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THIRD
SECTION
CASE OF
KURIĆ AND OTHERS v. SLOVENIA
(Application
no. 26828/06)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
13 July
2010
This
judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44
§ 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial
revision.
In the case of Kurić and Others v. Slovenia,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Third Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Josep
Casadevall,
President,
Elisabet
Fura,
Corneliu
Bîrsan,
Boštjan
M. Zupančič,
Alvina
Gyulumyan,
Egbert
Myjer,
Ineta
Ziemele, judges,
and
Santiago Quesada, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 22 June 2010,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 26828/06) against the Republic
of Slovenia lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by Mr Milan Makuc, a Croatian national, Mr Mustafa
Kurić, a stateless person, Mr Ljubomir Petreš, a
stateless person, Mr Jovan Jovanović, a citizen of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Mr Velimir Dabetić, a stateless person, Ms Ana
Mezga, a Croatian national, Mrs Ljubenka Ristanović, a Serbian
citizen, Mr Tripun Ristanović, a national of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Mr Ali Berisha, a Serbian national, Mr Ilfan Sadik
Ademi, a stateless person, and Mr Zoran Minić, a Serbian
national, on 4 July 2006.
- The
applicants were represented before the Court by Mr A.G. Lana and
Mr A. Saccucci, lawyers practising in Rome, and Ms A. Ballerini
and Mr M. Vano, lawyers practising in Genoa (Italy).
- The
Slovenian Government (“the respondent Government”) were
represented by their Agent, Mr L. Bembič, State
Attorney-General, and Mrs Z. Cilenšek Bončina, Co-Agent.
- On
2 June 2008 the applicant Mr Milan Makuc died. His cousin, Ms Marija
Ban, expressed the wish to pursue his application before the Court.
She continues to be represented by Mr A.G. Lana and Mr A. Saccucci.
For reasons of convenience, the present judgment will continue to
refer to Mr Makuc as an applicant where appropriate.
- Under
Article 8 of the Convention the applicants alleged, in particular,
that they had been arbitrarily deprived of the possibility of
acquiring citizenship of the newly-established Slovenian State in
1991 and/or of preserving their status as permanent residents. As a
result, their names had been unlawfully erased from the Register of
Permanent Residents on 26 February 1992 and many of them had become,
de facto, stateless persons. In spite of the Constitutional
Court's decisions, the situation of most of the applicants has
remained unchanged. They also complained under Article 13 of the
Convention of the lack of an effective legal remedy in that respect,
under Article 14 of the Convention of the allegedly discriminatory
treatment and, under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, about the denial of
pension benefits.
- On
10 November 2006 the Court decided to notify the respondent
Government urgently of the above application under Rule 40 of the
Rules of Court and to grant priority to it under Rule 41.
- On
31 May 2007 the Court decided to give notice to the respondent
Government of the complaints concerning the overall situation
affecting the applicants under Article 8, taken alone and in
conjunction with Articles 13 (lack of an effective legal remedy in
that respect) and 14 of the Convention (prohibition of
discrimination), and the denial of pension rights under Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1. It was also decided to rule on the admissibility and
merits of the application at the same time (Article 29 § 1). The
remainder of the application was declared inadmissible.
- The
applicants and the respondent Government each filed further written
observations (Rule 59 § 1). The parties replied in writing to
each other's observations. In addition, the President of the Chamber
requested the applicants under Rule 54 § 2 (a) to inform the
Court about any recent developments concerning their requests for
permanent residence permits and to submit fresh evidence in this
respect. The respondent Government filed comments on the applicants'
claims for just satisfaction.
- Furthermore,
third-party comments were received from the Serbian Government, which
had exercised its right to intervene (Article 36 § 1 of the
Convention and Rule 44 § 1 (b)) and the Equal Rights Trust, Open
Society Justice Initiative, the Peace Institute - Institute for
Contemporary Social and Political Studies (“the Peace
Institute”), and the Legal Information Centre of
Non-Governmental Organisations (“the PIC”) which had been
given leave by the President to intervene in the written procedure
(Article 36 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 44 § 2). The
respondent Government and the applicants replied to the Serbian
Government's comments.
- Further
to the notification under Article 36 § 1 of the Convention and
Rule 44 § 1 (a), the Croatian Government and the Government of
Bosnia and Herzegovina did not wish to exercise their right to
intervene in the present case.
- On
13 January 2009, the Chamber requested the respondent Government
under Rule 54 § 2 (a) to inform the Court whether residence
permits would be issued in respect of the applicants. The applicants
submitted comments on the respondent Government's reply.
- On
24 July 2009 the President of the Chamber requested the respondent
Government and the applicants under Rule 54 § 2 (a) to inform
the Court whether additional residence permits had been issued in
respect of the applicants Mr Petreš and Mr Jovanović.
Both parties replied.
- On
11 March 2010 the respondent Government informed the Court that on 8
March 2010 the amendments and supplements to the Legal Status Act had
been passed. At the time of the consideration of the present
judgment, they have not yet entered into force.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
first applicant, Mr Milan Makuc, was a Croatian citizen. He was born
in 1947 and lived in PortoroZ. He died in the course of the
proceedings before the Court. The second applicant, Mr Mustafa
Kurić, was born in 1935 and lives in Koper. He is a stateless
person. The third applicant, Mr Ljubomir Petreš, was born
in 1940 and lives in Piran. According to the applicant, he is a
stateless person. The respondent Government claimed, however, that he
was a citizen of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The fourth applicant, Jovan
Jovanović, was born in 1959 and lives in Ljubljana. He is a
citizen of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The fifth applicant, Mr Velimir
Dabetić, was born in 1969 and lives in Italy. He is a stateless
person. The sixth applicant, Ms Ana Mezga, is a Croatian citizen. She
was born in 1965 and lives in PortoroZ. The seventh applicant, Mrs
Ljubenka Ristanović, is a Serbian citizen. She was born in 1968
and lives in Serbia. The eighth applicant, Mr Tripun Ristanović,
the son of the seventh applicant, was born in 1988 and lives in
Serbia. He is a citizen of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The ninth
applicant, Mr Ali Berisha, was born in 1969 in Kosovo. According to
the most recently available data he is a Serbian citizen. The tenth
applicant, Mr Ilfan Sadik Ademi, was born in 1952. He lives in
Germany and is a stateless person. The eleventh applicant, Mr Zoran
Minić, was born in 1972. According to the respondent Government,
he is a Serbian citizen.
A. The circumstances of the individual applicants
- Before
25 June 1991, the day Slovenia declared independence, the applicants
were citizens of both the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
(“the SFRY”) and one of its constituent republics other
than Slovenia. They had acquired permanent resident status in
Slovenia as SFRY citizens, a status which they retained until
26 February 1992. On that day they became subject to the Aliens
Act (Zakon o tujcih) and their names were deleted from the
Register of Permanent Residents (Register stalnega prebivalstva,
“the Register”) (see paragraph 39 below).
- In
2009, further to a change in government policy, the applicants
Mr Petreš and Mr Jovanović, who were already in
possession of permanent residence permits valid from the date of
issue in 2006, were issued supplementary residence permits awarding
them residence status from 26 February 1992 on the basis of the
Constitutional Court's decision (see paragraphs 103 and 118 below).
The applicant Mr Makuc, who died on 2 June 2008, would also have
been entitled to such a permit. The applicant Ms Mezga, who is now in
possession of a temporary residence permit valid until 13 September
2012, is not entitled to a supplementary residence permit.
- The
applicants Mr Kurić, Mr Dabetić and Mrs and Mr Ristanović
have not applied for residence permits under the existing
legislation.
- Finally,
the applicants Mr Berisha, Mr Sadik and Mr Minić have applied
for residence permits and the respective proceedings are still
pending.
B. Background to the cases
1. Historical period 1918-1990
19. From
the First World War until 1991, the territory comprising the modern
Republic of Slovenia was incorporated into a union of Slav nations of
South-East Europe (mostly of the western Balkans). On 1 December 1918
the first union – the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs –
joined with the Kingdom of Serbs and became the Kingdom of Serbs,
Croats and Slovenes. In 1929 the latter was renamed as the Kingdom of
Yugoslavia.
20. A
new entity was subsequently formed during the Second World War. This
common State first bore the name of the Democratic Federal
Yugoslavia, then of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia,
which in 1963 was renamed as the SFRY. It was a federal State
composed of six republics: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia,
Serbia (with two autonomous regions, Kosovo and
Vojvodina), Slovenia, Montenegro and Macedonia.
- SFRY
nationals had “dual citizenship” for internal purposes,
that is, they were citizens both of the SFRY and of one of the six
republics (see paragraphs 193-207 below).
- The
first Constitution after the Second World War was adopted in 1946. In
1974, under the new Constitutions of the SFRY and of the then
Socialist Republic of Slovenia, the whole system of government
shifted from strict centralism to greater autonomy for the
constituent republics. The preamble to the Constitution of the SFRY
introduced the right of every nation to self-determination, including
to secession. Until 1974, federal citizenship prevailed over republic
citizenship: republic citizenship could only be
held by a Yugoslav citizen (see paragraphs 194-198 below).
- The
regulation of citizenship was similar in all republics of the SFRY,
with the basic principle of acquiring citizenship by blood (ius
sanguinis). In principle, a child followed his parents'
citizenship; if parents were citizens of different republics, they
jointly agreed on their child's citizenship. This basic principle was
combined with the principle of place of birth (ius soli) or of
residence (ius domicilii), of granting of republic citizenship
to a citizen of another republic upon application, of naturalisation
and recognition under international agreement. Moreover, on the date
of admission into the citizenship of another republic, a person's
prior republic citizenship came to an end.
- From
1947 a separate Register of Citizenship was kept at the level of the
republics and not at the level of the federal State. It follows from
the documents at the Court's disposal that those Registers were not
always accurate, since different authorities were responsible for
keeping them, the rules governing citizenship were not always
strictly respected and republic citizenship was not regarded as
crucial during the existence of the SFRY since all republic citizens
also had SFRY citizenship. Moreover, in a limited number of cases
republic citizenship was not even entered in the Register of
Citizenship.
- SFRY
citizens had freedom of movement within the federal State and could
register permanent residence wherever they settled on its territory.
Full enjoyment of various civil, economic, social and even political
rights for SFRY citizens was linked to permanent residence.
- SFRY
citizens living in the then Socialist Republic of Slovenia who were
citizens of one of the other SFRY republics, such as the applicants,
registered their permanent residence there in the same way as
Slovenian nationals. Foreign citizens could also acquire permanent
residence in the SRFY under a separate procedure (see paragraph 208
below).
2. Towards the independence of Slovenia
- In
the 1980s the SFRY faced a serious political and economic crisis,
with many ethnic tensions which eventually led to the end of the
communist regime and the break-up of the SFRY (see, Kovačić
and Others v. Slovenia, nos. 44574/98, 45133/98 and 48316/99, §
44, 6 November 2006).
- As
a consequence of the crisis, numerous amendments to the
Constitution of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia were made in the
years 1989 to 1991, aimed at a peaceful dissolution of the
federal State and the establishment of an independent democratic
Slovenia. In particular, Amendment X emphasised the right of the
Slovenian nation to self-determination and provided a legal basis for
calling a plebiscite and for the secession of Slovenia (see paragraph
206 below).
- On
6 December 1990, in the course of the preparations for the plebiscite
on the independence of Slovenia, the then Assembly of the Republic of
Slovenia (Skupščina Republike Slovenije) adopted
the so-called Statement of Good Intentions (Izjava o dobrih
namenih), guaranteeing that all persons with permanent residence
on Slovenian territory would be enabled to acquire Slovenian
citizenship if they so wished (see paragraph 212 below).
- On
23 December 1990 the plebiscite was held. The right to vote had been
granted to all adult inhabitants with registered permanent
residence in Slovenia. 1,361,369 out of 1,457,020 eligible voters
voted. 88.5 per cent of voters were in favour of independence and 4
per cent voted against.
3. Republic of Slovenia
- On
25 June 1991 Slovenia declared its independence. In order to set the
legal framework of the new sovereign State, the Fundamental
Constitutional Charter on the Sovereignty and Independence of the
Republic of Slovenia (Temeljna ustavna listina o samostojnosti in
neodvisnosti Republike Slovenije) (see paragraph 213 below) and a
series of laws termed “the independence legislation”
(osamosvojitvena zakonodaja) were passed.
- This
included the 1991 Constitutional Law relating to the
Fundamental Constitutional Charter on the Sovereignty and
Independence of the Republic of Slovenia (Ustavni zakon za izvedbo
Temeljne ustavne listine o samostojnosti in neodvisnosti Republike
Slovenije, “the 1991 Constitutional Law”),
the Citizenship of the Republic of Slovenia Act (Zakon o
drZavljanstvu Republike Slovenije, “the Citizenship Act”),
the Aliens Act (see paragraphs 221-223 below), the National Border
Control Act (Zakon o nadzoru drZavne meje) and the Passports
of the Citizens of Slovenia Act (Zakon o potnih
listinah drZavljanov Republike Slovenije).
- At
the material time, in contrast with some other former SFRY republics,
the Slovenian population was relatively homogeneous, as roughly 90
per cent of the 2 million residents had Slovenian citizenship.
Approximately 200,000 Slovenian residents (or 10 per cent of the
population), including the applicants, were citizens of the other
former SFRY republics. This proportion also broadly reflects the
ethnic origin of the Slovenian population at that time.
34. In
accordance with the Statement of Good Intentions, section 13 of the
1991 Constitutional Law provided that those citizens of other
republics of the former SFRY who, on 23 December 1990, the date of
the plebiscite, were registered as permanent residents of the
Republic of Slovenia and in fact lived there, held equal rights and
duties as the citizens of the Republic of Slovenia, with the
exception of the acquisition of property, until they
acquired citizenship of the Republic of Slovenia under section 40 of
the Citizenship Act or until the expiry of the time-limit set
out in section 81 of the Aliens Act (see paragraph 214 below).
- Section
40 of the Citizenship Act, which entered into force on 25 June
1991, provided that citizens of the former SFRY republics who were
not citizens of Slovenia (“citizens of the former SFRY
republics”) could acquire Slovenian citizenship if they met
three requirements: they had acquired permanent resident status in
Slovenia by 23 December 1990 (the date of the
plebiscite), were in fact residing in Slovenia, and applied
for citizenship within six months after the Citizenship Act entered
into force (see paragraph 217 below). The deadline expired on 25
December 1991.
- The
respondent Government maintained that it was not necessary to enclose
any official documents from other former SFRY republics when an
application for citizenship was filed; this was only necessary at a
later stage of the proceedings. The applicants however maintained
that in practice such documents were required from the outset.
- According
to the official data, 171,132 citizens of the former SFRY republics
living in Slovenia applied for and were granted citizenship of the
new State under section 40 of the Citizenship Act. Estimations
are that additional 11,000 persons left Slovenia.
