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Whistling past the graveyard : amnesty and the right to an effective remedy under the African Charter : the case of South Africa and MocambiqueMusila, Godfrey January 2004 (has links)
"First, this dissertation proposes to explore the practice of amnesties in dealing with violations of human rights vis-à-vis the obligation of states to punish and to prosecute gross violations of human rights and to guarantee effective remedies for victims. Secondly, it seeks to inquire, for purposes of meeting the first objective, into the validity of amnesties in international law with specific reference to the African Charter. Thirdly, on the strength of a selected case studies: South Africa and Moçambique, and informed by relevant jurisprudence drawn from the Inter-American human rights system and elsewhere, a critique informative of the recommendations as to how the African Court should deal with cases arising out of such amnesty situations will be attempted. Equally, similar reference will be made, albeit in an abridged way, to how amnesties could be dealt with at the political levels of the African Union (AU). Fourthly, the dissertation will inquire into why amnesties, which have been used to advance utilitarian ends of the communal good (national reconciliation) thereby ‘trumping individuals’ rights’, cannot at the same time, be so fashioned as to reconcile these especially relating to effective remedies for violations of human rights the amnesty seeks to address. Fifthly, in drawing on the foregoing, this study will, by way of recommendations, seek to outline criteria or conditionalities upon which amnesty should, if ever, be granted. ... The study consists of five chapters. Chapter one will provide the context in which the study is set. It highlights the basis and structure of the study. Chapter two endeavours to outline some of the basic concepts central to the study; amnesty, pardon as instruments of national reconciliation and the various avenues through which these has been effected in the past. In the main, the chapter attempts a problematisation of the concept of amnesty by which its validity and place in international law will be examined. Chapter three outlines the approaches to amnesty in South Africa and Moçambique and the countervailing state obligations to ensure rights protected in human rights instruments: to prosecute and punish violators and the rights of victims and their relatives to effective remedies. In the case of South Africa, the right to effective remedies is discussed within the context of the decision of the South African constitutional court in AZAPO. Chapter four attempts to grapple with the possibility of bringing a case before the African Court of Human Rights and how this case may, and should be decided in light of existing decisions of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights and available comparative jurisprudence on the subject. Chapter five will consist of a summary of the presentation and the conclusions drawn from the entire study. It will also make some recommendations as to how amnesty should be dealt with both at political level (AU) and at the level of the African Court in relation to human rights violations. In furtherance of this, it attempts an outline of directive criteria that should be applied." -- Chapter 1. / Thesis (LLM (Human Rights and Democratisation in Africa)) -- University of Pretoria, 2004. / http://www.chr.up.ac.za/academic_pro/llm1/dissertations.html / Centre for Human Rights / LLM
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Internally displaced children and HIV in situations of armed conflict in the DRC : a study of the obligations of the government and selected non-state actorsIraguha, Ndamiyehe Patient January 2013 (has links)
The mini-dissertation analyses the international law obligations of the government and nonstate
actors regarding the protection of internally displaced children living with HIV in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo.
The war and armed conflicts in the Eastern DRC have exacerbated the vulnerability of
children, causing them to be separated from their families, to experience sexual violence and
forced conscription into armed groups, to experience the violent deaths of a parent or friend,
resulting in insufficient adult care. They further are subject to a lack of safe drinking water
and food, insufficient access to health care services, discrimination and stigmatisation, and so
on. These factors increase their risk of contracting HIV and, if they are already living with
HIV, they adversely affect their welfare.
The mini-dissertation illustrates that international, regional and domestic human rights
instruments protecting children can be applied in situations of armed conflicts to supplement
humanitarian law instruments. It demonstrates that the government of the DRC has not
implemented and fulfilled its international obligations to ensure these children adequate
access to health services and to humanitarian assistance for displaced persons living with
HIV; security and protection within displaced persons camps; and that children are protected
from abuse and human rights violations.
The dissertation recommends the prosecution of perpetrators of crimes tied to the conflicts which have targeted children, as well as the ratification by the DRC of regional instruments
such as the African Union Convention on the Protection and Assistance of Internally
Displaced Persons in Africa, and the African Charter on the Rights and the Welfare of the
Child, as this may enhance the legal protection of displaced children in the DRC. / Dissertation (LLM)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2014 / Centre for Human Rights / unrestricted
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Climate change and Africa : the normative framework of the African Union / Daniel Mirisho PallangyoPallangyo, Daniel Mirisho January 2013 (has links)
There is enough evidence on how climate change consequences will adversely affect
Africa despite the fact that it is the continent that has least contributed to the problem.
