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IWPR'S TRIBUNAL UPDATE NO. 244, Part I, November
12-17, 2001
RTS BOMBING CASE OPENED
Relatives of media workers killed in the NATO attack on Radio Television
Serbia, along with one survivor, bring a case before the European human rights
court.
By Marjorie Farquharson in Strasbourg The world is consumed with the effort to obtain justice for
office workers in New York City whose building was destroyed in September while
they went about their lawful business. On October 24, five families and one
survivor brought a landmark case before the European Court of Human Rights in
Strasbourg, seeking redress for office workers, employees of Radio Television
Serbia, who were killed or injured when NATO bombed their building at the height
of the 1999 Kosovo campaign. On the very day that NATO was celebrating its fiftieth
anniversary, the applicants or their relatives were working in one of the
production centers of RTS on Takovska Street in central Belgrade. The premises
were shared during the NATO campaign by numerous foreign broadcasting companies,
including the BBC, CNN and Reuters. At 2:03 AM on April 23, the building was hit by an
air-launched cruise missile. Two of the four floors collapsed, and the master
control room was destroyed. Sixteen people - technicians, a make-up assistant
and others - were killed, and one, Dragan Sukovic, was injured. RTS stopped
broadcasting for five hours, and then resumed transmitting via its main
distribution center in Kosutnjak, outside Belgrade. Later that day, at the anniversary meeting, a NATO
spokesperson stated, "Strikes against TV transmitters and broadcast
facilities are part of our campaign to dismantle the FRY propaganda machinery,
which is a vital part of Milosevic's control mechanism". No foreign
journalists were in the building on the night of the attack, and the
complainants argue that there is compelling evidence that the former were warned
of the bombing. The complainants, one survivor and relatives of killed
staff, all citizens of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, claim that their
rights under the European Convention on Human Rights to life, freedom of
expression and effective judicial remedy (Articles 2, 10 and 13) were violated
by the NATO action. The October hearing in the case, Bankovic and others v.
NATO, concerned the admissibility of the case before the European court and
whether the 17 NATO member states named have a case to answer. The charges are
brought against those member states which are also parties to the European
Convention on Human Rights, which means all NATO members except Canada and the
United States. A decision on the admissibility of the case could be handed down
in November, and if it is established, without a second hearing any decision on
the merits could be announced by the end of the year. If the court decides on the merits, they could give
compensation and pass a general measure to prevent similar human rights
violations in the future. The case could set a number of important precedents for the
human rights court. The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia is not a member of the
Council of Europe, and therefore not a party to the European Convention on Human
Rights. The applicants have brought their case on the grounds that any state
that is a party - such as the 17 states named - is obliged to guarantee those
rights on any territory under its jurisdiction. Representing the 17 NATO states, the UK's Martin Eaton
argued that the incident took place beyond the borders of any NATO country - and
thus that it is not covered by the terms of the human rights convention. The
applicants asserted that, at the time of the attack, these NATO members
exercised effective control over Yugoslav airspace and therefore remained
responsible. The main question facing the court is therefore whether effective
control of the sky put Yugoslav territory under the jurisdiction of the 17 NATO
states? Multi-national organisations can be a party to the European
Convention on Human Rights. But since the United States and Canada, NATO members,
are not in Europe, the military alliance itself cannot be a party to the
convention. But the complainants argue that NATO's decision-making process means
that each member state retains complete sovereignty and responsibility for its
own decisions. They claim that the actions of NATO forces can therefore be
imputed to the governments of the member states. The convention does offer states an escape clause from its
obligations. In times of war or public emergency, states can lodge a derogation
under Article 15 seeking exemption from specific obligations, which they must
name. In the case of the attack on RTS, no NATO member state had done so. Even
if they had, the complainants argue that Article 15 is inapplicable, as the war
in question did not threaten the life of any NATO member state. The complainants further argue that RTS did not constitute
a military objective within the meaning of the four Geneva Conventions of 1949
and the Protocols of 1977. NATO forces never suggested that the station was used
to relay military communications and its destruction did not offer NATO any
military advantage. Under the terms of the convention, governments have some
freedom in interpreting the right to life and freedom of expression, provided
they can demonstrate that any restrictions are "lawful, proportionate and
necessary in a democratic society". If the case goes forward, the court
would have to decide if the bombing met these requirements. The applicants argue that it did not, because the RTS staff
and their broadcasts did not pose a threat of unlawful violence to the Kosovo
Albanians; as such, destroying the station was not necessary, let alone strictly
proportionate, to NATO's stated military aim. In view of the risk of civilian casualties, under Article
57 of Protocol 1 of the Geneva Conventions, NATO states should have expressly
warned those in charge of the station. The absence of foreign journalists
suggests that they were warned, while local staff were not. NATO sources
subsequently insisted that Belgrade authorities were also warned, but that these
warnings were not passed on to staff in the building. (In a separate proceeding
in a Belgrade court, the RTS station director is accused for not passing on this
warning.) The net result of the bombing was to block transmission for
only five hours at the cost of a significant number of employees' lives. The
applicants contend that this outcome could have been achieved more effectively
by other, more proportionate, means. Furthermore, the employees were killed not only while they
were exercising their democratic right to impart information under Article 10,
but were targeted specifically for doing so. In previous cases, the European
Court of Human Rights has confirmed that journalists merit special protection -
regardless of the quality of their journalism - because of the importance of
free expression to a democratic society. To the applicants' knowledge, no investigation into the
destruction of the RTS building has been carried out by the 17 NATO states named
in the case, depriving them of any means to challenge the assumption that the
building was a "lawful target". For this reason, they assert under
Article 13 that they have been denied an effective legal remedy. In legal terms, the case demonstrates the remarkable scope
of the European convention as a mechanism for enforcing human rights,
potentially ruling on a case even though two principal entities - NATO and
Yugoslavia - are not parties to it. The case will be watched carefully in the
Russian Federation, which is a Council of Europe member but was opposed to the
NATO air strikes against Yugoslavia. Coming before the court when the 19 NATO
allies have bombed civilian targets in Afghanistan, another non-member state of
the Council of Europe, the case could resonate well beyond Europe. Marjorie Farquharson was an assistant to the UN Special
Rapporteur on Human Rights in the Former Yugoslavia Tadeusz Mazowiecki in 1993. source: MHxJU |
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