- Under
second paragraph of section 81 of the Aliens Act, citizens of the
former SFRY republics who either failed to apply for Slovenian
citizenship within the prescribed time-limit or whose requests were
not granted became aliens. The provisions of the Aliens Act
became applicable to the former SFRY citizens either two months after
the expiry of the time-limit for filing the requests for citizenship
under section 40 of the Citizenship Act, that is, 26 February
1992, or when a decision issued in administrative proceedings
dismissing their application for citizenship became final (see
paragraph 221 below).
- On
or shortly after 26 February 1992 the municipal authorities removed
those concerned by the second paragraph of section 81 of the Aliens
Act from the Register of Permanent Residents and, according to the
respondent Government, transferred them into the Register of Aliens
without a Residence Permit.
- On
27 February 1992 the Ministry of the Interior (Ministrstvo za
notranje zadeve, “the Ministry”) sent “Instructions
on the implementation of the Aliens Act” to the municipal
authorities, indicating that it would be necessary to regulate the
legal status of the persons affected by the Aliens Act after the
expiry of the time-limits in section 81. It drew attention to the
fact that problems were expected to arise with regard to persons from
other republics of the former SFRY who would become aliens on 26
February 1992 and had not lodged an application for citizenship. In
addition, it pointed out that the papers of such persons, even if
issued by the Slovenian authorities and formally valid, would in fact
be invalid owing to the person's change in status ex lege.
Some of those concerned would be required to leave Slovenia in
accordance with sections 23 and 28 of the Aliens Act.
- The
applicants stated that persons whose names were removed from the
Register received no official notification. They pointed out that no
special procedure was provided for to that effect and no official
documents were issued. They only subsequently became aware that they
had become aliens, when, for example, they attempted to renew their
personal documents (personal identification card, passport, driving
licence). On the other hand, the respondent Government maintained
that, in addition to the publication in the Official Gazette, the
Slovenian population was informed about the new legislation through
public media and notices. In some municipalities, personal means of
notification were allegedly also used.
- Until
recently, according to the official data from 2002, the number of
former SFRY citizens who lost their permanent residence status on
26 February 1992 amounted to 18,305 (see paragraph 65 below), of
whom approximately 2,400 had been refused citizenship. Their names
were erased, ex lege, from the Register of Permanent Residents
on or shortly after 26 February 1992 and entered into the
Register of Aliens without a Residence Permit. They became known as
“the erased” (izbrisani), and included the
applicants in the present case.
- As
a result, “the erased” became aliens or stateless persons
illegally residing in Slovenia. In general, they had difficulties in
keeping their jobs, driving licences and obtaining retirement
pensions. Nor were they able to leave the country, because they could
not re-enter without valid documents. Many families became divided,
with some of their members in Slovenia and others in one of the other
successor States to the former SFRY. Among “the erased”
were a certain number of minors. In most cases their identity papers
were taken away. Some of “the erased” voluntarily left
Slovenia. Finally, some were served removal orders and deported from
Slovenia.
- After
the expiry of the six-month period set by section 40 of the
Citizenship Act, the less favourable conditions for acquisition of
citizenship by naturalisation provided for by its section 10 became
applicable also for citizens of other former SFRY republics (see
paragraph 217 below).
- After
26 February 1992 the registration of permanent residence of citizens
of other former SFRY republics was terminated if they had not
acquired a new residence permit. On the other hand, under
section 82 of the Aliens Act, permanent residence permits issued to
foreigners with citizenship of other States than the former SFRY
republics continued to be valid after the entry into force of the
Aliens Act (see paragraph 221 below).
- The
respondent Government maintained that, in view of the large number of
persons from the other republics of the former SFRY living in
Slovenia with non-regulated status, on 3 September 1992 the
Government decided also to take into account the period before the
entry into force of the Aliens Act for the purposes of calculating
the required period of three-year residence in Slovenia for issuing a
permanent residence permit under section 16 of the Aliens Act (see
paragraph 222 below). A total of 4,893 permanent residence permits
were thus issued in the period 1992-1997.
- On
28 June 1994 the Convention took effect in respect of Slovenia.
- Moreover,
on 20 November 1995, further to a request submitted by Parliament for
a referendum on the question whether or not the citizenship awarded
to former SFRY citizens on the basis of section 40 of the Citizenship
Act should be withdrawn, the Constitutional Court held that the
request was unconstitutional.
- In
the following years, several non-governmental organisations,
including Amnesty International and Helsinki Monitor, and the
Slovenian Human Rights Ombudsman issued reports drawing attention to
the situation of “the erased”.
4. The Constitutional Court's decision of 4 February
1999 and subsequent developments
- On
24 June 1998 the Constitutional Court (Ustavno sodišče)
declared admissible a challenge to the constitutionality of sections
16(1) and 81 of the Aliens Act, lodged in 1994 by two individuals
whose names had been removed from the Register in 1992 (see paragraph
236 below).
- On
4 February 1999 the Constitutional Court held that section 81 of
the Aliens Act was unconstitutional. However, no such problems arose
with section 16(1). It ordered the legislature to regulate, within
six months, the special legal status of citizens of the former SFRY
republics who had acquired permanent residence in Slovenia before its
independence and in fact lived in Slovenia, but either had not
applied for Slovenian citizenship or had had their applications
dismissed.
- As
a consequence, the Act on Regularisation of the Legal Status of
Citizens of Other Successor States to the Former SFRY in Slovenia
(Zakon o urejanju statusa drZavljanov drugih drZav naslednic
nekdanje SFRJ v Republiki Sloveniji, “the Legal Status
Act”) was passed to regulate the legal status of “the
erased”. It simplified the requirements for acquiring a
permanent residence permit. In particular, section 13 of the Aliens
Act was no longer applicable to this group of persons. Under this
Act, residence permits were granted ex nunc to those
fulfilling the conditions (see paragraphs 225-226 below).
- Ruling
on another constitutional challenge, on 18 May 2000 the
Constitutional Court set aside some of the provisions of the Legal
Status Act as unconstitutional because it found that the requirements
for the acquisition of permanent residence set forth in these
provisions were stricter than the grounds for revoking a permanent
residence permit under the Aliens Act (see paragraphs 248-249 below).
- According
to the respondent Government, 13,355 applications were lodged under
the Legal Status Act by 30 June 2007. As a result, 12,236 permanent
residence permits were issued.
- In
2002, the Citizenship Act was also amended in order to enable the
acquisition of Slovenian citizenship under more favourable conditions
to all aliens who had permanent residence in Slovenia on 23 December
1990 and had since lived uninterruptedly in Slovenia (see paragraph
220 below). The deadline for filing of applications expired on 29
November 2003. By that time, 2,959 applications were lodged and by 30
June 2007 1,747 persons had acquired Slovenian citizenship.
5. The Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003
and recent developments
- On
3 April 2003, deciding on a challenge to the constitutionality of the
Legal Status Act, the Constitutional Court (decision no. U-I-246/02)
again found that Act unconstitutional. It held, firstly, that it did
not afford permanent residence retroactively from the date on which
the name of the person concerned was removed from the Register.
Secondly, it failed to regulate the acquisition of permanent
residence for citizens of former SFRY republics who had been forcibly
removed from Slovenia. And, thirdly, it did not define the meaning of
the words “in fact residing” in its section 1. It also
struck down the three-month time-limit for lodging an application for
permanent residence. It ordered the legislature to rectify the
unconstitutional provisions within six months.
- In
point no. 8 of the operative part of the decision, the Constitutional
Court ordered the Ministry to issue, ex proprio motu, to those
who already had (non-retroactive) permits, supplementary decisions
establishing permanent residence in Slovenia with effect from
26 February 1992, the date on which their names were
deleted from the Register (see paragraphs 250-255 below). In 2004,
the Ministry issued 4,093 retroactive permits to the erased, solely
on the basis of the above-mentioned Constitutional Court's decision.
- Following
the Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003, the Government
initially prepared two Acts in order to comply with it which were
eventually never enacted.
- On
25 November 2003, Parliament enacted the Act on the Application of
Point No. 8 of the Constitutional Court's Decision no. U-I-246/02-28
(Zakon o izvršitvi 8. točke odločbe Ustavnega
sodišča Republike Slovenije št. U-I-246/02-28),
also known as the “Technical Act” (see paragraph 57
above).
- This
Act laid down the procedure for issuing permanent residence permits
to citizens of the former SFRY republics who were registered as
permanent residents in Slovenia on both 23 December 1990 and
25 February 1992 and had already acquired a permanent residence
permit under the Legal Status Act, the Aliens Act or the 1999 Aliens
Act.
- However,
those parliamentarians who voted against the Technical Act sought a
referendum on whether or not it should be implemented. The referendum
was held on 4 April 2004. The turnout was 31.54%; 94.59% of
voters were against its implementation, and therefore the Act never
entered into force.
- In
addition to the “Technical Act”, an “Act on
Permanent Residence in Slovenia of Foreigners Having Citizenship of
the Other Successor States to the SFRY who were Registered as
Permanent Residents in Slovenia on 23 December 1990 and 25 February
1992” (Zakon o stalnem prebivanju tujcev z drZavljanstvom
drugih drZav naslednic nekdanje SFRJ v Republiki Sloveniji, ki so
imeli na dan 23.12.1990 in 25.02.1992 v Republiki Sloveniji
prijavljeno stalno prebivališče) – a so-called
systemic Act – was drafted but never adopted by Parliament.
- In
November 2007 the Government sent a draft Constitutional Law amending
section 13 of the 1991 Constitutional Law to Parliament. However,
this law – subject to a heated political debate since it was
regarded by the then parliamentary opposition as an attempt to
overrule the Constitutional Court's decisions – was never
enacted and the parliamentary procedure terminated on completion of
the Parliament's term.
- Following
the parliamentary elections held on 21 September 2008, a new
Government was appointed in November 2008. The regulation of the
status of “the erased” in compliance with the
Constitutional Court's decisions was established as one of its
priorities.
- Further
to an upgrading of the IT system, the Ministry collected new data on
“the erased” and issued a report stating that on
24 January 2009 the number of the people removed from the
Register of Permanent Residents on 26 February 1997 amounted to
25,671, of whom 7,899 had subsequently acquired Slovenian
citizenship; 7,313 of them were still alive. A further 3,630 had
acquired a residence permit. 13,426 of “the erased” did
not have a regulated status in Slovenia on that date and their
current residence was unknown.
- On
23 February 2009 the Ministry started issuing ex officio
supplementary decisions further to point no. 8 of the Constitutional
Court's decision of 3 April 2003 to those who were already in
possession of permits or had acquired Slovenian citizenship (see
paragraph 57 above). According to the Ministry, approximately 3,000
such permits should have been issued. On 3 March 2009 the applicants
Mr Petreš and Mr Jovanović were issued with supplementary
permanent residence permits (see paragraphs 103 and 118 below).
- On
1 April 2009 the National Assembly voted on a motion of confidence
filed against the Minister of the Interior on account of the issuing
of retroactive residence permits with effect from 1992. The Minister
won the vote of confidence.
- Subsequently,
the Ministry prepared amendments and supplements to the Legal Status
Act, regulating the remaining incompatibilities between the Legal
Status Act and the Constitution, following the Constitutional
Court's decision of 3 April 2003. On 8 March 2010 the amendments and
supplements to the Legal Status Act were passed.
- On
12 March 2010 a group of parliamentarians requested that a referendum
be held on the implementation of the amendments and supplements to
the Legal Status Act, thus postponing their entry into force. On 10
June 2010 the Constitutional Court held that rejecting the law in a
referendum would produce unconstitutional consequences. At the
time of the consideration of this judgment, the new Act has not yet
entered into force.
C. The individual circumstances of the applicants
1. Mr Milan Makuc
- The
applicant Mr Makuc was born on 11 February 1947 in Raša,
Croatia. He was a Croatian citizen. His family moved to Slovenia when
he was seven years old. He was registered as a Slovenian resident
from 1 January 1955 to 26 February 1992 and considered
himself Slovenian. The applicant stated that he had worked in
Slovenia for twenty-one years and paid contributions to the national
health insurance and pension schemes.
- During
the ten-day war which followed the declaration of independence in
1991, Mr Makuc joined the Slovenian defence forces. He stated that he
believed that he would be granted Slovenian citizenship but he did
not receive any communication to that effect.
- As
a result of the deletion of his name from the Register on 26 February
1992, the applicant allegedly lost his job and the benefit of pension
contributions. He could no longer afford to pay rent for the
apartment owned by his former employer, International Shipping and
Chartering Ltd. (Splošna plovba), a State-owned
company, or to buy it in the privatisation process. He was evicted
from the apartment in 1994 or 1995, and lost all his personal
possessions, including his documents. He had been living in shelters
and municipal parks. His health seriously deteriorated as a result
but he no longer had access to medical care.
- The
applicant stated that he had visited the Piran Administrative
Authority (Upravna enota v Piranu) several times in an attempt
to regularise his status, but was repeatedly sent away.
- On
1 March 2006 he lodged an application for a permanent residence
permit under the provisions of the Legal Status Act.
- On
15 May 2006 the Piran Social Work Centre (Center za socialno delo
Piran) asked the Ministry to expedite the examination of the
applicant's request in view of his difficult social and health
condition.
- On
12 July 2006 the Ministry issued a residence permit to the applicant
and served it on him on 28 July 2006.
- According
to the respondent Government, the applicant never applied for
Slovenian citizenship.
- On
20 December 2006, with the help of the Piran Social Work Centre
(Center za socialno delo Piran) the applicant was awarded a
monthly social assistance allowance amounting to 205.57 euros (EUR).
- Further
to a proposal by the applicant's physician, on 20 September 2007
the Koper Unit of the Institute of Pension and Invalidity Insurance
(Zavod za pokojninsko in invalidsko zavarovanje Slovenije, Območna
enota Koper) issued a decision classifying him in category I of
invalidity with a right to a monthly invalidity pension amounting to
EUR 351.73 from 3 September 2007 onwards.
- On
2 June 2008 Mr Makuc died.
- The
applicants' representatives first asked the applicant Mr Makuc's
brother whether he wished to pursue the proceedings before the Court.
The latter did not express such an intention.
- On
16 January 2009 his cousin, Ms Marija Ban, informed the Court
that she wished to pursue his application before it. As far as the
Court is aware, the relevant inheritance proceedings are still
pending.
2. Mr Mustafa Kurić
- The
applicant Mr Kurić was born on 8 April 1935 in Šipovo
(Bosnia and Herzegovina). According to the respondent Government, he
is of unknown citizenship. He moved to Slovenia at the age of twenty
and settled in Koper in 1965. He is a trained shoemaker. In 1976 he
rented a small workshop from the Koper Municipality (Občina
Koper) and established a private business there. He was
registered as a permanent resident in Slovenia from 23 July 1970
until 26 February 1992.
