrictions during the period under
consideration as a matter of policy and in the absence of any legal basis
resulted in the enforced separation of families and the denial to the Greek-
Cypriot population in the north of the possibility of leading a normal family
life. In the absence of any legal basis for these restrictions, the Court does
not have to consider whether the interferences at issue can be justified with
reference to the provisions of Article 8(2) of the Convention. For the same
reason it does not have to consider either whether aggrieved individuals could
have been expected to exhaust domestic remedies to challenge what in effect
amounts to an *755 administrative
practice of interference with the right to respect for family life. [293]
H119 (jj) As to the alleged interferences with the right of the enclaved Greek
Cypriots to respect for their private life and home, the Court notes that the
Commission found it established on the evidence that, during the period under
consideration, this community was in effect monitored in respect of its contacts
and movements, Greek Cypriots having to account to the authorities for even the
most mundane of reasons for moving outside the confines of their villages. The
surveillance effected by the authorities even extended to the physical presence
of State agents in the homes of Greek Cypriots on the occasion of social or
other visits paid by third parties, including family members. [294]
H120 (kk) Such highly intrusive and invasive acts violated the right of the
Greek-Cypriot population in the Karpas region to respect for their private and
family life. No legal basis for these acts has been adduced, less so any
justification which could attract the provisions of Article 8(2) of the
Convention. They were carried out as a matter of practice. As such, no question
as to the exhaustion of local remedies arises in the circumstances. [295]
H121 (ll) The Court concludes that there has been a violation of the right of
Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus to respect for their private and family
life and to respect for their home, as guaranteed by Article 8 of the
Convention. [296]
H122 (mm) No violation of Article 8 of the Convention has been established by
reason of an alleged practice of interference with the right of Greek Cypriots
living in northern Cyprus to respect for their correspondence. [297-8]
H123 (nn) The applicant Government does not dispute the Commission's decision to
examine globally the living conditions of Greek Cypriots in northern Cyprus from
the standpoint of Article 8. It does, however, request the Court to isolate from
that examination a number of alleged specific interferences with the right to
respect for private life and to rule separately on their merits. In the Court's
opinion, the matters relied on by the applicant Government in this connection
are in reality bound up with their more general allegation that the respondent
State pursues a policy which is intended to claim the northern part of Cyprus
for Turkish Cypriots and settlers from Turkey to the exclusion of any
Greek-Cypriot influence. The applicant Government maintains that this policy is
manifested in the harshness of the restrictions imposed on the enclaved
Greek-Cypriot population. The specific complaints invoked by the applicant
Government regarding impediments to access to medical treatment and hindrances
to participation in bi-or inter-communal events are elements which fall to be
considered in the context of an overall analysis of the living conditions of the
population concerned from the angle of their impact on the right of its members
to respect for private and family life. [299]
H124 (oo) The Court cannot but endorse the Commission's conclusion that the
restrictions which beset the daily lives of the enclaved Greek Cypriots create a
feeling among them "of being compelled to live in a hostile environment in
which it is hardly possible to lead a normal private and family life".
[300]
H125 (pp) These restrictions are factors which aggravate the violations *756
which it has found in respect of the right of the enclaved Greek Cypriots to
respect for private and family life. Having regard to that conclusion, it is not
necessary to examine separately the applicant Government's allegations under
Article 8 concerning the implantation of Turkish settlers in northern Cyprus.
[301]
H126 (qq) It is an inescapable conclusion that the interferences at issue were
directed at the Karpas Greek-Cypriot community for the very reason that they
belonged to this class of persons. The treatment to which they were subjected
during the period under consideration can only be explained in terms of the
features which distinguish them from the Turkish-Cypriot population, namely
their ethnic origin, race and religion. It is the policy of the respondent State
to pursue discussions within the framework of the inter- communal talks on the
basis of bi-zonal and bi-communal principles. The respondent State's attachment
to these principles must be considered to be reflected in the situation in which
the Karpas Greek Cypriots live and are compelled to live: isolated, restricted
in their movements, controlled and with no prospect of renewing or developing
their community. The conditions under which that population is condemned to live
are debasing and violate the very notion of respect for the human dignity of its
members. [309]
H127 (rr) The discriminatory treatment attained a level of severity which
amounted to degrading treatment. The Court concludes that there has been a
violation of Article 3 of the Convention in that the Greek Cypriots living in
the Karpas area of northern Cyprus have been subjected to discrimination
amounting to degrading treatment. [310-311]
H128 (ss) Having regard to the reasoning which underpins its own finding of a
violation of Article 3, the Court considers that there is no need to pronounce
separately on what is in reality a restatement of a complaint which is
substantially addressed in that finding. The Court concludes therefore that, in
view of its finding under Article 3 of the Convention, it is not necessary to
examine whether during the period under consideration there has been a violation
of Article 14 of the Convention taken in conjunction with Article 3 in respect
of Greek Cypriots living in northern Cyprus. [314-5]
H129 (tt) The Court considers that, having regard to the particular
circumstances of this case, it is not necessary to examine whether during the
period under consideration there has been a violation of Article 14 of the
Convention taken in conjunction with the other relevant Articles. [317]
6. Alleged violation of the right of displaced Greek Cypriots to hold elections
(Article 3 of Protocol No. 1.)
