OEA/Ser.L/V/II.98
REPORT Nº 18/98
CASES 11.285 (EDSON DAMIÃO CALIXTO)
& 11.290 (ROSELANDIO BORGES SERRANO)
BRAZIL*
February 21, 1998
1. In
February, 1994, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the
"Commission", received two petitions directed against the Federal
Republic of Brazil, "Brazil" or "State of Brazil", accusing
military police in the state of Pernambuco of the attempted murder of two
juveniles, and the judicial authorities of the state of Pernambuco of failure to
provide due guarantees and judicial protection.
The petitions allege that these offenses constitute violations of rights
guaranteed in Article I (right to life, liberty, personal security, and physical
integrity) of the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, the
"Declaration", Article 8 (right to a fair trial) and 25 (right to
judicial protection) of the American Convention on Human Rights, the
"Convention", and Article 1(1) thereof (obligation to respect and
ensure the rights recognized in the Convention). The Commission decided to combine the two cases with a view
to preparing a single report. After
due analysis, the Commission decided to declare both cases admissible.
Case 11.285 (Edson Damiao Calixto)
I.
BACKGROUND
2. According
to this petition, Edson Damião Calixto, age 14, was shot in the back by three
state military police officers in Recife, Pernambuco, on the night of December
28, 1991; the shooting left him paralyzed from the waist down.
3. The
petition stated that Edson was detained for allegedly having robbed a bakery.
The military police officers took the juvenile to an isolated spot where
they beat him and shot him five times in the back for refusing to confess to the
crime and for refusing to implicate others. They then threw him on a garbage dump. Although he was later taken to a hospital, operated on, and
ultimately survived, he was left permanently paralyzed.
4. On
December 30, 1991, the Civil Police instituted an inquiry to investigate the
case. By late January they had
compiled sufficient evidence of the state police officers' involvement and the
case was referred to the military courts since only military courts have
jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute crimes committed by military police in
the line of duty. The inquiry
concluded on October 18, 1993 with a decision to indict the three military
police officers: Antonio Pedro da Silva, Edvaldo Santiago de Azevedo and
Josenildo José Caldas Lins. Although
the trial was set for February 1994, none of the officers was in custody at that
time. According to the petition,
there was little likelihood of their being convicted and imprisoned.
5. The
petitioners requested the exception allowed under Article 46(2)(c) of the
Convention, i.e., that the case be admitted due to unwarranted delay in
rendering a final judgment, even without the remedies under domestic law having
been exhausted; they further requested that, on account of these acts committed
by police officers of the state of Pernambuco, Brazil be condemned for violating
Articles I (right to life, liberty, personal security and physical integrity),
25 (right of protection against arbitrary arrest) and 26 (right to due process
of law) of the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, inasmuch as
the crime occurred before Brazil became a party to the American Convention on
Human Rights, and Articles 8(1) and 25(1) (right to judicial protection) of the
Convention, as these alleged violations occurred after Brazil ratified the
Convention.
II.
PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION
6. The
Commission received the petition in February, 1994.
In August 1994, the Government of Brazil replied that Brazilian law
enforcement was determined to investigate the events surrounding this incident
and that federal and state authorities in the executive and judicial branches of
government were conducting inquiries in their respective areas of jurisdiction
to ascertain the facts and the identity of those responsible.
Given the complexity and breadth of the inquiries underway, which
directly involved Pernambucan state authorities, it requested and was granted a
30-day extension.
7. In
September 1994, the petitioners sent additional information and pointed out,
first, that the Brazilian Government had not replied since May 1994.
The petitioners further alleged that, although the military police
officers had been indicted in October 1993, no witness had as yet been called to
testify; they also charged that the Government had failed to respond to the
administrative suit for damages for Edson, who was paralyzed from the waist down
for the rest of his life.
8. In
September and again in October, the Brazilian Government requested two
additional 30-day extensions, which were granted.
9. Following
these extensions, in November 1994, the Government replied that the Brazilian
authorities were diligently pursuing satisfactory solutions to the most serious
cases of human rights violations in the country.
