STANKOV AND UNITED MACEDONIAN ORGANISATION "ILINDEN" v. BULGARIA
Doc ref: 29221/95;29225/95 • ECHR ID: 001-4313
Document date: June 29, 1998
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AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application No. 29221/95 Application No. 29225/95
by Boris STANKOV by United Macedonian
against Bulgaria Organisation "ILINDEN"
against Bulgaria
The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in private on
29 June 1998, the following members being present:
MM S. TRECHSEL, President
J.-C. GEUS
M.P. PELLONPÄÄ
E. BUSUTTIL
G. JÖRUNDSSON
A.S. GÖZÜBÜYÜK
A. WEITZEL
J.-C. SOYER
H. DANELIUS
Mrs G.H. THUNE
MM F. MARTINEZ
C.L. ROZAKIS
Mrs J. LIDDY
MM L. LOUCAIDES
M.A. NOWICKI
I. CABRAL BARRETO
N. BRATZA
I. BÉKÉS
J. MUCHA
D. SVÁBY
G. RESS
A. PERENIC
C. BÎRSAN
P. LORENZEN
K. HERNDL
E. BIELIUNAS
E.A. ALKEMA
M. VILA AMIGÓ
Mrs M. HION
MM R. NICOLINI
Mr M. de SALVIA, Secretary to the Commission
Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;
Having regard to the applications nos. 29221/95 by Boris Stankov
and 29225/95 by United Macedonian Organisation "ILINDEN" and others
against Bulgaria, both introduced on 29 July 1994 and registered on
10 November 1995;
Having regard to:
- the reports provided for in Rule 47 of the Rules of Procedure of
the Commission;
- the observations submitted by the respondent Government on
3 February 1997 and the observations in reply submitted by the
applicants on 26 November 1997; the additional observations
submitted by the Government on 12 March 1998 and the applicants'
reply of 8 April 1998; the additional observations submitted by
the Government on 19 June 1998;
Having deliberated;
Decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The applicant in application No. 29225/95 is the United
Macedonian Organisation "Ilinden" ("the applicant association"). The
remaining applicant in application No. 29221/95 is Mr Boris Stankov
("the second applicant"), a Bulgarian citizen born in 1926 and residing
in Petrich.
The applicants are represented by Mr Iordan Kostadinov Ivanov,
a Bulgarian citizen residing in Sandanski, President of the applicant
association.
A. Particular circumstances of the case
The facts of the case as submitted by the applicants may be
summarised as follows.
Background of the case
The United Macedonian Organisation "Ilinden" was founded on
14 April 1990. It applied for but was refused registration. In the
proceedings for registration the Blagoevgrad Regional Court (Okrazhen
sad) and the Supreme Court (Varhoven sad) examined the statute of the
association, its programme and other written evidence such as, inter
alia, an appeal to the population of Pirin Macedonia distributed by the
applicant association and the text of its public address on the
occasion of the "Day of the Bulgarian Alphabet".
In their decisions of July and November 1990 and March 1991 the
courts found that the applicant association's aims were directed
against the unity of the nation, that it advocated national and ethnic
hatred, and that it was dangerous for the territorial integrity of
Bulgaria. Therefore, its registration would be contrary to Sections
3, 8 and 52 para. 3 of the Constitution of 1971, as in force at the
time. Thus, according to its programme and as it transpired from its
submissions to the courts, the aims of the association included inter
alia the "recognition of the Macedonian minority in Bulgaria", the
"political development of Macedonia" and the "united, independent
Macedonian state". Moreover, the association was advocating enmity and
rejection. In its appeal to the Supreme Court it had stated that "the
Macedonian people would not accept Bulgarian, Greek or Serbian rule".
The formal declaration, contained in the applicant association's
statute, that it would not infringe the territorial integrity of
Bulgaria, appeared inconsistent with the remaining material.
Following the refusal of registration the attempts of the
applicant association to organise marches and meetings and other public
events were prevented by the authorities.
Prohibitions against the holding of marches and meetings
In July 1994 Mr Stankov as President of the Petrich branch of the
applicant association requested the mayor of Petrich to authorise
a march and a meeting to be held on 31 July 1994 in commemoration of
a historical event. On 13 July 1994 permission was refused by the
mayor. The applicant association appealed to the Petrich District
Court (Raionen sad). On 16 July 1994 the Court dismissed the appeal.