- In
1991 he fell seriously ill, was hospitalised for three months, and
allegedly failed for that reason to lodge an application for
Slovenian citizenship. The respondent Government confirmed that the
applicant had been hospitalised. However, he had already been
released from hospital on 15 June 1991.
- In
1993 the applicant's home caught fire and he lost most of his papers.
When he applied for replacement papers to the Koper Municipality
(Občina Koper), he was informed that his name had
been deleted from the Register.
- The
applicant continued with his business and was paying the rent until
the late 1990s when he started experiencing financial difficulties.
Since he could no longer pay the rent, he lost the right to remain in
the premises. Without any papers, he was at risk of being expelled if
he travelled outside the local community where the police tolerated
his presence.
- The
applicant stated that at a later stage he tried on various occasions
to regularise his status with the Koper Administrative Authority,
including in October 2006, but allegedly
received no reply. On the other hand, the respondent Government
maintained that Mr Kurić had never applied for a residence
permit in Slovenia.
- The
applicant further maintained that in 2006 he had started proceedings
for pension rights with the Institute of Pension and
Invalidity Insurance. On 14 May 2006 the latter sent him a
letter with evidence of his years of employment, requesting him to
provide a certificate of citizenship. However, further to the request
of the Agent of the respondent Government, on 29 October 2007 the
Institute of Pension and Invalidity Insurance stated that the
applicant had not begun any official proceedings before it.
- On
7 May 2007 the applicant applied for Slovenian citizenship as a
stateless person. His request was dismissed on 27 July 2007.
- According
to the respondent Government, on 29 January 2008 the applicant again
applied for Slovenian citizenship under section 10 of the Citizenship
Act. The proceedings are pending.
3. Mr Ljubomir Petreš
- The
applicant Mr Petreš was born on 15
September 1940 in Laktaši (Bosnia and Herzegovina). He moved
to Slovenia when he was eighteen in search of work. Initially he
moved around the country constantly but in 1963 he settled in Piran.
He was registered as a permanent resident there from 4 March 1964
until 26 February 1992.
- The
applicant has been registered as unemployed in Slovenia since 1983.
He stated that he had occasionally worked in Germany and Italy from
1971 until 1992.
- In
1991 the applicant allegedly enquired of the Municipality of Piran
(Občina Piran)
whether he had to apply for Slovenian citizenship. He was told that
no application was necessary since he had his permanent residence
registered there. He was alerted in early 1992 when he did not
receive an invitation to vote in the local elections. In March 1992
when he sought to renew his identity card, holes were punched in it,
making it invalid.
- According
to the applicant, after his name was removed from the Register in
1992, he lost the right to remain in the centre where he resided. He
has been homeless ever since, living in a shelter made of wood and
cardboard on a piece of land owned by the Municipality. As he had no
valid documents he was unable to travel outside Slovenia and could
not seek work in Italy or visit his parents in Bosnia and
Herzegovina. He also risked expulsion if he travelled around the
country. In addition, he had health problems and has been in serious
need of medical assistance.
- On
6 May 1993 the applicant applied for Slovenian citizenship under
section 10 of the Citizenship Act. On 29 November 1996 the
Ministry informed Mr Petreš that his application was
incomplete and gave him two months to provide the missing documents
proving that he had accommodation, a permanent source of sufficient
income, that he had no convictions and that no criminal proceedings
were pending against him, that he had paid all his taxes, and that he
had a sufficient command of the Slovenian language. The deadline for
furnishing the missing documents was extended a number of times until
19 June 2000, when he was given a final three months.
- On
10 October 2000 the Ministry terminated the proceedings under section
38 of the Citizenship Act, citing the applicant's inactivity. The
applicant stated that his failure to submit the requested documents
was not due to his unwillingness or negligence but to the actual
impossibility of producing evidence.
- The
applicant further stated that in 2002 he sought in vain to obtain
citizenship of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Laktaši
Municipality. Contrary to that, the respondent Government maintained
that Mr Petreš was a citizen of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- On
24 December 2003 Mr Petreš lodged a request for permanent
residence under the Legal Status Act. On 29 December 2006 the
permanent residence permit was issued to the applicant and served on
him on 22 January 2007.
- In
February 2007, with the help of the Piran Social Work Centre (Center
za socialno delo Piran) the applicant was awarded a monthly
social assistance allowance, in the amount of EUR 205.57.
- Further
to the inquiries of the Agent of the respondent Government, on 18
October 2007 the Institute of Pension and Invalidity Insurance
stated that there were no data concerning the applicant's employment
in their evidence, nor had he started any proceedings before it.
- On
24 July 2009 the President of the Chamber requested the respondent
Government and the applicants under Rule 54 § 2 (a) to inform
the Court whether an additional residence permit, further to the
Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003, had been issued in
respect of the applicant Mr Petreš.
- The
respondent Government confirmed that on 3 March 2009 the applicant
had been ex officio issued a supplementary residence permit on
the basis of point no. 8 of the operative part of the Constitutional
Court's decision of 3 April 2003, awarding him residence status from
26 February 1992.
- The
applicant initially replied that no supplementary decision had been
issued in respect of him. However, on 24 September 2009 he confirmed
the fact that he had been issued with the supplementary residence
permit. Owing to impediments to serving the decision on the applicant
in person, the decision was notified to him by publication on the
Ministry's notice board.
4. Mr Jovan Jovanović
- The
applicant Mr Jovanović was born on 30 August 1959 in Lopare
(Bosnia and Herzegovina). He is a citizen of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
He moved to Slovenia in 1976 in search of work and settled in
Ljubljana. He had his permanent residence registered in Slovenia from
1 October 1976 to 26 February 1992.
- According
to the applicant, in 1991 he did not apply for Slovenian citizenship
because he could not obtain the required documents from Bosnia and
Herzegovina. Subsequently, he was stopped by the police in a routine
check and his passport and identity card were confiscated. The
applicant has not left Slovenia since 1992 because he would be unable
to re-enter the country, as he has no papers.
- The
applicant worked in the Pivovarna Union brewery from 30 April
1978 until 31 March 1992. Afterwards, he wished to set up a private
company but his plans to pursue a private career fell through because
of his lack of status. He also lost the apartment he had rented from
his former employer, but acquired a new residence with his partner,
L.N., who was also of Bosnian origin but had acquired Slovenian
citizenship. They had a son, S.J., who has Slovenian citizenship.
- On
31 March 2004 Mr Jovanović lodged an application for Slovenian
citizenship under section 10 of the Citizenship Act and an
application for a permanent residence permit.
- On
14 April 2004 the Ministry informed him that his application for
citizenship was incomplete. He was specifically requested to produce,
inter alia, proof that he had sufficient income, no
outstanding tax debts, and legal status as an alien.
- On
18 January 2006 the Ministry informed Mr Jovanović that he had
not lodged the application for a permanent residence permit with the
competent administrative authority on the prescribed application
form. As a consequence, he was requested to pay administration fees
within fifteen days, which he did.
- According
to the respondent Government, on 27 June 2006 the applicant applied
again for Slovenian citizenship under section 10 of the Citizenship
Act.
- In
the meantime, on 19 June 2006 the applicant applied again for a
permanent residence permit. On 22 September 2006 he withdrew his
request. On 3 October 2006 the Ljubljana Administrative Unit (Upravna
enota Ljubljana) terminated the proceedings.
- On
21 November 2006 a permanent residence permit in proceedings
initiated previously was issued to the applicant. The decision was
served on him on 8 January 2007.
- On
1 December 2006 his application for Slovenian citizenship was
dismissed.
- Subsequently,
according to the respondent Government, on 9 May 2007 the applicant
was awarded Slovenian citizenship by naturalisation since he is
married to a Slovenian citizen.
- Further
to the request of the Agent of the respondent Government, on 8
October 2007 the Institute of Pension and Invalidity Insurance
stated that the applicant's employment in Slovenia was registered in
their evidence. He did not start any proceedings before the
Institute of Pension and Invalidity Insurance.
- On
24 July 2009 the President of the Chamber requested the respondent
Government and the applicants under Rule 54 § 2 (a) to inform
the Court whether, further to the Constitutional Court's decision of
3 April 2003, a supplementary residence permit had been issued in
respect of the applicant Mr Jovanović.
- The
respondent Government confirmed that on 3 March 2009 the applicant
had been ex officio issued a supplementary residence permit on
the basis of point no. 8 of the operative part of the Constitutional
Court's decision of 3 April 2003, awarding him residence status from
26 February 1992.
- The
applicant initially replied that no supplementary decision had been
issued in respect of him. However, on 24 September 2009 he confirmed
that he had been issued with the supplementary residence permit.
Owing to various circumstances, however, he had previously been
unaware of this fact. The decision was served on a member of Mr
Jovanović's family, who allegedly failed to inform him.
5. Mr Velimir Dabetić
- The
applicant Mr Dabetić was born on 22 September 1969 in Koper
(Slovenia). According to the respondent Government, the applicant had
Yugoslav citizenship. He was registered as a permanent resident in
Slovenia from 29 September 1971 until 26 February 1992. His parents
and two brothers were born in Montenegro and they, like the
applicant, were removed from the Register in 1992. The applicant's
mother was granted Slovenian citizenship in 1997 and his father in
2004.
- The
applicant stated that in 1991 he had moved to Italy, but remained
registered as a permanent resident in Koper (Slovenia) until the
events of 1992. He allegedly received false information from the
Koper Administrative Unit. The respondent Government stated that the
applicant had been living in Italy since 1989, and not only in 1991.
He was therefore not resident in Slovenia when the plebiscite was
held and when it became independent.
- The
applicant worked in Italy until 2002, when his old SFRY passport
expired and the Italian authorities refused to extend his residence
permit. He remained in Italy illegally and on 20 April 2006 he was
ordered to leave the country within five days. Eventually, he was
given leave to remain in Italy since he had applied for recognition
of his stateless person status and the proceedings were pending.
- In
the meantime, on 25 November 2003 the applicant urged the
Slovenian Ministry to issue a decision regulating his status
following the delivery of the Constitutional Court's decision of 3
April 2003 (see paragraphs 56-57 above and 250-255 below). The
respondent Government maintained that the applicant had never
properly applied for a residence permit in Slovenia.
- On
29 November 2003 the applicant applied for Slovenian citizenship
under section 19 of the Citizenship Act as amended in 2002.
- On
9 February 2004 the applicant filed an action complaining of the
silence of the administrative authorities (toZba zaradi molka
upravnega organa) in the Nova Gorica Unit of the Administrative
Court (Upravno sodišče,
Oddelek v Novi Gorici) since he had not been issued with a
supplementary decision (see paragraph 57 above).
- On
20 May 2005 the applicant's action was rejected by the Administrative
Court.
- On
14 November 2005 the Ministry dismissed his application for Slovenian
citizenship because he had failed to prove that he had in fact
resided in Slovenia for ten years and had lived there constantly for
the last five years.
6. Ms Ana Mezga
- The
applicant Ms Mezga was born on 4 June 1965 in Čakovec (Croatia).
She is a Croatian citizen. In 1979 she moved to Ljubljana (Slovenia),
where she later found work. She was registered as a permanent
resident in Slovenia from 28 July 1980 to 26 February 1992.
- According
to the applicant, in 1992, after the birth of her second child, she
became aware of the fact that her name had been erased from the
Register. Her employer shortened her maternity leave and made her
redundant. Moreover, in March 1993 she was stopped by the police
during a routine check. Since she had no papers, she was detained at
the police station and later in a transit centre for foreigners
(prehodni dom za tujce), but was released after paying a fine.
- Subsequently,
she moved to Piran, where she met H.Š., a Slovenian citizen,
with whom she had two children, both of whom are Slovenian citizens.
- On
13 December 1999 Ms Mezga lodged an application for a permanent
residence permit under the Legal Status Act. The Ministry asked her
five times to complete her application and informed her that she
could also have sought a permanent residence permit under the
provisions for family reunification.
- On
14 April 2004 the applicant requested the Ministry to issue a
supplementary decision under point 8 of the operative part of the
Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003 (see paragraph 57
above).
- On
29 April 2004 the applicant applied for Slovenian citizenship under
section 19 of the amended Citizenship Act.
- On
15 October 2004 the applicant attended a meeting at the Piran
Administration Unit in the framework of proceedings for a permanent
residence permit. On 25 October 2004 the applicant was requested
to complete her application.
- On
5 November 2004 the Institute of Pension and Invalidity
Insurance stated that the applicant's employment in Slovenia was
registered in their files.
- On
6 December 2004 the Ministry terminated the proceedings relating to
the applicant's request for a permanent residence permit on account
of her inactivity.
- In
the proceedings concerning the citizenship, on 18 November 2005 the
Ministry gave the applicant two months to complete her application.
Among other things, she was to prove that she had in fact been
resident in Slovenia since 23 December 1990.
- On
13 June 2006 the Ministry dismissed her application for Slovenian
citizenship.
- On
10 August 2007 the applicant applied for a temporary permit as a
family member of a Slovenian citizen.
- On
13 September 2007 the applicant received a temporary residence permit
valid until 13 September 2012.
7. Mrs Ljubenka Ristanović and Mr Tripun
Ristanović
- The
applicant Mrs Ristanović was born on 19 November 1968 in
Zavidovići (Bosnia and Herzegovina). She is currently a Serbian
citizen. She moved to Ljubljana (Slovenia) in 1986 in search of work.
She married there and on 20 August 1988 her son, the applicant Mr
Tripun Ristanović, was born. He is a citizen of Bosnia and
Herzegovina. Both applicants were registered as permanent residents
in Ljubljana before the events of 1992; Mrs Ristanović from 6
August 1986 to 20 November 1991 and her son from 20 August 1988 until
26 February 1992.
- Mrs
Ristanović maintained that she believed that she would be
awarded Slovenian citizenship automatically as a permanent resident.
However, in 1994 both Mrs Ristanović and her son were deported
from Slovenia. Mrs Ristanović's husband, who was in possession
of a work permit and a temporary residence permit at the material
time, remained in Slovenia. He later received a
permanent residence permit.
- According
to the respondent Government, Mrs Ristanović moved from her
Municipality without deregistering her permanent residence and her
personal card was for that reason transferred from the Register of
Permanent Residents into the Register of those “emigrated
without having deregistered”.
- In
2004 Mrs Ristanović acquired a Serbian identity card and in 2005
a Serbian passport. In 2004, the authorities of Bosnia and
Herzegovina issued an identity card and a passport to Mr Ristanović.
Since he has no Serbian documents he has allegedly been living in
Serbia in constant fear of being deported.
- The
applicants Mrs and Mr Ristanović stated that they never applied
for a permanent residence permit or for Slovenian citizenship since
they did not fulfil the condition of actually living in Slovenia
under the existing legislation.
