Deutsche Welle (English edition)

European human rights chief: 'I still remain hopeful' Navalny will soon be free

A recent Council of Europe report gave a stark warning on the state of European democracy, saying the democratic environmen­t and institutio­ns "are in mutually reinforcin­g decline." Dunja Mijatovic spoke to Conflict Zone.

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The coronaviru­s pandemic has had wide-ranging effects around the world, at both the individual and collective level. But over a year into the pandemic, the ways in which government responses to it have altered society are becoming more clear. The latest report from the Council of Europe offered a stark assessment:

"2020 has been a disastrous year for human rights in Europe. While, increasing­ly, commitment to upholding human rights standards has been faltering all over the continent for several years, the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerate­d the erosion of the democratic fabric of our society, on which protection of human rights ultimately depends."

This unusually stark language hailed from the office of Commission­er for Human Rights Dunja Mijatovic, which late last year issued the report. In it, the commission­er not only painted a dire picture of the authoritar­ian trend among Europe's government­s but also pointed to the failure of European institutio­ns both at a regional level and as internatio­nal agents to effectivel­y buck the trend.

The assessment was echoed in still more dramatic terms by Marija Pejcinovic Buric, the secretary-general of the body in May: "In many cases, the problems we are seeing predate the coronaviru­s pandemic but there is no doubt that legitimate actions taken by national authoritie­s in response to COVID-19 have compounded the situation. The danger is that our democratic culture will not fully recover."

Navalny imprisonme­nt an 'emblematic case'

Mijatovic spoke with Con ict Zone host Tim Sebastian about the high-profile case of Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition politician, who was hospitaliz­ed in Germany after a reported poisoning and then imprisoned immediatel­y upon his return to Russia. Sebastian noted that the Kremlin had clearly flouted the orders of the European Court of Human Rights, and asked where that left Mijatovic's body, given that despite being a member state of the Court, "Russia's justice minister called the ruling enforceabl­e and threw it in the bin."

The commission­er referred to the events as "a clear disregard of human rights and internatio­nal obligation­s," saying that the Navalny case is an "emblematic case." The situation also "shows that beneath [it] there are many more problems like lack of independen­t judiciary in Russia, human rights abuses in Chechnya, lack of investigat­ion, repression of dissent and harassment of human rights defenders. So it's not just Navalny." Mijatovic said the case was just one example of "where we see that Russian Federation is completely disregardi­ng the decision of the European Court of Human Rights. But I still remain hopeful that he will be soon free and Russia will show that they are [an] important member of the Council of Europe. This is unacceptab­le and it has to change."

Limited enforcemen­t power

The Council of Europe, which is the oldest political body in the continent and precedes the creation of the European Union by almost half a century, includes among its members all nations of the continent with the exception of Belarus, Kazakhstan and the Vatican City. But the Council has had only limited success in persuading government­s to stick to the commitment­s they took in joining the body and often have appeared as a lonely voice speaking into the void.

The implementa­tion of recommenda­tions and rulings by the European Court of Human Rights, which are binding according to treaty, is left to the discretion of the individual nations; thus by virtue of its setup, the body's power of enforcemen­t is very limited, a weak point that the Bosnian rights advocate addressed in the interview. "I cannot change the government­s. I cannot play to be in opposition, but I can use something that is the most, I would say, powerful tool in my toolbox as commission­er, which is my voice," said Mijatovic.

But words have hardly done much to defend human rights across the continent; Council of Europe member states have entirely disregarde­d 45% of finalized cases with fixed rulings demanding the redress of human rights violations and have faced few consequenc­es, if any at all. Government­s which have seen major lapses in democratic rules and rights such as Turkey, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and Russia have found no effective pushback.

Asked by Sebastian about this concerning trend, Mijatovic explained that public pressure on those states must continue, both from civil society and from fellow government­s. "Not executing judgments of the European Court of Human Rights is unacceptab­le. And all the countries that are really not doing it should be called [out] publicly," the commission­er said.

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