A. P. v. AUSTRIADISSENTING OPINION OF MR. E.A. ALKEMA
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Document date: October 15, 1996
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DISSENTING OPINION OF MR. E.A. ALKEMA
I regret not to be able to agree with the Commission's majority
for the following reasons.
The applicant complains that he was discriminated since he was
denied parental leave payments and relies on Article 8 in conjunction
with Article 14 of the Convention.
The Convention does not guarantee a right to parental leave
payments as such. Nevertheless, for the reasons set out in the Report,
the case comes within the scope of both provisions. Moreover, on
similar grounds, Article 5 of Protocol No. 7, securing equality of
rights to spouses in their relations with their children, might be
applicable. However, neither the applicant nor the majority refer to
this Protocol, although it is in force for Austria since
1 November 1988.
For discrimination to be established it is, according to the
case-law, necessary to test whether the categories of persons are in
an analogous position, whether the aim of the differentiation is
legitimate and whether the means used are proportionate.
It may be noted first that here the distinction is drawn between
mothers and fathers, i.e. between parents only, and that the leave
payments are not available for other relatives e.g. grandparents
(cf. Article 26 (2) of the Convention of the Rights of the Child 1989;
ratified by Austria in August 1992). Furthermore, it may be noted that
the Court with regard to matters of parenthood does not require a
strict equality between the mother and the father of the child
(Eur. Court H.R., Rasmussen v. Denmark judgment of 28 November 1984,
Series A no. 87, p. 15, paras. 40-42).
It may be added that the idea of public support to both parents
for leave in order to take care of their children is relatively young.
It was laid down in general terms as lately as 1989 in Article 19 (2)
of the Convention for the Protection of the Child. Until then, at
least in international law, the emphasis was rather on protecting the
mother and child (see e.g. Article 17 of the European Social Charter).
Apparently, notions with respect to this matter are evolving.
Usually the Court will apply a strict scrutiny in matters of
discrimination based on sex. A case in point is Eur. Court H.R.,
Abdulaziz and others v. the United Kingdom judgment of 28 May 1984,
Series A no. 94, p. 37, para. 78. Yet, in that case the Court was
inclined to uphold the impugned difference in treatment if it were
established that the impact of immigrant women on the labour market
would have been proved to be important (loc. cit., para. 79). This and
the considerations mentioned before militate in favour of a flexible
test with regard to discrimination in the instant case.
In my opinion the introduction in 1989 of the leave payment for
mothers only cannot be said to be illegitimate. At the material time
there was certainly no common standard among the laws of Contracting
States (Eur. Court H.R., Rasmussen v. Denmark judgment, loc. cit.,
p. 15, para. 40).
Neither is there disproportionality with regard to the difference
arising between the applicant and other parents after 1 January 1990,
when the law abolished the difference in treatment between fathers and
mothers for children born as from that same date. In matters of social
security and of social benefits the fixing of certain dates for the
entitlement to those benefits is hardly avoidable. There is no
indication that this date was fixed arbitrarily. Besides, introducing
parental leave for newly born children seems rational in view of the
special care required by very young children.
It can be concluded that the impugned legislation stayed well
within the margin of appreciation to be applied, also with respect to
Article 14 (Eur. Court H.R., Rasmussen v. Denmark judgment, loc. cit.,
p. 15, para. 40), the more so since that legislation affected the
applicant a short period only (less than one year).
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