The Court found that since the applicant association was banned, there
were well-founded fears that the march would endanger the public order
and the rights and freedoms of others. Despite the refusal of the
authorities, on 31 July 1994 some members of the applicant association
(120-150 according to the applicants' assessment) attempted to approach
the historical site but the police, who according the applicants were
heavily armed, blocked their way.
On 10 April 1995 the applicant association requested the mayor
of Sandanski to authorise a meeting to be held on 22 April 1995 at the
grave of Yane Sandanski at the Rozhen Monastery in commemoration of
a historical event. This was refused on 14 April 1995 as the applicant
association was not duly registered by the courts. On 15 April 1995
the applicant association appealed to the Sandanski District Court
stating inter alia that the Macedonian people were deprived of their
right to their own cultural life and that this was a violation of
international law. The Court allegedly did not examine the appeal.
The applicants submit that a group of supporters of the applicant
association who went to the Rozhen Monastery on 22 April 1995 were
ordered by the police to leave their cars in the nearby town of Melnik
and were transported to the Monastery by local buses. There they were
allowed to visit the grave, to lay a wreath and to light candles.
However, they were not allowed to bring to the site the placards,
banners and musical instruments which they carried and were not allowed
to hold speeches at the grave. The police allegedly took away the
ribbon attached to the wreath. The participants then celebrated the
event, without music, in the region of the Monastery but at a certain
distance from the grave.
In July 1995, as in previous years, the applicant association
again requested a permission to hold a commemoration march and
a meeting on 30 July 1995 at the historical site around Petrich. The
reasons for the refusals of the mayor of Petrich of 14 July 1995 and
of the Petrich District Court of 18 July 1995 were identical to those
contained in their decisions of July 1994.
On 8 April 1997 the applicant association informed the mayor of
Sandanski and the local police that they were organising a march and
a meeting to be held on 20 April 1997 at the Rozhen monastery in
commemoration of a historical event. On 11 April 1997 the mayor
refused to grant permission. He stated that permission for the
commemoration of the same historical event had been requested on
4 April 1997 by the director of the local high school. The mayor
further explained that the commemoration would be organised jointly by
the school and the municipality and that "every [person], individually,
could come".
On 15 April 1997 the applicant association appealed to the
Sandanski District Court against the mayor's refusal stating inter alia
that the mayor had not allowed them, "as a separate ethnic community",
to organise a march and a meeting at the tomb of their national hero.
On 17 April 1997 the President of the Sandanski District Court
issued an order leaving the appeal without consideration. The order
stated that the appeal had been submitted on behalf of an unregistered
organisation. On 18 April 1997 the District Court's Registry prepared
a form letter notifying the representative of the applicant association
of the President's order. The date on which this notification reached
the applicant association is disputed. The Government have submitted
a copy of a document which shows that a Ms. K., the daughter-in-law of
the person who was representing the applicant association, received the
notification on 1 July 1997. The applicants initially stated that they
had never received a response to their appeal of 15 April 1997 but
later admitted that on 5 May 1997 they had learned about the order of
17 April 1997.
As the deficiencies of the appeal were not remedied within the
statutory seven days' time-limit, on 5 May 1997 the President of the
Sandanski District Court ordered the return of the appeal. This order
was notified to the applicant association on 13 August 1997.
The applicants claim that on 20 April 1997 the police did not
allow a group of supporters of the applicant association to reach the
Rozhen monastery and that two persons who have not submitted
applications to the Commission were ill-treated. The applicants submit
that on 20 April 1997 only 13 students and two teachers from the local
high school arrived at the Rozhen monastery. They laid a wreath in the
presence of the police and left two minutes later.
On 14 July 1997 Mr Stankov as President of the association's
branch in Petrich requested permission for a march and a meeting at
a historical site in the outskirts of Petrich to be held on 2 August
1997. On 17 July 1997 the mayor refused the request, stating that the
applicant association was not "a legitimate organisation".
On 20 July 1997 the applicant association appealed to the Petrich
District Court against the refusal of the mayor stating inter alia that
there was no legal provision prohibiting marches and meetings organised
by organisations which are not "legitimate" and that the planned public
event was peaceful and did not endanger the public order.
By decision of 1 August 1997 the Petrich District Court dismissed
the appeal on the merits. The Court found that the applicant
association was not duly registered "in accordance with the laws of the
country" and that it was not shown that the persons who were acting on
behalf of the association were representing it in reality. As a
result, it was unclear who was organising the event and who would be
responsible for order during the march and the meeting under Sections
9 and 10 of the Law on Manifestations and Meetings. The Court
concluded that the lack of clarity as regards the organisers of
a public event posed a danger to public order and to the rights and
freedoms of others.