H130 The Court does not consider it necessary to examine the complaint, having
regard to the fact that the complaint has not been pursued by the applicant
Government. It is not necessary to examine of its own motion whether the facts
disclose a violation of Article 3 of Protocol No. 1. [326-7]
7. Alleged violations in respect of the rights of Turkish Cypriots, including
members of the Gypsy community, living in northern Cyprus (Arts.3, 5, 6, 8, 10,
11, 13, 14, Art.1 of Protocol No.1)
H131 (a) The Commission declared admissible complaints introduced by the
applicant Government under Articles 5, 6, 10, 11 and 13 of the Convention *757
and Article 1 of Protocol No 1. These complaints were made with respect to
Turkish Cypriots. The Commission also declared admissible complaints under
Articles 3, 5 and 8 of the Convention in relation to the treatment of
Turkish-Cypriot Gypsies who had sought asylum in the United Kingdom. In respect
of all these complaints the applicant Government relied on specific sets of
facts in support of their allegations. At the merits stage the applicant
Government advanced further materials which, in their view, were intended to
elaborate on the facts initially pleaded in support of the complaints declared
admissible. However, in the Commission's opinion the materials had the effect of
introducing new complaints which had not been examined at the admissibility
stage. For this reason, the Commission could not entertain what it considered to
be "additional complaints". The Court notes that the complaints now
invoked by the applicant Government fall into this category. [332]
H132 (b) The Court finds no reason to depart from the Commission's view of the
scope of its admissibility decision. On that account the Court will not examine
any complaints adjudged by the Commission to fall outside the scope of that
decision. [333] & [335]
H133 (c) The Court accepts the Commission's conclusion. Its own assessment of
the evidence leads it to believe that there may have been individual cases of
interferences with the rights of political opponents. However, it cannot
conclude on the strength of that evidence that there existed during the period
under consideration an administrative practice of suppressing all dissent
directed at the TRNC ruling parties or an official policy of acquiescing in
interferences by pro-TRNC supporters with the rights invoked by the applicant
Government. The Court must have regard to the fact that the complaints alleged
by the applicant Government is shaped in a vulnerable political context
bolstered by a strong Turkish military presence and characterized by social
rivalry between Turkish settlers and the indigenous population. Such a context
has lead to tension and, regrettably, to acts on the part of the agents of the
TRNC which violate Convention rights in individual cases. However, the Court
considers that neither the evidence adduced by the applicant Government before
the Commission nor their criticism of the Commission's evaluation of that
evidence can be said to controvert the finding that it has not been shown beyond
reasonable doubt that the alleged practice existed during the period under
consideration. [346]
H134 (d) The respondent Government, in its submissions to the Commission, made
out a case for the availability of remedies, including the remedy of habeas
corpus. It is not persuaded on the evidence before it that it has been shown
that these remedies were inadequate and ineffective in respect of the matters
complained of or that there existed special circumstances absolving the
individuals in question from the requirement to avail themselves of these
remedies. In particular, and as previously noted, the evidence does not show
that the TRNC authorities have, as a matter of administrative practice, remained
totally passive in the face of serious allegations of misconduct or infliction
of harm either by State agents or private parties acting with impunity. [347]
H135 (e) The Court concludes that it has not been established that there has
been an administrative practice of violation of the rights of Turkish Cypriots
who are opponents of the regime in northern *758
Cyprus under Articles 3, 5, 8, 10 and 11 of the Convention, including by reason
of an alleged practice of failing to protect their rights under these
provisions. [348]
H136 (f) Members of the Turkish-Cypriot Gypsy community have suffered hardship
at the hands of the TRNC authorities. However, the Court does not consider that
these individual cases bear out the claim that there existed during the period
under consideration an administrative practice of violating the rights invoked
by the applicant Government. It does not appear that any of the members of the
Turkish-Cypriot Gypsy community who claim to have suffered at the hands of the
TRNC authorities sought to invoke remedies before the local courts. The Court
does not accept the applicant Government's assertion that the unavailability of
legal aid in the TRNC for the bringing of civil actions exonerated aggrieved
individuals from the requirement to use domestic remedies. There is no
Convention obligation as such on a Contracting State to operate a civil legal
aid system for the benefit of indigent litigants. What is important for the
Court is the fact that it does not appear that any attempt has been made to take
any legal proceedings whatsoever in respect of the matters alleged by the
applicant Government. [352]
H137 (g) The Court concludes that it has not been established that, during the
period under consideration, there has been a violation as a matter of
administrative practice of the rights of members of the Turkish-Cypriot Gypsy
community under Articles 3, 5, 8 and 14 of the Convention, including by reason
of an alleged practice of failing to protect their rights under these Articles.
[353]
H138 (h) The Court does not have to be satisfied on the evidence that there was
an administrative practice of trying civilians before military courts in the
TRNC. The applicant Government complains about the existence of a legislative
practice of violating Article 6, having regard to the clear terms of
"Article 156 of the TRNC Constitution" and the "Prohibited
Military Areas Decree". A Contracting State was entitled to challenge under
the Convention a law in abstracto having regard to the fact that former
Article 24 of the Convention enabled any Contracting State to refer to the
Commission any alleged breach of the provisions of the Convention and the
Protocols thereto by another Contracting State. A "breach" within the
meaning of former Article 24 resulted from the mere existence of a law which
introduced, directed or authorized measures incompatible with the rights and
freedoms safeguarded. A breach of this kind might only be found if the law
challenged pursuant to former Article 24 was couched in terms sufficiently clear
and precise to make the breach immediately apparent; otherwise, the decision
should be arrived at by reference to the manner in which the respondent State
interpreted and applied in concreto the impugned text or texts. [357]
H139 (i) For the Court, examination in abstracto of the impugned
"constitutional provision" and the "Prohibited Military Areas
Decree" leads it to conclude that these texts clearly introduced and authorized
the trial of civilians by military courts. It considers that there is
no reason to doubt that these courts suffer from the same defects of
independence and impartiality which were highlighted in Incal
v. Turkey in respect of the system of National Security Courts established
in Turkey by the respondent State, in *759
particular the close structural links between the executive power and the
military officers serving on the TRNC military courts. Civilians in the TRNC
accused of acts characterized as military offences before such courts could
legitimately fear that they lacked independence and impartiality. [358]
H140 (j) The Court finds that there has been a violation of Article 6 of the
Convention on account of the legislative practice of authorizing the trial of
civilians by military courts. [359]
H141 (k) No violation of Article 10 of the Convention has been established by
virtue of alleged restrictions on the right of Turkish Cypriots living in
northern Cyprus to receive information from the Greek-language press. [362-3]
H142 (l) The Court does not consider that there was an administrative practice
of impeding all bi-communal contacts between Turkish Cypriots living in the
north and Greek Cypriots in the south. The TRNC authorities took a much more
rigorous approach to such contacts after the second half of 1996 and indeed
prohibited them. However, alleged violations of Convention rights occurring
during that period are outside the scope of the admissibility decision. [369]
H143 (m) As to the alleged interference with the right of Turkish Cypriots
living in the north to freedom of association, the Court observes that the
Commission found on the evidence that the TRNC authorities had not made any
attempt to intervene to prevent the creation of bi-communal organizations in the
north of Cyprus. In the absence of any concrete evidence to the contrary, and
having regard to the requisite standard of proof for establishing the existence
of an administrative practice of violating a Convention right, the Court
concludes that there has been no violation of Article 11 from this standpoint
either. [370] & [371]
H144 (n) It has not been established that there has been a violation of Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 by reason of the alleged administrative practice of
violating that Article, including by reason of failure to secure enjoyment of
their possessions in southern Cyprus to Turkish Cypriots living in northern
Cyprus. [377]
H145 (o) The Court could not accept the applicant Government's allegation that
there was an administrative practice of denying remedies to individuals, in
breach of Article 13 of the Convention. The evidence before the Court in this
connection cannot be said to prove beyond reasonable doubt the existence of any
such practice. Accordingly, no violation of Article 13 of the Convention has
been established by reason of a failure as a matter of administrative practice
to secure effective remedies to Turkish Cypriots living in northern Cyprus.