Because of the importance attached to the inter-American system for the
protection of human rights and, in particular, its determination to cooperate
with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs had forwarded the Commission's request for information on the petition
relating to Edson Damião Calixto to the appropriate federal and state
authorities. According to
information received from the Pernambucan state government and from the Council
for the Defense of Human Rights of the Ministry of Justice, internal legal
proceedings had been instituted to punish those responsible for the human rights
violation in the instant case.
10. The
Government reported that on December 30, 1991, the State Justice Department
requested that a police inquiry be instituted.
On January 6, 1992, the Juvenile Police Department of the Pernambucan
State Justice Department sent the files on the case to the Homicide Squad.
The Government also said that the Pernambucan State Military Court was
processing case No. 3766, and the Juvenile Court case No. 531/92, both of which
were related to the instant case. The
Government argued that the remedies under domestic law had not been exhausted
inasmuch as the additional phases of the proceedings required for judgment and
sentencing of those eventually found guilty had not yet been completed in
accordance with the law.
11. The
Government added that other measures had also been taken.
On January 2, 1992, the juvenile Edson Damião Calixto was sent to the
Provisional Shelter of the Juvenile Foundation, at the initiative of the State
Justice Department. On January 8,
the head of the center petitioned the Juvenile Court to arrange to have Edson
sent to an appropriate health institution for his physical condition.
12. On
January 16, 1996, following the granting of extensions for his reply, the
petitioner responded to the Government's reply by reconstructing the events
described in the original petition and enclosing documentary evidence supporting
that petition.
13. The
petitioners also reported that another important piece of evidence was the
statement that the proceedings in the military court were still in the initial
phase, i.e., the investigation phase: defense
witnesses were being heard, after which the prosecution's witnesses would be
heard. They explained that after
the investigation phase, there would be a verdict, which might then be followed
by an appeal. Only then would a
final ruling be reached.
14. As to
the exhaustion of the remedies under domestic law, the petitioners argued that
Article 46(2)(c) of the Convention and Article 37 of the Commission's
Regulations provide for an exception to the rule requiring exhaustion of
domestic remedies when there has been an unwarranted delay in rendering a
judgment under those remedies. The
petitioners alleged that the Brazilian Government had left out one important
detail: while it had reported that
the inquiry had been instituted in December 1991, it failed to say that the
deadline for completing the police investigation in progress in the military
courts was 40 days. Article 20 of
the Code of Military Penal Justice stipulates that:
Article 20. If the accused
is in custody, the inquiry must be completed within 20 days, which time period
begins as of the date on which the order of imprisonment is executed; if the
accused is at liberty, the inquiry must be completed within 40 days from the
date on which the inquiry is instituted.
15. The
petitioners said that the four years allowed for the first instance criminal
proceedings were excessive. It was
clear that the Pernambucan military courts were stalling and that this was a
case of unwarranted delay, which was the exception allowed under the Convention
for the Commission to move forward with its analysis of the case.
This reply was forwarded to the Government with a request that it answer
specific points. This request was
reiterated to no avail. A hearing
was held on October 7, 1996, in which the parties were invited to consider a
friendly settlement. The Government
said that it was not in a position to initiate such proceedings at that time. Later, in the view of the lack of an affirmative response by
the Government to the friendly settlement proposal, the petitioner requested
that the case be admitted and a decision taken on its merits.
III.
FRIENDLY SETTLEMENT
16. On
October 11, the Commission placed itself at the disposal of the parties with a
view to reaching a friendly settlement in the case, with a 30-day deadline for
reply. On November 19, 1996, the
Commission informed the Government and the petitioner that it was extending the
deadline for another ten days.
17. On
December 9, 1996, the Commission received a note from the petitioner inquiring
whether the Government had indicated whether or not it wanted to participate in
the friendly settlement proceeding. If
no reply had been received from the Government, the petitioner asked the
Commission to prepare the report referred to in Article 50 of the American
Convention, in accordance with Article 23(2) of its Regulations.
