Case LawAfrican Union / Regional Courts
Communication 375/09 - Priscilla Njeri Echaria (represented by Federation of Women Lawyers, Kenya & International Center for the Protection of Human Rights) v. Kenya
16 January 1970
Headnotes
Type: Decision | Keywords: Freedom from Discrimination, Equality, Right to Property, Women's Rights, Right to Work, Inheritance/Succession, Right of Women to Inheritance, Equality Before the Law, Protection of Family and Vulnerable Groups, Best Interest of the Child, Administration of Justice, Rights and Welfare of the Child | Outcome: Ruled Inadmissible | State: Kenya | Provisions: ACHPR 14: Right to Property, ACHPR 18.3: Protection of Rights of Women and Children, ACHPR 19: Right of All Peoples to Equality and Rights, ACHPR 2: Freedom from Discrimination, ACHPR 3: Right to Equality before the Law and Equal Protection of the Law
Judgment
Communication 375/09 - Priscilla Njeri Echaria (represented by Federation of
Women Lawyers, Kenya and International Center for the Protection of Human
Rights) v. Kenya
Summary of the Complaint
1. On 22 September 2009, the Secretariat of the African Commission on
Human and Peoples’ Rights (hereinafter the Secretariat) received a
Complaint from the Federation of Women Lawyers Kenya and the
International Center for the Legal Protection of Human Rights (the
Complainants), representing Priscilla Njeri Echaria (hereinafter the
Victim).
2. The Complaint is submitted against the Republic of Kenya (hereinafter the
Respondent State or Kenya), State Party to the African Charter on Human
and Peoples’ Rights (the African Charter).
3. The Complainants submit that the Victim was married in 1964 to Mr. Peter
Echaria, a Kenyan diplomat who served in Moscow, Washington D C and
Addis Ababa before returning to Kenya. They state that due to the
diplomatic status of Mr. Peter Echaria, the Victim was not allowed to
work.
4. The Complainants also indicate that the above mentioned marriage ended
by divorce sometime in 1990.
5. According to the Complainants, in November 1987, the Victim petitioned
the High Court requesting that their matrimonial property be divided
equally between her and the husband. In 1993, the High Court granted an
order to the effect that the property acquired during the subsistence of the
marriage, be divided equally between the Victim and Mr. Peter Echaria, as
the Victim had made an indirect contribution to the acquisition of the
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property. The property in question is a farm called Tigoni Farm,
comprising 118 acres.
6. The Complainants submit that in 2001, Mr. Peter Echaria appealed against
the decision of the High Court to the Court of Appeal and in February
2007, the Court of Appeal set aside the ruling of the High Court and
reduced the Victims share of the matrimonial property to a quarter of the
assets.
7. The Court of Appeal being the highest court in Kenya, the Complainants
contend that the Victim has no further recourse before a Kenya Court.
Articles alleged to have been violated
8. The Complainants allege violation of Articles 2, 3, 14, 18(3) and 19 of the
African Charter.
Prayers of the Complainants
9. The Complainants urge the African Commission to:
a) Find violations of the Charter Articles enumerated above and
b) Recommend to the Respondent State to enact legislation aimed at
effecting the property rights of married women before a specific
time.
Procedure
10. The Complaint dated 10 September 2009, was received at the Secretariat of
the African Commission on 22 September 2009. By letter dated 29
September 2009, the Secretariat acknowledged receipt of the Complaint
and informed the Complainant that it would be considered for seizure
during its 46th Ordinary Session.
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11. During its 46th Ordinary Session held in Banjul, the Gambia from 11 – 25
November 2009, the African Commission considered the Communication
and decided to be seized thereof. The parties were according informed of
this decision and requested to submit their arguments on Admissibility.
12. On 15 April 2010, the Submission of the Respondent State on
Admissibility was received at the Secretariat of the African Commission
which acknowledged receipt by Note Verbal dated 7 May 2010 wherein
the State was also informed that the Complainant’s Submissions would be
forwarded to it as soon as they were received at the Secretariat.
13. By letter dated 7 May 2010, the Complainants were requested to forward
their submissions on Admissibility within three months of the notification.
Respondent State’s Submissions on Admissibility were equally forwarded
to the Complainants.