[382] & [383]
8. Alleged violations of Articles 1, 17, 18 and former Article 32(4) of the
Convention.
H146 The Court considers that it is unnecessary in the circumstances to examine
separately these complaints. It further recalls that, regarding the applicant
Government's complaints under Articles 17 and 18, it reached the same conclusion
in the context of similar allegations made with respect to alleged interferences
with the rights of Greek-Cypriot displaced persons' property. [388]
H147 Representation
Mr A. Markides, Attorney-General of the Republic of Cyprus, (Agent), Mr I.
Brownlie QC, Mr D. Pannick QC, Ms C. Palley, Barrister-at-Law, Mr M. Shaw,
Barrister-at-Law, Mrs S.M. Joannides, Senior Counsel of the Republic of Cyprus, *760
Mr P. Polyviou, Barrister-at-Law, Mr P. Saini, Barrister-at-Law, (Counsel), Mr
N. Emiliou, Consultant, (Adviser); for the applicant Government.
H148 The following cases are referred to in the Court's judgment:
1. Abdulaziz,
Cabales and Balkandali v. United Kingdom (A/94): (1985) 7 E.H.R.R. 471
2. Akdivar
and Others v. Turkey (1997) 23 E.H.R.R. 143
3. Belgian
Linguistic Case (A/6): (1979-80) 1 E.H.R.R. 252
4. Belilos
v. Switzerland (A/132): (1988) 10 E.H.R.R. 466
5. Çakici
v. Turkey: (2001) 31 E.H.R.R. 5
6. East African Asians v. United Kingdom, D.R.78, p.62
7. Ergi
v. Turkey: (2001) 32 E.H.R.R. 18
8. Findlay
v. United Kingdom (1997) 24 E.H.R.R. 221
9. France, Norway, Denmark, Sweden and the Netherlands v. Turkey, decision of 6
December 1983, D.R. 35, pp.163-164
10. Greek Case, Yearbook 12.
11. Guerra
and Others v. Italy (1998) 26 E.H.R.R. 357
12. Ireland v. United Kingdom (A/25): (1979-1980) 2 E.H.R.R. 25
13. Kaya
v. Turkey (1999) 28 E.H.R.R. 1
14. Kjeldsen,
Busk Madsen and Pedersen v. Denmark (A/23), 7 December 1976
15. Kurt
v. Turkey (1999) 27 E.H.R.R. 373
16. L.C.B.
v. United Kingdom (1999) 27 E.H.R.R. 212
17. Lithgow
v. United Kingdom (A/102): (1986) 8 E.H.R.R. 329
18. Loizidou
v. Turkey (1997) 23 E.H.R.R. 513
19. Loizidou
v. Turkey (A/319): (1995) 20 E.H.R.R. 99
20. Legal Consequences for States of the Continued Presence of South Africa In
Namibia (South West Africa) Notwithstanding Security Council Resolution 276
(1970) Case, [1971] I.C.J.R. 16
21. McCann
and Others v. United Kingdom (A/324): (1996) 21 E.H.R.R. 97
22. Mitap
and Müftüoglu v. Turkey (1996) 22 E.H.R.R. 209
23. Philis
v. Greece (A/209): (1991) 13 E.H.R.R. 741
24. Powell
and Rayner v. United Kingdom (A/172): (1990) 12 E.H.R.R. 355
25. Salman
v. Turkey: (2002) 34 E.H.R.R. 17
26. Sargin
and Yagci v. Turkey, App.Nos. 14116-14117/88, 8 June 1995
27. Tanrikulu
v. Turkey (2000) 30 E.H.R.R. 950
28. Van
Mechelen and Others v. Netherlands (1998) 25 E.H.R.R. 647
29. Yasa
v. Turkey (1999) 28 E.H.R.R. 408
H149 The following additional case is referred to in the opinion of Judge Costa:
30. Chassagnou
and Others v. France (2000) 29 E.H.R.R. 615
H150 The following additional case is referred to in the opinion of Judge Fuad:
31. Loizidou
v. Turkey (Art.50), 28 July 1998
H151 The following additional cases are referred to in the opinion of Judge
Marcus-Helmons:
32. Adams
v. Adams [1970] 3 W.L.R. 934
33. Golder
v. United Kingdom (A/18): (1979-80) 1 E.H.R.R. 524
34. Open
Door and Well Woman v. Ireland (A/246-A): (1993) 15 E.H.R.R. 244 *761
35. Young,
James and Webster v. United Kingdom (A/44): (1982) 4 E.H.R.R. 38
H152 The following additional cases are referred to in the Commission's Opinion:
36. Assenov
v. Bulgaria (1999) 28 E.H.R.R. 652
37. Austria v. Italy, App.No.788/60, dec.11.1.61, Yearbook 4
38. Chrystostomos, Papachrystostomou v. Turkey, App. Nos. 15299-15300/89,
dec.4.3.91, D.R.68, p. 216.