18. On
December 13, 1996, the Commission informed the petitioner that the Government
had not yet responded to the friendly settlement proposal and that the
Commission would review the request to prepare the report called for in Article
50.
19. In
January 1997, the petitioners requested a hearing for the February/March
session, stating that the Commission's proceedings in the case had already
concluded and that only a decision was pending.
IV. CONSIDERATIONS
REGARDING ADMISSIBILITY
20. The
facts recounted by the petitioners in their petition describe possible
violations of human rights, which will be examined in due course.
The Commission will now examine the formal requirements for admitting a
petition.
21. Article
46 of the Convention establishes the requirements for a petition to be admitted:
a. that
the remedies under domestic law have been pursued and exhausted;
b. that
the petition is lodged within a period of six months from the date on which the
party alleging violation of his rights was notified of the final judgment;
c. that
the subject of the petition or communication is not pending in another
international proceeding for settlement; and
d. that,
in the case of Article 44, the petition contains the name, nationality,
profession, domicile, and signature of the person or persons or of the legal
representative of the entity lodging the petition.
22. In the
petition filed in February 1994, the petitioners arguing the exception to
exhausting domestic remedies, alleged that even though indicted, three years
after the fact the accused had still not been taken into custody and brought to
trial and that although trial had been set for February, it was highly unlikely
that the accused would ever be punished.
23. For its
part, in its reply of November 1995, the Government did not deny the delay in
judicial proceedings and gave no indication of any headway in the case.
It nevertheless argued a failure to exhaust the remedies under domestic
law, on the grounds that the additional phases of the proceedings required to
judge and sentence those eventually found guilty had not yet been concluded in
accordance with the law.
24. In
November 1994, the petitioners observed that the proceedings were still in the
investigation phase, with testimony being taken from defense witnesses; that the
Government had left out one important detail when it reported that the police
inquiry had been instituted in December 1991, which was the deadline for
completing that inquiry: 40 days under Article 20 of the Code of Military Penal
Procedures; and that four years for first instance proceedings was excessive.
They therefore requested the exception provided for in Article 46(2)(c)
of the Convention.
25. Article
46(2)(c) of the Convention stipulates that the provisions of paragraphs (1)(a)
(exhaustion of remedies under domestic law) and (1)(b) (period for presenting
the petition) shall not apply when there has been an unwarranted delay in
rendering a final judgment under those remedies.
The same is stated by Article 37(2)(c), of the Regulations of the
Commission.[1]
26. The
petitioners alleged that the trial, which was set for February 1994, did not
take place, which demonstrates a delay in administration of justice.
In its reply of November 1994, the Government reported that inquiries
were in progress, the implication being that the trial had not yet been held.
The most recent information from the petitioners, dated November 1995,
reported that the proceedings were still in the investigation phase four years
after the fact. The Government did not reply or respond affirmatively to the
request the Commission made in February 1996 and reiterated in April, nor to the
friendly settlement proposal made in October of that year.
The Commission considers that it has taken too long for a trial top be
held and accepts the request that an exception be made to the rule requiring
exhaustion of domestic remedies, in accordance Articles 46(2)(c) of the
Convention and 37(2)(c) of its Regulations.
27. Given
that there has been an evidently unwarranted delay in administering justice, the
Commission considers that the exception provided for in Article 46(2)(c) of the
Convention also applies to the requirement that a petition be filed within six
months of the date on which the person whose rights were allegedly violated was
informed of the definitive ruling. The
Commission considers that the petition was presented within the reasonable time
period stipulated in Article 38(2) of the Commission's Regulations, which says:
In the circumstances set forth in Article 37(2) of these Regulations, the
deadline for presentation of a petition to the Commission shall be within a
reasonable period of time, in the Commission´s judgment, as from the date on
which the alleged violation of rights has occurred, considering the
circumstances of each specific case.
28. The
Commission has no knowledge of the subject of the petition being pending in
another international proceeding for settlement.
Nor did the Government make such a claim.
29. The
petitioner observed the requirement that in the case of Article 44, the petition
contains the name, nationality, profession, domicile, and signature of the
person or persons or of the legal representative of the entity lodging the
petition.