The international climate change regime recognises Africa's vulnerability to climate
change and provides for special treatment under the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (the UNFCCC). Thus, the international climate change
regime presents an opportunity for African countries to adapt and mitigate the
consequences of climate change through the UNFCCC mechanism. However, the
international climate change legal regime has not been able to adequately assist African
countries to address the consequences of climate change under the vulnerability
principle. Although the current international climate change regime requires developed
countries to reduce their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, Africa needs to take steps
itself to address the problem, because it is most vulnerable to the consequences of
climate change.
The African Union (AU) could play a great role in ensuring that the international climate
change regime addresses the consequences of climate change in the region. This could
be done through fostering strong African common positions during international climate
change negotiations. A strong common position could strengthen African bargaining
power and might result in more funding, capacity building and technology development
and transfer for adaptation and mitigation programmes under the UNFCCC-Kyoto
Conference of Parties. However, reaching a strong common position requires the
cooperation of the AU member states. In this context, African regional integration is an
opportunity for the AU to foster such cooperation among member states. The Treaty
Establishing the African Economic Community (the Abuja Treaty), the Constitutive Act
of the AU and the Protocol on the Relations between the AU and Regional Economic
Communities (RECs) prioritise regional economic integration and call for states'
cooperation, but the call has not yet been heeded. To realise deep and viable African
integration, there must be a well-structured institutional and legal framework that defines
the relationship between the AU, the AEC and the RECs. African regional integration is also seen as an avenue whereby the AU can create its
own regional climate-change regime. In this regard, the AU's and RECs' normative
framework on climate change is examined in order to assess whether it adequately
integrates climate change issues. This study finds that although Africa is most
vulnerable to the consequences of climate change, the AU's and RECs' normative
framework on climate change is weak and inadequate to address the problem. The
Framework should integrate climate change issues in order to achieve sustainable
development. The AU should also ensure that member states ratify the relevant treaties
and protocols (the Maputo Nature Convention and the Protocol establishing the African
Court of Justice and Human Rights) that have not yet been ratified in order that they
may become operational. The Maputo Nature Convention puts sustainable development
in the forefront of attention as a reaction to the potentially conflicting environmental and
developmental challenges facing the continent (such as climate change), but it is not yet
in force.
This work finds that human rights law can strengthen the AU's role in addressing
climate change through its normative framework. The human rights approach to climate
change under the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (the Banjul Charter) is
a viable avenue because human rights law forms the basis for states' responsibility
based on human rights obligations and principles. The extraterritorial application of the
Banjul Charter presents an avenue for AU institutions such as the Human Rights
Commission and the African Human Rights Court to curb the effects of climate change
through a human rights lens.
The future of the AU is presented within the context of a set of recommendations that
identify strong African regional integration as an avenue through which the AU can
foster the cooperation of member states to address the consequences of climate
change in the AU's and RECs' normative frameworks. General recommendations are
made on the need for the international climate change regime to pay more attention to
issues of funding, capacity building and technology development and transfer on the
basis of the vulnerability principle and in relation to the principles of equity and common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities. Also, the AU needs to
strengthen its legal and institutional structures to ensure deep African integration that is
capable of addressing common challenges such as the consequences of climate
change. / PhD (Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
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Climate change and Africa : the normative framework of the African Union / Daniel Mirisho PallangyoPallangyo, Daniel Mirisho January 2013 (has links)
There is enough evidence on how climate change consequences will adversely affect
Africa despite the fact that it is the continent that has least contributed to the problem.
The international climate change regime recognises Africa's vulnerability to climate
change and provides for special treatment under the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (the UNFCCC). Thus, the international climate change
regime presents an opportunity for African countries to adapt and mitigate the
consequences of climate change through the UNFCCC mechanism. However, the
international climate change legal regime has not been able to adequately assist African
countries to address the consequences of climate change under the vulnerability
principle. Although the current international climate change regime requires developed
countries to reduce their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, Africa needs to take steps
itself to address the problem, because it is most vulnerable to the consequences of
climate change.