39. Dyer v. United Kingdom, App. No. 10475/83, dec.5.7.84, D.R.39
40. Gillow
v. United Kingdom (A/102): (1989) 11 E.H.R.R. 335
41. Gülec
v. Turkey (1999) 28 E.H.R.R. 121
42. Incal
v. Turkey (2000) 29 E.H.R.R. 449
43. James
and Others v. United Kingdom (A/98): (1986) 8 E.H.R.R. 123
44. McVeigh and Others v. United Kingdom, D.R.25, p.15
45. Mehmet
Kaya v. Turkey, 19 February 1998
46. Osman
v. United Kingdom (2000) 29 E.H.R.R. 245
47. Papamichalopoulos
and Others v. Greece (A/260-B): (1993) 16 E.H.R.R. 440
48. Skärby
v. Sweden (A/180-B), 28 June 1990
49. Sporrong
and Lönroth v. Sweden (A/52): (1983) 5 E.H.R.R. 35
50. Sunday
Times (No.1) v. United Kingdom (A/30): (1979-80) 2 E.H.R.R. 245
51. Timurtas
v. Turkey: (2001) 33 E.H.R.R. 6
52. X.
and Y. v. Netherlands (A/91): (1986) 8 E.H.R.R. 235
H153 The following additional case is referred to in the opinion of Mrs J. Liddy:
53. Buckley
v. United Kingdom (1997) 23 E.H.R.R. 101
The Facts
The circumstances of the case
A. General context
13 The complaints raised in this application arise out of the Turkish military
operations in northern Cyprus in July and August 1974 and the continuing
division of the territory of Cyprus. At the time of the Court's consideration of
the merits of the Loizidou v. Turkey case in 1996, the Turkish military presence
at the material time was described in the following terms [FN1]:
16. Turkish armed forces of more than 30,000 personnel are stationed throughout
the whole of the occupied area of northern Cyprus, which is constantly patrolled
and has checkpoints on all main lines of communication. The army's headquarters
are in Kyrenia. The 28th Infantry Division is based in Asha (Assia) with its
sector covering Famagusta to the Mia Milia suburb of Nicosia and with about
14,500 personnel. The 39th Infantry Division, with about 15,500 personnel, is
based at Myrtou village, and its sector ranges from Yerolakkos village to Lefka.
TOURDYK (Turkish Forces in Cyprus under the Treaty of Guarantee) is stationed at
Orta Keuy village near Nicosia, with a sector running from Nicosia International
Airport to the Pedhieos River. A *762
Turkish naval command and outpost are based at Famagusta and Kyrenia
respectively. Turkish airforce personnel are based at Lefkoniko, Krini and other
airfields. The Turkish airforce is stationed on the Turkish mainland at Adana.
FN1 Loizidou
v. Turkey (1997) 23 E.H.R.R. 513 paras 16-17.
17. The Turkish forces and all civilians entering military areas are subject to
Turkish military courts, as stipulated so far as concerns 'TRNC citizens' by the
Prohibited Military Areas Decree of 1979 (section 9) and Article 156 of the
Constitution of the 'TRNC'.
14 A major development in the continuing division of Cyprus occurred in November
1983 with the proclamation of the "Turkish Republic of Northern
Cyprus" (the "TRNC") and the subsequent enactment of the "TRNC
Constitution" on 7 May 1985.
This development was condemned by the international community. On 18 November
1983 the United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 541 (1983) declaring
the proclamation of the establishment of the "TRNC" legally invalid
and calling upon all States not to recognize any Cypriot State other than the
Republic of Cyprus. A similar call was made by the Security Council on 11 May
1984 in its Resolution 550 (1984). In November 1983 the Committee of Ministers
of the Council of Europe decided that it continued to regard the government of
the Republic of Cyprus as the sole legitimate government of Cyprus and called
for respect of the sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and unity of
the Republic of Cyprus.
15 According to the respondent Government, the "TRNC" is a democratic
and constitutional State which is politically independent of all other sovereign
States including Turkey, and the administration in northern Cyprus has been set
up by the Turkish-Cypriot people in the exercise of its right to self-
determination and not by Turkey. Notwithstanding this view, it is only the
Cypriot government which is recognized internationally as the government of the
Republic of Cyprus in the context of diplomatic and treaty relations and the
working of international organizations.
16 United Nations peacekeeping forces ("UNFICYP") maintain a
buffer-zone. A number of political initiatives have been taken at the level of
the United Nations aimed at settling the Cyprus problem on the basis of
institutional arrangements acceptable to both sides. To this end, inter-communal
talks have been sponsored by the Secretary-General of the United Nations acting
under the direction of the Security Council. In this connection, the respondent
Government maintain that the Turkish-Cypriot authorities in northern Cyprus have
pursued the talks on the basis of what they consider to be already agreed
principles of bi-zonality and bi-communality within the framework of a federal
constitution. Support for this basis of negotiation is found in the UN
Secretary-General's Set of Ideas of 15 July 1992 and the UN Security Council
resolutions of 26 August 1992 and 25 November 1992 confirming that a federal
solution sought by both sides will be "bi-communal" and
"bi-zonal".
Furthermore, and of relevance to the instant application, in 1981 the *763
United Nations Committee on Missing Persons ("CMP") was set up to
"look into cases of persons reported missing in the inter-communal fighting
as well as in the events of July 1974 and afterwards" and "to draw up
comprehensive lists of missing persons of both communities, specifying as
appropriate whether they are still alive or dead, and in the latter case
approximate times of death". The CMP has not yet completed its
investigations.
B. The previous inter-State applications
17 The events of July and August 1974 and their aftermath gave rise to three
previous applications by the applicant Government against the respondent State
under former Article 24 of the Convention. The first [FN2] and second [FN3]
applications were joined by the Commission and led to the adoption on 10 July
1976 of a report under former Article 31 of the Convention ("the 1976
report") in which the Commission expressed the opinion that the respondent
State had violated Articles 2, 3, 5, 8, 13 and 14 of the Convention and Article
1 of Protocol No. 1. On 20 January 1979 the Committee of Ministers of the
Council of Europe in turn adopted, with reference to an earlier decision of 21
October 1977, Resolution DH (79) 1 in which it expressed, inter alia, the
conviction that "the enduring protection of human rights in Cyprus can only
be brought about through the re-establishment of peace and confidence between
the two communities; and that inter-communal talks constitute the appropriate
framework for reaching a solution of the dispute". In its resolution the
Committee of Ministers strongly urged the parties to resume the talks under the
auspices of the Secretary-General of the United Nations in order to agree upon
solutions on all aspects of the dispute. [FN4] The Committee of Ministers viewed
this decision as completing its consideration of the case.
FN2 App. No.6780/74.
FN3 App. No.6950/75.
FN4 See para.16 above.
The third application [FN5] lodged by the applicant Government was the subject
of a further report under former Article 31 adopted by the Commission on 4
October 1983 ("the 1983 report"). In that report the Commission
expressed the opinion that the respondent State was in breach of its obligations
under Articles 5 and 8 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. On 2
April 1992 the Committee of Ministers adopted Resolution DH (92) 12 in respect
of the Commission's 1983 report. In its resolution the Committee of Ministers
limited itself to a decision to make the 1983 report public and stated that its
consideration of the case was thereby completed.
FN5 App.No.8007/77.
