Rezoluția CM/ResDH(2012)21 [1] Executarea hotărârii Curții Europene a Drepturilor Omului Macready împotriva Republicii Cehe Comitetul miniștrilor, în temeiul articolului 46 alineatul (2) din Convenția pentru apărarea drepturilor omului și a libertăților fundamentale, care prevede că el supraveghează executarea hotărârilor definitive ale Curții Europene a Drepturilor Omului (denumită în continuare "convenția" și "Curtea") [2] Având în vedere hotărârea de mai jos, care a fost transmisă de Curte Comitetului odată ce a devenit definitiv Numele cauzei (referitor la cerere) Hotărârea Definitive Le Macready (4824/06) 22/04/2010 04/10/2010 Reamintind că constatările de încălcare făcute de Curte impun, pe lângă plata satisfacției echitabile acordate în hotărâri, adoptarea de către statul membru pârât, dacă este necesar, a unor măsuri individuale care să pună capăt încălcărilor și să șteargă, pe cât posibil, consecințele acestora pentru solicitant, precum și măsuri generale care să permită prevenirea unor încălcări similare; După ce a invitat autoritățile din statul membru în cauză să furnizeze un plan de acțiune privind măsurile propuse pentru executarea hotărârii; după examinarea, în conformitate cu normele Comitetului privind aplicarea articolului 46 alineatul (2) din convenție, a bilanțului de acțiune furnizat de guvern (a se vedea bilanțul de acțiune, documentul DD(2011) 1021E [3] după ce a luat act de faptul că Tribunalul de Primă Instanță a acordat părții reclamante satisfacția echitabilă prevăzută în hotărârea pronunțată; DECURSĂ că acesta și-a îndeplinit funcțiile în temeiul articolului 46 alineatul (2) din Convenție în această cauză și DECIDE d In its judgment of 22 April 2010 the European Court of Human Rights found a violation of the applicant The judgment became final on 4 October 2010 concording to Article 44 § 2 (c) of the Convention. The present report is intented to information the Committee of Ministers of the individual and general measures of execution of the judgment. I. INDIVIDUAL MEASURIs In view of the Government, the wrong complained of by the aplicant, i.e. Both the unreasonable length of the proceseedings relating to the return of the applicant Therefore, the Government believe that no further individual measures to execute the Court. II. Government believe that in its judgment the Court itself puncted out the existing of Act no. 295/2008 which entered into force on 1 October 2008 and which amendad the Rules of Civil Procedure. In particular, the new Sections 193a-193e of the Rules of Civil Procedure provide with a separat legal scop for the procesion relating to the internațional child abduction the purpose of which is to secure a concentred course of the proceseedings with respect to the limits set down by the Hague Convention (determination of a special tribunal for the proceseedings in case; the possibility for the court to take measable measures in order to se-curence for a return of a child or to decide on interim aranjamente of a compailment with his/herchild; implementation of the statutorie șase-week time time limit for delivering a decision on the merits). The Court further admitted that the Czech Republic had heard the Court as criticism relating to the preventive remedy remedy against an unreasonable length of proceseedings under Act no. 6/2002, as the supportment had been amend. În plus, Government would like to stres that besides the above mentioned amendments a însemnat efort has been made in order to spead information relating to the problematic issues of international parental certations, on the one hand, among judges deciding care se încadrează în cases and among other content state authorities (such as the authorities for social and legal protection of children and the Office for International Protection of Children oIL) and, on other hand, also to the public at larg. In particular, the amendad Rules of Civil Procedure and, Generally, the family issues have been a subject matter of a number of seminars held for judges, their asistences and senior scurt officers at the Judicial Academy of the Czech Republic. Pentru example, a seminar for child care judges was held in Autumn 2008, a seminar for judges of district and regional Courts on family law was held in January 2009, a semnar for judges of scurts of the first instance was held in the matter of the Rules of Civil Procedure and their amendments in March 2009 and șase seminars for senior scurt offices and hayiffs refereng the execution of decisions involving minor children took place in April 2009. Topic of the execution of the decisions of the foreign child care scurts was discussed between judges and their asistents during a seminar in September 2009. In order to informa the public at lat, there have been several leaflets publicatshed by the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs