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CYIL 7 ȍ2016Ȏ THE CZECH REPUBLIC BEFORE THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS …

THE CZECH REPUBLIC BEFORE THE EUROPEAN COURT

OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN 2015

Vít Alexander Schorm*

Introduction

Since the previous edition of the Czech Yearbook of International Law, this

annual contribution aims at providing a short overview of the European Court of

Human Rights’ activities with regard to the Czech Republic as a high contracting

party to the European Convention on Human Rights (“the Convention”) in the

respective previous year – 2015 in these circumstances.

My last article ended by saying, amongst other remarks, that “there will hopefully

be a matter for contribution to this Yearbook next year as well”. In reality, this is

hardly so, as the year of reference was particularly poor in new judgments and nearly

all interesting cases are still pending at the time of the writing this article (i.e. in

August 2016). It is certainly not up to the Agent of the Government of the country

concerned to comment on the reasons explaining why the Court has slowed down

significantly its pace of deciding on applications filed against that country.

Let me also recall the introduction to my last article in the sense that the fate of

many applications is for them to be declared inadmissible by a single judge (around

400 cases against the Czech Republic ended this way in 2015) and that one year

is not a very representative unit. A standard number of some 45 new applications

were communicated to the Czech Government in 2015. The year of reference, for

a second time in a row, does not seem to be a very typical “vintage”, at least when it

comes to judgments (only 2 on the merits and 2 on just satisfaction after a friendly

settlement) and even decisions (10) delivered in communicated cases.

As a whole, when it comes to the year 2015 three cases are worth mentioning,

very different in their nature and Convention provisions invoked, but with some

common features in procedural terms. The Court has dealt with them in two steps:

after a Chamber judgment which did not establish a violation of the Convention,

the panel of five judges granted the applicant’s request for referral of the respective

case to the Grand Chamber, with subsequent fresh assessment by seventeen judges

of the Court. Each of the cases has found itself at a different stage of re-examination.

*

Vít Alexander Schorm

has been the Agent of the Government of the Czech Republic before the

European Court of Human Rights since 2002. He graduated from the Faculty of Law of Masaryk

University in Brno in 1996, studied public comparative law at the Université de Paris I – Panthéon-

Sorbonne (D.E.A. in 1998) and is an alumnus of the French École nationale d’administration (2002).

All views expressed in this article are strictly personal, and should not be construed as reflecting the opinion of

the Czech Government.