8. Mr Ali Berisha
- The applicant Mr Berisha was born on 23 May 1969 in
Peć (Kosovo) in a Roma ethnic community. According to the
respondent Government, he is a Serbian citizen. He moved to Slovenia
in 1985. He worked in a factory “Elektrokovina” in
Maribor until 31 May 1991. He was registered as a permanent resident
in Slovenia from 6 October 1987 until 26 February 1992.
- In
1991 he allegedly spent some time in Kosovo with his sick mother.
This appears to have been the reason why he did not apply for
Slovenian citizenship at that time.
- The
applicant maintained that he was detained in 1993 by the Slovenian
border police as he re-entered the country after visiting relatives
in Germany. His SFRY passport was taken away from him and he was kept
in a transit centre for foreigners for ten days. On 3 July 1993 he
was deported to Tirana (Albania), allegedly without any decision. The
Albanian police returned the applicant to Slovenia because he had no
passport. He was again placed in the transit centre, from which he
escaped during the night.
- In
1993 the applicant fled to Germany, where he received a temporary
residence permit for humanitarian reasons, owing to the unstable
situation in Kosovo at the time.
- On
9 August 1996 he married M.M., born in Kosovo, also a member of a
Roma ethnic group. Four children were born between 1997 and 2003
while the family lived in Germany and received welfare benefits
there.
- In
2005 the German authorities dismissed the applicant's request for
another extension of his residence permit because the overall
situation in Kosovo was deemed stable enough for him to return there.
He was ordered to leave Germany with his family by 30 September 2005.
- At
an unknown time, the applicant and his family lodged requests for
asylum in Germany.
- Subsequently,
the applicant and his family moved to Slovenia.
- On
13 July 2005 the applicant and his family lodged an application for
temporary residence permits and on 25 July 2005 they lodged an
application for permanent residence permits under the Legal Status
Act.
- In
addition, on 26 September 2005 the applicant and his family filed
asylum requests. The applicant also sought refugee status.
- Further
to the withdrawal of their asylum requests, on 19 October 2005 the
Ministry terminated the proceedings. The Ministry also ordered that
the applicant and his family should return to Germany. On 28 October
2005 the removal order was issued but was not executed. On 10
November 2005 a new removal order was issued, setting the date of
removal for 18 November 2005. The applicant started proceedings
before the Administrative Court. On 15 November 2005 his request was
granted.
- At
that time the case also received considerable attention from the
local and international community owing to the efforts of Amnesty
International.
- On
27 February 2006 the family again applied for asylum in Slovenia.
They were living in an asylum centre (azilni dom) at the time.
- On
28 April 2006 the applicant brought an action before the
Administrative Court, complaining of the silence of the
administrative authorities in the proceedings related to the
permanent residence permits for him, his wife and their four
children. Those proceedings are pending.
- On
19 July 2006 the German authorities informed the Slovenian
authorities that Germany had jurisdiction under the Dublin Regulation
for examining the asylum applications of the Berisha family.
- On
28 July 2006 the applicant's fifth child was born in Slovenia.
- On
30 October 2006 the Ministry decided, further to the above-mentioned
decision of the German authorities, that they did not have
jurisdiction for the examination of the asylum requests of the
applicant and his family and that they would be handed over to
Germany. The Ministry had also received fresh evidence that Mr
Berisha and his family were asylum seekers in Germany, where they had
received financial aid for that purpose.
- On
5 November 2006 the applicant and his family instituted proceedings
in the Administrative Court, contesting the Ministry's decision. On
the same day they also requested that the impugned decision not be
enforced and withdrew their application for asylum.
- According
to the applicant, on 7 November 2006 the Ministry again tried to
transfer the applicant and his family to Germany and on 15 November
2006 the Administrative Court annulled the removal order.
- On
28 December 2006 the Supreme Court (Vrhovno sodišče)
upheld the Ministry decision's of 30 October 2006 that Germany had
jurisdiction under the Dublin Regulation to decide on the applicant's
request for asylum.
- On
1 February 2007 the applicant and his family were handed over to
Germany.
- Neither
the applicant nor his family have applied for Slovenian citizenship.
- On
22 March 2007 the applicant filed a constitutional complaint. The
proceedings before the Constitutional Court are pending.
9. Mr Ilfan Sadik Ademi
- The
applicant Mr Ademi was born on 28 July 1952 in Skopje (“the
former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”) in a Roma ethnic
community. According to the respondent Government, he is of unknown
citizenship. In 1977 he moved to Slovenia, where he worked until
1992. He had his permanent residence registered there from 27
September 1977 to 26 February 1992.
- According
to the applicant, in 1993 he was stopped by the police in the course
of a routine check. Since he had no valid papers, he and his family
were expelled to Hungary. Shortly afterwards they moved to Croatia,
from where they re-entered Slovenia illegally.
- On
23 November 1992 the applicant lodged an application for Slovenian
citizenship with the assistance of a lawyer.
- The
applicant later moved to Germany where he declared himself a
stateless person and obtained a temporary residence permit and a
passport for foreigners.
- On
9 February 1999 he requested the Embassy of “the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” to issue him with a passport,
but received a negative reply since he was not their citizen.
- On
16 February 2005 the applicant applied for a permanent residence
permit under the Legal Status Act. On 20 April 2005 the Ministry
requested him to complete his application with evidence of
citizenship.
- On
26 May 2005 his application was rejected on the ground that the
applicant was a stateless person. The Ministry stated that the Legal
Status Act applied only to citizens of the former SFRY republics.
- On
11 July 2005 the Ministry replied to the applicant's letter seeking
further examination of his application for Slovenian citizenship
lodged in 1992. It informed him that, since he did not appear to have
lived in Slovenia for the preceding ten years, he did not meet the
requirements for Slovenian citizenship under the amended Citizenship
Act.
- On
9 September 2005 his application for Slovenian citizenship was
dismissed.
- On
31 July 2007 the applicant again applied for a permanent residence
permit under the Legal Status Act. On 31 March 2008 his
application was rejected, again on the ground that the applicant was
not a citizen of any of the former SFRY republics.
- The
applicant started proceedings before the Administrative Court which
are pending.
- The
applicant now lives in Germany.
10. Mr Zoran Minić
- The
applicant Mr Minić was born on 4 April 1972 in Podujevo
(Kosovo). According to the respondent Government, he is a Serbian
citizen. He moved to Slovenia with his family in 1977. He was
registered as a resident in Slovenia from 1 August 1984 to 26
February 1992.
- According
to the applicant, he and his family applied for Slovenian citizenship
under the Citizenship Act. However, they missed the deadline for
lodging the application by one month, as the war in Kosovo had made
collecting the necessary documents difficult. According to the
information supplied by the respondent Government, there was no
evidence that Mr Minić had applied for Slovenian citizenship in
1991. Finally, Mr Minić's mother was awarded Slovenian
citizenship in 2000 and his siblings in 2003.
- The
respondent Government stated that it followed from his employment
documents that he had been working in Podujevo from 1992 until 1999.
He married a Serbian citizen, with whom he has four children. On the
other hand, the applicant stated that he had been living in Ljubljana
in 1992.
- In
2002 Mr Minić was arrested by the police in Slovenia because he
was working without a permit. He was prosecuted, ordered to pay a
fine and on 5 June 2002 expelled to Hungary, in spite of the
Constitutional Court's decision of 4 February 1999 (see
paragraphs 51 above and 243 below), without any formal decision.
- On
15 September 2003 the applicant applied for Slovenian citizenship
under Section 19 of the amended Citizenship Act.
- Between
26 April and 9 October 2004 the Ministry asked the applicant five
times to complete his application by providing evidence, among other
things, that he had been living in Slovenia without interruption
since 23 December 1990. When he failed to do so, he was summoned for
a hearing at the Ministry.
- At
the hearing on 17 December 2004 he confirmed the information stated
in his employment record, namely that he had worked in Podujevo
(Kosovo) from 8 January 1992 to 6 April 1999 and had thus not been
living in Slovenia uninterruptedly since 23 December 1990.
- On
21 February 2006 his application for Slovenian citizenship was
accordingly dismissed. That decision was served on Mr Minić
between 28 June and 2 July 2006 during a trip to Slovenia.
- On
17 July 2006 the applicant initiated proceedings before the
Administrative Court. The proceedings are pending.
- On
30 June 2006 the applicant applied for a permanent residence permit
under the Legal Status Act.
- On
29 March 2007 a hearing was held at the Ministry. On 14 July 2007 the
applicant provided supplementary documents in support of his request.
- On
18 July 2007 the Ministry dismissed the applicant's request since he
did not meet the requirement of the actual residence in Slovenia.
- On
19 September 2007 the applicant initiated proceedings before the
Administrative Court. The proceedings are pending.
II. RELEVANT INTERNATIONAL AND DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
A. Domestic law and practice
1. Yugoslav legislation
- In
the former Yugoslavia, citizenship was regulated by different federal
and individual republics' acts on citizenship (see paragraphs 194-207
below).
(a) Citizenship of the Democratic Federal
Yugoslavia Act (Zakon o drZavljanstvu Demokratične
federativne Jugoslavije – Official Gazette of the DFY, no.
64/45 of 1945)
- Section
1 of the Citizenship of the Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Act
provided for uniformity of Yugoslav citizenship,
which comprised both federal and republic citizenship: every citizen
of a republic was simultaneously a federal citizen and every federal
citizen was also a republic citizen.
- After
the adoption of the Constitution in 1946, this Act was confirmed as
the Citizenship of the Federal People's Republic
of Yugoslavia Act.
(b) Citizenship of the People's Republic
of Slovenia Act (Zakon o drZavljanstvu Ljudske Republike Slovenije
– Official Gazette of the PRS, no. 20/50 of 1950)
- Section
1 of this Act specified that citizenship of the People's Republic of
Slovenia could only be held by persons who were also citizens of the
Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia.
(c) Yugoslav Citizenship Act (Zakon o
jugoslovanskem drZavljanstvu – Official Gazette of the
SFRY, no. 38/64 of 1964)
- Following
the adoption of the 1963 Constitution, the Yugoslav
Citizenship Act was passed in 1964. Section 2
of that Act provided that the republic citizenship could only be held
by a Yugoslav citizen, thus retaining the primacy of federal
citizenship. Loss of Yugoslav citizenship entailed loss of republic
citizenship.
- Consequently,
the new Citizenship of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia
Act was adopted in 1965.
(d) Constitution of the SFRY (Ustava
SFRJ – Official Gazette of the SFRY, no. 9/74 of 1974)
- The
Preamble of the Constitution of the SFRY read:
“Proceeding from the right of every nation to
self-determination, which also includes the right to secede, the
nations of Yugoslavia have, on the basis of the freely expressed will
in the common struggle of all the nations and nationalities in the
national liberation war and socialist revolution, in accordance with
their historical aspirations, aware that the further strengthening of
brotherhood and unity is in the common interest, together with the
nationalities with which they live, united into a federal republic of
free and equal nations and nationalities and have created a socialist
federal community of working people – the Socialist Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia – in which in the interest of each
nation and each nationality in particular and of all together they
shall fulfill and ensure:
...
The working people and nations and nationalities shall
fulfill their sovereign rights in the socialist republics and in the
socialist autonomous regions in accordance with their constitutional
rights and – where this Constitution so provides in the common
interest – in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
...”
- Article
1 of the Constitution defined the SFRY as a federal State consisting
of voluntarily united nations. Individual republics were defined as
States based on national sovereignty and on the rule and
self-management of the working class and all working people (Article
3).
- Article
294 of the Constitution provided that SFRY citizenship was common to
all residents of Yugoslavia, whereby every citizen of a republic was
at the same time a citizen of the SFRY.
- Following
the adoption of the 1974 Constitution, a new SFRY Citizenship
Act, the last, was enacted in 1976.
(e) Constitution of the Socialist Republic
of Slovenia (Ustava Socialistične republike Slovenije –
Official Gazette of the SRS, no. 6/74 and 32/89 of 1974 and 1989)
- Article
2 of the Slovenian Constitution set forth the duties of the republic:
ensuring and exercising sovereignty, equality and national freedom,
ensuring independence and territorial integrity, ensuring human
rights; ensuring conditions for the development and progress of the
Slovenian nation; developing international relationships in the
political, economic, cultural and other areas within the framework of
foreign policy of the SFRY; performing all other functions that are
important for political, economic and cultural activities; defence
and socialist self-managing of the democratic social environment.
- Moreover,
the same article provided that only those duties which, in the common
interest of nations and nationalities and on the basis of an
agreement of the republics and autonomous regions, were so defined by
the SFRY Constitution, were to be fulfilled within the SFRY.
- In
relation to citizenship, the Constitution provided that every citizen
of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia was simultaneously a citizen of
the SFRY.
- In
1989, Amendment X to the 1974 Constitution replaced its Article 2,
and provided:
Article 2
“The Republic of Slovenia exists within the
composition of the SFRY on the basis of the permanent, integral and
inalienable right of the Slovenian nation to self-determination,
which also includes the right to secede.”
(f) Citizenship of the Socialist Republic
of Slovenia Act (Zakon o drZavljanstvu
Socialistične republike Slovenije – Official
Gazette of the SRS, no. 23/76 of 1976)
- Section
1 of this Act provided that every citizen of the Socialist Republic
of Slovenia was simultaneously a citizen of the SFRY, thus
establishing the primacy of the republic citizenship.
(g) Movement and Residence of Aliens Act
(Zakon o gibanju
in prebivanju tujcev – Official Gazette of the SFRY,
no. 56/80 of 1980, as amended)
- This
Act clearly distinguished between a permit for temporary or permanent
residence of an alien in the State territory and the temporary or
permanent place of residence of a SFRY citizen, denoting the actual
location of his/her residence.
(h) Inhabitants' Residence Evidence and
Population Registry Act (Zakon o
evidenci nastanitve občanov in o registru prebivalstva
– Official Gazette of the SRS, no. 6/83, 11/91 of 1983
and 1991)
209. This
Act regulated the registration and deregistration of permanent and
temporary residence and the keeping of population registers on
Slovenian territory.
- In
1991, its section 5 was amended to provide:
“The registration of permanent residence and
registration of any change of address is obligatory for all
inhabitants, whenever they settle permanently in a settlement or
change their address. Deregistration of permanent residence is
obligatory for inhabitants who move from the territory of the
Republic of Slovenia.”
(i) Rules
on the Keeping and Management of the Register of Permanent Residents
(Pravilnik o vodenju in vzdrZevanju
registra prebivalstva –
Official Gazette of the SRS, no. 18/84 of 1984)
- The
relevant provisions of this Act provide:
Section 4
“Personal cards shall contain the following data
on the inhabitant:
unique personal identification number (enotna matična
številka občana)
...
national affiliation, nationality or ethnic group,
citizenship of a socialist republic,
...”