quising booth general information for the The role of an informal mediciator in the international child abductions is performed by the OILPC the fack of which is to reach solutions that would have the least posibil negativ impacts on the family crisis cauzad by illegal international removals of children. So far, the OIL According to the statisticics available to the Government which raport to the succesor rate of the OILPC□s mediation activity in the internațional child abduction assessment classing the Czech Republic in 2009 and 2010, from the total number of 56 cases of international child abduction in 33 cases the mediation resulted in an agreement as a final solution of the case (9 cases) or a voluntary return of a child (12 cases) or a withdrawal of a motion for return of child fild with a tribunal (12 cases). Concern the preventive remedy against an unreasonable length of proceseedings in the form of a motion for determination of a time limitation for taking a procedural step according to section 174a of Act no. 6/2002 on Courts and Judges, the Government note that the amendment which came into force on 1 July 2009 and which the Court mentioned in the judgment removed the contencious relation between the mentioned motion for the determination of a time limitation for making a procedural act and the complaint filed with an authority responsible for the State The Government are of the opinie that the preventive remedy against an unreasonable length of proceseedings now fully complimentes with the requirement of efectivness set down by the convention. In concluzie, the Government believe that no further systematic measures to prevent analogous viols in viitoare are required. III. CONCLUZION The Government of the Czech Republic submit this report and be be found to have implemented all obligations incumbent upon them in order to execute the Macready v. the Czech Republic judgment. Praga, 16 September 2011. Vít A. Schorm Government Agent before the Court signed electronically [1] Adoptată de Comitetul miniștrilor la 8 martie 2012 în cadrul celei de-a 1136-a ședințe a delegaților miniștrilor. [2] A se vedea, de asemenea, recomandările adoptate de Comitetul miniștrilor în cadrul supravegherii hotărârilor Curții Europene a Drepturilor Omului, în special Recomandarea Rec(2004)6 a Comitetului de Miniștri al statelor membre privind îmbunătățirea acțiunilor interne. [3] Numai în limba engleză
Résolution CM/ResDH(2012)21
[1]
Exécution de l’arrêt de la Cour européenne des droits de l’homme
Macready contre République tchèque
Le Comité des Ministres, en vertu de l’article 46, paragraphe 2, de la Convention de sauvegarde des droits de l’homme et des libertés fondamentales, qui prévoit qu’il surveille l’exécution des arrêts définitifs de la Cour européenne des droits de l’homme (ci-après nommées «
la Convention
» et «
la Cour
»)
[2]
,
Vu l’arrêt ci-dessous, qui a été transmis par la Cour au Comité une fois qu’il est devenu définitif
;
Nom de l’affaire (réf. requête)
Arrêt du
Définitif le
Macready (4824/06)
22/04/2010
04/10/2010
Rappelant que les constats de violation faits par la Cour exigent, outre le paiement de la satisfaction équitable octroyée dans les arrêts, l’adoption par l’Etat défendeur, si nécessaire, de mesures individuelles mettant fin aux violations et effaçant autant que possible les conséquences de celles-ci pour le requérant, et de mesures générales permettant de prévenir des violations semblables ;
Ayant invité les autorités de l’Etat défendeur à fournir un plan d’action concernant les mesures proposées pour exécuter l’arrêt ;
Ayant examiné, conformément aux Règles du Comité pour l’application de l’article 46, paragraphe
2, de la Convention, le bilan d’action fourni par le gouvernement (voir le bilan d’action, document
DH
‑
[3]
)
;
Ayant noté que
l’Etat défendeur a versé à la partie requérante la satisfaction équitable prévue dans l’arrêt ;
DECLARE qu’il a rempli ses fonctions en vertu de l’article 46, paragraphe 2, de la Convention dans cette affaire et
DECIDE d’en clore l’examen.
Report of the Government of the Czech Republic on the execution of the judgment
in cases nos. 4824/06 and 15512/08 – Macready v. the Czech Republic
In its judgment of 22 April 2010 the European Court of Human Rights found a violation of the applicant’s right to respect for his family life, guaranteed by Article 8 of the Convention, in connection with the proceedings relating to the return of the applicant’s child according to the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (hereinafter “the Hague Convention”) and the exercise of the applicant’s visiting rights. The judgment became final on 4 October 2010 according to Article 44 § 2 (c) of the Convention. The present report is intended to inform the Committee of Ministers of the individual and general measures of execution of the judgment.