The applicants submit that on 2 August 1997 the police did not
allow a group of supporters of the applicant association to reach the
historical site around Petrich.
B. Relevant domestic law
a) Freedom of assembly under the Constitution of July 1991:
Section 43
"(1) Everyone shall have the right to peaceful and unarmed
assembly at meetings and manifestations.
(2) The procedure for organising and holding meetings and
manifestations shall be provided for by act of Parliament.
(3) Permission shall not be required for meetings to be
held indoors."
Section 44
"...
(2) Organisations whose activities are directed against the
sovereignty or the territorial integrity of the country or
against the unity of the nation, or aim at stirring racial,
national, ethnic or religious hatred, or at violating the rights
and freedoms of others, as well as organisations creating secret
or para-military structures, or which seek to achieve their aims
through violence, shall be prohibited."
b) Requirements for the organisation of a meeting or a
manifestation:
Law on Manifestations and Meetings of 1990
Section 2
"Meetings and manifestations may be organised by
individuals, associations, political and other public
organisations."
Section 6 para. 2
"(2) Every organiser [of] or participant [in a
manifestation or a meeting] shall be responsible for damage
caused through his or her fault during the [event]."
Section 8 para. 1
"Where a meeting is to be held outdoors the organisers
shall notify in writing the [respective] People's Council or
mayor's office not later than 48 hours before the beginning [of
the meeting] and shall indicate the [name of] the organiser, the
aim [of the meeting], and the place and time of the meeting."
Section 9 para. 1
" The organisers of the meeting shall take the measures
necessary to ensure the order during the event."
Section 10
"(1) The meeting shall be presided over by a president.
(2) The participants shall abide by the instructions of the
president concerning the preservation of [public] order ..."
c) Prohibitions on meetings and manifestations and appeals against
the prohibitions:
Law on Manifestations and Meetings of 1990
Section 12
"(1) Where the time or the place of the meeting or
manifestation, or the itinerary of the march, would create a
situation endangering public order or traffic safety, the
President of the Executive Committee of the People's Council, or
the mayor, respectively, shall propose their modification.
(2) The President of the Executive Committee of the
People's Council, or the mayor, shall be competent to prohibit
the holding of a meeting, of a march or of a manifestation,
where reliable information exists that:
1. it aims at the violent overturning of the
Constitutional public order or is directed against the
territorial integrity of the country;
2. it would endanger public order in the local
community;
...
4. it would breach the rights and freedoms of others.
(3) The prohibition shall be imposed by a written reasoned
act not later than 24 hours following the notification.
(4) The organiser of the meeting, march or manifestation
may appeal to the Executive Committee of the People's Council
against the prohibition referred to in the preceding paragraph.
The Executive Committee shall decide within 24 hours.
(5) Where the Executive Committee of the People's Council
has not decided within [this] time-limit, the march, meeting or
manifestation may proceed.
(6) In case the appeal has been dismissed the dispute shall
be referred to the respective District Court which shall decide
within five days. The Court's decision shall be final."
The Law on Manifestations and Meetings was adopted in 1990, when
the Constitution of 1971 was in force. Under the Constitution of 1971
the executive local state organs were the Executive Committees of the
district People's Councils (Izpulnitelni komiteti na obshtinskite
narodni saveti). The mayors referred to in some of the provisions of
the Law on Manifestations and Meetings were representatives of the
Executive Committee acting in villages and towns which were under the
jurisdiction of the respective People's Council.
The 1991 Constitution abolished the Executive Committees and
established the post of the mayor, elected by direct universal
suffrage, as the "organ of the executive power in the municipality"
(Section 139). The new municipal councils (obshtinski saveti), which
consist of elected councillors, are "organ[s] of local self-government"
(Section 138). Under Section 21 of the Law on Local Self-Government
and Local Administration (Zakon za mestnoto samoupravlenie i mestnata
administratzia) of 1991 the municipal councils adopt the local budget,
determine the local taxes, decide on the management of municipal
property, adopt building plans and perform other similar tasks. There
is no provision envisaging a possibility for a municipal council to
examine appeals against decisions of the mayor.
Under Section 27 para. 2 of the Administrative Procedure Act
(Zakon za administrativnoto proizvodstvo), read in conjunction with
Section 5 of the transitory provisions to this Act, the decisions of
the mayors are subject to appeal to the regional governor (oblasten
upravitel).