14. By letter and Note Verbale dated 16 June 2010, both parties were
informed that the African Commission had, during its 47th Ordinary
Session held in Banjul, The Gambia, decided to defer consideration of the
Communication to its 48th Ordinary Session. The Complainants were
again reminded to forward their Submissions on Admissibility to the
Secretariat failing which it would proceed with consideration of the
Communication.
15. On 23 September 2010, the Complainants’ Submissions on Admissibility
were received at the Secretariat and a letter acknowledging receipt of the
said Submissions was forwarded to them on the same day.
16. The African Commission by Note Verbale dated 23 September 2010,
forwarded the Complainants’ Submissions to the Respondent State and
requested the latter to forward its observations in response.
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17. By letter and Note Verbale respectively dated 14 and 15 December 2010,
both parties were informed of the African Commission’s decision to defer
consideration of the Communication to its 49th Ordinary Session, in order
to allow the Secretariat draft a decision on the Admissibility of the
Communication.
The Law on Admissibility
18. The Admissibility of Communications submitted pursuant to Article 55 of
the African Charter is governed by the conditions stipulated in Article 56
of the same Charter.
The Complainants’ Submission on Admissibility
19. The Complainants submit that the present Communication fulfils all the
Admissibility requirements set out in Article 56 of the African Charter.
Regarding Article 56(5) in particular on the exhaustion of local remedies,
they aver that the Victim initially filed her case before the High Court of
Kenya where she received a favourable decision. This decision was
subsequently overruled on appeal by a full bench of the Appeal Court of
Kenya. The full bench of the Kenya Appeal Court being the court of final
instance in all legal matters in Kenya, the Complainants argue that they
have exhausted local remedies and urge the African Commission to
declare the Communication admissible.
The Respondent State’s Submissions on Admissibility
20. In its response to the Submissions of the Complainants, the Respondent
State contends that the Communication does not adhere to the
requirements of Article 56 of the African Charter and should therefore be
declared inadmissible.
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21. The Respondent State submits that the Complainants have failed to
exhaust available local remedies. According to them, there were multiple
domestic remedies open to the Complainants following the decision of the
Kenyan Court of Appeal. They could, the State maintains, file an
Application for Review before the same court if they were not satisfied
with the Court’s decision. To support this position, the Respondent State
cites the case of Mahinda-v-Kenya Power and Lighting Company Ltd1
and Musiara-v- Ntimama2 wherein the Kenyan Court of Appeal declared
itself competent to re-open an appeal that it had already determined in
order to among other things, avoid real injustice in exceptional
circumstances.
22. The Respondent State further argues that other than making an
Application for Review in the Court of Appeal, the Victim could apply for
enforcement of her rights under Section 84 (1) of the Kenyan Constitution
to the High Court of Kenya which has original jurisdiction to enforce the
aforementioned Section of the Constitution.
23. The Respondent State also contends that the Complainants failed to
exhaust available quasi-judicial remedies by not bringing their case before
the Public Complaints Standing Committee or the Kenya National
Commission on Human Rights; an independent human rights institution
established by an Act of Parliament in accordance with the Paris
Principles with a wide jurisdiction to hear matters such as the one brought
by the Complainants before the African Commission.
24. The Respondent State finally submits that as per the principles of public
international law, the interpretation of laws by national courts is binding
1 (2005) 2 EA 102 (CAK)
2 (2005) 1 EA 317 (CAK)
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on international tribunals and therefore concludes that the decision of the
Kenyan Court of Appeal is binding on the African Commission except
there is evidence of systematic human rights violation, which the
Complainants have failed to prove in this case.3 According to the
Respondent State, it is only in situations where there is evidence of
systematic violations by the state that international tribunals such as the
African Commission may have jurisdiction to hear disputes arising from
such violations. The Respondent State thus urges the African Commission
to declare the Communication inadmissible.
Complainants’ Supplementary Submissions on Admissibility
25. In response to the Respondent State’s Submissions, the Complainants
maintain that the requirements of Article 56 have been fully complied
with and that the arguments of the Respondent State regarding the
exhaustion of local remedies rule are untenable.
26. Regarding the Respondent State’s argument that the Complainants could
have filed an Application for Review to the Kenyan Court of Appeal, they
submit, citing jurisprudence of the African Commission, that the generally
accepted meaning of local remedies, which must be exhausted prior to
any Communication/Complaint procedure before the African
Commission, are the ordinary remedies of common law that exist in
jurisdictions and normally accessible to people seeking justice.4
3 Respondents State cites the case of Serbians Loans, PCIJ, Ser. A. nos 20-1, Fisheries Case,
ICJ Reports (1951) to support its position.
