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THE BELGIAN "VAGRANCY" CASES

Doc ref: 2832/66;2835/66;2899/66 • ECHR ID: 001-55397

Document date: January 19, 1972

  • Inbound citations: 2
  • Cited paragraphs: 0
  • Outbound citations: 0

THE BELGIAN "VAGRANCY" CASES

Doc ref: 2832/66;2835/66;2899/66 • ECHR ID: 001-55397

Document date: January 19, 1972

Cited paragraphs only



The Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe has expressed

satisfaction with the recent amendments to Belgium's Vagrancy Act,

designed to ensure the application of the Council's Human Rights

Convention; the Committee was considering the execution of a judgment

of the European Court of Human Rights which had ruled that part of the

Belgian Vagrancy Act of 1891 was in breach of the Convention.

The Committee of Ministers was acting in accordance with Article 54

(art. 54) of the Convention on Human Rights which provides that "the

judgment of the Court shall be transmitted to the Committee of

Ministers, which shall supervise its execution".

In its judgment of 18 June 1971, in the so-called Belgian "Vagrancy"

Cases, the Court held, inter alia, by nine votes to seven, that there

had been a breach in this case by Belgium of paragraph 4 of Article 5

(art. 5-4) of the European Convention on Human Rights.  This paragraph

provides that anyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or

detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which the

lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court; in

this case, the applicants, three Belgian nationals who had been

detained under the Vagrancy Act of 1891, had no remedy open to them

before a court against the decisions ordering their detention.

The Court decided that they did not enjoy the guarantees set forth in

Article 5 (4) (art. 5-4) and reserved their right, should the occasion

arise, to apply for just satisfaction on this point.  Article 50

(art. 50) of the Convention empowers the Court, in case of violation,

to award in certain circumstances, "just satisfaction" to the injured

party; in fact the Court will be called upon in the near future to

consider a request for compensation made by the applicants.

The Committee of Ministers was informed by the Permanent Representative

of Belgium that a law was enacted in Belgium on 6 August 1971 amending

the Vagrancy Act of 27 November 1891 and that this new law, which came

into force on 4 September 1971, gave to persons detained for vagrancy

a right of appeal to a court of law.  By a transitional provision,

this remedy was also made available to persons being detained at the

time when the new law entered into force.

The Committee of Ministers took note of the new law and expressed its

satisfaction with the legislative measures introduced by the Belgian

authorities with a view to ensuring the application of the European

Convention on Human Rights in Belgium.

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