Under Section 35 para. 2 of the Administrative Procedure Act an
administrative act can be appealed against to a court either after the
exhaustion of the appeals to higher administrative organs, or after the
expiry of the time-limits for such appeals. According to the Supreme
Court's practice an appeal may be submitted directly to the courts,
without exhausting the possibility of lodging appeals with the higher
administrative organs (opred. No. 103 ot 20.10.1987 na V.S. III g.o.;
opred. No. 68 ot 16.4.1997 po adm.d. 1260/96 na V.A.S., Biul., kn. 7-
8/97, str. 32).
Section 120 para. 2 of the 1991 Constitution provides that all
administrative acts, except those expressly excluded by Act of
Parliament, are subject to judicial appeal.
Where a court orders that an appeal against an administrative
decision shall be returned to the sender for failure to remedy
a procedural omission, the court's order is subject to appeal to the
higher court within a seven days' time limit (Section 45 of the
Administrative Procedure Act in conjunction with Section 200 of the
Code of Civil Procedure (Grazhdansko-protzesualen kodeks).
At the relevant time a petition for review to the Supreme
Administrative Court could be submitted against a judgment of
a District Court pronounced in proceedings concerning an appeal against
an administrative decision (Sections 225-229 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, as in force until April 1998; Section 44 of the
Administrative Procedure Act as in force until December 1997).
COMPLAINTS
The applicants complain under Article 11 of the Convention of the
refusal of the authorities to allow the holding of marches and meetings
on 31 July 1994, 22 April and 30 July 1995, and on 20 April and
2 August 1997.
PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION
Mr Boris Stankov and the applicant association introduced their
complaints on 29 July 1994.
On 21 October 1996 the Commission decided to join applications
Nos. 299221, 29222, 29223, 29225 and 29226/95 and to communicate the
complaints of UMO "Ilinden" and of Mr Boris Stankov (which formed part
of applications Nos. 29221/95 and 29225/95) concerning the refusal of
the authorities to allow the holding of marches and meetings on 31 July
1994 and on 22 April and 30 July 1995. The Commission declared
inadmissible the remainder of the five joined applications.
The Government's written observations were submitted on
3 February 1997, after an extension of the time-limit fixed for that
purpose. The applicants replied on 26 November 1997, after extensions
of the time-limit.
On 7 March 1997 the Commission granted legal aid to Mr Stankov.
By letter dated 20 October 1997 the applicants submitted
additional complaints concerning the events in April, July and August
1997. This letter and the enclosed material was transmitted to the
Government on 13 January 1998. The Government commented on these
additional complaints by letter of 12 March 1998. The applicants
replied on 8 April 1998. On 23 May 1998 the Commission decided to
communicate the additional complaints and to examine them jointly with
the initial complaints. On 19 June 1998 the Government submitted
additional observations.
THE LAW
1. The Commission notes at the outset that by its partial decision
of 21 October 1996 it has declared inadmissible all complaints
registered under applications nos. 29222/95, 29223/95 and 29226/95 and
some of the complaints registered under applications nos. 29221/95 and
29225/95, the examination of the remainder of the latter two
applications having been adjourned. The Commission takes note,
therefore, that applications nos. 29222/95, 29223/95 and 29226/95 are
to be considered disjoined and declared inadmissible on 21 October
1996.
2. The applicants complain under Article 11 (Art. 11) of the
Convention of the refusal of the authorities to allow the holding of
marches and meetings on 31 July 1994, 22 April and 30 July 1995 and on
20 April and 2 August 1997.
Article 11 (Art. 11) of the Convention, insofar as relevant,
provides as follows:
"1. Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and
to freedom of association with others ...
2. No restrictions shall be placed on the exercise of these
rights other than such as are prescribed by law and are necessary
in a democratic society in the interests of national security or
public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the
protection of health or morals or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others..."
a) The Government submit that the applicants have concealed certain
facts in an attempt to mislead the Commission and that therefore the
application must be rejected as an abuse of the right to petition.
Thus, the applicants stated that they had never received a response
from the District Court to their appeal of 15 April 1997, whereas in
reality they had been duly informed of the decisions taken on this
appeal.
The applicants have not reacted to the Government's allegation
that the application was an abuse of the right to petition. They state
nevertheless that it was only on 5 May 1997, well after the date of the
planned commemoration, that they learned about the order of the
President of the District Court of 17 April 1997.