4 Communication 242/01 Interights, Institute for Human Rights and Development in
Africa, and Association Mauritanienne des Droits de l’Homme/Islamic Republic of Mauritania
17th Annual Activity Report at para 27.
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27. The Complainants maintain that an Application for Review to the Kenyan
Court of Appeal is a discretionary remedy; which remedy under broadly
accepted principles among international tribunals is a discretionary
remedy which need not be exhausted. They note that the above
notwithstanding, the Kenyan Court of Appeal has itself declared that the
remedy of an Application for Review is not an accessible remedy. They
cite the case of Jasbir Singh Rai & 3 Others v Tarlochan Singh Rai & 4
Others, wherein the Kenyan Court of Appeal stated that it had no
jurisdiction to re-open, re-hear and then recall its earlier decision and
substitute it with another.5 They further cite Mahinda v Kenya Power
Lighting (earlier relied on by the Respondent State) wherein the Kenyan
Court of Appeal affirmed that its power to re-open an appeal is highly
limited and only reserved for exceptional circumstances. They maintain
that the present case is not an exceptional one for which an application for
review would be necessary.
28. Regarding the argument of the Respondent State that the Victim could
have instituted a fundamental rights application under section 84 of the
Kenyan Constitution, the Complainants submit that a fundamental rights
application is an exceptional or extraordinary remedy that the Victim was
not required to pursue in order to satisfy the requirement of Article 56(5).
29. The Complainant also submits that the Victim did not have to submit a
complaint to the Kenyan Human Rights Commission or to the Public
Complaints Standing Committee, as asserted by the State Party. They
argue that these bodies are not judicial bodies and are thus not effective
remedies which must be exhausted. They cite Cudjoe v Ghana6 wherein
5 (2007) Eklr, per Bosire JA, cited in page 5 of Complainant’s Submission on
Admissibility.
6 Communication 221/98 (1999)
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the African Commission held that the internal remedy to which article
56(5) refers entails a remedy sought from courts of a judicial nature’.
30. On Respondent State’s argument that the African Commission has no
jurisdiction to hear the Complainants’ matter because the judgment of the
Kenyan Court of Appeal is binding on it, the Complainants submit that
they do not request that the Commission review the interpretation of law
established by the Kenyan Court of Appeal, but that the African
Commission should evaluate the judgment of the Court of Appeal with
respect to their obligations under the African Charter and the other
international conventions to which Kenya is a party. According to the
Complainants, because their submission specifically concerns the
interpretation and application of the Charter in relation to the Victim’s
case, the Commission has jurisdiction to hear the matter.
Decision of the African Commission on the Respondent State’s Challenge to
its competence
31. Before delving into the Admissibility of this Communication it is
important to deal with the issue raised by the Respondent State on the
competence of the African Commission to hear this matter.
32. The Respondent State is of the view that the decision of the Kenyan Court
of Appeal is binding on the African Commission. According to the
Respondent State, it is only in situations where there is evidence of a
systematic violation of human rights by a state that international tribunals
can have the competence to entertain the matter. Since there is no such
evidence that there are systematic violations or discrimination on the basis
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of sex and gender by Kenyan courts, the Respondent state argues that the
African Commission is precluded from hearing the matter.
33. The jurisdiction of international judicial and quasi-judicial bodies
commonly has four attributes or facets; personal jurisdiction, material
jurisdiction, temporal jurisdiction and territorial jurisdiction. The
competence of the African Commission to determine the present
communication will therefore be assessed within the framework of these
attributes of jurisdiction.
34. Regarding its personal jurisdiction or ratione personae, the African
Commission is competent to determine Communications directed against
a State Party to the African Charter by someone competent to do so. The
Republic of Kenya is a State Party to the African Charter having ratified
same on 23 January 1992. The Complainants are competent to bring the
case before the African Commission because the only requirement for
doing so in this respect, that is, the disclosure of identity has been met as
indicated in paragraph 1 above. The personal jurisdiction of the African
Commission is therefore not called into question.