Case 11.290 (Roselandio Borges Serrano)
V.
BACKGROUND
30. The
petitioners filed a petition against the Government of Brazil in accordance with
Articles 44 to 51 of the American Convention on Human Rights.
The petition seeks to redress the attempted murder of Roselândio Borges
Serrano, age 16, who was shot in the back by military police officer Sandro
Tadeu Oliveira on January 17, 1991, in the city of Olinda, state of Pernambuco,
as a result of which Roselândio is now paralyzed from the waist down.
31. The
petition states that Roselândio and a friend were riding horseback through a favela
(shanty town) known as Peixinhos when they met several state police officers who
were looking for someone who had threatened a couple and fled on horseback.
The police were fired at the two youths; the bullet that struck Roselândio
left him paralyzed.
32. The
military police inquiry, instituted only after a local human rights group (Gabinete
de Asesoría Jurídica Popular - GAJOP) found the bullet that had wounded one of
the horses, was concluded on May 16, 1991.
The inquiry recommended that Sandro Tadeu Oliveira dos Santos be indicted
as the party who fired the shots and that Hugo Tadeu dos Santos be indicted on
charges of failing to report or investigate the incident.
The investigation also revealed that Hugo Tadeu brought pressure to bear
against other police officers to get them to cover up the truth.
33. According
to the petition, the prosecutor's office completed its work in 70 days, record
time for the military justice system. Despite
the evidence set forth in the inquiry, the prosecutor did not file charges
against Hugo dos Santos, and only two witnesses were heard:
Sandro Tadeu Oliveira da Silva -the accused police officer himself- and
Ailton Pedrosa da Silva, who lived in the neighborhood and was with the police
at the time.
34. The
petition refers to other irregular aspects of the procedures in the military
court. The petitioners alleged that in the instant case, agents of
the Brazilian State were immediately responsible for the violations; however,
they also alleged that Brazilian authorities failed to conduct the proper
investigations and bring the guilty parties to justice.
The police officer who shot Roselândio, leaving him paralyzed from the
waist down, was acquitted after perfunctory and negligent proceedings in the
military courts. The police officer
involved in the case attempted to obstruct justice several times and intimidate
witnesses, including fellow police officers.
35. The
petitioners therefore asked that the Brazilian State be condemned for violating
Article I (right to life, liberty and personal security), 25 (the right to
protection against arbitrary arrest) and 26 (due process) of the American
Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, and Articles 8(1) and 25(1) (right
to judicial protection) of the American Convention on Human Rights.
VI. PROCEEDINGS
BEFORE THE COMMISSION
36. The
Commission received the petition in February 1994.
In September 1994, the Government replied by requesting a 30-day
extension, arguing the complexity and scope of the inquiries in progress which
directly involved Pernambucan state authorities.
That extension was granted.
37. In
September 1994, the petitioners sent additional information.
First, they argued that the Brazilian Government had not replied since
May 1994. They added that because
the prosecutor did not appeal the ruling that acquitted the military police
officer, and even though Article 65 of the Code of Military Penal Procedure
prohibits the assistant attorney from filing appeals, the assistant attorney did
in fact file an appeal. The appeal
was a petition seeking a rehearing, which is an ordinary petition reserved for
actions that tend to benefit the defendant.
The Military High Court, in a ruling of April 27, 1994, denied the
appeal. No further appeal was
possible.
38. In
October and again in November, the Government of Brazil requested two more
30-day extensions, which it was granted. In
December 1994, the Government replied that according to information received
from the Government of the State of Pernambuco and from the Council for the
Defense of Human Rights of the Ministry of Justice, on October 17, 1991, the
Pernambucan Permanent Council of Military Justice had found defendant Sandro
Tadeu Oliveira da Silva innocent of the charges against him and that verdict had
not been not appealed.
39. On
January 10, 1995, the Commission forwarded the Government's reply to the
petitioner. After several extensions, on January 16, 1996 the petitioner
replied to the Government's response by reconstructing the crime described in
the original petition; it added that it was enclosing documentary evidence to
illustrate the grievous nature of the violations committed by the military
police.
