
PRESS
RELEASE ISSUED BY THE REGISTRAR OF THE EUROPEAN
COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS

SUMMARY OF THE CASE
138 23.3.1995 JUDGEMENT IN THE CASE OF LOIZIDOU v. TURKEY (Preliminary
objections)
In a judgment delivered at Strasbourg on 23 March 1995 in
the case of Loizidou v. Turkey, the European Court of Human Rights, by sixteen votes to
two, held that the territorial restrictions attached to Turkey's Article 25 and 46
declarations were invalid but that these declarations contain valid acceptances of the
competence of the Commission and Court. It also decided, by a unanimous vote, to join to
the merits the preliminary objection that the complaint related to facts and events which
occurred before the Turkish declaration of acceptance, pursuant to Article 46 (1),
of the compulsory jurisdiction of the Court dated 22 January 1990 (objection ratione
temporis). It is the first case against Turkey to come before the Court.
The judgment was read out in open court by Mr Rolv
Ryssdal, President of the Court.

(1) The text of Article 46 of the Convention
and of the Turkish declaration of acceptance of the compulsory juristriction of the Court
are appended

contents
I. BACKROUND TO THE CASE
A. Principal facts
B. Proceedings
before the European Commission of Human Rights
II SUMMARY OF THE JUDGMENT
A. The standing
of the applicant Government
B. Abuse of process
C. The Turkish Government's
role in the proceedings
D. Scope of the case
E. Objections Ratione Loci
1. Whether the facts
alleged by the applicant are capable of falling within the jurisdiction of Turkey under
Article 1 of the Convention
2.
The validity of the territorial restrictions attached to Turkey's Articles 25 and 46
declarations
3. The
validity of the Turkish declarations under Articles 25 and 46
F. Objection
Ratione Temporis
APPENDIX
Article 46 of the Convention
Turkey's Article 46
Declaration of 22 January 1990

I.
BACKROUND TO THE CASE
A. Principal facts
The applicant grew up in Kyrenia in northern Cyprus, where
she owned certain plots of land. In 1972 she married and moved with her husband to
Nicosia. Since 1974 she claims that she has been prevented from gaining access to the
above-mentioned properties as a result of the presence of Turkish forces in Cyprus.
On 19 March 1989 a Greek Cypriot women's group,
"Women Walk Home", organised a march with the announced intention of crossing
the Turkish forces' cease-fire line. From Nicosia the demonstrators drove to the village
of Lymbia, where a group managed to cross the buffer zone and the Turkish forces' line.
Some of the women, including Mrs Loizidou, were arrested by Turkish Cypriot policemen.
Later the same day, they were released to United Nations officials (UNFICYP) in Nicosia
and taken over to the Greek Cypriot area.
The Turkish Government submitted, by way of preliminary
objections, inter alia, that the case fell outside the Court's jurisdiction on the grounds
that it related to facts and events which occurred before the Turkish declaration of
acceptance of the jurisdiction of the Court under Article 46 (22 January 1990) (objection
ratione temporis) and did not concern matters arising within the territory covered by this
declaration (objections ratione loci).
B. Proceedings
before the European Commission of Human Rights
The application was lodged with the Commission on 22 July
1989; it was declared admissible on 4 March 1991.
Having attempted unsuccessfully to secure a friendly
settlement the Commission drew up a report (1) on 8 July 1993 in which it
established the facts and expressed the opinion that there had been no violation of (1)
Article 3 (unanimously); (2) Article 8 as regards the applicant's private life (eleven
votes to two); (3) Article 5 s.1 (nine votes to four); (4) Article 8 as regards the
applicant's home (nine votes to four) and (5) Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 (eight votes to
five).
The case has been referred to the Court by the Government
of the Republic of Cyprus under Article 48 (b) of the Convention in so far as it relates
to the alleged interference with the applicant's property rights (Article 1 of Protocol
no. 1 and Article 8 of the Convention).

(1) Available to the press and the
public on application to the Registrar of the Court

II SUMMARY OF THE JUDGMENT (1)
A. The standing of the applicant Government
The Court confined itself to noting, with reference inter
alia to the consistent practice of the Council of Europe, that the applicant Government
had been recognized by the international community as the Government of the Republic of
Cyprus. Its locus standi as the Government of a High Contracting Party cannot therefore be
in doubt.
[See paragraphs 39-41 of the judgment.]
B. Abuse of process
The Court observed that this objection was not raised in
the proceedings before the Commission. Accordingly the Turkish Government was estopped
from raising it before the Court in so far as it applied to Mrs Loizidou.
In so far as it was directed to the applicant Government,
the Court noted that this Government have referred the case to the Court inter alia
because of their conern for the rights of the applicant and other citizens in the same
situation. The Court did not consider such motivation to be an abuse of its
procedures.
[See paragraphs 42-46 of the judgment and point 1 of the
operative provisions.]
C. The Turkish
Government's role in the proceedings
The Court did not consider that it lay within the
discretion of a Contracting Party to the Convention to characterise its standing in the
proceedings before the Court in the manner it saw fit. It observed that the case
originated in a petition made under Article 25, brought by the applicant against Turkey in
her capacity as a High Contracting Party to the Convention and had been referred to the
Court under Article 48 (b) by another High Contracting Party.
The Court therefore considered - without prejudging the
remainder of the issues in these proceedings - that Turkey was the respondent party in
this case.
[See paragraphs 47-52 of the judgment.]