C. The instant application
18 The instant application is the first to have been referred to the Court. The
applicant Government requested the Court in their memorial to *764
"decide and declare that the respondent State is responsible for continuing
violations and other violations of Articles 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13,
14, 17 and 18 of the Convention and of Articles 1 and 2 of Protocol No. 1".
These allegations were invoked with reference to four broad categories of
complaints: alleged violations of the rights of Greek-Cypriot missing persons
and their relatives; alleged violations of the home and property rights of
displaced persons; alleged violations of the rights of enclaved Greek Cypriots
in northern Cyprus; alleged violations of the rights of Turkish Cypriots and the
Gypsy community in northern Cyprus.
D. The Commission's findings of fact in the instant application
19 The Court considers it appropriate at this stage to summaries the
Commission's findings of fact in respect of the various violations of the
Convention alleged by the applicant Government as well as the essential
arguments advanced by both parties and the documentary and other evidence relied
on by the Commission.
1. Alleged violations of the rights of Greek-Cypriot missing persons and
their relatives
20 The applicant Government essentially claimed in its application that about
1,491 Greek Cypriots were still missing 20 years after the cessation of
hostilities. These persons were last seen alive in Turkish custody and their
fate has never been accounted for by the respondent State.
21 The respondent Government maintained in reply that there was no proof that
any of the missing persons were still alive or were being kept in custody. In
its principal submission, the issues raised by the applicant Government should
continue to be pursued within the framework of the United Nations Committee on
Missing Persons [FN6] rather than under the Convention.
FN6 See para.16 above.
22 The Commission proceeded on the understanding that its task was not to
establish what actually happened to the Greek-Cypriot persons who went missing
following the Turkish military operations conducted in northern Cyprus in July
and August 1974. Rather, it saw its task as one of determining whether or not
the alleged failure of the respondent State to clarify the facts surrounding the
disappearances constituted a continuing violation of the Convention.
23 To that end, the Commission had particular regard to its earlier findings in
its 1976 and 1983 reports. It recalled that in its 1976 report it had stated
that it was widely accepted that a considerable number of Cypriots were still
missing as a result of armed conflict in Cyprus and that a number of persons
declared to be missing were identified as Greek Cypriots taken prisoner by the
Turkish army. This finding, in *765 the
Commission's opinion at the time, created a presumption of Turkish
responsibility for the fate of persons shown to be in Turkish custody. While
noting that killings of Greek-Cypriot civilians had occurred on a large scale,
the Commission also considered at the time of its 1976 report that it was unable
to ascertain whether, and under what circumstances, Greek-Cypriot prisoners
declared to be missing had been deprived of their life.
24 In the present case, the Commission further recalled that in its 1983 report
it found it established that there were sufficient indications in an indefinite
number of cases that missing Greek Cypriots had been in Turkish custody in 1974
and that this finding once again created a presumption of Turkish responsibility
for the fate of these persons.
25 The Commission found that the evidence submitted to it in the instant case
confirmed its earlier findings that certain of the missing persons were last
seen in Turkish or Turkish-Cypriot custody. In this connection, the Commission
had regard to the following: a statement of Mr Denktas, "President of the
TRNC", broadcast on 1 March 1996, in which he admitted that 42
Greek-Cypriot prisoners were handed over to Turkish-Cypriot fighters who killed
them and that in order to prevent further such killings prisoners were
subsequently transferred to Turkey; the broadcast statement of Professor Yalçin
Küçük, a former Turkish officer who had served in the Turkish army at the
time and participated in the 1974 military operation in Cyprus, in which he
suggested that the Turkish army had engaged in widespread killings of, inter
alia, civilians in so-called cleaning-up operations; the Dillon Report
submitted to the United States Congress in May 1998 indicating, inter alia,
that Turkish and Turkish-Cypriot soldiers rounded up Greek-Cypriot civilians in
the village of Asha on 18 August 1974 and took away males over the age of 15,
most of whom were reportedly killed by Turkish-Cypriot fighters; the written
statements of witnesses tending to corroborate the Commission's earlier findings
that many persons now missing were taken into custody by Turkish soldiers or
Turkish- Cypriot paramilitaries.
26 The Commission concluded that, notwithstanding evidence of the killing of
Greek-Cypriot prisoners and civilians, there was no proof that any of the
missing persons were killed in circumstances for which the respondent State
could be held responsible; nor did the Commission find any evidence to the
effect that any of the persons taken into custody were still being detained or
kept in servitude by the respondent State. On the other hand, the Commission
found it established that the facts surrounding the fate of the missing persons
had not been clarified by the authorities and brought to the notice of the
victims' relatives.
27 The Commission further concluded that its examination of the applicant
Government's complaints in the instant application was not precluded by the
ongoing work of the CMP. It noted in this connection that the scope of the
investigation being conducted by the CMP was *766
limited to determining whether or not any of the missing persons on its list
were dead or alive; nor was the CMP empowered to make findings either on the
cause of death or on the issue of responsibility for any deaths so established.
Furthermore, the territorial jurisdiction of the CMP was limited to the island
of Cyprus, thus excluding investigations in Turkey where some of the
disappearances were claimed to have occurred. The Commission also observed that
persons who might be responsible for violations of the Convention were promised
impunity and that it was doubtful whether the CMP's investigation could extend
to actions by the Turkish army or Turkish officials on Cypriot territory.
2. Alleged violations of the rights of the displaced persons to respect for
their home and property
28 The Commission established the facts under this heading against the
background of the applicant Government's principal submission that over 211,000
displaced Greek Cypriots and their children continued to be prevented as a
matter of policy from returning to their homes in northern Cyprus and from
having access to their property there for any purpose. The applicant Government
submitted that the presence of the Turkish army together with "TRNC"-imposed
border restrictions ensured that the return of displaced persons was rendered
physically impossible and, as a corollary, that their cross-border family visits
were gravely impeded. What started as a gradual and continuing process of
illegality over the years had now resulted in the transfer of the property left
behind by the displaced persons to the "TRNC" authorities without
payment of compensation and its re-assignment, together with "title
deeds", to State bodies, Turkish Cypriots and settlers from Turkey.
29 The respondent Government maintained before the Commission that the question
of the Varosha district of Famagusta along with the issues of freedom of
movement, freedom of settlement and the right of property could only be resolved
within the framework of the inter-communal talks [FN7] and on the basis of the
principles agreed on by both sides for the conduct of the talks. Until an
overall solution to the Cyprus question, acceptable to both sides, was found,
and having regard to security considerations, there could be no question of a
right of the displaced persons to return. The respondent Government further
submitted that the regulation of property abandoned by displaced persons, as
with restrictions on cross-border movement, fell within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the "TRNC" authorities.