The Commission considers that the Government's objection could
only be accepted if it were clear that the application was based on
untrue facts in a deliberate attempt to mislead the Commission.
However, this is far from clear at this stage of the proceedings
(No. 24760/94, Dec. 27.6.96, D.R. 86, p. 54; Eur. Court HR, Akdivar
v. Turkey judgment of 16 September 1996, Reports of judgments and
decisions 1996-IV, No. 15, pp. 1210, 1211, paras. 53 and 54).
It follows that the application cannot be regarded as an abuse
of the right of petition within the meaning of Article 27 para. 2
(Art. 27-2) of the Convention and cannot be declared inadmissible on
this ground.
b) The Government dispute the locus standi of the applicant
association to bring an application under Article 25 (Art. 25) of the
Convention. They submit that since this organisation has been refused
registration in Bulgaria, it has no standing as a legal entity under
Bulgarian law and, consequently, it may not be considered to have
standing before the Commission. In the Government's view the applicant
association cannot be considered a "non-governmental organisation"
within the meaning of Article 25 (Art. 25) of the Convention.
Furthermore, the Government insist that no reference to the non-
existent United Macedonian Organisation "Ilinden" should be made in the
Commission's decisions. The Government do not dispute the locus standi
of the second applicant, Mr Boris Stankov.
The applicant association replies that the lack of registration
does not mean that it is an "illegal" association or that it does not
exist. Without being registered an association has a number of rights,
including the right to hold meetings. Many unregistered associations
exist in Bulgaria. Also, Article 25 (Art. 25) of the Convention does
not limit the right of petition to those associations which are
registered. Finally, the applicant association may choose its own name
and it is not for the Government to decide what name it should bear.
The Commission recalls its case-law in cases concerning non-
governmental organisations which have been refused registration or have
been dissolved. In such cases, where the complaints concerned inter
alia the very fact of the dissolution or of the refusal of
registration, the Commission did not question the applicants' locus
standi as "non-governmental organisations" within the meaning of
Article 25 (Art. 25) of the Convention (cf. No. 18874/91, Dec. 12.1.94,
D.R. 76, p. 44; Nos. 19392/92 and 21237/93, Dec. 6.12.94, pending
before the Court; No. 23892/94, Dec. 16.10.95, D.R. 83, p. 57; No.
27608/95, Dec. 29.11.95; No. 28626/95, Dec. 3.7.97; No. 30985/96, Dec.
8.9.97). Indeed, any other solution would to a substantial degree
restrict the right of non-governmental organisations to petition under
Article 25 (Art. 25) of the Convention.
The Government's argument in the present case is in essence that
where a non-governmental organisation has no legal standing under
domestic law and where it is not open to the Commission to examine the
conformity with the Convention of the decision which has led to such
legal situation, the non-governmental organisation has no standing to
submit a petition in respect of acts of the authorities posterior to
that decision.
However, the Commission notes that in the present case the
applicant association has been refused registration and has not been
"dissolved", and that there is nothing to suggest that a non-registered
association such as the applicant association had no right under
Bulgarian law to function and to perform its activities.
Furthermore, the Commission recalls its case-law according to
which the refusal of registration of an association does not amount to
an interference with the association's right to freedom of assembly if
the association is able to perform its activities without
a registration (No. 18874/91, Dec. 12.1.94, D.R. 76, p. 44).
It follows that in case the authorities seek to suppress the activities
of such an association following the refusal of registration there must
be a possibility for it to submit a complaint under Article 11
(Art. 11) of the Convention.
In any event, the Commission notes that in the present case the
domestic authorities on several occasions received requests and appeals
by the applicant association, as represented by its President or by the
second applicant, and examined them on the merits, thus impliedly
accepting the applicant association's locus standi to complain about
the prohibition against the holding of marches and meetings. In these
circumstances the Commission accepts the procedural capacity of the
applicant association, as represented by its President, to bring an
application to the Commission (cf., mutatis mutandis, Eur. Court HR,
Catholic Church of Canea v. Greece judgment of 16 December 1997,
para. 31, to be published in Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1997;
No. 13712/88, Dec. 2.4.90 and No. 20966/92, Dec. 30.11.94).
It follows that the Government's objection that the applicant
association has no legal standing before the Commission must be
rejected and that, therefore, the application cannot be declared
inadmissible under Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention on
this ground.
c) In their initial observations the Government did not raise an
objection in respect of the exhaustion of all domestic remedies.