35. It would appear that what is mainly contested by the Respondent State is
the material jurisdiction (ratione materae) of the African Commission. The
African Commission has jurisdiction over a Communication in this
respect, which alleges the violation of rights guaranteed in the African
Charter. The subject matter of the Communication must relate to the
violation of a right protected in the African Charter and the Complainant
is only required to establish a prima facie violation.7 In assessing whether a
7 A person is presumed to have presented a prima facie violation under the African
Charter when the facts presented in a complaint show that a human rights violation has
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prima facie case exists, the African Commission only needs to be satisfied
that the facts before it point to likelihood that a right protected in the
African Charter has been violated. There is no requirement in the African
Charter for evidence of systematic violations to be adduced for a prima
facie case to exist.
36. Whether a national court has handed down a judgment in a matter is
immaterial to the determination of the existence of a prima facie case
before the African Commission. What matters is whether such judgment is
in conformity with a state’s obligations under the African Charter. In
assessing the compatibility of the ruling of a national court with the
African Charter, the African Commission does not act as an appellate
body with powers to overrule the decisions of national courts but simply
discharges its mandate of ensuring compliance by a State Party, with the
provisions of the African Charter in its interpretation and application of
the law.
37. In the present Communication, the Complainants allege violations of
specific articles of the African Charter, the provisions of which they deem
the Kenyan Court of Appeal failed to take into consideration in their
application of the law.8 Because the Communication specifically hinges on
the interpretation and application of particular provisions of the African
Charter with regards to the Victim’s case, the African Commission is
satisfied that a prima facie case exists which it can determine without the
necessity to require a systematic pattern of violations.
likely occurred. See African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Information
Sheet No 3: Communication Procedure
8 Complainants specifically allege violation of Articles 2, 3, 14 and 18(3) of the African
Charter.
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38.
The alleged violations complained of occurred at a time when the
African Charter was in force in Kenya and the African Commission’s
temporal jurisdiction (or ratione temporis) is therefore unquestionable. The
violations are also alleged to have occurred in Kenyan territory thereby
confirming the African Commission’s territorial or ratione loci jurisdiction.
39. Having regard to all the above, the African Commission finds that it has
jurisdiction to entertain the present Communication.
The African Commission’s Analysis on Admissibility
40. The Admissibility of Communications submitted to the African
Commission is governed by the seven requirements set out in Article 56 of
the African Charter. According to the Respondent State, the
Communication is inadmissible because the Complainants have failed to
exhaust local remedies The Complainants on the other hand maintain that
the Communication meets all the admissibility requirements and should
be declared admissible.
41. Although the Admissibility of the Communication is only contested on
the issue of the exhaustion of local remedies, the African Commission will
proceed to analyze the conformity of the Communication with all the
requirements of Article 56.
42. Article 56(1) requires that Communications submitted to the African
Commission be considered if they ‘’indicate their authors even if the latter
requests anonymity’’. The Authors of this Communication have been
disclosed as the International Center for the Protection of Human Rights
(Interights) and the Federation of Women Lawyers Kenya. The address
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and contact information of the Complainants has also been disclosed as
well as the name of the Victim. These facts remain uncontested by the
Respondent State. The African Commission is satisfied that the authors of
the Communication are indicated and accordingly holds that the
requirement of Article 56(1) has been complied with.
43. According to Article 56(2) of the African Charter, Communications, in
order to be admissible must be compatible with the Charter of the
Organization of African Unity (now Constitutive Act of the African
Union) or with the African Charter. The parties have not made
Submissions on this issue. The African Commission finds no
incompatibility in the Communication with the above instruments and is
thus satisfied that the requirement of article 56(2) has been fully complied
with.
44. Article 56(3) states that Communications shall be considered if they are
not written in disparaging or insulting language directed against the state
concerned and its institutions or to the African Union. Both parties have
not made any submissions on this point. The African Commission finds
that there is no use of disparaging or insulting language in the
Communication and is therefore satisfied that the requirement of Article
56(3) has been complied with.
45. Article 56(4) of the African Charter provides that Communications must
not be based exclusively on news disseminated through the mass media.
The present Communication is based on information provided by the
Complainants and corroborated by the Respondent State. There is no
evidence that any of the information provided is based on news
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disseminated through the media and the African Commission
consequently finds that the requirement of Article 56(4) has been met.
46. Article 56(5) requires that Communications be submitted after exhausting
local remedies, if any, unless it is obvious that this procedure is unduly
prolonged.