The African Union (AU) could play a great role in ensuring that the international climate
change regime addresses the consequences of climate change in the region. This could
be done through fostering strong African common positions during international climate
change negotiations. A strong common position could strengthen African bargaining
power and might result in more funding, capacity building and technology development
and transfer for adaptation and mitigation programmes under the UNFCCC-Kyoto
Conference of Parties. However, reaching a strong common position requires the
cooperation of the AU member states. In this context, African regional integration is an
opportunity for the AU to foster such cooperation among member states. The Treaty
Establishing the African Economic Community (the Abuja Treaty), the Constitutive Act
of the AU and the Protocol on the Relations between the AU and Regional Economic
Communities (RECs) prioritise regional economic integration and call for states'
cooperation, but the call has not yet been heeded. To realise deep and viable African
integration, there must be a well-structured institutional and legal framework that defines
the relationship between the AU, the AEC and the RECs. African regional integration is also seen as an avenue whereby the AU can create its
own regional climate-change regime. In this regard, the AU's and RECs' normative
framework on climate change is examined in order to assess whether it adequately
integrates climate change issues. This study finds that although Africa is most
vulnerable to the consequences of climate change, the AU's and RECs' normative
framework on climate change is weak and inadequate to address the problem. The
Framework should integrate climate change issues in order to achieve sustainable
development. The AU should also ensure that member states ratify the relevant treaties
and protocols (the Maputo Nature Convention and the Protocol establishing the African
Court of Justice and Human Rights) that have not yet been ratified in order that they
may become operational. The Maputo Nature Convention puts sustainable development
in the forefront of attention as a reaction to the potentially conflicting environmental and
developmental challenges facing the continent (such as climate change), but it is not yet
in force.
This work finds that human rights law can strengthen the AU's role in addressing
climate change through its normative framework. The human rights approach to climate
change under the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (the Banjul Charter) is
a viable avenue because human rights law forms the basis for states' responsibility
based on human rights obligations and principles. The extraterritorial application of the
Banjul Charter presents an avenue for AU institutions such as the Human Rights
Commission and the African Human Rights Court to curb the effects of climate change
through a human rights lens.
The future of the AU is presented within the context of a set of recommendations that
identify strong African regional integration as an avenue through which the AU can
foster the cooperation of member states to address the consequences of climate
change in the AU's and RECs' normative frameworks. General recommendations are
made on the need for the international climate change regime to pay more attention to
issues of funding, capacity building and technology development and transfer on the
basis of the vulnerability principle and in relation to the principles of equity and common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities. Also, the AU needs to
strengthen its legal and institutional structures to ensure deep African integration that is
capable of addressing common challenges such as the consequences of climate
change. / PhD (Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
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Investigating the challenges in enforcing international human rights law in Africa : towards an effective regional systemMbondenyi, Morris Kiwinda 26 November 2009 (has links)
This study is entitled ‘investigating the challenges in enforcing international human rights
law in Africa: Towards an effective regional system’. It centres around a critical research
problem namely: what challenges beset regional enforcement of human rights law in
Africa and how can they be addressed to ensure the effective promotion and protection of
human rights in the continent? It critically reviews and revisits the discourses and
scholarly arguments on the crucial issue of regional enforcement of human rights law in
Africa. It traverses through historical epochs in order to explain the origins, scope and
evolution of human rights law in Africa. This is done in the quest for answers to
questions such as: When and how did Africa’s regional human rights system originate?
What factors led to its emergence? Was the concept of human rights recognised in Africa
prior to European colonial rule? What is the present status of international human rights
in Africa? It therefore lays the foundations for a better understanding of the historical and
philosophical origins and evolution of Africa’s regional human rights system. The study
then proceeds to review the normative and institutional mechanisms established in Africa
to enforce human rights at the regional level. Particularly, it highlights the roles of the
African Commission and Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights in the light of their
contribution to, and challenges in, the enforcement of human rights in the region. The
study concludes with recommendations on the possible ways to invigorate the African
human rights system. One of the key findings is that, with appropriate reforms, the
system can be more effective. / Constitutional, International & Indigenous Law / LL.D. (Public, Constitutional and International Law)
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The African human rights system : challenges and prospectsIngange-wa-ingange, Jean Desire 04 1900 (has links)
The world has seen gradual evolution of regional human rights arrangements. The adoption by the UN General Assembly of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 1948, was followed by the creation of numerous regional instruments that address concerns of particular importance in the regional context. Three world regions, Africa, the Americas and Europe, have established their respective regional instruments together with the supervisory mechanism, such as commissions and courts.