However, in their additional observations, which deal with the
prohibitions on marches and meetings on 20 April and 2 August 1997, the
Government submit that the applicants have not complied with the rule
of exhaustion of all domestic remedies.
In their additional observations of 12 March 1998, referring to
Section 35 para. 2 of the Administrative Procedure Act and Section 12
para. 4 of the Law on Manifestations and Meetings, the Government
stated that the acts of the mayors were subject to appeal to the
respective municipal council. In their additional observations of
19 June 1998 the Government stated that under Section 27 para. 2 of the
Administrative Procedure Act, read in conjunction with Section 5 of the
transitory provisions to this Act, the decisions of the mayors were
subject to appeal to the regional governor.
The Government also state that the applicants should not have
seized the District Court before having exhausted the administrative
avenue of appeal. They maintain that a judicial appeal submitted prior
to the exhaustion of the administrative avenue of appeal or,
alternatively, prior to the expiry of the time-limits for such appeals,
is inadmissible under Bulgarian law. Thus, in the applicants' case,
the district courts decided wrongly on the occasions where they
examined the applicants' appeals on the merits. Also, the
administrative avenue of appeal is a better remedy as it offers
a possibility to challenge not only the impugned decision's lawfulness,
but also the exercise of discretionary power by the administrative
body.
Furthermore, the decisions of the District Courts on the merits
of the applicants' appeals could be challenged before the Supreme
Administrative Court by means of petitions for review (molba za pregled
po reda na nadzora). The Bulgarian review proceedings have been
considered by the Commission as a remedy to be exhausted for purposes
of Article 26 (Art. 26) of the Convention (Nos. 24571 and 24572/94,
Dec. 28.6.95, D.R. 82, p. 85; No. 24140/94, Dec. 22.2.95, unpublished).
The Government acknowledge that a decision of the Supreme
Administrative Court in a case such as the applicants' would not have
provided a possibility to hold the prohibited meeting. However, a
decision of the Supreme Administrative Court in the applicants' favour
would have had jurisprudential value and would have dealt with the
question whether or not the applicants' rights had been violated.
Thus, the Supreme Administrative Court would have provided the remedy
which the applicants now seek from the Convention organs.
The Government also state that the order of the President of the
Sandanski District Court of 17 April 1997 refusing on procedural
grounds to deal with the applicants' appeal was subject to appeal to
the Regional Court.
The applicants reply that the 1991 Constitution abolished the
Executive Committees of the People's Councils, referred to in
Section 12 para. 4 of the Law on Manifestations and Meetings. It is
therefore evident that the applicants could not appeal to an
administrative body which did not exist. Furthermore, the Law on
Administrative Procedure provides for a possibility to appeal against
an administrative act directly to a court.
As regards the possibility to submit to the Supreme
Administrative Court a petition for review the applicants state that
this may be an effective remedy in cases concerning, for example,
property disputes, but not in circumstances where, as in their case,
the District Court confirmed prohibitions against meetings to be held
a day or two following the court's judgment. The review proceedings
before the Supreme Administrative Court normally last for a year or
more. Furthermore, the review proceedings cannot lead to an award of
compensation for the violation of the applicants' rights. Also, the
review proceedings have never been used, as far as the applicants are
informed, in cases pertaining to the application of the Law on
Manifestations and Meetings.
The applicants also maintain that an appeal to the Regional Court
against the orders of the President of the Sandanski District Court
leaving without consideration the association's appeal of 15 April 1997
is not an effective remedy.
The Commission considers that the Government's objection
concerning the exhaustion of domestic remedies, albeit raised solely
in the context of their submissions about the prohibitions on marches
and manifestations on 20 April and 2 August 1997, is submitted in
general terms and must therefore be regarded as a general objection
concerning all prohibitions complained of.
The Commission recalls that under Article 26 (Art. 26) of the
Convention normal recourse should be had by an applicant to remedies
which are available and sufficient to afford redress in respect of the
breaches alleged. The existence of the remedies in question must be
sufficiently certain not only in theory but also in practice, failing
which they will lack the requisite accessibility and effectiveness.
In the area of exhaustion of domestic remedies there is
a distribution of the burden of proof. It is incumbent on the
Government claiming non-exhaustion to satisfy the Convention organs
that the remedy was an effective one available in theory and in
practice at the relevant time, that is to say, that it was accessible,
was one which was capable of providing redress in respect of the
applicant's complaints and offered reasonable prospects of success.