In view of the Government, the wrong complained of by the applicant, i.e. both the unreasonable length of the proceedings relating to the return of the applicant’s child according to the Hague Convention and the failure of the courts to ensure the applicant’s exercise of the interim measures arranging for his right to contact with his child have already been rectified as the proceedings in hand terminated with the Constitutional Court’s rejection of the applicant’s constitutional appeal on 27 September 2007 which was served to the applicant on 11 October 2007.
Therefore, the Government believe that no further individual measures to execute the Court’s judgment are necessary.
The Government note that in its judgment the Court itself pointed out the existence of Act no. 295/2008 which entered into force on 1 October 2008 and which amended the Rules of Civil Procedure. In particular, the new Sections 193a-193e of the Rules of Civil Procedure provide with a separate legal scope for the proceedings relating to the international child abduction the purpose of which is to secure a concentrated course of the proceedings with respect to the limits set down by the Hague Convention (determination of a special tribunal for the proceedings in case; the possibility for the court to take suitable measures in order to se-cure conditions for a return of a child or to decide on interim arrangements of a complainant’s contact with his/her child; implementation of the statutory six-week time limit for delivering a decision on the merits). The Court further admitted that the Czech Republic had heard the Court’s criticism relating to the preventive remedy against an unreasonable length of proceedings under Act no. 6/2002, as the relevant provision had been amended.
In addition, the Government would like to stress that besides the above mentioned amendments a significant effort has been made in order to spread relevant information relating to the problematic issues of international parental disputes, on the one hand, among judges deciding relevant cases and among other competent state authorities (such as the authorities for social and legal protection of children and the Office for International Legal Protection of Children – OILPC ) and, on the other hand, also to the public at large. In particular, the amended Rules of Civil Procedure and, generally, the family issues have been a subject matter of a number of seminars held for judges, their assistants and senior court officers at the Judicial Academy of the Czech Republic. For example, a seminar for child care judges was held in Autumn 2008, a seminar for judges of district and regional courts on family law was held in January 2009, a seminar for judges of courts of the first instance was held in the matter of the Rules of Civil Procedure and their amendments in March 2009 and six seminars for senior court officers and bailiffs concerning the execution of decisions involving minor children took place in April 2009. The topic of the execution of the decisions of the foreign child care courts was discussed between judges and their assistants during a seminar in September 2009. In order to inform the public at large, there have been several leaflets published by the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs concerning both general information for the “international families in crisis” and particularly the issue of international abduction of children.
An important accent was also put on mediation in parental disputes. The role of an informal mediator in the international child abduction disputes is performed by the OILPC the task of which is to reach solutions that would have the least possible negative impacts on the family crisis caused by illegal international removals of children. So far, the OILPC’s effort, intensified in the field of mediation since 2009, has achieved success. According to the statistics available to the Government which relate to the success rate of the OILPC’s mediation activity in the international child abduction cases concerning the Czech Republic in 2009 and 2010, from the total number of 56 cases of international child abduction in 33 cases the mediation resulted in an agreement as a final solution of the case (9 cases) or a voluntary return of a child (12 cases) or a withdrawal of a motion for return of child filed with a tribunal (12 cases).
Concerning the preventive remedy against an unreasonable length of proceedings in the form of a motion for determination of a time limit for taking a procedural step according to Section 174a of Act no. 6/2002 on Courts and Judges, the Government note that the amendment which came into force on 1 July 2009 and which the Court mentioned in the judgment removed the contentious relation between the mentioned motion for the determination of a time limit for making a procedural act and the complaint filed with an authority responsible for the State’s administration of courts according to Section 164 of the act. The Government are of the opinion that the preventive remedy against an unreasonable length of proceedings now fully complies with the requirement of effectiveness set down by the Convention.
In conclusion, the Government believe that no further systematic measures to prevent analogous violations in future are required.
The Government of the Czech Republic submit this report and believe that they will be found to have implemented all obligations incumbent upon them in order to execute the Macready v. the Czech Republic judgment.
Prague, 16 September 2011.
Vít A. Schorm
Government Agent before the Court
signed electronically
[1]
Adoptée par le Comité des Ministres le 8 mars 2012 lors de la 1136e réunion des Délégués des Ministres.
[2]
voir aussi les recommandations adoptées par le Comité des Ministres dans le cadre de la supervision des arrêts de la Cour européenne des droits de l’homme, et en particulier la Recommandation
Rec(2004)6 du Comité des Ministres aux Etats membres sur l'amélioration des recours internes.
[3]
Document en anglais uniquement