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0.5.9. Recommendation 1201 on an additional protocol on
the rights of national minorities to the European Convention on Human
Rights, of 1993
Eng: http://stars.coe.fr/
"The Assembly recalls its Recommendations 1134 (1990) and 1177
(1992), and its Orders No. 456 (1990) and No. 474 (1992) on the rights
of minorities. In the texts adopted on 5 February 1992 it asked the Committee
of Ministers :
to conclude as soon as possible the work under way for the elaboration
of a charter for regional or minority languages and to do its utmost to
ensure the rapid implementation of the charter ;
to draw up an additional protocol on the rights of minorities to the European
Convention on Human Rights ;
to provide the Council of Europe with a suitable mediation instrument.
By adopting the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages -
a Council of Europe convention - on 22 June 1992, the Committee of Ministers
gave the Assembly satisfaction on the first point. The charter, on which
legislation in our member states will have to be based, will also be able
to give guidance to many other states on a difficult and sensitive subject.
There remains the rapid implementation of the charter. It is encouraging
that when it was opened for signature on 5 November 1992, eleven Council
of Europe member states signed it straight away. But one has to go further.
The Assembly therefore appeals to member states which have not yet signed
the charter to do so and to urge all of them to ratify it speedily, accepting
as many of its clauses as possible.
The Assembly reserves the right to return, at a later date, to the question
of a suitable mediation instrument of the Council of Europe which it has
already proposed to set up.
It has been advised of the terms of reference given by the Committee of
Ministers to the Steering Committee for Human Rights and its Committee
of Experts for the Protection of National Minorities and wishes to give
its full support to this work and actively promote it.
Through the inclusion in the European Convention on Human Rights of certain
rights of persons belonging to minorities as well as organisations entitled
to represent them, such persons could benefit from the remedies offered
by the convention, particularly the right to submit applications to the
European Commission and Court of Human Rights.
Consequently, the Assembly recommends that the Committee of Ministers
adopt an additional protocol on the rights of national minorities to the
European Convention on Human Rights, drawing on the text reproduced below,
which is an integral part of this recommendation.
As this matter is extremely urgent and one of the most important activities
currently under way at the Council of Europe, the Assembly also recommends
that the Committee of Ministers speed up its work schedule so that the
summit of heads of state and government (Vienna, 8 and 9 October 1993)
will be able to adopt a protocol on the rights of national minorities
and open it for signature on that occasion.
Text of the proposal for an additional protocol to the Convention for
the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, concerning persons
belonging to national minorities
Preamble
The member states of the Council of Europe, signatory, hereto,
Considering that the diversity of peoples and cultures with which it is
imbued is one of the main sources of the richness and vitality of European
civilisation ;
Considering the important contribution of national minorities to the cultural
diversity and dynamism of the states of Europe ;
Considering that only the recognition of the rights of persons belonging
to a national minority within a state, and the international protection
of those rights, are capable of putting a lasting end to ethnic confrontations,
and thus of helping to guarantee justice, democracy, stability and peace
;
Considering that the rights concerned are those which any person may exercise
either singly or jointly ;
Considering that the international protection of the rights of national
minorities is an essential aspect of the international protection of human
rights and, as such, a domain for international co-operation,
Have agreed as follows :
Section I - Definition
Article 1
For the purposes of this Convention[2], the expression ''national
minority'' refers to a group of persons in a state who :
reside on the territory of that state and are citizens thereof ;
maintain longstanding, firm and lasting ties with that state ;
display distinctive ethnic, cultural, religious or linguistic characteristics
;
are sufficiently representative, although smaller in number than the rest
of the population of that state or of a region of that state ;
are motivated by a concern to preserve together that which constitutes
their common identity, including their culture, their traditions, their
religion or their language.
Section 2 - General principles
Article 2
Membership of a national minority shall be a matter of free personal
choice.
No disadvantage shall result from the choice or the renunciation of such
membership.
Article 3
Every person belonging to a national minority shall have the right to
express, preserve and develop in complete freedom his/her religious, ethnic,
linguistic and/or cultural identity, without being subjected to any attempt
at assimilation against his/her will.
Every person belonging to a national minority may exercise his/her rights
and enjoy them individually or in association with others.
Article 4
All persons belonging to a national minority shall be equal before the
law. Any discrimination based on membership of a national minority shall
be prohibited.
Article 5
Deliberate changes to the demographic composition of the region in which
a national minority is settled, to the detriment of that minority, shall
be prohibited.
Section 3 - Substantive rights
Article 6
All persons belonging to a national minority shall have the right to set
up their own organisations, including political parties.
Article 7
Every person belonging to a national minority shall have the right freely
to use his/her mother tongue in private and in public, both orally and
in writing. This right shall also apply to the use of his/her language
in publications and in the audiovisual sector.