(1) This summaryby the Registry does npt
bind the Court

D. Scope of the case
In the application referring the case to the Court under
Article 48 (b) the applicant Government confined themselves to seeking a ruling on the
complaints under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 and Article 8, in so far as they have been
declared admissible by the Commission concerning access to the applicant's property.
Accordingly, it is only these complaints which were before the Court.
[See paragraphs 53 and 54 of the judgment.]
E. Objections
Ratione Loci
1. Whether the facts alleged by the applicant are
capable of falling within the jurisdiction of Turkey under Article 1 of the Convention
The Court emphasised that it was not called upon at the
preliminary objections stage of its procedure to examine whether Turkey was actually
responsible under the Convention for the acts which form the basis of the applicant's
complaints. Nor is it called upon to establish the principles that govern State
responsibility under the Convention in a situation like that obtaining in the northern
part of Cyprus. Such questions belong rather to the merits phase of the Court's procedure.
The Court's inquiry is limited to determining whether the matters complained of by the
applicant are capable of falling within the jurisdiction of Turkey even though they occur
outside her national territory.
The concept of "jurisdiction" under Article 1 is
not restricted to the national territory of the High Contracting Parties. Responsibility
may also arise when as a consequence of military action, whether lawful or unlawful, a
Contracting Party exercise effective control of an area outside its national
territory.
It was not disputed that the applicant was prevented by
Turkish troops from gaining access to her properties.
The Court concluded that the facts alleged by the
applicant were capable of falling within Turkish "jurisdiction" within the
meaning of Article 1. Whether the matters complained of were imputable to Turkey and gave
rise to State responsibility are questions which fall to be determined by the Court at the
merits phase.
[See paragraphs 56-64 of the judgment and point 2 of the
operative provisions.]
2.
The validity of the territorial restrictions attached to Turkey's Articles 25 and 46
declarations
The Court had regard to the special character of the
Convention as a treaty for the collective enforcement of human rights and the fact that it
is a living instrument to be interpreted in the light of present day conditions. In
addition, the object and purpose of the Convention requires that its provisions be
interpreted and applied so as to make its safeguards practical and effective.
It then sought to ascertain the ordinary meaning given to
Articles 25 and 46 in their context and in the light of their object and purpose. Regard
was also had to subsequent practice in the application of the treaty.
If substantive or territorial restrictions were
permissible under Articles 25 and 46, Contracting Parties would be free to subscribe to
separate regimes of enforcement of Convention obligations depending on the scope of their
acceptances. Such a system, which would enable States to qualify their consent under the
optional clauses, would not only seriously weaken the role of the Commission and Court in
the discharge of their functions, but would also diminish the effectiveness of the
Convention as a constitutional instrument of European public order ("ordre
public"). Moreover, where the Convention permits States to limit their acceptance
under Article 25, there is an express stipulation to this effect (e.g. Article 6 s.2 of
Protocol no. 4 and Article 7 s.2 of Protocol No. 7).
In the Court's view, the consequences for the enforcement
of the Convention and the achievement of its aims would be so far reaching that a power to
this effect should have been expressly provided for. However, no such provision exists in
either Article 25 or Article 46.
This approach is confirmed by the subsequent practice of
Contracting Parties under these provisions. Since the entry into force of the Convention
until the present day, almost all of the thirty parties to the Convention, apart from the
respondent Government, have accepted the competence of the Commission and Court to examine
complaints without restrictions ratione loci or ratione materiae. The existence of such a
uniform and consistent State practice clearly rebuts the respondent Government's arguments
that restrictions attaching to Article 25 and Article 46 declarations must have been
envisaged by the drafters of the Convention in the light of practice under Article 36 of
the Statute of the International Court of Justice.
It was not contested that Article 46 of the Convention was
modelled on Article 36 of the Statute of the International Court which has been
interpreted as allowing restrictions. However, in the Court's view, it did not follow that
such restrictions on the acceptance of jurisdiction of the Court must also be permissible
under the Convention.
The fundamental difference in the role and purpose of the
respective tribunals, coupled with the existence of a practice of unconditional
acceptance, provides a compelling basis for distinguishing Convention practice from that
of the International Court.
Finally, the Court did not accept that the application of
Article 63 s.4, by analogy, provided support for the claim that a territorial restriction
was permissible.
Taking into consideration the character of the Convention,
the ordinary meaning of Articles 25 and 46 in their context and in the light of their
object and purpose and the practice of Contracting Parties, the Court concluded that the
restrictions ratione loci attached to Turkey's Article 25 and Article 46 declarations were
invalid.
[See paragraphs 65-89 of the judgment and point 3 of the
operative provisions. ]
3. The
validity of the Turkish declarations under Articles 25 and 46
The Court did not consider that the issue of severability
of the invalid parts of Turkey's declarations could be decided by reference to the
statements of her representatives expressed subsequent to the filing of the declarations.
In this connection, it observed that the respondent Government must have been aware, in
view of the consistent practice of Contracting Parties under Articles 25 and 46 to accept
unconditionally the competence of the Commission and Court, that the impugned restrictive
clauses were of questionable validity under the Convention system and might be deemed
impermissible by the Convention organs.
The subsequent reaction of various Contracting Parties to
the Turkish declarations provided convincing support to the above observation concerning
Turkey's awareness of the legal postion. That she, against this background, subsequently
filed declarations under both Articles 25 and 46 indicated a willingness on her part to
run the risk that the limitation clauses at issue would be declared invalid by the
Convention institutions without affecting the validity of the declarations
themselves.
The Court examined the text of the declarations and the
wording of the restrictions with a view to determining whether the impugned restrictions
could be severed from the instruments of acceptance or whether they formed an integral and
inseparable part of them. It considered that the impugned restrictions could be separated
from the remainder of the text leaving intact the acceptance of the optional
clauses.
The Court concluded that the declarations of 28 January
1987 and 22 January 1990 under Articles 25 and 46 contain valid acceptances of the
competence of the Commission and Court.
[See paragraphs 90-98 of the judgment and point 3 of the
operative provisions.]
F.
Objection Ratione Temporis
The Court considered that the correct interpretation and
application of the restrictions ratione temporis, in the Turkish declarations under
Articles 25 and 46, and the notion of continuing violations of the Convention, raised
difficult legal and factual questions.
It considered that on the present state of the file it had
not sufficient elements enabling it to decide these questions. Moreover, they were so
closely connected to the merits of the case that they should not be decided at the present
phase of the procedure. It therefore decided to join this objection to the merits.
[See paragraphs 99-105 of the judgment and point 4 of the
operative provisions.]
In accordance with the Convention and the Rules of Court,
judgment was given by a Grand Chamber composed of eighteen judges, namely Mr R. Ryssdal
(Norwegian), President, Mr R. Bernhardt (German), Mr F. Golcuklu (Turkish), Mr L. -E.
Pettiti (French), Mr B. Walsh (Irish), Mr R. Macdonald (Canadian), Mr A. Spielmann
(Luxemburger), Mr S.K. Martens (Dutch), Mrs E. Palm (Swedish), Mr R. Pekkanen (Finnish),
Mr A.N. Loizou (Cypriot), Mr J.M. Morenilla (Spanish), Mr A.B. Baka (Hungarian), Mr M. A.
Lopes Rocha (Portuguese), Mr L. Wildhaber (Swiss), Mr G. Mifsud Bonnici (Maltese), Mr p.
Jambrek (Slovenian), and Mr U. Lohmus (Estonian), Judges, and also of Mr H. Petzold,
Registrar.
A joint dissenting opinion by two judges, as well as their
separate dissenting opinions, are annexed to the judgment.
For further information, reference is made to the text of
the judgment, which is available on request and will be published shortly as volume 310 of
Series A of the Publications of the Court (obtainable from Carl Heymanns Verlag KG,
Luxemburger Strasse 449, D - 50939, Koln).
Subject to his duty of discretion, the Registrar is
responsible under the Rules of Court for replying to requests for information concerning
the work of the Court, and in particular to enquiries from the press.
Registry of the European Court of Human Rights
Registry contact: Montserrat ENRICH/MAS -
External Relations - F - 67075 Strasbourg Cedex
Telephone: 88 41 23 95; Fax: 88 41 27 91