However, once this burden of proof has been satisfied it falls to the
applicant to establish that the remedy advanced by the Government was
in fact exhausted or was for some reason inadequate and ineffective in
the particular circumstances of the case or that there existed special
circumstances absolving him or her from the requirement to exhaust.
It must be further emphasised that the application of the rule
of exhaustion must make due allowance for the fact that it is being
applied in the context of machinery for the protection of human rights
that the Contracting Parties have agreed to set up. Accordingly,
Article 26 (Art. 26) must be applied with some degree of flexibility
and without excessive formalism (Eur. Court HR, Akdivar v. Turkey
judgment, loc. cit., paras. 66 and 68).
Insofar as the Government refer to Section 12 para. 4 of the Law
on Manifestations and Meetings which provides for an appeal to the
Executive Committee of the People's Council, the Commission notes that
no such state organ has existed in Bulgaria since 1991. The Government
initially suggested that after the abolition of the Executive
Committees the power to examine appeals resided with the local
municipal councils. However, the Commission notes that under the
relevant law the municipal councils do not act as judicial bodies and
are not competent to examine appeals. The Government have not provided
any example which would lead to a different conclusion.
It is true that under Section 27 para. 2 of the Administrative
Procedure Act, read in conjunction with Section 5 of the transitory
provisions to this Act, the decisions of the mayors are subject to
appeal to the regional governor.
However, the Commission notes that contrary to the Government's
assertion, the practice of the Supreme Court confirms that the
Administrative Procedure Act allows an appeal to a court against an
administrative act without exhaustion of the administrative avenue of
appeal. Therefore, despite the existence of further possibilities for
administrative appeals against the mayors' decisions, the applicants
were not required to resort to them. It should be noted that on
several occasions the District Courts admitted for examination the
applicants' appeals against the mayors' prohibitions, without requiring
the exhaustion of any administrative remedy.
Finally, it is also true that on the occasions where the District
Courts examined their appeals, the applicants had the theoretical
possibility to submit to the Supreme Administrative Court petitions for
review. Also, the order of the President of the Sandanski District
Court of 5 May 1997, which barred the examination of the case before
it on procedural grounds, was apparently subject to appeal on
procedural points to the Regional Court.
However, the Government have not provided any example of
a petition for review relating to matters under the Law on
Manifestation and Meetings having been examined by the Supreme
Administrative Court. Also, it is undisputed that had the applicants
attempted the remedies suggested by the Government, the proceedings
would have lasted for at least several months and any favourable
outcome would have resulted long after the date of a planned meeting
or manifestation. The Commission, therefore, is not persuaded that
these theoretical remedies could provide adequate redress in respect
of the alleged violations of the Convention.
The Commission finds, accordingly, that the Government's
objections as regards the exhaustion of domestic remedies must be
rejected and that, therefore, the application cannot be declared
inadmissible under Article 27 para. 3 (Art. 27-3) of the Convention.
d) The Government further maintain that the application is
inadmissible because the refusals of the authorities to allow the
holding of marches and meetings were justified on several grounds.
Firstly, the Government state that under Section 2 of the Law on
Manifestations and Meetings the organisers of such public events must
be "individuals, associations, political and other public
organisations", whereas the applicant association is not registered and
its activities are not in conformity with Bulgarian law. This was the
ground for some of the refusals. The Government submit, without
relying on a particular example, that on several occasions requests to
organise meetings have been granted where they had been submitted by
members of the applicant association in their individual capacity.
Secondly, the Government maintain that the refusals were
justified under Sections 39 and 44 of the Constitution. The Government
submit a copy of a poster distributed by the applicant association
which contains an invitation to the meeting planned for 31 July 1994
and depicts a schematic map where the territory of Macedonia is shown
to encompass parts of the territory of Bulgaria, Greece and Albania.
The Government submit a copy of a police report which states that
during meetings held by the applicant association in 1990 and 1991
calls had been launched for the recognition of the Macedonian minority
in Bulgaria, for cultural autonomy, as well as for independence and for
greater Macedonia. The Government also submit a copy of a newspaper
published in FYROM in 1997, which reports that the applicant
association had announced 10 August 1998 as the date on which Pirin
Macedonia would declare its independence from Bulgaria. The Government
submit that these documents emanating from the applicant association
openly propagate against the sovereignty and the territorial integrity
of the country and spread enmity and national and ethnic hatred.