40. On
February 20, 1996, the Commission forwarded the petitioners' final observations
to the Government and requested the latter's within 30 days.
On April 18, 1996, the Commission reiterated the request it made of the
Government back in February. No reply was received.
VII. FRIENDLY
SETTLEMENT
41. In
January 1997, the Commission placed itself at the disposal of the parties with a
view to reaching a friendly settlement of the matter.
In February 1997, the petitioners expressed an interest in participating
in negotiations with the Government of Brazil, with a view to reaching a
friendly settlement. The Government
did not reply to the Commission.
VIII. CONSIDERATIONS
REGARDING THE ADMISSIBILITY
42. The
facts recounted by the petitioners in the petition describe possible violations
of human rights, and will be examined in due course in the proper stage of the
proceedings. The Commission will now examine the formal requirements for
admitting the petition.
43. Article
46 of the Convention, cited above, spells out the requirements for a petition to
be admitted. In their petition
filed in February 1994, the petitioners reported that in proceedings that lasted
seven months and contained several irregularities, the guilty party was tried
and acquitted. They add that the
military prosecutor did not act with the diligence necessary to convict the
defendant and did not appeal the acquittal; that the appeal filed in November
1992 by a local human rights organization seeking a review of the acquittal was
denied in a ruling of April 1994 and no other remedy was possible.
44. In its
reply of December 1994, the Government did not deny the petitioners' allegations
and confirmed that the defendant's acquittal of the charge of having caused
permanent injury to the victim had not been appealed.
In January 1996, the petitioners also added that the State had not
provided the victim with any assistance, even though he was his parents' eldest
child and helped them support their five underage children.
45. Article
46(2)(c) of the Convention provides that the provisions of subparagraphs (1)(a)
(exhaustion of domestic remedies) and (1)(b) (deadline for presenting a
petition) shall not apply when there has been unwarranted delay in rendering a
final judgment under the aforementioned remedies.
The same is stated by Article 37(2)(c), of the Regulations of the
Commission.
46. The
Commission considers that in the instant case, the victim was 16 at the time the
events occurred and was thus a minor for civil (21) and criminal (18) purposes. He did not have the financial means to hire a private
attorney to act as assistant to the prosecutor and was thus totally dependent on
the military courts for protection of his rights.
47. Had the
petitioner been able to hire an attorney, the latter could only have represented
him subject to various limitations, up to the time a ruling was handed down,
since Article 530 of the Code of Military Penal Procedures clearly states that
"only the Public Prosecutor's Office and the defendant or the latter's
representative may file an appeal." The
final portion of the first paragraph of Article 65 of the Code of Military Penal
Procedures, which restricts what a victim's representative may do, states that
"he cannot avail himself of remedies, except in the case of a ruling that
denies the request for victim representation."
Therefore, the military prosecutor, whose legal obligation it is and who
is the only one who could have appealed the acquittal, failed to do so.
48. Given
these circumstances, the victim was not allowed to exhaust all the remedies
under domestic law, since the prosecutor did not appeal the acquittal.
The victim was also prevented from exhausting the remedies under domestic
law because, being a minor from a needy family, he did not have the financial
means or was unable to act on his own initiative to hire an attorney to serve as
assistant to the prosecutor.
49. In its
Advisory Opinion OC-11/91, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights held in
paragraph 17 that "Article 46(2)(b) is applicable to situations in which
the domestic law does provide for remedies, but such remedies are either denied
the affected individual or he is otherwise prevented from exhausting them.
These provisions thus apply to situations where domestic remedies cannot
be exhausted because they are not available either as a matter of law or as a
matter of fact.[2]
(emphasis added)
50. The
Commission believes it is important to note that this phase of analysis of the
issue of exhaustion of the remedies under domestic law has a close bearing on
the merits of the case, since the petitioners allege a lack of judicial
protection. In this regard, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights says
the following:
The rule of prior exhaustion of domestic remedies under the international
law of human rights has certain implications that are present in the Convention.