Section 6
“If the competent
authority determines that for an individual inhabitant the reasons
for being kept in the card index of permanent residents have ceased,
it shall remove that person's card from the card index of permanent
residence and shall place it in one of the special card indexes.”
Section 9
“..
The competent authority must
harmonise and supplement the files daily with regard to the following
events:
...
loss of citizenship of a socialist republic and the SFRY
and change in citizenship of a socialist republic,
...”
2. Legislation of the Republic of Slovenia
(a) Statement of Good Intentions (Izjava
o dobrih namenih – Official Gazette of the RS, no. 44/90-I
of 1990)
- The
purpose of the Statement of Good Intentions, adopted on 6 December
1990 in the course of preparations for the plebiscite on the
independence of Slovenia, was to express the State's commitment to
certain values in pursuit of its independence. The relevant provision
of this document provides:
“... The Slovenian State ... shall ... guarantee
to all members of other nations and nationalities the right to an
all-embracing development of their culture and language and to all
those who have their permanent residence in Slovenia the right to
obtain Slovenian citizenship if they so wish...”
(b) Fundamental Constitutional Charter on
the Sovereignty and Independence of the Republic of Slovenia
(Temeljna ustavna listina o samostojnosti in neodvisnosti
Republike Slovenije – Official Gazette of the RS no. 1/91-I
of 1991)
- The
relevant provisions of the Fundamental Constitutional Charter on the
Sovereignty and Independence of the Republic of Slovenia, published
on 25 June 1991, provide:
Section III
“The Republic of Slovenia guarantees the
protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms to all persons on
the territory of the Republic of Slovenia, regardless of their
national origin and without any discrimination, in accordance with
the Constitution of the Republic of Slovenia and binding
international agreements...”
(c) 1991 Constitutional Law relating to
the Fundamental Constitutional Charter on the Sovereignty and
Independence of the Republic of Slovenia (Ustavni zakon za
izvedbo Temeljne ustavne listine o samostojnosti in neodvisnosti RS
– Official Gazette of the RS no. 1/91-I of 1991)
- The
relevant provisions of the 1991 Constitutional Law provide:
Section 13
“Citizens of the other republics [of the former
SFRY] who on 23 December 1990, the day the plebiscite on the
independence of the Republic of Slovenia was held, were registered as
permanent residents in the Republic of Slovenia and in fact live here
shall until they acquire citizenship of Slovenia under section 40 of
the Citizenship of the Republic of Slovenia Act or until the expiry
of the time-limit set forth in section 81 of the Aliens Act,
have equal rights and duties as the citizens of the Republic of
Slovenia...”
(d) Constitution of the Republic of
Slovenia (Ustava Republike Slovenije),
Official Gazette no. 33/91-I of 1991)
- The
relevant provisions of the Constitution of the Republic of Slovenia
provide:
Article 8
“Statutes and regulations must comply with
generally accepted principles of international law and with treaties
that are binding on Slovenia. Ratified and published treaties shall
be applied directly.”
Article 14
“In Slovenia everyone shall be guaranteed equal
human rights and fundamental freedoms irrespective of national
origin, race, sex, language, religion, political or other conviction,
material standing, birth, education, social status or any other
personal circumstance.
All are equal before the law.”
Article 90
“The National Assembly may call a referendum on
any issue which is the subject of regulation by law. The National
Assembly is bound by the result of such referendum.
The National Assembly may call a referendum from the
preceding paragraph on its own initiative, however it must call such
a referendum if so required by at least one third of the deputies, by
the National Council or by forty thousand voters..
The right to vote in a referendum is held by all
citizens who are eligible to vote in elections.
A proposal is passed in a referendum if a majority of
those voting have cast votes in favour of the same.
Referendums are regulated by a law passed in the
National Assembly by a two-thirds majority vote of deputies present.”
(e) Constitutional
Court Act (Zakon o Ustavnem sodišču,
Official Gazette of the RS, no. 15/94 of 1994, as amended)
- The
relevant provisions of the Constitutional Court Act provide:
Section 1
“1. The Constitutional Court is
the highest body of judicial authority for the protection of
constitutionality, legality, human rights and basic freedoms.
2. In relation to other State bodies,
the Constitutional Court is an autonomous and independent state body.
3. Decisions of the Constitutional Court are legally
binding.”
Section 59
“The Constitutional Court shall issue a decision
declaring that the appeal was unfounded or shall accept the appeal
and quash the act that was the subject of the appeal or declare it
null and void in whole or in part, and return the matter to the
competent body. ...”
Section 60
“1. If the Constitutional Court quashes an
individual act, it may also decide a contested right or freedom if
such a procedure is necessary in order to put an end to consequences
that have already occurred as a result of that act or if such is the
nature of the constitutional right or freedom and provided that a
decision can be reached on the basis of information in the record.
2. The decision referred to in the
preceding paragraph is implemented by the authority which is
competent for the implementation of the individual act which the
Constitutional Court abrogated or annulled and replaced by its
decision. If there is no competent authority according to the
regulations in force, the Constitutional Court determines one.”
(f) Citizenship of
the Republic of Slovenia Act (Zakon o drZavljanstvu Republike
Slovenije, Official Gazette no. 1/91-I,
30/91 and 96/2002 of 1991 and 2002)
- The
relevant provisions of the Citizenship Act provide:
Section 10
“The competent authority may, within its
discretion, admit a person requesting naturalisation if this is in
compliance with the national interest. The person must fulfil the
following conditions:
1. be 18 years of age;
2. have been released from current citizenship or prove
that he/she will be released [from such citizenship] if he/she
acquires citizenship of the Republic of Slovenia;
3. have in fact been living in Slovenia for 10 years, of
which the past 5 years prior to the submission of the application are
to have been continuous;
4. have a guaranteed permanent source of income, at
least in an amount that enables material and social security;
5. have a command of the Slovene language for the
purposes of everyday communication;
6. not have been sentenced to a prison sentence longer
than one year in the country of which he/she is a citizen or in
Slovenia for a criminal offence which is prosecuted by law, provided
that such an offence is punishable pursuant to the regulations of
his/her country and also pursuant to the regulations of the Republic
of Slovenia;
7. not have had his or her residence in the Republic of
Slovenia prohibited;
8. the person's naturalisation must pose no threat to
the public order, security or defence of the State;
...”
Section 38
“If the procedure for the establishment of
citizenship or for the acquisition or loss of citizenship of the
Republic of Slovenia was introduced upon request of the person
concerned and it is impossible to end the procedure without his/her
cooperation, his/her silence shall be considered as the withdrawal of
the request, if he/she, despite an admonition from the competent
authority, does not carry out any activity within the given term,
necessary to continue or end the procedure, or if it can be concluded
from the omission of such deeds that he/she is no longer interested
in the continuation of the procedure.
The procedure can only be ended on the basis of the
reasons under the preceding paragraph after three months have expired
from the admonition.”
Section 39
“Persons who acquired citizenship of the Republic
of Slovenia and of the Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia
under valid legislation shall be considered citizens of Slovenia
under the present Act.”
Section 40
“Citizens of another republic [of the former SFRY]
who on 23 December 1990, the day the plebiscite on the independence
of the Republic of Slovenia was held, were registered as permanent
residents in the Republic of Slovenia and in fact live here shall
acquire citizenship of the Republic of Slovenia if they lodge, within
six months after the present Act enters into force, an application
with the internal affairs authority of the municipality where they
live...”
- On
14 December 1991 the Citizenship Act was amended, by adding the
following two paragraphs to the above-mentioned section 40:
“Even if the applicant meets the requirements set
forth in the preceding paragraph his or her application will be
dismissed, if he or she committed, after 26 June 1991, a crime .....
against the Republic of Slovenia or other values protected by the
criminal legislation in accordance with section 4 of the
Constitutional Act relating to the Fundamental Constitutional Charter
on the Sovereignty and Independence of the Republic of Slovenia,
regardless of where the crime was committed. If criminal proceedings
are pending, the procedure concerning nationality shall be suspended
until the decision in the aforementioned proceedings becomes final.
Even if the applicant meets the requirements for
citizenship set forth in the first paragraph, his or her application
may be dismissed [if granting citizenship would be liable to
undermine public order, security or defence of the State].”
- In
its decision U-I-89/99 of 10 June 1999, the Constitutional Court
declared unconstitutional the provision in the latter paragraph that
cited “public order” as a reason for denying citizenship.
- On
14 November 2002 the Citizenship of the Republic of Slovenia Act was
further amended. The relevant provision reads:
Section 19
“An adult who on 23 December 1990 was registered
as a permanent resident on the territory of the Republic of Slovenia
and has lived there uninterruptedly since that date, may apply for
citizenship of the Republic of Slovenia within one year after the
present Act enters into force if he or she meets the requirements set
forth in ... this Act.
When deciding under the preceding paragraph whether the
applicant meets the requirements set forth in ... this Act, the
competent authority may take into consideration the length of the
applicant's stay in the State, his or her personal, family, business,
social and other ties with the Republic of Slovenia and the
consequences a refusal of citizenship would have for the applicant.
...”
(g) Aliens Act (Zakon
o tujcih, Official Gazette no.
1/91-I of 1991)
- The
relevant provisions of the Aliens Act read as follows:
Section 13
“A foreigner who enters the territory of the
Republic of Slovenia with a valid passport may remain in it for three
months or as long as the validity of an issued visa allows him to,
unless otherwise provided by an international agreement ...
A foreigner wishing to remain on the territory of the
Republic of Slovenia for longer than provided by the above paragraph
for reasons of education, specialisation, employment, medical
treatment, professional experience, or because they have married a
citizen of the Republic of Slovenia, have immovable property on the
territory of the Republic of Slovenia, or enjoy the rights afforded
by employment in the State or for any other valid reason requiring
their residence in the State, must apply ... for a temporary
residence permit.
...”
Section 14
“A residence permit may be issued as
(i) a temporary permit; or
(ii) a permanent residence permit.”
Section 16
“A permanent residence permit may be issued to a
foreigner who has been living on the territory of the Republic of
Slovenia continuously for at least three years on the basis of a
temporary residence permit and meets the requirements set forth in
section 13 of this Act for permanent residence on the territory
of the Republic of Slovenia...”
Section 23
“A foreigner residing on the territory of the
Republic of Slovenia on the basis of a foreign passport, a visa or an
entrance permit, or an international agreement ... or who has been
issued with a temporary residence permit ... may be refused leave to
remain:
(i) if reasons of public order, security or defence of
the State so demand;
(ii) if he or she refuses to abide by a decision of the
State authorities;
(iii) if he or she repeatedly breaches public order,
national border security or the provisions of this Act;
(iv) if he or she is convicted by a foreign or national
court of a crime punishable by at least three months' imprisonment;
(v) if he or she no longer has sufficient means of
subsistence and his or her subsistence is not otherwise secured;
(vi) for the protection of public health.”
Section 28
“An authorised officer of the internal affairs
authority may take a foreigner who fails voluntarily to leave the
territory of the Republic of Slovenia when required to do so by the
competent authority or administrative body in charge of internal
affairs, or who resides on the territory of the Republic of Slovenia
beyond the period provided for in section 13(1) of this Act or beyond
the period allowed in the decision granting temporary residence, to
the State border or diplomatic-consular representation of the State
of which he or she is a citizen, and direct such person to cross the
border or hand him or her over to the representative of a foreign
country.
The internal affairs authority concerned shall order any
foreigner who does not leave the territory of the Republic of
Slovenia in accordance with the above paragraph and cannot be removed
immediately for any reason, to reside in a transit centre for
foreigners for a period not exceeding thirty days if there exists a
suspicion that he or she will seek to evade this measure.
An internal affairs authority may designate a different
place of residence for a foreigner who is unable to leave the
territory of the Republic of Slovenia immediately but has sufficient
means of subsistence.”
Section 81
“Until the decision issued in the administrative
proceedings concerning the request for citizenship becomes final, the
provisions of this Act shall not apply to citizens of the SFRY who
are citizens of other republics and who apply for Slovenian
citizenship in accordance with section 40 of the Citizenship of the
Republic of Slovenia Act within six months after it enters into
force.
As regards citizens of the SFRY who are citizens of
other republics but either do not apply for citizenship of the
Republic of Slovenia within the time-limit set out in the previous
paragraph or are refused citizenship, the provisions of this Act
shall apply two months after the expiry of the time-limit within
which they could have applied for citizenship or after the decision
made in respect of their application became final.”
Section 82
“... Permanent residence permits issued in
accordance with the Movement and Residence of Foreigners Act ...
shall remain valid if the foreign holder of such a permit had
permanent residence on the territory of the Republic of Slovenia when
this Act came into force.”
222. In
order to faciliate the acquisition of permanent residence permits for
citizens of the other former SFRY republics who have either failed to
apply for Slovenian citizenship or have not acquired residence
permits under the Aliens Act, on 3 September 1992 the Government
adopted the following decision:
“... in examining applications for
permanent residence permits for aliens referred to in section 16 of
the Aliens Act ..., the Ministry of the Interior shall take into
account that the condition for permanent residence in the territory
of the Republic of Slovenia has been met when the alien has had
permanent residence registered for at least three years and was in
fact living here before the provisions of the Aliens Act started
applying to him.”
- In
1997 section 16 of the Aliens Act was amended so as to require eight
years' uninterrupted residence on the basis of a temporary residence
permit in order for a foreigner to qualify for permanent residence.
(h) 1999 Aliens Act
(Zakon o tujcih,
Official Gazette nos. 61/99 and 107/2006 of 1999 and 2000)
- The
1999 Aliens Act replaced the Aliens Act of 1991. Several amendments
were made to the 1999 Aliens Act in 2002, 2005 and 2006. The relevant
provision of the amended 1999 Aliens Act provides:
Section 36
“Foreigners registered as a permanent resident in
Slovenia and foreigners who have been living in Slovenia for one year
as a temporary resident and have acquired a temporary residence
permit valid for at least one year shall have, under the terms set
forth in this Act, a right to preservation of family and a right to
family reunification...
An application for a residence permit shall be lodged
with a diplomatic-consular representation of Slovenia abroad or with
a competent authority in Slovenia.
For the purposes of this Act, the members of the
foreigner's immediate family are:
(i) a spouse;
(ii) minor unmarried children of the foreigner;
(iii) minor unmarried children of the spouse;
(iv) parents of the minor foreigner;
(v) foreigner's or spouse's unmarried of-age children
and parents which the foreigner or the spouse are obliged to support
in accordance with the legislation of the State of his or her
citizenship.
...”