47. The Complainants submit that all available local remedies have been
exhausted since the Kenyan Court of Appeal had passed a final decision
on the Victim’s case. The Kenyan Court of Appeal being the most superior
Court in Kenya at the time, the Complainants maintain that there are no
more local remedies to be exhausted.
48. The Respondent State on the other hand argues that Complainants have
failed to meet this requirement since there are numerous judicial and
quasi-judicial local remedies in existence which were not utilized.
Regarding judicial remedies, the Respondent State maintains that the
Victim could submit an application for Review to the Kenyan Court of
Appeal if she was not satisfied with the Court’s decision. The Respondent
State also argues that the Victim could have submitted an Application in
terms of Section 84 of the Kenyan Constitution to the High Court which
has original jurisdiction to enforce fundamental rights as provided for in
the Constitution, when these rights have been violated.
49. It is also argued by the Respondent State that the Victim could pursue
available quasi-judicial remedies by lodging her claim in bodies like the
Kenya National Commission on Human Rights and the Public Complaints
Standing Committee which are empowered to hear matters such as those
raised by the Complainants in the present Communication.
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50. The Complainants have submitted counter arguments to the issues raised
by the Respondent State reproduced here in paragraphs 26 – 30 above.
51. The practice of the African Commission as articulated in its information
Sheet No 3 on Communication Procedures is very clear on the fact that a
Complainant, in order to meet the exhaustion of local remedies
requirement, must take his/her case to the highest judicial authority of a
State Party.9 The African Commission notes that the Kenyan Court of
Appeal was, at the time this Communication was brought before it, the
Court of final jurisdiction in Kenya. It also notes that the Respondent State
does not dispute the fact that this court had entertained the Victim’s case
and handed down a binding final decision without any possibility of
appeal. It is therefore clear that the Victim’s case was entertained by the
most superior court in Kenya.
52. The question that remains to be answered is whether the Complainants
were required to have recourse to other local remedial avenues after the
Court of Appeal’s decision in order to meet the requirement of Article
56(5) of the African Charter. An assessment of the nature of local remedies
required to be exhausted before a Complaint can be submitted to the
African Commission is necessary in order to provide a satisfactory answer
to the above question.
53. The African Commission has held in Alfred Cudjoe v Ghana10 and
reaffirmed in Good v Botswana11 that the internal remedy to which
Article 56(5) refers entails a remedy sought from courts of a judicial
9 See Information Sheet No 3on Communication Procedures of the African Commission
available on www.achpr.org .
10 Communication 221/98 (1998 – 1999) 12th Activity Report ACHPR. para 14
11 Communication 313/05 (2010) 28th Activity Report ACHPR. para 88
14
nature. The Commission has also maintained that such a remedy must not
be subordinated to the discretionary power of public authorities;12 thereby
affirming that only mandatory local remedies are required to be
exhausted.
54. In the present Communication, the Respondent State argues that the
Kenyan Court of Appeal was not approached to review its decision on the
Victim’s case. The Respondent State cites authorities wherein the Kenyan
Court of Appeal has affirmed its inherent power to review its own
decision under exceptional circumstances.13 The Complainants equally
cite authorities where the same court has stated that its residual powers to
reopen an appeal are highly limited and is only reserved for exceptional
circumstances.14 From the arguments of both parties, it is clear that the
Court of Appeal is not under any legal obligation to review its own
decisions. It is therefore apparent that the power of the court to review its
own decisions is purely discretionary and not mandatory and such review
cannot as such be considered an available local remedy.
55. The Respondent State also argues that the Victim failed to submit an
application to the High Court in terms of Section 84 of the Constitution in
order to enforce her fundamental rights. The African Commission agrees
with the Complainants that the Victim was not required to take this step
in order to meet the requirement of Article 56(5). It is an established
principle in human rights law that when a remedy has been attempted,
use of another remedy which has essentially the same objective is not
12 Communication 48/90 - Amnesty International v Sudan, 50/91 Comité Loosli Bachelard v
Sudan, 52/91 Lawyers Committee for Human Rights v Sudan, 89/93 Association of Members of
the Episcopal
Conference of East Africa v Sudan (1999), para 31
13 See no 2 above
14 See no 5 above.
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required.15 The Kenyan Court of Appeal was very well in a position to
protect the right that the Victim would have sought to be protected
through a fundamental rights application to the High Court. The remedy
was thus exceptional and the victim cannot be required to have engaged
in forum shopping in order to meet the requirement of article 56(5).