FN7 See para.16 above.
30 The Commission found that it was common knowledge that with the exception of
a few hundred Maronites living in the Kormakiti area and Greek Cypriots living
in the Karpas peninsula, the whole Greek-Cypriot population which before 1974
resided in the northern part of Cyprus had left that area, the large majority of
these people now living *767 in
southern Cyprus. The reality of this situation was not contested by the
respondent Government.
31 The Commission noted with reference to its earlier findings in its 1976 and
1983 reports that there was no essential change in the situation obtaining at
the time of the introduction of the instant application. Accordingly, and this
was not disputed either by the respondent Government, displaced Greek Cypriots
had no possibility of returning to their homes in northern Cyprus and were
physically prevented from crossing into the northern part on account of the fact
that it was sealed off by the Turkish army. The arrangements introduced by the
"TRNC" authorities in 1998 to allow Greek Cypriots and Maronites to
cross into northern Cyprus for the purposes of family visits or, as regards
Greek Cypriots, visits to the Apostolos Andreas Monastery, did not affect this
conclusion.
32 Nor did the respondent Government disputes the fact that Greek-Cypriot owners
of property in northern Cyprus continued to be prevented from having access to,
controlling, using and enjoying their property. As to the fate of that property,
the Commission found it established that up until 1989 there was an
administrative practice of the Turkish-Cypriot authorities to leave the official
Land Register unaffected and to register separately the "abandoned"
property and its allocation. The beneficiaries of allocations were issued with
"possessory certificates" but not "deeds of title" to the
properties concerned. However, as from June 1989 the practice changed and
thereafter "title deeds" were issued and the relevant entries
concerning the change of ownership were made in the Land Register. The
Commission found it established that, at least since June 1989, the
Turkish-Cypriot authorities no longer recognized any ownership rights of Greek
Cypriots in respect of their properties in northern Cyprus. The Commission found
confirmation for this finding in the provisions of "Article 159(1)(b) of
the TRNC Constitution" of 7 May 1985 and "Law No. 52/1995"
purporting to give effect to that provision.
33 Although the respondent Government pointed out in its submissions to the
Commission that the issue of the right of displaced Greek Cypriots to return to
their homes was a matter to be determined within the framework of the inter-
communal talks sponsored by the Secretary-General of the United Nations, [FN8]
the Commission found that there had been no significant progress in recent years
in the discussion of issues such as freedom of settlement, payment of
compensation to Greek Cypriots for the interference with their property rights,
or restitution of Greek-Cypriot property in the Varosha district.
FN8 See para.16 above.
*768 3. Alleged violations arising
out of the living conditions of Greek Cypriots in northern Cyprus
34 The applicant Government adduced evidence in support of its complaint that
the dwindling number of Greek Cypriots living in the Karpas peninsula of
northern Cyprus were subjected to continuing oppressive treatment which amounted
to a complete denial of their rights and a negation of their human dignity. In
addition to the harassment and intimidation which they suffered at the hands of
Turkish settlers, and which has gone unpunished, the enclaved Greek Cypriots
laboured under restrictions which violated many of the substantive rights
contained in the Convention. The continuous daily interferences with their
rights could not be redressed at the local level on account of the absence of
effective remedies before the "TRNC" courts. Similar but less
extensive restrictions applied to the Maronite population living in the
Kormakiti area of northern Cyprus.
35 The respondent Government maintained before the Commission that effective
judicial remedies were available to all Greek Cypriots living in northern
Cyprus. However, it claimed that the applicant Government actively discouraged
them from taking proceedings in the "TRNC". The respondent Government
further submitted that the evidence before the Commission did not provide any
basis of fact for the allegations made.
36 The Commission established the facts under this heading with reference to
materials submitted by both Governments. These materials included, inter alia,
written statements of persons affected by the restrictions alleged by the
applicant Government; press reports dealing with the situation in northern
Cyprus; case law of the "TRNC" courts on the availability of remedies
in the "TRNC"; "TRNC legislation" and decisions of the
"TRNC Council of Ministers" on entry and exit arrangements at the
Ledra Palace check-point. The Commission also had regard to United Nations
documents concerning the living conditions of enclaved Greek Cypriots and
especially to the UN Secretary-General's progress reports of 10 December 1995
and 9 March 1998 on the humanitarian review carried out by UNFICYP in 1994-95
concerning the living conditions of Karpas Greek Cypriots, the so-called
"Karpas Brief".
37 Furthermore, the Commission's delegates heard the evidence of fourteen
witnesses on the situation of Greek Cypriots and Maronites living in northern
Cyprus. These witnesses comprised two persons who were closely associated with
the preparation of the "Karpas Brief" as well as persons proposed by
both Governments. The delegates also visited, on 23 and 24 February 1998, a
number of localities in northern Cyprus, including Greek-Cypriot villages in the
Karpas area, and heard statements from officials and other persons encountered
during the visits.
38 The Commission considered the above-mentioned "Karpas Brief" *769
an accurate description of the situation of the enclaved Greek-Cypriot and
Maronite populations at about the time of the introduction of the instant
application and that the proposals for remedial action recommended by UNFICYP
following the humanitarian review reflected the real needs of these groups in
the face of administrative practices which actually existed at the material
time. Although the Commission noted that there had been a considerable
improvement in the overall situation of the enclaved populations, as evidenced
by the UN Secretary-General's progress reports on the "Karpas Brief"
recommendations, there still remained a number of severe restrictions. These
restrictions were not laid down in any "TRNC legislation" and were in
the nature of administrative practices.
39 The Commission further found that there existed a functioning court system in
the "TRNC" which was in principle accessible to Greek Cypriots living
in northern Cyprus. It appeared that at least in cases of trespass to property
or personal injury there had been some successful actions brought by
Greek-Cypriot litigants before the civil and criminal courts. However, in view
of the scarcity of cases brought by Greek Cypriots, the Commission was led to
conclude that the effectiveness of the judicial system for resident Greek
Cypriots had not really been tested.
40 In a further conclusion, the Commission found that there was no evidence of
continuing wrongful allocation of properties of resident Greek Cypriots to other
persons during the period under consideration. However, the Commission did find
it established that there was a continuing practice of the "TRNC"
authorities to allocate to Turkish-Cypriots or immigrants the property of Greek
Cypriots who had died or left northern Cyprus.