(i) Act on Regularisation of the Legal
Status of Citizens of Other Successor States to the Former SFRY in
Slovenia (Zakon o urejanju statusa drZavljanov drugih drZav
naslednic nekdanje SFRJ v Republiki Sloveniji, Official
Gazette, nos. 61/99 and 54/2000 of 1999 and 2000)
- The
relevant provisions of the Legal Status Act, enacted further to the
Constitutional Court's decision of 4 February 1999 (see paragraphs
51-52 above and 237-244 below), provide:
Section 1
“Citizens of another successor State to the former
SFRY (hereinafter 'a foreigner') who were registered as permanent
residents on the territory of the Republic of Slovenia on 23 December
1990 and are in fact residing in the Republic of Slovenia, and
foreigners who were in fact resident in the Republic of Slovenia on
25 June 1991 and have been living there continuously ever since
shall be issued with a permanent residence permit, regardless of the
provisions of the Aliens Act ..., if they meet the requirements set
forth in this Act.”
Section 2
“An application for permanent residence shall be
filed within three months after this Act enters into force ...
A foreigner who has lodged an application for permanent
residence pursuant to section 40 of the Citizenship of the Republic
of Slovenia Act ... but has received a decision refusing to grant his
application, may file an application under the preceding paragraph
within three months after this Act enters into force or the decision
became final, if such decision is issued after this Act entered into
force...”
Section 3
“A permanent residence permit shall not be issued
if the applicant has:
(i) disturbed the peace or breached public order by the
use of violence since 25 June 1991; or
(ii) been convicted and sentenced to more than one
year's imprisonment since 25 June 1991; or
(iii) been convicted and sentenced, in total, to more
than three years' imprisonment since 25 June 1991; or
...”
- The
2001 amendments to this Act were made as a result of the
Constitutional Court's decision of 18 May 2000 (see paragraphs 53
below and 248-249 above) and replaced the original section 3 with a
new section which provides as follows:
“The Ministry [of Internal Affairs] may refuse a
permanent residence permit to a foreigner who, by a final judgment:
(i) has been convicted of a criminal offence and
sentenced to at least three years' imprisonment;
(ii) has been convicted and sentenced to a total of more
than five years' imprisonment;
...
When taking a decision on the basis of the preceding
paragraph, the Ministry shall take into consideration the length of
the applicant's stay in the State, his personal, family, business,
social and other ties with the Republic of Slovenia and the potential
consequences of a refusal of a permanent residence permit for the
applicant.”
(j) Rules on the Form for Registering or
Deregistering Permanent Residence, the Form of the Personal and
Household Card and on the Manner of Keeping and Managing the Register
of Permanent Residents (Pravilnik o obrazcu za
prijavo oziroma odjavo stalnega prebivališča, o obrazcu
osebnega kartona in kartona gospodinjstev ter o načinu vodenja
in vzdrZevanja registra stalnega prebivalstva, Official
Gazette no. 27/92 of 1992)
- The
relevant provision of the Rules provides:
Rule 5
“The record of permanent residents contains data
on citizens of the Republic of Slovenia who have registered permanent
residence in the territory of the municipality.
In the record of permanent residents, the competent
authority shall identify citizens of the Republic of Slovenia who
travel abroad temporarily for more than three months, and persons to
whom the authority has declined registration of permanent residence
...”
(k) Employment Act (Zakon o delovnih
razmerjih, Official Gazette no. 17/91 of 1991)
- The
relevant provisions of this Act provide:
Section 80
“1. During pregnancy and following childbirth, a
female worker shall have the right to maternity leave and childcare
leave in a total duration of 365 days.
The female worker shall use the right to maternity leave
in the form of absence from work of 105 days, and following the
expiry of maternity leave shall use the right to childcare leave in
the form of absence from work of 260 days or by working half of her
working hours a day until the child is 17 months old.”
- The
Self-management Agreement on Maternity Leave (Samoupravni
sporazum o porodniškem dopustu, Official Gazette of
the SRS, no. 36/87, as amended), which previously governed maternity
leave, contained similar provisions.
(l) Employment of Aliens Act (Zakon o
zaposlovanju tujcev, Official Gazette no. 33/92 of 1992)
- The
transitional provision of section 23 of this Act enabled the citizens
of other former SFRY republics to acquire a one-year work permit if,
on the date of the entry into force of the Act, they were formally
employed in Slovenia for an indefinite period with less than 10 years
of service or if they were in fixed-period employment or if they were
in an employment relationship for a fixed or indefinite period as
daily migrants, or registered at the Employment Service and receiving
financial benefits in accordance with the regulations on employment
and employment insurance. Any citizens of other former SFRY republics
(with some exceptions) who on the date of the entry into force of the
act were in an employment relationship of an indefinite period in
Slovenia and had at least 10 years of service were enabled to acquire
a work permit for an indefinite period. Both categories were to have
applied for work permits within 90 days of the Act entering into
force.
(m) Pension and Invalidity
Insurance Act (Zakon o pokojninskem in
invalidskem zavarovanju, Official
Gazette no. 106/99 of 1999)
- The
following provisions of this Act are relevant:
Section 1
“The pension and invalidity insurance system in
the Republic of Slovenia shall cover:
- a compulsory pension and invalidity insurance scheme
on the basis of intergenerational solidarity;
- compulsory and voluntary supplementary pension and
invalidity insurance schemes; and
- a pension and invalidity insurance scheme on the basis
of personal pension savings accounts.”
Section 4
“1. The rights under compulsory insurance shall be
as follows:
a. the right to a pension:
- old-age pension,
- invalidity pension,
- widow/widower's pension,
- survivor's pension,
- partial pension;
...”
Section 7
“1. Compulsory insurance shall cover the nationals
of the Republic of Slovenia and foreign nationals, provided they
fulfil the conditions stipulated by the present Act or by a relevant
treaty. ...”
Section 13
“1. Compulsory insurance shall
cover persons employed in the territory of the Republic of Slovenia.
...”
(n) Administrative General
Procedure Act (Zakon o splošnem
upravnem postopku, Official
Gazette no.80/99 of 1999, as amended)
- Section
222(1) of this Act provides that in simple matters, where there is no
need to undertake separate examination proceedings, an administrative
body is obliged to give a decision within one month of the submission
of an application. In all other cases, the administrative body is
obliged to give a decision within two months.
- Section
222(4) entitles a party whose application has not been decided upon
within the time-limits set out in subsection (1) to lodge an appeal
as if the application had been denied.
(o) Administrative Disputes
Act (Zakon o upravnem sporu,
Official Gazette no. 105/2006 of 2006)
- The
relevant sections of this Act provide:
Section 28
“1. The action must be filed within thirty days of
the delivery of the administrative act by means of which the
procedure was concluded. The public-interest representative may file
an action even if he was not a party to the proceedings in which the
administrative act was issued, within the time-limit that applies to
the party in favour of which the administrative act was issued.
2. If the second-instance authority does not
rule on the applicant's appeal against the first-instance decision
within 2 months or within a shorter period if any, provided by a
special regulation, and fails to make an award upon a subsequent
request within a further period of seven days, the applicant may then
bring an administrative action, as if his request had been
dismissed.”
Section 33
“1.
An action may be filed to request:
-
the annulment of the administrative act (challenging action),
-the
issuing or service of the administrative act (action due to
non-response of the authority),
-amendment
of the administrative act (action in a dispute of full
jurisdiction).”
235. Similar
provisions were contained in sections 26 and 31 of the previously
valid Administrative Disputes Act (Official Gazette no. 50/97,
as amended).
3. Case-law of the Constitutional Court of the Republic
of Slovenia
(a) Decision of 4 February 1999
(U-I-284/94)
- On
24 June 1998 the Constitutional Court declared partly admissible a
challenge to the constitutionality of the Aliens Act, lodged by two
individuals whose names had been removed from the Register in 1992.
- In
a decision of 4 February 1999 (U-I-284/94) the Constitutional Court
declared that section 81 of the Aliens Act was unconstitutional since
it had not set out the conditions for acquisition of permanent
residence for those subject to its second paragraph. It noted that
the authorities had deleted the names of citizens of the former SFRY
republics who had not applied for Slovenian citizenship from the
Register and entered them ex officio in the register of
foreigners, without any notification. It further found that there was
no legal basis for this measure; the Inhabitants' Residence Evidence
and Population Registry Act did not provide for an ex lege
deregistration.
- The
Constitutional Court stated that the provisions of the Aliens Act
were, in general, designed to regulate the status of foreigners who
entered Slovenia after independence, not of those who were already
living there. While section 82 of the Aliens Act did regulate the
legal status of foreigners originating from outside the former SFRY
republics, no similar provision existed in respect of people from the
former SFRY. As a consequence, the latter were in a less favourable
legal position than foreigners who had lived in Slovenia since before
independence. Failing to regulate the legal status of these people
was contrary to Article 14 § 2 of the Constitution.
- The
Constitutional Court noted in this respect that a proposal had been
made in the legislative process in 1991 for a special provision
regulating the temporary situation of former SFRY citizens living in
Slovenia who had not applied for Slovenian citizenship. The
legislature had maintained that their situation should not be
regulated by the Aliens Act but rather by an agreement between the
successor States to the former SFRY. Since those agreements had not
been concluded, notably because of the state of war in Croatia and in
Bosnia and Herzegovina, their situation remained unaddressed. In the
Constitutional Court's view, in the light of modern developments in
human-rights protection, the situation of persons having held the
nationality of the predecessor but not of the successor State, with
permanent residence on the territory of States disintegrated after
1990, had become a matter of international agreements.
- Furthermore,
the provisions of the Aliens Act regulating the acquisition of
permanent and temporary residence (sections 13 and 16 of the Aliens
Act) could not be used to remedy the status of citizens of the former
SFRY republics because permanent residence and the fact of actual
residence in Slovenia were particular circumstances requiring special
consideration. Citizens of the former SFRY republics had a reasonable
expectation that the new conditions for retaining permanent residence
in Slovenia would not be stricter than those set forth in section 13
of the Constitutional Act relating to the Fundamental Constitutional
Charter on the Sovereignty and Independence of the Republic of
Slovenia and section 40 of the Citizenship Act, and that their status
would be determined in accordance with international law.
- Section
81 was therefore declared unconstitutional as it did not prescribe
the conditions under which persons subject to this section who either
failed to apply for or were denied Slovenian citizenship could apply
for permanent residence after the expiry of the prescribed
time-limit. A legal void was thus constituted and the principles of
the rule of law, of legal certainty and equality breached.
- The
Constitutional Court further found that section 16(1) of the Aliens
Act was not unconstitutional, because it applied only to foreigners
entering Slovenia after independence.
- The
legislature was given six months in which to modify the
unconstitutional provisions. In the meantime, the Constitutional
Court ruled that no citizen of the former SFRY who was registered as
a permanent resident in Slovenia on 23 December 1990, the day on
which the plebiscite on independence was held, and was living in
Slovenia when the Constitutional Court's judgment was issued, could
be forcibly removed from Slovenia pursuant to section 28 of the
Aliens Act.
- The
Constitutional Court also pointed out that the unregulated situation
of citizens of the former SFRY republics who have found themselves in
a precarious legal position could lead to a violation of the right to
respect for family life, as protected by Article 8 of the Convention.
(b) Decision of 1 July 1999 (Up-333/96)
- In
a decision of 1 July 1999 (Up-333/96) the Constitutional Court
referred to its findings in the decision of 4 February 1999 and
reiterated that citizens of the former SFRY republics were in a less
favourable position than other foreign citizens who were living in
Slovenia on the date of independence. It noted that following its
decision of 4 February 1999 a Bill the Legal Status Act
had been drafted, but had not yet been adopted, for the purpose of
addressing the issue raised by that judgment.
- In
the case before it, the claimant, whose name had been deleted from
the Register in 1992, had been refused the renewal of his driving
licence, because he was considered a foreigner without lawful
residence in Slovenia. The Constitutional Court ordered that, until
the Legal Status Act entered into force, he should enjoy the status
he would have had under section 13 of the Fundamental Constitutional
Charter on the Sovereignty and Independence of the Republic of
Slovenia before the expiry of the time-limit set forth in section 81
of the 1991 Act. The authorities were ordered to register the
claimant as a permanent resident at the address where he was living
before his name was illegally deleted from the Register. They were
also ordered to renew his driving licence.
(c) Decision of 15 July 1999 (Up-60/97)
- In
a decision of 15 July 1999 (Up-60/97), the claimants, who were
members of the same family and citizens of one of the former SFRY
republics, were denied permanent residence under section 16 of the
Aliens Act, because the father had lost his job. The Constitutional
Court, for reasons similar to those in case no. Up-333/96, held that
until the Legal Status Act entered into force, the authorities should
register them as permanent residents at the address where they were
living before their names were illegally deleted from the Register.
(d) Decision of 18 May 2000 (U-I-295/99)
- In
a decision of 18 May 2000 (U-I-295/99) the Constitutional Court set
aside the first, second and third sub-paragraphs of section 3 of the
Legal Status Act. It found that the requirements for the acquisition
of permanent residence set forth in these provisions were stricter
than the grounds for revoking a permanent residence permit under the
Aliens Act.
- It
went on to hold that the legal status of citizens of the former SFRY
republics should be regulated on the basis of the position the
individuals concerned would have had, but did not have, because of
the legislature's failure to regulate it. It reiterated that the
legal status of citizens of the former SFRY republics should not be
essentially different from that enjoyed by foreign citizens who had
acquired permanent resident status in the Republic of Slovenia before
independence.
(e) Decision of 3 April 2003 (U-I-246/02)
- In case no. U-I-246/02 the Constitutional Court
reiterated its ruling in its decision of 4 February 1999. It
found the Legal Status Act unconstitutional because, firstly, it did
not grant retrospective permanent residence from the date of the
erasure of the names of those concerned from the Register; secondly,
it failed to regulate the acquisition of permanent residence for
citizens of former SFRY republics who had been forcibly removed from
Slovenia pursuant to section 28 of the Aliens Act; and, thirdly, it
did not define the meaning of the words “in fact residing”
in section 1. The Constitutional Court also struck down the
three-month time-limit for submitting applications for permanent
residence because it was unreasonably short. It ordered the
legislature to rectify the unconstitutional provisions of the
impugned act within six months.
- In
point no. 8 of the operative part of the decision, it held that
permanent residence permits already issued to citizens of the former
SFRY republics in accordance with the Legal Status Act, the Aliens
Act or the 1999 Aliens Act would be effective from 26 February 1992,
if their names had been erased from the Register on that date. It
also ordered the Ministry to issue, ex proprio motu,
supplementary decisions establishing the permanent residence of those
concerned retrospectively, since that date. Once this was done, those
who had had permanent residential status until 26 February 1992
but had not been able to enjoy certain rights after that date owing
to their unregulated legal status, would be able to invoke their
rights in accordance with the relevant legislation.
- In
addition, special provisions were needed to address the situation of
those who had been forcibly removed from Slovenia, although the
Constitutional Court suspected that the numbers of individuals
affected would probably be low, since the unregulated status of these
people had generally been tolerated.
