Reparation and reconciliation processes to overcome past conflicts and build a common peaceful future – the question of just and equal redress
Reply to Recommendation
| Doc. 16116
| 12 February 2025
- Author(s):
- Committee of Ministers
- Origin
- Adopted at the 1518th meeting
of the Ministers’ Deputies (5 February 2025). 2025 - Second part-session
- Reply to Recommendation
- : Recommendation 2281
(2024)
1. The Committee of Ministers has carefully
examined Parliamentary Assembly
Recommendation 2281 (2024) “Reparation
and reconciliation processes to overcome past conflicts and build
a common peaceful future – the question of just and equal redress”,
which it has forwarded to the Committee of Legal Advisers on Public
International Law (CAHDI), the Steering Committee for Human Rights
(CDDH) and the Steering Committee on Democracy (CDDEM) for information
and possible comments.
2. The Committee of Ministers, referring to the Statute of the
Council of Europe and recalling that the “pursuit of peace based
upon justice and international co-operation is vital for the preservation
of human society and civilisation”, took note of the Parliamentary
Assembly’s reflection process aiming at improving effective action
for achieving reconciliation and reparations in relation to conflicts
between member States.
3. The Committee notes that whilst the Parliamentary Assembly’s
proposals foresee a presumably non-judicial mediation process for
interstate disputes, such situations are currently addressed within
the Council of Europe mainly through either political approaches,
notably in the Committee of Ministers and the Parliamentary Assembly,
or under the interstate procedure before the European Court of Human
Rights (the Court) under Article 33 of the European Convention on
Human Rights (the Convention), with the Committee of Ministers supervising
the implementation of judgments in such cases under Article 46 of
the Convention. Albeit it is recalled that the interstate procedure
under Article 33 of the Convention is intended to adjudicate upon allegations
of human rights violations arising in the context of interstate
disputes. It does not address the causes of disputes or conflicts,
nor does it seek to resolve them or to address post-conflict situations
other than in relation to human rights violations identified in
the judgment in an interstate case.
4. The Committee also recalls that the 1957 European Convention
for the Peaceful Settlement of Disputes (ETS No. 23) which aims
to improve the possibilities for the legal settlement of disputes
between member States. This Convention provides for three avenues
of peaceful dispute settlement: judicial settlement before the International
Court of Justice (Chapter I), conciliation (Chapter II), and arbitration
(Chapter III). The Committee invites member States that have not
yet done so to become Parties to the 1957 European Convention for
the Peaceful Settlement of Disputes.
5. It further recalls the existence of other international treaties
which provide for mediation as a form of peaceful dispute settlement,
including the Charter of the United Nations, and in particular Article
33 paragraph 1, and the Conventions for the Pacific Settlement of
International Disputes of 29 July 1899 and 18 October 1907.
6. The Committee of Ministers noted that the elements listed
in paragraph 5 of
Recommendation
2281 (2024) describe the establishment of a mediation
procedure which may be initiated without the consent of the parties
involved. These elements also refer to “potential repercussions”
and “consequences” for non-compliance with obligations of good faith
and co-operation. The Committee recalls that mediation is a consensual
process unless mandated by a legally binding instrument. Therefore,
the States concerned must give their prior consent to the use of
this procedure.
7. The Committee additionally noted paragraph 5.6 of
Recommendation 2281 (2024),
which indicates that this process “should also be available for
identifying a package of reparations and remedies in relation to interstate
cases before the European Court of Human Rights, where a given case
could benefit from a broader toolkit for proposing solutions that
are better adapted to addressing the complexities of post-conflict
situations and the needs of victims.” In the context of interstate
proceedings before the Court, the Committee recall that it is for
the Court alone to determine the appropriate amount of just satisfaction
to award for any violations of the European Convention of Human
Rights or the Protocols thereto.
8. The Committee of Ministers also recalled its Declaration on
the effective processing and resolution of cases relating to interstate
disputes, adopted on 5 April 2023, which affirmed the potential
of the friendly settlement procedure under Article 39 of the Convention
to resolve interstate cases pending before the Court and invited
the States Parties concerned to consider using this framework, under
active guidance from the Court. Several aspects of the Court’s friendly
settlement procedure offer opportunities for the Parties to an interstate
case to discuss and agree on various measures aimed at ensuring
remedies for alleged violations of the Convention.