[Done in English, French and
Spanish, the English text being the original version. Subsequently to
be translated into Arabic, Chinese and Russian as part of the Committee's
annual report to the General Assembly.]
Individual
Opinion by Committee Member, Mr. Nisuke Ando
(partly dissenting)
In the present case I agree with the Committee's conclusion that the communication
is inadmissible because the author was no longer subject to the jurisdiction
of Portugal both when his appeals were heard by the Court of Second Instance
in May 2000 and when the Tribunal of Last Instance rendered its judgement
in March 2001. (See paras. 6.4, 6.5 and 2.7). However, I am unable to
share the Committee's view that non-applicability of the Optional Protocol
in any area within its jurisdiction of a State party cannot be assumed
without an express indication to that effect (para. 6.3). In my view this
assumption of the Committee is not fully convincing for the following
reasons:
First of all, the State party clearly indicated that, whereas the application
of the Covenant was extended to Macao by a resolution of the Portuguese
Parliament, no such resolution was adopted with respect to the Optional
Protocol (para. 4.2). Secondly, the Committee accepts the State party's
statement that the Optional Protocol is not, whereas the Covenant is,
among the treaties listed in its note to the United Nations Secretary
General with respect to which the Chinese Government has agreed to assume
responsibilities of succession (para 4.1). Thus, thirdly, while the Committee
accepts that the continued application of the Covenant requires "express"
indication of a State concerned (China in the present case), it seems
to assume that no such indication is required with respect to the extension
of application of the Optional Protocol. (Portugal in the present case).
In regard to the third point, it must be admitted that, while the continued
application of the Covenant is an issue between two different States (China
and Portugal), the extension of application of the Optional Protocol to
Macao is an issue within one and the same State (Portugal alone). Nevertheless,
the fact remains that, while the Covenant has become applicable to the
Macao Special Administrative Region by the "express" indication of China,
the Optional Protocol has not become applicable to the same region in
the absence of "express" indication of the same State. In this connection,
it must be remembered that, according to the Committee's General Comment
No. 26 entitled "Continuity of Obligations", "The Human Rights Committee
has consistently taken the view … that once the people are accorded
the protection of the rights under the Covenant, such protection devolves
with territory and continues to belong to them, notwithstanding change
in government of the State party, including dismemberment in more than
one State or State succession or any subsequent action of the State party
designed to divest them of the rights guaranteed by the Covenant". (3)
Personally, I agree with the Committee's view as a matter of policy statement,
but I cannot agree with it as a statement of a rule of customary international
law. As far as State practice with respect to the Covenant is concerned,
only in the cases of the dismemberment of the former Yugoslavia and that
of Czechoslovakia, each of the newly born States in Central and Eastern
Europe except Kazakhstan (Kazakhstan has made no indication) indicated
that it "succeeds to" the Covenant. All the other seceding or separating
States indicated that they "accede to" the Covenant, which implies that
they are not succeeding to the former States' Covenant obligations but
are newly acceding to the Covenant obligations on their own. The corresponding
State practice with respect to the Optional Protocol makes it clear that
only the Czech Republic and Slovakia "expressly" succeeded to the Optional
Protocol obligations. Certainly the State practice shows that there is
no "automatic" devolution of the Covenant obligations, to say nothing
of the Optional Protocol obligations, to any State. A State needs to make
an "express" indication as to whether or not it accepts obligations under
the Covenant and/or the Optional Protocol. Absent such an indication,
it should not be assumed that the State has accepted the obligations.
It may be recalled that during the consideration of the 4th periodic report
of Portugal on Macao, the Committee specifically posed the question; "What
arrangements exist for the application of the Optional Protocol in the
Macao Special Administration Region?" The delegation replied that the
question of the Optional Protocol had not been addressed in its negotiation
with China (CCPR/C/SR. 1794, para. 9). From this reply it is difficult
to determine whether or not the Optional Protocol, as distinguished from
the Covenant, was considered as applicable in Macao. However, in response
to the author's claims in the present case, Portugal expressly indicates
that no resolution was adopted by its Parliament to extend the application
of the Optional Protocol to Macao during its administration of the territory,
suggesting that it has never intended to apply the Optional Protocol there.
Signed Nisuke Ando
[Done in English, French and Spanish, the English text being the original
version. Subsequently to be translated into Arabic, Chinese and Russian
as part of the Committee's annual report to the General Assembly.]
Individual
Opinion by Committee Members, Messrs. Eckart Klein,
Rafael Rivas Posada and Maxwell Yalden
(partly dissenting)
In our view the Committee should have decided that the communication was
admissible.
We agree with the Committee's finding that in the present case the Optional
Protocol establishing the competence of the Committee to receive and consider
communications is applicable to Macao.
However, we disagree with the finding that the author had not exhausted
domestic remedies. We base our dissent on two interrelated grounds.
