OPEN LETTER
Council of Ministers
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Ministry of security
Mr. Tarik Sadović
Minister
Re: Safeguarding the Fundamental Rights of Individuals
Subject to Removal from Bosnia and Herzegovina
Your Excellency,
Amnesty International, the Helsinki Committee for Human
Rights in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Human Rights Watch
are writing to ask you to exercise your leadership to
ensure that every person in Bosnia and Herzegovina
subject to deportation, extradition or other removal is
protected against return to countries where they would
be at risk of serious human rights abuses, including
torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment (refoulement). The concern arises
particularly in the context of the current process of
reviewing the citizenship of naturalized citizens of
Bosnia and Herzegovina. In this respect, we are
concerned about recent public comments made by officials
in Bosnia and Herzegovina encouraging individuals whose
presence or citizenship is being reviewed to
“voluntarily leave the country before they are
deported.”
Based on concerns expressed by individuals subject to
the citizenship review process, as well as past
treatment of individuals deemed to be a threat to the
security of Bosnia and Herzegovina, we urge you to
ensure that existing remedies function properly and
provide adequate safeguards against extrajudicial
transfers and refoulement. We recall the 2002
case of six men of Algerian origin handed over by the
authorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina to the US military
in the face of a determination by the Federation of
Bosnia and Herzegovina Supreme Court that there was no
basis for their detention, as well as an interim order
by Human Rights Chamber of Bosnia and Herzegovina for
provisional measures to prevent the deportation,
expulsion or extradition of four of the men. The six men
were subsequently transferred to the Guantánamo Bay
detention facility. This case is documented in the June
2006 report by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe’s Special Rapporteur on “Alleged
secret detentions and unlawful inter-state transfers
involving Council of Europe member states” (AS/Jur
(2006) 16 Part II).
As the European Court of Human Rights has repeatedly
affirmed, any transfer to a country where the individual
concerned would be at risk of torture or inhuman and
degrading treatment or punishment, is a violation of
Article 3 of the European Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, to which
Bosnia and Herzegovina became a state party on July 12,
2002.
Any procedure that puts a person at risk of deportation,
extradition or other removal, including arising from the
citizenship review process, should safeguard their human
rights. Particularly, it is imperative to ensure that
asylum procedures and existing domestic remedies in
Bosnia and Herzegovina are sufficient to safeguard
against the risk of torture or ill-treatment, or the
application of the death penalty to individuals subject
to removal.
To ensure that those subject to removal have access to
an effective remedy against human rights violations, it
is critically important that appeals against removal on
human rights grounds have suspensive effect, in order to
allow individuals to remain in Bosnia and Herzegovina
while their appeal is being determined.
It is also imperative that the authorities in Bosnia and
Herzegovina do not rely on diplomatic assurances to
remove persons at risk of torture and other
ill-treatment. Research by our organizations indicates
that such assurances are an ineffective safeguard
against torture and ill-treatment. Reliance upon
diplomatic assurances circumvents the states’
obligations under the principle of non-refoulement
undermining the absolute obligation not to return a
person to a place where he or she is at risk of such
human rights violations. That view is widely shared
among international human rights experts including the
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, the UN Special
Rapporteur on Torture, and the Council of Europe
Commissioner for Human Rights. We urge the authorities
in Bosnia and Herzegovina not to seek or rely on such
assurances where persons are at risk of torture or other
ill-treatment.
We urge you to take appropriate steps to safeguard the
fundamental rights of every person in Bosnia and
Herzegovina subject to removal, including those whose
citizenship is under review.
Thank you for your attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
Holly Cartner
Executive Director
Europe and Central Asia division
Human Rights Watch
Srđan Dizdarević
President
Helsinki Committee for Human Rights
in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Nicola Duckworth
Director
Europe and Central Asia Programme
Amnesty International
No:
02-05/2007
May 11, 2007
Cc: Nebojša Radmanović, Chairman of the Presidency,
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Cc: Haris Silajdžić, member of the Presidency, Bosnia
and Herzegovina
Cc: Željko Komšić, member of the Presidency, Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Cc: Nikola Špirić, Chairman of the Council of Ministers,
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Cc: Beriz Belkić, Chariman of the House of
Representatives, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Cc: Bariša Čolak, Minister of Justice, Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Cc: Vjekoslav Vuković, Chairman of the State Commission
for the Revision of Decisions on Naturalization of
Foreign Citizens
Cc: Christian Schwarz-Schilling, High Representative,
Office of the High Representative and EU Special
Representative, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Cc: Fiorenzo Stolfi, Chairman of the Committee of
Ministers, Council of Europe
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