41 In the absence of legal proceedings before the "TRNC" courts, the
Commission noted that it had not been tested whether or not Greek Cypriots or
Maronites living in northern Cyprus were in fact considered as citizens enjoying
the protection of the "TRNC Constitution". It did however find it
established that, in so far as the groups at issue complained of administrative
practices such as restrictions on their freedom of movement or on family visits
which were based on decisions of the "TRNC Council of Ministers", any
legal challenge to these restrictions would be futile given that such decisions
were not open to review by the courts.
42 Although the Commission found no evidence of cases of actual detention of
members of the enclaved population, it was satisfied that there was clear
evidence that restrictions on movement and family visits continued to be applied
to Greek Cypriots and Maronites notwithstanding recent improvements. It further
observed that an exit visa was still necessary for transfers to medical
facilities in the south, although no fees were levied in urgent cases. There was
no evidence to confirm the allegation that the processing of applications for
movement was delayed in certain cases with the result that the health or life *770
of patients was endangered; nor was there any indication of a deliberate
practice of delaying the processing of such applications.
43 The Commission found it established that there were restrictions on the
freedom of movement of Greek-Cypriot and Maronite schoolchildren attending
schools in the south. Until the entry into force of the decision of the "TRNC
Council of Ministers" of 11 February 1998, they were not allowed to return
permanently to the north after having attained the age of 16 in the case of
males and 18 in the case of females. The age-limit of 16 years was still
maintained for Greek-Cypriot male students. Up to the age-limit, certain
restrictions applied to the visits of students to their parents in the north,
which were gradually relaxed. However, even today such visits are subject to a
visa requirement and a reduced "entry fee".
44 As to educational facilities, the Commission held that, although there was a
system of primary-school education for the children of Greek Cypriots living in
northern Cyprus, there were no secondary schools for them. The vast majority of
schoolchildren went to the south for their secondary education and the
restriction on the return of Greek-Cypriot and Maronite schoolchildren to the
north after the completion of their studies had led to the separation of many
families. Furthermore, school textbooks for use in the Greek-Cypriot primary
school were subjected to a "vetting" procedure in the context of
confidence- building measures suggested by UNFICYP. The procedure was cumbersome
and a relatively high number of school-books were being objected to by the
Turkish- Cypriot administration.
45 Aside from school-books, the Commission found no evidence of any restrictions
being applied during the period under consideration to the importation,
circulation or possession of other types of books; nor was there evidence of
restrictions on the circulation of newspapers published in southern Cyprus.
However, there was no regular distribution system for the Greek-Cypriot press in
the Karpas area and no direct post and telecommunications links between the
north and south of the island. It was further noted that the enclaved population
was able to receive Greek-Cypriot radio and television.
46 The Commission did not find any conclusive evidence that letters destined for
Greek Cypriots were opened by the "TRNC" police or that their
telephones were tapped.
47 As to alleged restrictions on religious worship, the Commission found that
the main problem for Greek Cypriots in this connection stemmed from the fact
that there was only one priest for the whole Karpas area and that the Turkish-
Cypriot authorities were not favourable to the appointment of additional priests
from the south. The Commission delegates were unable to confirm during their
visit to the Karpas area whether access to the Apostolos Andreas Monastery was
free at any time for Karpas Greek Cypriots. It appeared to be the case that on
high religious holidays (which occur three times a year) *771
visits to the monastery are also allowed to Greek Cypriots from the south.
48 Concerning alleged restrictions on the freedom of association of the enclaved
population, the Commission observed that the relevant "TRNC" law on
associations only covered the creation of associations by Turkish Cypriots.
4. Alleged violations in respect of the rights of Turkish Cypriots and the
Turkish-Cypriot Gypsy community in northern Cyprus
49 The applicant Government contended before the Commission that Turkish
Cypriots living in northern Cyprus, especially political dissidents and the
Gypsy community, were the victims of an administrative practice of violation of
their Convention rights. It adduced evidence in support of their claim that
these groups were victims of arbitrary arrest and detention, police misconduct,
discrimination and ill-treatment and interferences in various forms with other
Convention rights such as, inter alia, fair trial, private and family
life, expression, association, property and education.
50 The respondent Government essentially maintained that the above allegations
were unsubstantiated on the evidence and pointed to the availability of
effective remedies in the "TRNC" to aggrieved persons.
51 The Commission's investigation into the applicant Government's allegations
was based mainly on the oral evidence of thirteen witnesses who testified before
the Commission's delegates on the situation of Turkish Cypriots and the Gypsy
community living in northern Cyprus. The witnesses were proposed by both
parties. Their evidence was taken by the delegates in Strasbourg, Cyprus and
London between November 1997 and April 1998.
52 The Commission found that there existed rivalry and social conflict between
the original Turkish Cypriots and immigrants from Turkey who continued to arrive
in considerable numbers. Some of the original Turkish Cypriots and their
political groups and media resented the "TRNC" policy of full
integration for the settlers.
53 Furthermore, while there was a significant incidence of emigration from the
"TRNC" for economic reasons, it could not be excluded that there were
also cases of Turkish Cypriots having fled the "TRNC" out of fear of
political persecution. The Commission considered that there was no reason to
doubt the correctness of witnesses' assertions that in a few cases complaints of
harassment or discrimination by private groups of or against political opponents
were not followed up by the "TRNC" police. However, it concluded that
it was not established beyond reasonable doubt that there was in fact a
consistent administrative practice of the "TRNC" authorities,
including the courts, of refusing protection to political opponents of the
ruling parties. In so far as it was alleged by the applicant Government that the
authorities themselves were involved in the harassment of political opponents,
the *772 Commission did not have
sufficient details concerning the incidents complained of (for example, the
dispersing of demonstrations, short-term arrests) which would allow it to form
an opinion as to the justification or otherwise of the impugned acts. The
Commission noted that, in any event, it did not appear that the remedy of habeas
corpus had been invoked by persons claiming to be victims of arbitrary arrest or
detention.
54 Regarding the alleged discrimination against and arbitrary treatment of
members of the Turkish-Cypriot Gypsy community, the Commission found that
judicial remedies had apparently not been used in respect of particularly grave
incidents such as the pulling down of shacks near Morphou and the refusal of
airline companies to transport Gypsies to the United Kingdom without a visa.