Under the Convention, States Parties have an obligation to provide
effective judicial remedies to victims of human rights violations (Art.25),
remedies that must be substantiated in accordance with the rules of due process
of law (Article 8(1)), all in keeping with the general obligation of such States
to guarantee the free and full exercise of the rights recognized by the
Convention to all persons subject to their jurisdiction (Art.1).
Thus, when certain exceptions to the rule of non-exhaustion of domestic
remedies are invoked, such as the ineffectiveness of such remedies or the lack
of due process of law, not only is it contended that the victim is under no
obligation to pursue such remedies, but, indirectly, the State in question is
also charged with a new violation of the obligations assumed under the
Convention. Thus, the question of
domestic remedies is closely tied to the merits of the case. [3]
51. The
Commission thus grants the exception to the rule requiring exhaustion of
domestic remedies, provided for in Article 46(2)(b) of the Convention, which
applies when the alleged victim has not been permitted access to the remedies
under domestic law or has been prevented from exhausting them, as in the instant
case. It will continue its
prosecution of the case and rule on the merits in due course.
52. The
Commission considers that the six-month period provided for in Article 37(1) of
the Commission's Regulations and Article 46(1)(b) of the Convention for filing
the petition as of the date on which the party whose rights were allegedly
violated is notified of the final judgment, is not operative if the exception
provided for in Article 46(2)(b) of the Convention and Article 37(2)(b) of the
Commission's Regulations (the party whose rights were allegedly violated was not
given access to the remedies under domestic law or was prevented from exhausting
them) applies to the case. The
Commission considers that the petition was lodged within a reasonable time
period, and also applies the provisions of Article 38(2) of the Commission's
Regulations, as previously cited.
53. The
Commission has no knowledge of this petition being pending in another
international proceeding for settlement, nor does the Government claim such
knowledge.
54. The
petitioner also met the requirement that in the case of Article 44, the petition
contains the name, nationality, profession, domicile, and signature of the
person or persons or of the legal representative of the entity lodging the
petition.
IX. CONSIDERATIONS
REGARDING THE TWO CASES
A.
CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING THE COMPETENCE OF THE COMMISSION
55. The
petitioners have alleged violations of rights guaranteed in Article I (right to
life, liberty, personal security and physical integrity) of the American
Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, and in Articles 8 (right to a fair
trial) and 25 (right to judicial protection) of the American Convention on Human
Rights. The Commission is competent
to analyze possible violations to human rights which are protected by the
Declaration and by the Convention, in accordance to Articles 1.2b and 20, of its
statute. The fact that Brazil has
ratified the Convention on September 25, 1992, does not exempt its
responsibility for violations of human rights occurred prior to that
ratification, rights guaranteed in the Declaration, which is binding.
56. The
Inter-American Court of Human Rights recognized the binding force of the
Declaration stating that "Articles 1(2)(b) and 20 of the Commission´s
Statute define...the competence of that body with respect to the human rights
enunciated in the Declaration. Thus, for those States that ratified the Protocol
of Buenos Aires, the American Declaration and the Convention are, in pertinent
matters and in relation with the Charter of the Organization.[4],
a source of international obligations.
B.
CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING THE PROCEEDING
57. Article
40 of the Regulations of the Commission establishes criteria for separation and
combination of cases:
1. Any
petition that states different facts that concern more than one person, and that
could constitute various violations that are unrelated in time and place shall
be separated and processed as separate cases, provided the requirements set
forth in Article 32 are met.
2. When
two petitions deal with the same facts and persons, they shall be combined and
processed in a single file.
58. The
Commission has interpreted Article 40 in a broad sense.
Regarding Article 40(1) of its Regulation:
The Commission has not interpreted this provision to require that the
facts, victims and violations set forth in a petition strictly coincide in time
and place in order to allow processing as a single case.
Rather, the Commission has processed individual cases dealing with
numerous victims who have alleged violations of their human rights occurring at
the different moments and in different locations so long as all of the victims
allege violations arising out of the same treatment.