First, we do not think that further Adomestic@ remedies were, in fact,
available to the author after the jurisdiction of Portugal over Macao
had come to an end. It is true that by agreement between the State party
and the People's Republic of China the system of criminal appeals was
to remain unchanged. But it is likewise true that after 19 December 1999,
the courts to which the author could have applied (and has done in fact)
no longer came within the jurisdiction of the State party against which
this communication had been directed. The author submitted his communication
on 15 December 1999, only four days before Macao reverted to Chinese administration.
To take the view that the author should have exhausted further domestic
(i.e. Portuguese) remedies within this short period of time would be clearly
unreasonable. Therefore, even if the essential moment for deciding the
question when domestic remedies are exhausted were to be the time of submission
of the communication and not that of its consideration by the Committee
(an issue on which we need not comment here), this requirement would have
been met due to the special circumstances of the present case.
Second, we believe that the Committee's view suffers from a further defect.
Requesting the author C at the time of submission of his communication
C to exhaust domestic remedies, since otherwise the communication would
be inadmissible, on the one hand, and taking the line when he has done
so that his communication is inadmissible because he is no longer subject
to the jurisdiction of Portugal, on the other, creates an unacceptable
situation in which the author is deprived of any effective protection
which the Covenant and the Optional Protocol purport to ensure.
For these reasons we are of the view that the Committee should have declared
the communication admissible.
Signed Eckart Klein
Signed Rafael Rivas Posada
Signed Maxwell Yalden
[Done in English, French and Spanish, the English text being the original
version. Subsequently to be translated into Arabic, Chinese and Russian
as part of the Committee's annual report to the General Assembly.]
Individual Opinion by Committee Member, Mr. David Kretzmer
(partly concurring and possibly reserving his position)
Domestic remedies in this case had not been exhausted when the communication
was submitted. For the reasons set out in the Committee's Views the communication
is therefore inadmissible even on the assumption that the Optional Protocol
to alleged violations of the Covenant carried out by the authorities in
Macao before the transfer of jurisdiction to the People's Republic of
China. I believe that in these circumstances it was unnecessary for the
Committee to decide whether the Optional Protocol did indeed apply to
such alleged violations. I reserve my opinion on this question.
Signed David Kretzmer
[Done in English, French and Spanish, the English text being the original
version. Subsequently to be translated into Arabic, Chinese and Russian
as part of the Committee's annual report to the General Assembly.]
Individual
Opinion by Committee Member, Mr. Martin Scheinin
(dissenting)
It needs to be pointed out at the outset that although the majority of
the Committee came to the conclusion that the communication is inadmissible,
there was no majority for any specific reason for inadmissibility. The
reasons given in the decision itself were formulated by a minority of
Committee members, representing the majority position among those who
came to inadmissibility as conclusion.
In my opinion the decision is to be seen as an anomaly in the Committee's
jurisprudence. It is the established position of the Committee that article
5, paragraph 2 (b) is the clause in the Optional Protocol that prescribes
the requirement of exhaustion of domestic remedies as a condition for
admissibility. The reference to exhaustion of domestic remedies in article
2 as a condition for the submission of an individual communication is
to be understood as a general reflection of this rule, not as a separate
admissibility requirement. The requirement of exhaustion of domestic remedies
is subject to the discretion of the Committee (article 5, paragraph 2
in fine). Also, it is a recoverable ground for inadmissibility
(Rule 92.2 of the Committee's Rules of Procedure). Consequently, it would
be absurd to read into article 2 an additional requirement that domestic
remedies must be exhausted prior to the submission of a communication
and to declare a communication inadmissible in a case where domestic remedies
were not yet exhausted at the time of submission but have been exhausted
by the time when the Committee has the opportunity to make its decision
on admissibility.
The specific circumstances of transfer of sovereignty over Macao do not
change the situation. If that change has any effect on the requirement
of exhausting domestic remedies, it is because the available remedies
after the transfer might not be regarded as effective ones in respect
of Portugal. Consequently, domestic remedies would be exhausted in respect
of Portugal on the date of transfer of sovereignty, irrespective of the
stage where the proceedings were on that date.
Signed Martin Scheinin
[Done in English, French and Spanish, the English text being the original
version. Subsequently to be translated into Arabic, Chinese and Russian
as part of the Committee's annual report to the General Assembly.]
Notes
1. These issues, including the question of the alleged
breach of article 31.2 of the Decree-Law No. 55/92/M (see above para 2.3),
were addressed in the Judgment of the Tribunal de Segunda Inst�ncia of
28 July 2000 as well as in the judgment of the Tribunal of Last Instance
of 16 March 2001.
2. Cf. also the general rule embodied in article 29 of the Vienna Convention
on the Law of Treaties.
3. UN document No. A/53/40, Annex VII, para. 40.