56. Regarding Respondent State’s argument that the Victim could have
submitted a complaint to the Kenyan Human Rights Commission or the
Public Complaints Standing Committee, the jurisprudence of the African
Commission is clear on the issue. As stated in paragraph 48 above, the
remedy to which Article 56(5) refers entails a remedy sought from courts
of a judicial nature. The Kenyan Human Rights Commission and the
Public Complaints Standing Committee are quasi-judicial bodies which
the African Commission has held in Cudjoe v Ghana16 to not constitute
judicial remedies. It follows that the Victim was not required to approach
this body in order to meet the exhaustion requirement under the African
Charter.
57. It is evident from all the above that all remedies that fall within the realm
of ‘local remedies’ in the African Charter have been duly exhausted and
the African Commission holds that the requirement of Article 56(5) has
been adhered to.
58. According to Article 56(6), Communications shall be considered if they are
submitted within a ‘reasonable period from the time local remedies are
exhausted or from the date the Commission is seized with the matter’. The
present Communication was received at the Secretariat of the African
15 See decision of the European Court of Human rights in Wójcik v. Poland, App.
no. 26757/95
16 See no 9 above.
16
Commission on the 22 September 2009 and was dated 10 September 2009.
From the parties’ submissions, local remedies were exhausted in February
2007 when the Kenyan Court of Appeal handed down its judgment. This
gives an interval of thirty one (31) months between the date local remedies
were exhausted and the submission of the Communication to the African
Commission. The question that therefore falls for determination is
whether a period of thirty one months can be considered reasonable in the
circumstances of the case.
59. Unlike in the other regional human rights instruments, notably the
American Convention on Human Rights and the European Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms which all
consider the period of six months17, as a reasonable period within which
Complaints must be submitted after the exhaustion of local remedies, the
African Charter has no such period. The African Commission by virtue of
its mandate under Article 45 of the Charter therefore interprets this
provision on a case by case basis taking cognizance of its duty to promote
and protect human rights as laid down in the Charter.
60. The African Charter empowers the African Commission to, in interpreting
the provisions of the Charter, draw inspiration from various sources of
law including legal precedents, doctrine, customs and practices consistent
with international norms on human rights.18 Accordingly, the African
Commission in interpreting the provision of Article 56 (6) in Michael
Mujuru v Zimbabwe19 stated as follows:
17 See articles 56 (1) b & 36(1) respectively of the American Convention on Human Rights
and the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Rights and Freedoms.
18 See articles 60 & 61 of the African Charter.
19 Communication 308/05(2008) 25th Activity Report, ACHPR. Para 109. The Commission
declared this Communication inadmissible on account of the fact that it was submitted 22
17
Going by the practice of similar regional human rights institutions, such as
the Inter-American Commission and Court and the European Court, six
months seem to be the usual standard. This notwithstanding, each case
must be treated on its own merit. Where there is good and compelling
reason why a Complainant could not submit his/her complaint for
consideration on time, the Commission may examine the complaint to
ensure fairness and justice
61. In the present Communication, the Complainants have made no
submissions to explain why the Communication could not be submitted
earlier than thirty one months. Submitting a Communication thirty one
months after local remedies were exhausted without any reason to explain
such a wide interval is clearly unreasonable and the African Commission
therefore finds no compelling reason why this Communication should
meet the requirement of Article 56(6).
62. According to Article 56(7) of the African Charter, Communications, in
order to be admissible must not deal with cases which have been settled
by the States, in accordance with the principles of the United Nations, or
the Charter of the OAU or the African Charter. In the present case, the
Communication has not been settled in accordance with any of these
international principles and as a result, the African Commission finds that
the requirement of Article 56(7) has been fulfilled by the Complainants.
Decision of the African Commission on Admissibility
63. Based on the above, the African Commission decides:
months after the Complainant fled Zimbabwe and no convincing reason was put forth to
explain such delay.
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1) To declare the Communication inadmissible for failing to comply
with the provisions of Article 56(6) of the African Charter;
2) To notify its decision to the parties and attach the Communication to
its Annual Activity Report in accordance with Rule 107(3) of its Rules
of Procedure;
Done in Banjul, the Gambia, 05 November 2011
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