55 In a further conclusion, the Commission observed that there was no evidence
before it of Turkish-Cypriot civilians having been subjected to the jurisdiction
of military courts during the period under consideration. Furthermore, and with
respect to the evidence before it, the Commission considered that it had not
been established that, during the period under consideration, there was an
official prohibition on the circulation of Greek- language newspapers in
northern Cyprus or that the creation of bi-communal associations was prevented.
In respect of the alleged refusal of the "TRNC" authorities to allow
Turkish Cypriots to return to their properties in southern Cyprus, the
Commission observed that no concrete instances were referred to it of any
persons who had wished to do so during the period under consideration.
The full text of the Commission's Opinion, and of the dissenting opinions
contained in the report, follows.
Opinion
[FN9]
FN9 The paragraph numbering from here to para. C636 in bold is the original
numbering of the Commission's Opinion (and report). Then we revert to the
numbering of the Court's judgment.--Ed.
General and preliminary considerations
I. Locus standi of the applicant Government
C68 At various stages of the proceedings, the respondent Government has
contested the locus standi of the applicant Government to lodge an
application under former Article 24 of the Convention. The respondent Government
does not recognize the applicant Government, to which they refer as the
"Greek Cypriot Administration", as being the lawful Government of the
Republic of Cyprus. It submits that this administration has been established
since 1963 in flagrant violation of the Cypriot Constitution of 1960 and of the *773
international agreements underlying the independence of Cyprus, in particular
the provisions on the bi-communal structure of the Government and other central
State organs. The respondent Government therefore contends that the applicant
Government cannot validly represent the Republic of Cyprus. Its initial refusal
to participate in the proceedings on the merits was primarily based on the
argument that by admitting the application introduced by that Government the
Commission had acted ultra vires.
C69 The applicant Government contests the respondent Government's arguments. It emphasizes
that it has been consistently recognized by the international
community as the Government of the Republic of Cyprus whose territory covers the
whole of the island. As regards non-compliance with the provisions of the 1960
Constitution and corresponding stipulations of the relevant international
agreements, they invoke the "doctrine of necessity", i.e. the
need to reorganize the State without the representatives of the Turkish Cypriot
community after the latter had refused to continue co-operating in the
bicommunal structures provided for by the Constitution.
C70 The Commission recalls that the same arguments have been raised by the
parties in the previous applications brought by Cyprus against Turkey.
Furthermore, similar arguments concerning the applicant Government's locus
standi to bring an individual application before the Court by virtue of
former Article 48(b) of the Convention have been examined by the Court in the
Loizidou case. Both the Commission and the Court eventually rejected the
respondent Government's claim that the applicant Government had no locus
standi. [FN10]
FN10 cf. The Commission's decision on admissibility of App. Nos.6780/74-
6950/75 of 26 May 1975, D.R.2, pp.135-136, its decision on the admissibility of
App.No.8007/77 of 10 July 1978, D.R.13, pp.146-148, and the Court's judgment
(Preliminary Objections) Loizidou
v. Turkey (A/319): (1995) 20 E.H.R.R. 99 paras.39-41.
C71 In the present case, the Commission cannot but confirm the conclusions
reached by itself and the Court in those decisions. It notes in particular the
following:
-- The Republic of Cyprus continues to exist as a State and High Contracting
Party to the Convention.
-- The applicant Government has been, and continues to be, recognized internationally as the Government of the Republic of Cyprus. Even assuming an
inconsistency with the Constitution of Cyprus of 1960, the practice under that
Constitution, especially since 1963, must also be taken into account.
International legal acts and instruments drafted in the course of that practice
on behalf of the Republic of Cyprus have consistently been recognized in
diplomatic and treaty relations, both by Governments of other States and by
organs of international organizations including the Council of *774
Europe. In any event, having regard to the purpose of former Article 24, the
protection of the rights and freedoms of the people of Cyprus under the
Convention should not be impaired by any constitutional defect of its
Government.
-- The fact that the respondent Government does not recognize the applicant
Government does not deprive the latter of the possibility of introducing an
inter-State application. The Convention does not only envisage rights and
obligations between the High Contracting Parties concerned, but also
"objective obligations" accepted by the High Contracting Parties which
are primarily owed to persons within their jurisdiction. These obligations are
subject to "collective enforcement", of which former Article 24 of the
Convention is the vehicle, and which serves the public order of Europe. [FN11]
To accept that a Government may avoid "collective enforcement" of the
Convention under former Article 24 by not recognizing the Government of the
applicant State would defeat the purpose of the Convention.
-- Finally, in so far as former Article 28 of the Convention comes into play,
that provision does not necessarily require direct contacts between the
Governments concerned, so that non-recognition by one Government of the other
does not make it impracticable for the Commission to conduct its proceedings
with the participation of the Parties, as foreseen under this Article.
FN11 cf. App.No.788/60, Austria v. Italy, dec.11.1.61, Yearbook 4, pp.
138-142.
C72 The Commission therefore rejects the respondent Government's objections.
Conclusion
C73 The Commission concludes, unanimously, that the applicant Government has locus
standi to bring an application under Article 24 of the Convention against
the respondent Government.
II. Legal interest of the applicant Government
C74 In its decision on the admissibility of the present application, the
Commission, reacting to the argument of the respondent Government that this
application is essentially the same as the previous inter-State applications
lodged by Cyprus against Turkey, has reserved for consideration at the merits
stage the question whether and, if so, to what extent the applicant Government
can have a valid legal interest in the determination of the alleged continuing
violations of the Convention in so far as they have already been dealt with in
previous Reports of the Commission. In so far as the respondent Government had
invoked res iudicata and abuse of procedure in this context, the *775
Commission further observed that this presupposed a pronouncement on the
identity of the application with the previous ones which also could only be made
at the merits stage. [FN12]
FN12 cf. D.R.86, pp. 134-135.
C75 In its observations on the merits, the respondent Government has reiterated
its argument that the applicant Government has no legal interest to bring
repetitive applications ad infinitum, with a view to changing the
relevant resolutions of the Committee of Ministers which the applicant
Government may find unsatisfactory, but which constitute res iudicata in
relation to proceedings prior to January 1990, when Turkey accepted the Court's
compulsory jurisdiction. The respondent Government claims that with the
exception of the complaints under Articles 9, 10 and 11 of the Convention and
under Article 3 of Protocol No. 1, the facts submitted and the Articles invoked
are the same as in the applicant Government's previous applications and disclose
no new information or victims.
C76 The applicant Government refutes these arguments. It claims that certain
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