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FACTS
1. Communication 25/89 alleges the torture of 15 persons by a military unit
on, or about, 19 January 1989. These people were brought to Kinsuka near the
Zaire river, where they were subject to severe forms of torture. On 19 April
1989, when several people protested their treatment, they were detained and
held indefinitely.
2. Communication 47/90 describes, in detail, many arbitrary arrests,
arbitrary detentions, torture, extra judicial executions, unfair trials,
severe restrictions placed on the right to association and peaceful
assembly, and suppression of the freedom of the press.
3. Communication 56/91 concerns the persecution of the Jehovah’s Witnesses (Témoins
de Jéhovah), a religious group. The communication alleges many types of
harassment including arbitrary arrests, unlawful appropriation of church
property, and exclusion from access to education.
4. Communication 100/93 contains allegations of torture, executions,
arrests, detention, unfair trials, restrictions on freedom of association
and freedom of the press. It also alleged that public finances were
illegally mismanaged; that the failure of the government to provide basic
services such as safe drinking water and electricity was degrading; that
there was a shortage of medicines in the country; that the universities and
secondary schools had been closed for two years; that freedom of movement
was violated by restrictive police measures; and that ethnic hatred was
incited by the official media.
5. When the Commission considered all the communications, they revealed
evidence of serious or massive violations of human rights in Zaire. It
decided to draw the attention of the Assembly of the Heads of State of the
Organisation of African Unity in December 1995.
6. The Commission also requested, on more than one occasion, that the
government of Zaire permit a mission consisting of two members of the
Commission to the country, with the objective of discovering the extent and
cause of human rights violations and endeavouring to help the government to
ensure full respect of the African Charter. The government of Zaire did not
respond to these request.
PROCEDURE BEFORE THE COMMISSION
7. Communication 25/89 was received by the Commission in June 1989. The
Commission was seized of the communication at its 11th session in October
1989 and the State of Zaire was notified on 14 March 1990.
8. Between 1990 and 1993, numerous reminders were sent by the Secretariat to
the Government of Zaire, but no response was received.
9. The Secretariat also sent the complainants regular updates on the status
of the communication
10. On 23 September 1993, the Ministry of Justice of Zaire wrote that no
copy of the communication had ever been received.
11. A copy was sent on 3 March 1994 by registered post to the Embassy of
Zaire in Dakar. No response was forthcoming.
12. At the 16th Session held in October/November 1994, the Commission
decided to send a mission to Zaire in order to create a dialogue.
13. At the 17th session, held in Lomé, Togo, March 1995, the communications
against Zaire were declared admissible.
14. The government of Zaire was notified of this decision on 26 April, 1995.
15. At the 18th session held in October 1995, in Praia, Cape Verde, the
Commission decided to apply Article 58.1 of the Charter and to draw the
attention of the Heads of State and Government to the serious or massive
violations of human rights in Zaire.
16. On 12 January 1996, a note verbale was sent to the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of Zaire, informing the Ministry of the proposed mission to Zaire to
be undertaken by Commissioners Nguema and Ben-Salem.
17. Communication 47/90, was received by the Commission in October 1990.
18. On 20 October 1990, at the 8th Ordinary Session, held in Banjul, The
Gambia, the African Commission was seized of the communication and decided
to notify the State of Zaire of the complaint and invite its written
comments on admissibility.
19. On 6 November 1990, the Secretariat of the Commission informed the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Zaire of this decision by registered post. No
response was forthcoming.
20. At the 11th Ordinary Session, held in Tunisia in March 1992, the
Commission decided to send a reminder to Zaire. The Secretariat sent this
reminder on 30 March 1992. No response was forthcoming.
21. At the 12th Ordinary Session, held in Banjul, The Gambia, the Commission
declared the communication admissible and decided that it would be examined
on the merits.
22. The notice of this decision was sent by the Secretariat of the
Commission on 16 November 1992. No response was forthcoming.
23. In 1993 and 1994, the Secretariat sent several reminders to the
government of Zaire. No response was received.
24. From August 1994 to the present, the correspondence in respect of this
communication is identical with that in communication 25/89, above.
25. Communication 56/91, was received by the Commission in Summer of 1991.
26. The Commission was seized of the communication and a notification was
sent by the Secretariat of the Commission to the State of Zaire on 14
November 1991. No response was forthcoming.
27. Two reminders were sent by the Secretariat of the Commission to the
State of Zaire in 1992.
28. In a letter dated 14 September 1993 was received from the Ministry of
Justice of Zaire, claiming that a copy of the communication had never been
received.