A P P E N
D I X
Article 46 of the Convention
"1. Any of the High Contracting Parties may at any
time declare that it recognises as compulsory ipso facto and without special agreement the
jurisdiction of the Court in all matters concerning the interpretation and application of
the £ Convention.
2. The declarations referred to above may be made
unconditionally or on condition of reciprocity on the part of several or certain other
High Contracting Parties or for a specified period.
3. These declarations shall be deposited with the
Secretary General of the Council of Europe who shall transmit copies thereof to the High
Contracting Parties."
Turkey's Article 46
Declaration of 22 January 1990
"On behalf of the Government of the Republic of
Turkey and acting in accordance with Article 46 of the European Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, I hereby declare as follows:
The Government of the Republic of Turkey acting in
accordance with Article 46 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
and Fundamental Freedoms, hereby recognises as compulsory ipso facto and without special
agreement the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights in all matters concerning
the interpretation and application of the Convention which relate to the exercise of
jurisdiction within the meaning of Article 1 of the Convention, performed within the
boundaries of the national territory of the Republic of Turkey, and provided further that
such matters have previously been examined by the Commission within the power conferred
upon it by Turkey.
This declaration is made on condition of reciprocity,
including reciprocity of obligations assumed under the Convention. It is valid for a
period of 3 years as from the date of its deposit and extends to matters raised in respect
of facts, including judgments which are based on such facts which have occurred subsequent
to the date of deposit of the present Declaration." |