Thus, the Commission may process as a single case the claims of various
victims alleging violations arising out of the application of legislation or a
pattern or practice to each of the victims regardless of the time and place in
which they received this similar treatment.
The Commission not only has refused to separate such cases for processing
but has also accumulated separate cases with such characteristics into single
cases for processing.[5]
59. Both two
cases had separate proceedings but the Commission acknowledges the similarities
of the two petitions and the fact that the violations happened within the same
context. The alleged violations were committed by military police of
the same State, Pernambuco, supposedly acting illegally against defenseless,
unarmed juvenile civilians in which the alleged perpetrators went unpunished
owing to the bias of the military courts when prosecuting and deciding cases.
Therefore, the Commission decided to join the two cases with a view to
preparing a single report.[6]
CONCLUSIONS
60. The
Commission considers that it is competent to address this case and that it is
admissible, in accordance with the requirements set forth in Articles 46 and 47
of the American Convention.
On the basis of the foregoing factual and legal arguments
X.
THE INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS DECIDES:
61. To
declare the two instant cases admissible.
62. To send
this report on admissibility to the State of Brazil and to the petitioners.
63. To
continue its examination of the pertinent issues defined in this report, in
order to decide the merits of the cases.
64. To
publish this report in the Annual Report to the OAS General Assembly. [
Table of Contents | Previous |
Next ]
*
Commissioner Hélio Bicudo, a Brazilian national, did not participate
in the consideration and vote on this report, pursuant of Article 19(2)(a)
of the Commission's Regulations.
[1]
Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Cases: Velásquez Rodríguez,
Judgment of July 29, 1988, para. 62-66 and 72, Series C, No. 14; Fairén
Garbi and Solís Corrales, Preliminary Exceptions of March 15, 1989, para.
86-90 and 97; Godínez Cruz, Judgment of January 20, 1989, para. 65-69 and
75, and Preliminary Exceptions of June 26, 1987, para. 95.
[2]
Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Exceptions to the Exhaustion of
Domestic Remedies (Art. 46(1), 46(2)(a) and 46(2)(b) American Convention on
Human Rights), Advisory Opinion OC-11/90 of August 10, 1990, Series A,
No.11, paragraph 17.
[3]
Velásquez Rodríguez Case, Judgment of June 26, 1987, Preliminary
Exceptions, paragraph 90, Series C, No. 1.
[4]
Advisory Opinion of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights,
paragraph 45, July 14, 1989, on the "Interpretation of the American
Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man within the framework of Article
64 of the American Convention on Human Rights."
[5]
Report No. 4/97, Regarding Admissibility, March 12, 1997,(Colombia),
Annual Report of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, 1996,
paragraphs 40 and 41, and footnote No. 23 about Report No. 24/82, Chile,
March 8, 1982, which accumulated 50 cases.
[6]
See also: Report No. 9/94, January 1st, 1994 (Haiti), about Cases:
11.105, 11.107, 11.110, 11.111. 11.112, 11.113. 11.114, 11.118, 11.120 and
11.102, Annual Report of the IACHR, 1993; Report
No. 28/92, October 2nd, 1992 (Argentina), about Cases: 10.147,
10.181, 10.240, 10.262, 10.309 and 10.311, Report No. 1/93, March 3rd, 1993
(Argentina), about Cases: 10.288, 10.310, 10.436, 10.496, 10.631 and 10.771,
and Report No. 24/92, October 2nd, 1992 (Costa Rica), about Cases: 9.328,
9.329, 9.742, 9.884, 10.131, 10.193, 10.230, 10.429 and 10.469, Annual
Report of IACHR 1992-1993; Report
about Cases 9.768,
9.780 and 4.828 (Mexico),
Annual Report of IACHR, 1989-1990; Report about Cases
9.777 and 9.718, March 30, 1988, (Argentina),
Annual Report of IACHR, 1987-1988; Resolution No. 19/83, March 30,
1983 (Nicaragua), about cases 5.154, 7.313, 7.314, 7.316 and 7.320, Annual
Report of IACHR, 1982-1983. |