Every person belonging to a national minority shall have the right to
use his/her surname and first names in his/her mother tongue and to official
recognition of his/her surname and first names.
In the regions in which substantial numbers of a national minority are
settled, the persons belonging to a national minority shall have the right
to use their mother tongue in their contacts with the administrative authorities
and in proceedings before the courts and legal authorities.
In the regions in which substantial numbers of a national minority are
settled, the persons belonging to that minority shall have the right to
display in their language local names, signs, inscriptions and other similar
information visible to the public. This does not deprive the authorities
of their right to display the above-mentioned information in the official
language or languages of the state.
Article 8
Every person belonging to a national minority shall have the right to
learn his/her mother tongue and to receive an education in his/her mother
tongue at an appropriate number of schools and of state educational and
training establishments, located in accordance with the geographical distribution
of the minority.
The persons belonging to a national minority shall have the right to set
up and manage their own schools and educational and training establishments
within the framework of the legal system of the state.
Article 9
If a violation of the rights protected by this protocol is alleged, every
person belonging to a national minority or any representative organisation
shall have an effective remedy before a state authority.
Article 10
Every person belonging to a national minority, while duly respecting the
territorial integrity of the state, shall have the right to have free
and unimpeded contacts with the citizens of another country with whom
this minority shares ethnic, religious or linguistic features or a cultural
identity.
Article 11
In the regions where they are in a majority the persons belonging to a
national minority shall have the right to have at their disposal appropriate
local or autonomous authorities or to have a special status, matching
the specific historical and territorial situation and in accordance with
the domestic legislation of the state.
Section 4 - Implementation of the protocol
Article 12
Nothing in this protocol may be construed as limiting or restricting an
individual right of persons belonging to a national minority or a collective
right of a national minority embodied in the legislation of the contracting
state or in an international agreement to which that state is a party.
Measures taken for the sole purpose of protecting ethnic groups, fostering
their appropriate development and ensuring that they are granted equal
rights and treatment with respect to the rest of the population in the
administrative, political, economic, social and cultural fields and in
other spheres shall not be considered as discrimination.
Article 13
The exercise of the rights and freedoms listed in this protocol fully
applies to the persons belonging to the majority in the whole of the state
but who constitute a minority in one or several of its regions.
Article 14
The exercise of the rights and freedoms listed in this protocol are not
meant to restrict the duties and responsibilities of the citizens of the
state. However, this exercise may only be made subject to such formalities,
conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and necessary
in a democratic society in the interests of national security, territorial
integrity 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.
Section 5 - Final clauses
Article 15
No derogation under Article 15 of the Convention from the provisions of
this protocol shall be allowed, save in respect of Article 10 of the latter.
Article 16
No reservation may be made under Article 64 of the Convention in respect
of the provisions of this protocol.
Article 17
The States Parties shall regard the provisions of Articles 1 to 11 of
this protocol as additional articles of the Convention and all the provisions
of the Convention shall apply accordingly.
Article 18
This protocol shall be open for signature by the member states of the
Council of Europe which are signatories to the Convention. It shall be
subject to ratification, acceptance or approval. A member state of the
Council of Europe may not ratify, accept or approve this protocol unless
it simultaneously ratifies or has previously ratified the Convention.
Instruments of ratification, acceptance or approval shall be deposited
with the Secretary General of the Council of Europe.
Article 19
This protocol shall enter into force on the first day of the month following
the date on which five member states of the Council of Europe have expressed
their consent to be bound by the protocol in accordance with the provisions
of Article 18.
In respect of any member state which subsequently expresses its consent
to be bound by it, the protocol shall enter into force on the first day
of the month following the date of the deposit of the instrument of ratification,
acceptance or approval.
Article 20
The Secretary General of the Council of Europe shall notify the member
states of the Council of:
any signature;
the deposit of any instrument of ratification, acceptance or approval;
any date of entry into force of this protocol;
any other act, notification or communication relating to this protocol.
In witness whereof the undersigned, being duly authorised thereto, have
signed this protocol.
Done at Strasbourg this day of , in English and French, both texts being
equally authentic, in a single copy, which shall be deposited in the archives
of the Council of Europe. The Secretary General of the Council of Europe
shall transmit certified copies to each member state of the Council of
Europe.
[1] Assembly debate on 1 February 1993 (22nd Sitting) (see Doc. 6742,
report of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights, Rapporteur
: Mr Worms ; and Doc. 6749, opinion of the Political Affairs Committee,
Rapporteur : Mr de Puig).
Text adopted by the Assembly on 1 February 1993 (22nd Sitting).
[2] The term ''Convention'' in this text refers to the Convention for
the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms."
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