The African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, with its emphasis on group rights and individual duties challenges the Western liberal account of rights, as expressed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The cultural differences brought to the fore not only the tension between individual and group rights but also the question as to whether of the universalism of human rights is possible. The study advocates for a moderate universalism of human rights, which can only be achieved through a dialogue among different cultural approaches to the notion of human rights.
This study examines the content and substance of human rights norms of the African system with a view to recommending the possible strategies for their reform. Its central thesis is, the system is rather weak and therefore needs to be reformed. Toward this end, the study analyses the provisions of the African Charter. Thereafter, it explores its weaknesses and proposes strategies for their reform. The African human rights mechanisms face a number of common and particular challenges. Prospectively, Africa is going through a tremendous and interesting phase. These challenges are not insurmountable. / Constitutional, International and Indigenous Law / LL.D.
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La défense contentieuse des intérêts collectifs devant les commissions et cours régionales des droits de l'homme / The contentious defence of collective interests before regional commissions and courts of human rightsBirker, Matthieu 23 June 2012 (has links)
La tension entre la singularité de chaque individu et la dimension sociale de l’être humain est souvent réduite par le droit à une contradiction. Fondé sur la nécessité de protéger la dignité individuelle et les droits qui lui sont attachés contre les atteintes portées par la collectivité et ses institutions, le droit européen des droits de l’homme fait ainsi figure de rempart à la suprématie du groupe sur l’individu. Cependant, le développement de nouveaux systèmes régionaux de protection des droits de l’homme en Amériques et en Afrique fondés sur des traités moins empreints de l’antagonisme entre l’individuel et le collectif, ainsi que la multiplication de groupes sociaux prétendant détenir et faire valoir leurs intérêts, mettent en évidence la dimension sociale de l’individu et font entrer les intérêts collectifs dans la sphère juridique. Cette étude vise à rechercher si cette dimension est, à ce point, constitutive de l’humanité de l’individu que les intérêts que ce dernier détient conjointement et indissociablement avec tout ou partie ses semblables sont des droits de l’homme, qui devraient être consacrés et défendus comme tels. / The tension between the uniqueness of each individual and the social dimension of the human being is often reduced by law to a contradiction. European human rights law is seen as a bulwark against the supremacy of the group over the individual, as it is based on the need to protect individual dignity and the rights attached to it against attacks by the wider community and its institutions. However, the development of new regional systems of human rights protection in the Americas and Africa based on conventions that are less imbued with the antagonism between the individual and the collective, as well as the proliferation of groups claiming to have interests and to defend them, highlight the social dimension of the individual and bring collective interests to the legal sphere. This study aims to investigate whether this dimension is so inherent to the humanity of the individual, that the interests that the latter owns jointly and inseparably with all or part of his fellows are human rights, which should be enshrined and defended as such.
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Investigating the challenges in enforcing international human rights law in Africa : towards an effective regional systemMbondenyi, Morris Kiwinda 26 November 2009 (has links)
This study is entitled ‘investigating the challenges in enforcing international human rights
law in Africa: Towards an effective regional system’. It centres around a critical research
problem namely: what challenges beset regional enforcement of human rights law in
Africa and how can they be addressed to ensure the effective promotion and protection of
human rights in the continent? It critically reviews and revisits the discourses and
scholarly arguments on the crucial issue of regional enforcement of human rights law in
Africa. It traverses through historical epochs in order to explain the origins, scope and
evolution of human rights law in Africa. This is done in the quest for answers to
questions such as: When and how did Africa’s regional human rights system originate?