29. A copy of the communication was sent on 3 March 1994 by registered post
to the Embassy in Dakar, but no response was received.
30. From August 1994 to the present, the correspondence in respect of this
communication is identical with that in communication 25/89, above.
31. Communication 100/93 was received by the Commission in April 1993.
32. The Commission was seized of the communication at its 13th session in
April 1993 and it was brought to the attention of the State in 12 April
1993. No response was forthcoming.
33. In 1993 and 1994, reminders were sent to the government of Zaire but no
response was forthcoming.
34. From August 1994 to the present, the correspondence in respect of this
communication is identical with that in communication 25/89, above.
LAW
ADMISSIBILITY
35. After deliberations, as envisioned by article 58 of the Charter, the
Commission considered that communications 25/89, 47/90, 56/91 and 100/93
reveal the existence of a series of serious or massive violations of human
and peoples’ rights.
36. Article 56.5 of the African Charter requires that complainants exhaust
local remedies before the Commission can take up a case, unless these
remedies are as a practical matter unavailable or unduly prolonged. The
requirement of exhaustion of local remedies is founded on the principle that
a government should have notice of human rights violation in order to have
the opportunity to remedy such violation, before being called before an
international body. In this case, the government has had ample notice of the
violation.
37. The Commission has never held the requirement of exhaustion of local
remedies to apply literally in cases where it is impractical or undesirable
for the complainant to seize the domestic courts in the case of each
violation. This is the situation, given the vast and varied scope of the
violations alleged and the general situation prevailing in Zaire.
38. For the above reasons, the Commission declared the communications
admissible.
THE MERITS
39. The main goal of the communications procedure before the Commission is
to initiate a positive dialogue, resulting in an amicable resolution between
the complainant and the State concerned, which remedies the prejudice
complained of. A pre-requisite for amicably remedying violations of the
Charter is the good faith of the parties concerned, including their
willingness to participate in a dialogue.
40. In the present case, there has been no substantive response from the
Government of Zaire, despite the numerous notifications of the
communications sent by the African Commission. The African Commission, in
several previous decisions, has set out the principle that where allegations
of human rights abuse go uncontested by the government concerned, even after
repeated notifications, the Commission must decide on the facts provided by
the complainant and treat those facts as given.1 This principle conforms
with the practice of other international human rights adjudicatory bodies
and with the Commission’s duty to protect human rights. Since the Government
of Zaire does not wish to participate in a dialogue, the Commission must,
regrettably, continue its consideration of the case on the basis of facts
and opinions submitted by the complaints alone.
41. Article 5 of the African Charter prohibits torture and inhuman or
degrading treatment. The torture of 15 persons by a military unit at Kinsuka,
near the Zaire river, as alleged in communication 25/89, constitutes a
violation of this article.
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[FN1] (see, e.g., the Commission’s decisions in communications 59/91, 60/91,
64/91, 87/93 and 101/93).
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42. Article 6 of the African Charter guarantees the right to liberty and
security of the person. The indefinite detention of those who protested
against torture as described in communication 25/89 violates article
6.reads:
43. Article 4 of the Charter protects the right to life. Communication
47/90, in addition to alleged arbitrary arrests, arbitrary detention and
torture, alleges extrajudicial executions which are a violation of article
4.
44. Article 7 of the African Charter specifies the right to have one’s cause
heard. The unfair trials described in communication 47/90 constitute a
violation of this right.
45. Article 8 of the African Charter protects freedom of conscience. The
harassment of the Jehovah Witnesses, as described in communication 56/91,
constitutes a violation of this article, since the government has presented
no evidence that the practice of their religion in any way threatens law and
order. The arbitrary arrests of believers of this religion likewise
constitutes a contravention of article 6 of the Charter.
46. The torture, executions, arrests, detention, unfair trials, restrictions
on freedom of association and freedom of the press described in
communication 100/93 violate the above articles.
47. Article 16 of the African Charter states that every individual shall
have the right to enjoy the best attainable state of physical and mental
health and that States Parties should take the necessary measures to protect
the health of their people. The failure of the government to provide basic
services necessary for a minimum standard of health, such as safe drinking
water and electricity and the shortage of medicine as alleged in
communication 100/93 constitutes a violation of Article 16.
48. Article 17 of the Charter guarantees the right to education. The
closures of universities and secondary as described in communication 100/93,
constitute a violation of Article 17.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COMMISSION holds that the facts constitute serious or
massive violations of the African Charter, namely of Articles 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,
9.2, 10.1, 12.2, 16, 17, 18.3 and 26.
Taken at the 19th Ordinary Session, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, March 1996.
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