Thirdly, in the Government's view the meetings and marches posed
a danger to public order and their prohibition was therefore justified
under Section 12 of the Law on Manifestations and Meetings. The
Government submit that the historical site in the outskirts of Petrich
is a place visited by many tourists, especially on a Sunday in the
summer. Therefore it was not appropriate to allow meetings to be held
there. Also, as regards the marches and meetings at the Rozhen
Monastery near Sandanski, the Government state that at the same place
and at the same time meetings and marches were organised by the local
authorities and by other non-governmental organisations. The
Government further submit that the concern for the public order was not
unjustified because in the past there had been clashes between
supporters of the applicant association and other persons. In support
of this statement the Government submit a copy of a police report which
states that during a meeting held by the applicant association in 1991,
tension had arisen due to the statements made at the meeting, and that
a prominent politician was splashed with beer on his face.
The Government emphasize that all requests for the holding of
meetings and marches were made by the applicant association, as an
organisation. The Government clarify that the applicants were informed
by the local authorities that if they wished to visit the historical
sites and to commemorate the historical events as individuals they
could do so provided that they did not carry their slogans and posters.
The applicants reply that the position of the Government
discloses the lack of clarity about the legal grounds of the
prohibitions of meetings and marches organised by the applicant
association. Thus, the Government now submit arguments which were not
relied upon by the local authorities in their decisions refusing
permission. Also, the grounds for refusing examination of the appeals
on procedural grounds were changing constantly which reveals that the
authorities would resort to "tricks" to avoid addressing the
substantive issues. All this confusion demonstrates, in the
applicants' view, that the prohibitions were a part of the consistent
administrative practice of the authorities of all levels to suppress
the rights of the Macedonians.
The applicants state that the lack of registration of the
applicant association cannot be a valid argument for the prohibition
of the meetings and marches. Thus, the Law on Manifestations and
Meetings contains no requirement that a notification for a public
event, and an appeal against a prohibition, must originate from
a registered legal person.
The applicants submit that their gatherings have always been
peaceful and that there have never been clashes with other persons.
Thus, a meeting held at the Rozhen Monastery in 1990, prior to the
beginning of the policy of systematic prohibitions, went without any
problems. The gatherings in commemoration of historical events usually
began with a speech, followed by reading of poems and then folk music
and dances. The applicants submit that it has always been the police
who created problems and ill-treated the demonstrators.
The applicants dismiss as frivolous the arguments that the
prohibitions were necessary in view of the danger that tourists would
be disturbed or because the local authorities or other organisations
were holding meetings in the same places and on the same dates. They
submit that on 31 July 1994, when the supporters of the applicant
association were prevented from approaching the historical site near
Petrich, the police had sealed off the whole area, not letting anyone
pass. Therefore, there were no tourists around. Also, the police were
not checking identity documents and had no means to know who was
a tourist and who was a member of UMO Ilinden.
The applicants submit in respect of the commemoration on 20 April
1997, when thirteen school children came to lay a wreath, that it is
unclear why two commemorations could not take place simultaneously or
one shortly after the other. This would not have posed a threat to the
public order. The position of the Government that any member of the
applicant association could attend the commemoration "in an individual
capacity" is no answer to the applicants' complaints which concern
their freedom of assembly.
The applicants submit that even if the authorities had reasons
to believe that the meetings and marches would meet opposition by other
people, it was their duty to protect the applicant association's right
to counter-demonstrate, as defined in the Court's case-law.
The applicants further argue that the demonstrations did not pose
any threat to the national security and the territorial integrity of
the country as the demonstrators never carried arms or threatened
anyone. The applicants submit that speeches, music and dances cannot
amount to attempts to forcibly change the established constitutional
order or to incitement to enmity or hatred. If the demonstrators were
responsible for such acts, the authorities could have brought criminal
proceedings against them. However, no such proceedings have been
brought.
Having examined the complaints of the applicant association and
of Mr Stankov under Article 11 (Art. 11) of the Convention concerning
the prohibitions against holding meetings and marches on 31 July 1994,
22 April and 30 July 1995, and on 20 April and 2 August 1997, the
Commission finds that they raise serious questions of fact and law
which are of such complexity that their determination should depend on
an examination of the merits. This part of the applications cannot,
therefore, be regarded as manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of
Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention, and no other grounds
for declaring it inadmissible have been established.
For these reasons, the Commission, by a majority,
DECLARES THE REMAINDER OF THE APPLICATIONS ADMISSIBLE, without
prejudging the merits.
M. de SALVIA S. TRECHSEL
Secretary President
to the Commission of the Commission
LEXI - AI Legal Assistant