- Moreover,
the Constitutional Court said that, when determining a new time-limit
for applications for permanent residence, assuming such a time-limit
should be provided, the legislature should take into consideration
personal and other circumstances that might have impeded the persons
concerned from lodging their application in time. Until such a
time-limit was set, those concerned could continue to lodge
applications for permanent residence.
- Lastly,
the Constitutional Court observed that by 10 February 2003
11,746 citizens of the former SFRY republics had been granted
permanent residence status on the basis of the Legal Status Act, that
385 applications had been dismissed or rejected, 980 applications
were pending and that approximately 4,300 citizens of former SRFY
republics had not applied for permanent residence. The decisions
concerning the first group of persons concerned were of a
constitutive nature and thus only had ex nunc effect. The
Constitutional Court further observed that permanent residence was
important in securing certain rights and benefits. A lack of
permanent residence status resulted in citizens of the former SFRY
republics being deprived of certain rights enjoyed by foreigners with
permanent residence status, for example, the right to a military
pension, and to certain retirement benefits and the right to renew a
driving licence.
- Subsequently,
in a decision handed down on 22 December 2003, the Constitutional
Court specified that the legal basis for issuance of the
supplementary residence permits by the Ministry of Interior was its
decision of 3 April 2003 and that it was bound to implement it.
(f) Decision of 2 March 2006 (Up-211/04)
- In
a decision of 2 March 2006, the Constitutional Court set aside the
judgments of the Supreme and the Administrative Courts dismissing the
claimant's request for a permanent residence permit under the Legal
Status Act and remitted the case to the Administrative Court. It
instructed the latter to appropriately assess the legal term set out
in section 1 of the Legal Status Act “in fact residing on the
territory of the Republic of Slovenia” since 23 December 1990
onwards and the reasons for the claimant's absence from Slovenia.
- In
particular, the Constitutional Court held that the fact that the
legislature had been late in eliminating the inconsistency did not
prevent the courts to render a decision in the case in conformity
with the Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003 (see
paragraphs 250-255 above).
B. International texts and documents
1. European Union
(a) The Dublin Convention and Regulation
- The Dublin Convention (the Convention determining the
State responsible for examining applications for asylum lodged in one
of the Member States of the European Communities, 15 June 1990)
provided for measures to ensure that applicants for asylum had their
applications examined by one of the Member States. Articles 4 to 8
set out the criteria for determining the single Member State
responsible for examining an application for asylum.
- The Convention has been superseded by Council
Regulation (EC) No. 343/2003 of 18
February 2003 establishing the criteria and mechanisms for
determining the Member State responsible for examining an asylum
application lodged in one of the Member States by a third-country
national (“Dublin II”,
hereinafter “the Dublin
Regulation”). The Dublin
Regulation applies to all
European Union Member States, Norway and Iceland. Article 3(1)
of the Regulation provides for asylum
applications to be examined by a single Member State, according to
the criteria set out in Chapter III. If responsibility of a Member
State can be designated on the basis of the criteria, Article 11
provides that the first Member State with which the application for
asylum was lodged shall be responsible for examining it.
(b) Directive 2004/38/EC of the European
Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on the right of
citizens of the Union and their family members to move and reside
freely within the territory of the Member States amending Regulation
(EEC) No 1612/68 and repealing Directives 64/221/EEC, 68/360/EEC,
72/194/EEC, 73/148/EEC, 75/34/EEC, 75/35/EEC, 90/364/EEC,
90/365/EEC and 93/96/EEC, Official Journal of the EU L
158 , 30 April 2004
Article 8
“... for periods of residence longer than three
months, the host Member State may require Union citizens to register
with the relevant authorities. ...”
Article 9
“1. Member States shall issue a residence card to
family members of a Union citizen who are not nationals of a Member
State, where the planned period of residence is for more than three
months.
2. The deadline for submitting the residence card
application may not be less than three months from the date of
arrival.
3. Failure to comply with the
requirement to apply for a residence card may make the person
concerned liable to proportionate and non-discriminatory sanctions.”
Article 10
“1. The right of residence of
family members of a Union citizen who are not nationals of a Member
State shall be evidenced by the issuing of a document called
'Residence card of a family member of a
Union citizen' no later than six months from the date on which they
submit the application. A certificate of application for the
residence card shall be issued immediately.
2. For the residence card to be issued, Member States
shall require presentation of the following documents:
(a) a valid passport;
(b) a document attesting to the existence of a family
relationship or of a registered partnership;
(c) the registration certificate or, in the absence of a
registration system, any other proof of residence in the host Member
State of the Union citizen whom they are accompanying or joining;
(d) in cases falling under points (c) and (d) of Article
2(2), documentary evidence that the conditions laid down therein are
met;
(e) in cases falling under Article 3(2)(a), a document
issued by the relevant authority in the country of origin or country
from which they are arriving certifying that they are dependants or
members of the household of the Union citizen, or proof of the
existence of serious health grounds which strictly require the
personal care of the family member by the Union citizen;
(f) in cases falling under Article 3(2)(b), proof of the
existence of a durable relationship with the Union citizen.”
Article 11
“1. The residence card provided for by Article
10(1) shall be valid for five years from the date of issue or for the
envisaged period of residence of the Union citizen, if this period is
less than five years.
2. The validity of the residence card shall not be
affected by temporary absences not exceeding six months a year, or by
absences of a longer duration for compulsory military service or by
one absence of a maximum of 12 consecutive months for important
reasons such as pregnancy and childbirth, serious illness, study or
vocational training, or a posting in another Member State or a third
country.”
Article 16
“1. Union citizens who have resided legally for a
continuous period of five years in the host Member State shall have
the right of permanent residence there. This right shall not be
subject to the conditions provided for in Chapter III.
2. Paragraph 1 shall apply also to family members who
are not nationals of a Member State and have legally resided with the
Union citizen in the host Member State for a continuous period of
five years.
3. Continuity of residence shall not be affected by
temporary absences not exceeding a total of six months a year, or by
absences of a longer duration for compulsory military service, or by
one absence of a maximum of twelve consecutive months for important
reasons such as pregnancy and childbirth, serious illness, study or
vocational training, or a posting in another Member State or a third
country.
4. Once acquired, the right of permanent residence shall
be lost only through absence from the host Member State for a period
exceeding two consecutive years.”
Article 20
“1. Member States shall issue family members who
are not nationals of a Member State entitled to permanent residence
with a permanent residence card within six months of the submission
of the application. The permanent residence card shall be renewable
automatically every ten years.
2. The application for a permanent residence card shall
be submitted before the residence card expires. Failure to comply
with the requirement to apply for a permanent residence card may
render the person concerned liable to proportionate and
non-discriminatory sanctions.
3. Interruption in residence not exceeding two
consecutive years shall not affect the validity of the permanent
residence card.”
2. Council of Europe
(a) The Conventions relating to
nationality
- The
principal Council of Europe document concerning citizenship is the
European Convention on Nationality, which was adopted on 6 November
1997 and entered into force on 1 March 2000. Slovenia has not signed
this convention.
Article 18
“1. In
matters of nationality in cases of State succession, each State Party
concerned shall respect the principles of the rule of law, the rules
concerning human rights and the principles contained in ... this
Convention ..., in particular in order to avoid statelessness.
2. In
deciding on the granting or the retention of nationality in cases of
State succession, each State Party concerned shall take account in
particular of:
(a) the genuine and effective link of the person
concerned with the State;
(b) the habitual residence of the person concerned at
the time of State succession;
(c) the will of the person concerned;
(d) the territorial origin of the person concerned.
...”
- On
19 May 2006 the Council of Europe adopted the Convention on the
avoidance of statelessness in relation to State succession. This
convention entered into force on 1 May 2009. Slovenia has not signed
this convention.
Article 5
“1. A successor State shall grant its nationality
to persons who, at the time of the State succession, had the
nationality of the predecessor State, and who have or would become
stateless as a result of the State succession if at that time:
(a) they were habitually resident in the territory which
has become territory of the successor State, or
(b) they were not habitually resident in any State
concerned but had an appropriate connection with the successor State.
2. For the purpose of paragraph 1, sub-paragraph b, an
appropriate connection includes inter alia:
(a) a legal bond to a territorial unit of a predecessor
State which has become territory of the successor State;
(b) birth on the territory which has become territory of
the successor State;
(c) last habitual residence on the territory of the
predecessor State which has become territory of the successor State.”
Article 11
“States concerned shall take all necessary steps
to ensure that persons concerned have sufficient information about
rules and procedures with regard to the acquisition of their
nationality.”
(b) The Framework Convention for the
Protection of National Minorities
- On
26 May 2005 the Advisory Committee on the Framework Convention for
the Protection of National Minorities adopted its second opinion
concerning Slovenia. On 1 December 2005 the respondent Government
filed its written comments. The relevant part of the report states as
follows:
“Legal status of persons deleted from the list of
permanent residents
Findings of the first cycle
54. In its first Opinion on Slovenia, the Advisory
Committee noted with concern the problematic situation of a number of
former citizens of other republics of former Yugoslavia (SFRY), who
found themselves foreigners in the territory they were living in and
without confirmed legal status, following their removal from the
register of permanent residents, in 1992.
Present situation
a) Positive developments
55. The Advisory Committee notes that a number of
positive developments have taken place in this area. For instance,
the Constitutional Court has taken a stand on these issues by clearly
stating the need to restore, without further delay and
retrospectively, the rights of non-Slovenian former Yugoslav citizens
who were, according to the Court, illegally removed from the register
of permanent residents. The Advisory Committee also notes that
efforts have been made at the legislative level to regularise the
legal status of these persons, and that most of them have been
granted permanent resident status in recent years on the basis of
individual decisions issued by the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
b) Outstanding issues
56. The Advisory Committee notes with concern that,
despite the relevant Constitutional Court decisions, several thousand
persons whose names were deleted from the registers of permanent
residents on 26 February 1992, and automatically transferred to the
registers of foreigners, are still, more than ten years on, awaiting
clarification of their legal status. This concerns citizens of other
former Yugoslav republics, including a number of Roma, who were
legally resident in Slovenia and, for various reasons, did not wish –
or were unable – to obtain Slovenian citizenship within the
short time-limit allowed by the authorities after the country's
independence.
57. In many cases, the lack of citizenship or of a
residence permit has had a particularly negative impact on these
persons' situation. It has, in particular, paved the way for
violations of their economic and social rights, with some of them
having lost their homes, employment or retirement pension
entitlements, and has seriously hindered the exercise of their rights
to family life and freedom of movement.
58. The Advisory Committee notes that more recent
government initiatives have sought, in accordance with the relevant
decisions of the Constitutional Court, to restore these persons'
rights retrospectively. It finds it disturbing that these initiatives
have been stalled for over a year, and that the social climate in
Slovenia has not been conducive to a speedier resolution of these
matters. In the referendum held in April 2004 on the Act on
Application of Point No. 8 of Constitutional Court Decision
no. U-I-246/02 (the so-called 'Technical Act on Erased
Persons'), 94.7% of participants (representing 31.45% of voters)
expressed their opposition to this Act (see also comments under
Article 6 below).
59. The Advisory Committee notes that the authorities
are in the process of drafting, at the governmental level, a new
normative text expected to provide solutions to the problems
mentioned above. Insofar as this new initiative is not yet in the
public domain, it is difficult to ascertain, at this stage, whether
the measures envisaged – legislative or other – will be
likely to resolve the situation in a comprehensive manner once and
for all.
Recommendations
60. Without further delay, the authorities should find
solutions to the problems faced by non-Slovenians from former
Yugoslavia (SFRY) who have been deleted from the register of
permanent residents, in connection with the regularisation of their
legal status, including access to citizenship and social and economic
rights.
61. At the same time, they should assist these persons
in their efforts to overcome the difficulties arising from this
situation, and facilitate their effective participation and
integration in the Slovene society by means of targeted measures.”
- On
14 June 2006 the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe
adopted Resolution ResCMN(2006)6 on the implementation of the
Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities by
Slovenia. It noted as an issue of concern the situation of those
non-Slovenes from former Yugoslavia (SFRY) whose legal status had
still not been resolved, which raised substantial problems in terms
of access to social and economic rights, including educational
rights, and effective participation. The Committee invited the
Slovenian authorities to find without further delay solutions to the
situation of non-Slovenes from SFRY whose legal status had still not
been regularised and take specific measures to assist those persons
on the social and economic front.
(c) The Council of Europe Commissioner for
Human Rights
- On
29 March 2006 a Follow-up Report on Slovenia (2003-2005) was
published, assessing the progress made in implementing the
recommendations of the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human
Rights. In the relevant part it states as follows:
“46. The issue of erased persons continues to be a
divisive and politically charged issue in Slovenia and is the subject
of heated debate. Regrettably, the issue has been frequently used by
some political factions as a campaign tool. Especially during the
period leading to the October 2004 general elections, many
politicians made xenophobic statements when referring to the issue of
the erased persons and to others considered non-Slovene or otherwise
different.
47. In a ruling of April 2003, the Constitutional Court
declared the 1999 law aimed at remedying the situation of the erased
persons to be
unconstitutional. The Court ordered that those who had already
acquired permanent residency on the basis of the law, be granted
permanent residence permits retroactively for the period from
26 February 1992 to the date of its formal acquisition. It also
ordered the legislator to amend the law within six months to
determine a new time limit for possible new applications for
permanent residence permits.
48. The Constitutional Court's decision imposed a duty
on the Ministry of Internal Affairs to issue supplementary decisions
giving retroactive effect to the residence permits to all those
citizens of other former Yugoslav Republics, who were, on 26 February
1992, removed from the register of permanent residents, but who had
since acquired a permit for permanent residence. The Constitutional
Court's position was made clear in a further decision issued in
December 2003 stating that the decision of April 2003
could be considered as sufficient legal basis for issuing decisions
on permanent residence with retroactive effect, without there being
any need for specific legislation. Following the Constitutional
Court's decisions, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, after some
delay, started issuing permanent residence decrees with retroactive
validity. Approximately 4,100 such decrees have since been issued,
but at the time of the follow-up visit, it appeared that the issuance
of decisions was suspended.
49. According to the information received from the
Association of Erased, out of the 18,305 erased persons, some 12,000
have over time either obtained citizenship or received a permanent
residence permit. All of these 12,000 persons, according to the 2003
decision of the Constitutional Court, should have had their permanent
residence status recognised with retroactive effect.
50. Regarding the enactment of the law required to
regulate the status of those erased persons who had been expelled
from or had left Slovenia, the issue is still unresolved. There has
been an ongoing and heated discussion regarding this issue, which –
quite apart from what the criteria for legitimate absence from
Slovenia and the situation of the expelled should be – has
focused also on whether the law should be enacted in the normal
legislative process or adopted as a constitutional act.
