ICCPR Case Digest

CCPR/C/132/D/2561/2015

Submission: 2014.05.31

View Adopted: 2021.07.23

Voronezhtsev et al v Belarus

Substantive Issues
  • Freedom of association
  • Freedom of expression
Relevant Articles
  • Article 19
  • Article 21
Full Text

    A PHP Error was encountered

    Severity: Warning

    Message: foreach() argument must be of type array|object, string given

    Filename: page/specific_decision.php

    Line Number: 93

    Backtrace:

    File: /home/clients/641f76aad230025e6bdb2354aa60f8fe/sites/ccprcentre-main-website/application/views/page/specific_decision.php
    Line: 93
    Function: _error_handler

    File: /home/clients/641f76aad230025e6bdb2354aa60f8fe/sites/ccprcentre-main-website/application/views/template/page.php
    Line: 184
    Function: view

    File: /home/clients/641f76aad230025e6bdb2354aa60f8fe/sites/ccprcentre-main-website/application/controllers/Page.php
    Line: 750
    Function: view

    File: /home/clients/641f76aad230025e6bdb2354aa60f8fe/sites/ccprcentre-main-website/index.php
    Line: 315
    Function: require_once

Facts

Authors are Belarusian nationals. They sought permission from local authorities to hold a picquet, but this request was denied, as local city law requires contracts with emergency medical services and road maintenance services. Belarusian courts dismissed authors’ protests. Authors contend that their rights under articles 19 and 21 of the Covenant - red in conjunction with articles 2 (2) and (3), were violated.

Admissibility

The communication was deemed to be admissible. The author contended that article 2 (2) of the Convention was violated in conjunction with articles 19 and 21. The Committee emphasised that a violation of article 2 (2) in conjunction with another Convention provision would be redundant, and found this portion of the communication to be inadmissible. Further, the committee found the alleged violation of articles 19 and 21 read in conjunction with article 2 (3) to be inadmissible due to a lack of substantiation. Nonetheless, the committee found the alleged violations of articles 19 and 21 themselves to be substantiated and ultimately admissible.

Merits

The Committee found that the State Party failed to invoke any grounds under which they were authorised to restrict the freedom of expression, as required by article 19 (3). Further, the State Party failed to demonstrate that the restrictions were proportionate and the minimum restrictions required to achieve a permitted objective. As such, a violation of the author’s rights under article 19 occurred. Further, the restrictions were not so as to be necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, public safety, or public order, and as such a breach of article 21 further occurred.

Recommendations

The State party is obligated, inter alia, to provide the authors with adequate compensation. The State party is also under an obligation to take all steps necessary to prevent similar violations from occurring in the future. To that end, the State party should revise its normative framework on public events, in accordance with its obligation under article 2 (2), with a view to ensuring that the rights under articles 19 and 21 of the Covenant may be fully enjoyed in the State party.

By Justin Golden

deneme bonusu bonus veren siteler bonus veren siteler deneme bonusu veren siteler aiaswo.org cafetinnova.org
deneme bonusu veren siteler obeclms.com bonus veren siteler

Rules of Procedure of the Human Rights Committee

Rules of Procedure of the Human Rights Committee CCPR/C/3/Rev.10

Arabic | Chinese | English | French | Russian | Spanish

CCPR NGO Participation

Documents adopted by the Human Rights Committee (March 2012)

English | French | Spanish | Russian | Handbook

CCPR NHRI Participation

Documents adopted by the Human Rights Committee (November 2012)

English | French | Spanish | Russian | Arabic | Chinese