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13:53 GMT, Thursday, 18 September 2008 14:53 UK

Profile: European Court of Human Rights

Court is run by Europe's human rights body, the Council of Europe

Profile: The Council of Europe

Exterior, European Court of Human Rights, Strasbourg; building designed by Richard Rogers

The European Court of Human Rights aims to apply and to protect the civil and political rights of the continent's citizens.

These principles are set out in the European Convention on Human Rights, a landmark treaty that was drawn up in the aftermath of World War II.

The court, which was set up in 1959 in the French city of Strasbourg, considers cases brought by individuals, organisations and states against the countries which are bound by the convention; namely, all European nations except Belarus.

These cases have many forms; they include allegations of human rights abuses, discrimination, the improper conduct of trials and the mistreatment of prisoners.

RECENT RULINGS


Countries must comply with the court's verdicts, although the court cannot directly enforce this.

Most of the nations which have signed the human rights convention, including the UK, have incorporated its principles into their own laws. The court will only hear a case when all domestic legal avenues have been exhausted.

Moreover, plaintiffs must show that they have been a direct victim of an alleged violation and they cannot bring cases against individuals or private bodies.

The court was established and is overseen by the Council of Europe, a pan-European human rights body.

The council is a distinct entity and is not a branch of the European Union (EU). The European Human Rights Convention is its landmark treaty.

The European Court of Human Rights should not be confused with the European Court of Justice - the EU's highest court.

  • Established: 1959
  • Headquarters: Strasbourg, France
  • Official languages: English, French
  • Case applications: 50,500 (2006)
  • Judgements delivered: 1,560 (2006)

Court president: Jean-Paul Costa

ECHR president The court is made up of 46 judges, equating to the number of countries that have signed up to the European Human Rights Convention.

The judges are elected to six-year terms by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. They sit as individuals, rather than as representatives of their home countries.

A three-judge committee considers each application to the court, and can sift out unfounded cases by a unanimous decision. Seven-member chambers consider most of the cases that are taken up by the court.

In exceptional circumstances, a case may be referred to a 17-member Grand Chamber, whose judgements are final.

The court has seen its case load grow rapidly, from just under 6,000 cases in 1998 to almost 14,000 by 2001. In 2006 it received more than 50,000 new requests to judge cases.

Much of this increase has come from the newer democracies of central and eastern Europe, where there is less trust in local judicial systems. Russia is the biggest single source of cases.

It can take years for the judges to reach a final verdict. A backlog of cases - running to 90,000 in early 2007 - has prompted calls for more judges to be appointed and for the the court's functions to be streamlined, especially for minor cases.

The court has been described by the head of the Council of Europe as a victim of its own success.



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RELATED INTERNET LINKS
European Court of Human Rights
Council of Europe
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