What factors led to its emergence? Was the concept of human rights recognised in Africa
prior to European colonial rule? What is the present status of international human rights
in Africa? It therefore lays the foundations for a better understanding of the historical and
philosophical origins and evolution of Africa’s regional human rights system. The study
then proceeds to review the normative and institutional mechanisms established in Africa
to enforce human rights at the regional level. Particularly, it highlights the roles of the
African Commission and Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights in the light of their
contribution to, and challenges in, the enforcement of human rights in the region. The
study concludes with recommendations on the possible ways to invigorate the African
human rights system. One of the key findings is that, with appropriate reforms, the
system can be more effective. / Constitutional, International and Indigenous Law / LL.D. (Public, Constitutional and International Law)
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The African human rights system : challenges and prospectsIngange-wa-ingange, Jean Desire 04 1900 (has links)
The world has seen gradual evolution of regional human rights arrangements. The adoption by the UN General Assembly of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 1948, was followed by the creation of numerous regional instruments that address concerns of particular importance in the regional context. Three world regions, Africa, the Americas and Europe, have established their respective regional instruments together with the supervisory mechanism, such as commissions and courts.
The African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, with its emphasis on group rights and individual duties challenges the Western liberal account of rights, as expressed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The cultural differences brought to the fore not only the tension between individual and group rights but also the question as to whether of the universalism of human rights is possible. The study advocates for a moderate universalism of human rights, which can only be achieved through a dialogue among different cultural approaches to the notion of human rights.
This study examines the content and substance of human rights norms of the African system with a view to recommending the possible strategies for their reform. Its central thesis is, the system is rather weak and therefore needs to be reformed. Toward this end, the study analyses the provisions of the African Charter. Thereafter, it explores its weaknesses and proposes strategies for their reform. The African human rights mechanisms face a number of common and particular challenges. Prospectively, Africa is going through a tremendous and interesting phase. These challenges are not insurmountable. / Constitutional, International and Indigenous Law / LL.D.
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La Cour africaine des droits de l'homme et des peuples : étude à la lumière de l'expérience européenne / The African court of human rights : a study in the light of the european experienceHanffou Nana, Sarah 10 April 2015 (has links)
Si l’idée de la création d’une cour régionale de protection des droits de l’Homme remonte à 1961, elle ne s’est concrétisée qu’en 1998 avec l’adoption du protocole de Ouagadougou créant la Cour africaine des droits de l’Homme et des peuples. Cette juridiction vient compléter le mandat de la Commission africaine des droits de l’Homme et des peuples. Elle s’inscrit dans la lignée de ses homologues européenne et américaine et joue un rôle essentiel dans l’effectivité de la protection régionale des droits de l’Homme. De ce fait, l’étude de cette juridiction à la lumière de l’expérience européenne a pour but de mettre en exergue les particularités de cette cour tout en démontrant qu’elle a su adapter les standards internationaux en la matière, particulièrement les normes découlant du procès équitable. Il reste toutefois que sa compétence demeure ainsi singulière à bien des égards. Les États africains ont fait preuve de pragmatisme dans l’établissement de cette cour et n’ont pas opéré un mimétisme aveugle avec le modèle de la CEDH. Depuis son premier arrêt en 2009, la cour africaine a rendu des arrêts au fond qui apportent des précisions utiles tant sur les questions d’ordre procédural que sur le contenu des droits protégés. Cependant, elle reste confrontée à des défis qui menacent son avenir. La cristallisation des relations avec la CPI et l’incertitude de la création d’une cour africaine de justice et des droits de l’homme sont manifestement problématiques. La multiplicité des juridictions régionales ayant pour objectif l'intégration économique, mais pouvant statuer sur des questions relatives aux droits de l'Homme, soulève également un certain nombre d’interrogations / If the idea of creating a regional human rights court dates back to 1961, it became a reality in 1998, when the Ouagadougou Protocol establishing the African Court of Human and Peoples' rights (African Court) was adopted.This court complements the mandate of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ rights. It is fully in line with its European and American counterparts and has undoubtedly a role to play in the effectiveness of the regional protection of human rights.Therefore, the study of this court, in the light of the European experience, aims to highlight the features of this court while demonstrating that it meets international standards in this area, particularly the standards derived under fair trial. His extended competence, whether contentious or advisory is unique in many ways.African states have demonstrated pragmatism in the establishment of this regional court and have not made a blind imitation with the model of the European Court of Human Rights. Since its first judgment in 2009, the African Court delivered judgment on the merits which provide information on both procedural issues and the content of the protected rights. Of course, challenges remain to be addressed. The crystallization of the relations with the International Criminal Court and the subsequent uncertainty about the creation of an African Court of Justice and Human Rights are clearly problematic. The multiplicity of regional courts whose main objective is economic integration, but who can also rule on questions relating to human rights, also raises a number of questions
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