Conclusions
51. The Commissioner urges the Ministry of Internal
Affairs to immediately continue and finalise the issuance of
supplementary decisions giving retroactive effect to the permanent
residence permit of all those persons, who are entitled to it.
52. As regards the enactment of the law regulating and
reinstating the status of the remaining erased persons, the
Commissioner urges the Slovenian government to definitely resolve the
issue in good faith and in accordance with the decisions of the
Constitutional Court. Whatever the appropriate legislative solution
may be, the current impasse reflects poorly on the respect for the
rule of law and the Constitutional Court's judgements in Slovenia.
53. The Commissioner is extremely concerned about the
continuous public manifestations of hate speech and intolerance by
some politicians. The Commissioner calls for greater responsibility
of politicians and media in this regard and for the full respect of
the rights and values laid down in European Convention on Human
Rights and other international instruments.”
- On 6 and 7 October 2009 the Commissioner visited
Slovenia and, inter alia, discussed the issue of the “erased”
with the Slovenian authorities.
(d) The European Commission against Racism
and Intolerance
- On
13 February 2007 the European Commission against Racism and
Intolerance (“ECRI”) published its third report on
Slovenia, which was adopted on 30 June 2006. This report described
the situation of “the erased” as follows:
“109. In its second report, ECRI dealt at length
with the situation of those citizens of other ex-Yugoslav countries
who were removed ex officio from the register of permanent
residents of Slovenia in 1992 and who since then, are often referred
to as the 'erased'. As explained in that report, following the armed
conflict in Slovenia in 1991 and the ensuing independence of the
country, over 170 000 of the approximately 200 000
permanent residents of Slovenia from other ex-Yugoslav countries
obtained Slovenian citizenship on the basis of the 1991 citizenship
law. This law allowed for a six-month window to apply for
citizenship. Of the remaining 30 000 persons, approximately
11 000 left Slovenia around that time. However, for a number of
reasons, including the war between other successor States of the
former Yugoslavia, the uncertain situation prevailing in other such
States, and the destruction, loss or inaccessibility of personal
documents, 18 305 permanent residents did not or could not apply for
Slovenian citizenship or applied and were rejected. As mentioned,
these persons were struck off the register of permanent residents on
26 February 1992. Many of these persons – for the most part
reportedly persons without good levels of education – had been
living in Slovenia for a long time and some of them were even born in
the country. However, as a result of the erasure from the registers,
they became foreigners without legal status in Slovenia from one day
to the next, in many cases without being aware of it. Loss of legal
status meant for them loss of access to fundamental rights attached
to residence, including the right to work and access to healthcare
and other social rights, along with the annulation of personal
documents and exposure to a risk of deportation.
110. In its second report, ECRI noted that a law had
been passed in 1999 to open the possibility for the 'erased' to apply
for permanent residence. It also noted however, that the time-limit
of three months to do so and the requirement that applicants prove
that they had lived in Slovenia since 1991 without interruptions of
longer than three months seriously limited the effectiveness of this
law. ECRI notes that approximately 12 000 people have obtained
permanent residence permits on the basis of that law. However, such
residence permits were not granted with effect from the date of
erasure (26 February 1992), but from the date of formal acquisition
of these permits, i.e. in a majority of cases, 1999.
111. ECRI notes that in April 2003, the Constitutional
Court declared the 1999 law unconstitutional, inter alia
because: it did not give retroactive effect to residence permits; it
did not regulate the obtaining of residence permits for those
'erased' who had been forcibly deported from Slovenia; it did not
prescribe criteria for the fulfilment of the requirement of
continuous residence in Slovenia. The Constitutional Court therefore
established that the Ministry of Interior must issue supplementary
administrative decisions whereby residence permits already granted
were given retroactive effect from 26 February 1992 to the date of
formal acquisition. It also established that the 1999 law must be
amended within six months to determine a new time limit for possible
new applications.
112. Concerning the first point, ECRI notes that
following initial delays, the Ministry of Interior under the former
Government started to issue supplementary administrative decisions
giving residence permits retroactive effect at the end of 2004. ECRI
notes however, that only approximately 4 100 such decisions have
been issued. The representatives of the Ministry of Interior under
the current Government have stated that they consider that these
supplementary decisions do not rest on a sufficiently strong legal
basis, and that a general law establishing conditions and criteria
for issuing of residence permits should be passed first. ECRI notes
however, that in December 2003 the Constitutional Court made it clear
that its decision of April 2003 constituted a sufficient legal basis
for issuing such decisions and that, in fact, the 4 100
administrative decisions already issued were issued on such a basis.
ECRI expresses serious concern at the fact that approximately
two-thirds of the 'erased' who, since 26 February 1992, have secured
citizenship or permanent residence of Slovenia are still not in a
position to see their rights linked to permanent residence restored
with effect from the date of erasure.
113. The situation as concerns the implementation of the
other parts of the decision of the Constitutional Court appears very
unclear and uncertain at the time of writing and is a cause for
serious concern to ECRI. The issue essentially relates to the
enactment of a law to regulate the status of approximately 6 000
'erased' who have not yet secured Slovenian citizenship or permanent
residence permits and whose current position varies from holders of
temporary permits (an estimated 2 500 persons) and persons still
living in Slovenia without legal status to persons who have left
Slovenia or have been deported. The Slovenian authorities have
reported to ECRI their decision to adopt such a law in the form of a
constitutional law. ECRI notes that this decision has been widely
criticised both within the Parliament and in civil society for
effectively and deliberately leading to non-implementation of the
Constitutional Court's decision, inter alia as it entails the use of
constitutional means and relative procedures (including the need for
a qualified majority in Parliament) in order to deal with matters
that should be regulated through primary legislation. ECRI is not
aware of the exact content of the law, which is reportedly in the
drafting process, nor has it been possible to clarify the envisaged
timetable for adoption. In any event, ECRI deplores the fact that, as
a result of the non-implementation by the Slovenian authorities of
the decision of the Constitutional Court, it is still not possible
for approximately 6 000 people to regain the rights of which
they were unlawfully stripped over fifteen years ago.
114. More generally, ECRI is deeply concerned at the
tone prevailing in Slovenian public and political debate concerning
the 'erased' since its last report. It regrets that this part of the
Slovenian population has in many occasions fallen hostage to merely
political considerations, including the exploitation of their
situation as a vote gainer, and that the debate around the position
of these persons has steadily moved away from human rights
considerations. It is particularly regrettable that racism and
xenophobia have been encouraged and fostered as part of this process,
including through generalisations and misrepresentations concerning
the loyalty of these persons to the Slovenian State or the economic
burden that restoration of their rights would entail.
Recommendations
115. ECRI urges the Slovenian authorities to restore the
rights of persons erased from the registers of permanent residents on
26 February 1992. To this end, it strongly recommends that the
Slovenian authorities implement the April 2003 decision of the
Constitutional Court in good faith and without further delay. This
includes the immediate resumption and finalisation of the process of
issuing supplementary decisions granting retroactive permanent
residence rights, and the adoption of a legal framework enabling
those 'erased' persons who have not yet secured permanent residence
or Slovenian citizenship to have their rights reinstated in a manner
that is as fair and generous as possible.
116. ECRI urges the Slovenian authorities to take the
lead in placing public debate on the situation of the 'erased'
securely in the realm of human rights and to refrain from
generalisations and misrepresentations concerning these persons which
foster racism and xenophobia.”
3. United Nations
- In
1961 the United Nations adopted the Convention on the Reduction of
Statelesness. Slovenia has not ratified it.
268. On
2 June 2003 the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination issued concluding observations under Article 9 of the
International Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial
Discrimination stating, inter alia:
“13. The Committee is encouraged by the steps
taken by the State party to address the long-standing issue of
persons living in Slovenia who have not been able to obtain
citizenship. It is nevertheless concerned that many of the persons
who have not acquired Slovene citizenship may still experience
administrative difficulties in complying with the specific
requirements contained in the law. The Committee recommends that the
State party give priority to addressing this issue and, taking into
account the difficulties which have arisen, ensure that the new
citizenship legislation is implemented in a non-discriminatory
manner.
14. The Committee is concerned that a significant number
of persons who have been living in Slovenia since independence
without Slovene citizenship may have been deprived under certain
circumstances of their pensions, of apartments they were occupying,
and of health care and other rights. The Committee takes note of the
efforts undertaken by the State party to address these issues and
requests the State party to provide, in its next periodic report,
specific information on these issues and on any remedies provided.”
- On
30 January 2004 the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the
Child issued concluding observations made under Article 44 of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child which, in the relevant part,
state as follows:
“26. The Committee notes the rulings of the
Constitutional Court (U-I-284/94 of 4 February 1999 and
U-I-246/02 of 2 April 2003) that the erasure of about 18,300 people
originating from other parts of the former Socialist Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia from the Register of Permanent Residence in 1992 had no
legal basis and that the permanent residence status should be
restored to the affected persons retroactively. The Committee is
concerned that many children were negatively affected by this
erasure, as they and their families lost their right to health care,
social assistance and family benefits as a consequence of losing
permanent residence status and children born in Slovenia after 1992
became stateless.
27. The Committee recommends that the State party
proceed with the full and prompt implementation of the decisions of
the Constitutional Court, compensate the children affected by the
negative consequence of the erasure and ensure that they enjoy all
rights under the Convention in the same way as other children in the
State party.”
- On
25 July 2005 the United Nations Human Rights Committee issued
concluding observations to the second periodic report made under
Article 40 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights which, in the relevant part, state as follows:
“10. While acknowledging the efforts made by the
State party to grant permanent resident status in Slovenia or
Slovenian nationality to citizens of other republics of the former
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia living in Slovenia, the
Committee remains concerned about the situation of those persons who
have not yet been able to regularize their situation in the State
party (arts. 12 and 13).
The State party should seek to resolve the legal status
of all the citizens of the successor States that formed part of the
former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia who are presently
living in Slovenia, and should facilitate the acquisition of Slovene
citizenship by all such persons who wish to become citizens of the
Republic of Slovenia.”
- On
25 January 2006 the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights issued concluding observations under Articles 16 and
17 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights stating, inter alia:
“16. The Committee is concerned that nationals of
the former Yugoslavia have been 'erased' as their names were removed
from the population registers in 1992. As a result of this, they have
lost their Slovene nationality and their right to reside in the State
party. The Committee observes that this situation entails violations
of these persons' economic and social rights, including the rights to
work, social security, health care and education. Moreover, the
Committee regrets the lack of information on the actual situation
with regard to the enjoyment by those individuals of the rights set
out in the Covenant.
...
32. The Committee urges the State party to take the
necessary legislative and other measures to remedy the situation of
nationals of the States of former Yugoslavia who have been 'erased'
as their names were removed from the population registers in 1992.
While noting that bilateral agreements were concluded in this regard,
the Committee strongly recommends that the State party should restore
the status of permanent resident to all the individuals concerned, in
accordance with the relevant decisions of the Constitutional Court.
These measures should allow these individuals to reclaim their rights
and regain access to health services, social security, education and
employment. The Committee requests the State party to report to it,
in its next periodic report, on progress in this regard.”
- In
1999 the International Law Commission of the United Nations adopted
the Draft Articles on Nationality of Natural Persons in relation to
the Succession of States. Its Article 6 states as follows:
“Each State concerned should, without undue delay,
enact legislation on nationality and other connected issues arising
in relation to the succession of States consistent with the
provisions of the present draft articles. It should take all
appropriate measures to ensure that persons concerned will be
apprised, within a reasonable period, of the effect of its
legislation on their nationality, of any choices they may have there
under, as well as of the consequences that the exercise of such
choices will have on their status.”
THE LAW
I. AS TO THE LOCUS STANDI OF MS MARIJA BAN
- The
Court must first examine whether Ms Marija Ban has standing to
pursue the application originally lodged by the applicant Mr Milan
Makuc, who died on 2 June 2008 in the course of the proceedings.
- The
Court observes that the applicants' representatives first asked the
applicant Mr Makuc's brother whether or not he wished to pursue the
proceedings before it and that the latter was not willing to do so
(see paragraph 81 above). At that time, the respondent Government
considered that the wish of the applicant's brother should be
respected and that it was not necessary to continue the proceedings
in the applicant's stead. On the other hand, relying on Karner v.
Austria (no. 40016/98, § 25, ECHR 2003-IX), the
applicant's representative maintained that the present case
transcended the person and the interest of the sole applicant and
that the continuation of the proceedings was required by respect for
human rights as defined by the Convention (Article 37 § 1).
- Subsequently,
on 16 January 2009 the late applicant's cousin, Ms Marija
Ban, declared that she wished to pursue his application before the
Court. She later informed the Court that the inheritance proceedings
were pending.
- The
Court notes that in several cases in which the applicant has died
after having lodged the application, it has taken into account the
intention of the applicant's heirs or close members of his or her
family to pursue the proceedings (see, for example, Malhous v. the
Czech Republic (dec.) [GC], no. 33071/96, ECHR 2000-XII, and
Kovačić and Others v. Slovenia [GC], nos.
44574/98, 45133/98 and 48316/99, §§ 189-192, ECHR
2008-...). In this connection, the Court has considered whether or
not the persons wishing to pursue the proceedings were the
applicant's close relatives (see Thévenon v. France (dec.),
no. 2476/02, ECHR 2006-III, and Scherer v. Switzerland,
25 March 1994, §§ 31-32, Series A no. 287).
Moreover, as a second criterion, the Court has examined whether the
rights concerned were transferable. On the one hand, the Court has
continued the examination of cases involving pecuniary claims that
were transferable to the deceased applicant's heirs (see, for
example, Ahmet Sadık v. Greece, 15 November 1996,
§ 26, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-V;
and, mutatis mutandis, Karner, cited above § 25).
On the other hand, the Court has found that certain other rights,
such as those guaranteed by Articles 5 and 8 (Thévenon,
cited above) or Articles 2, 3, 5, 8, 9 and 14 (Sanles Sanles v.
Spain (dec.), no. 48335/99, ECHR 2000-XI) were of an
eminently personal and non-transferable nature (see Vääri
v. Estonia (dec.), no. 8702/04, 8 July 2008, with
further references).
The
Court has also considered whether the case concerned involved an
important question of general interest transcending the person and
the interests of the applicant (see Karner, cited
above, §§ 25-27; Marie-Louise Loyen and Bruneel v.
France, no. 55929/00, § 29, 5 July 2005; and Biç
and Others v. Turkey, no. 55955/00, § 23, 2 February
2006).
- Turning
to the present case, the Court observes at the outset that Ms Ban
is seeking to pursue the case concerning the alleged violations of
the rights of her cousin Mr Makuc, the original applicant. The Court
notes that the applicant's representatives first asked the applicant
Mr Makuc's brother whether he wished to pursue the proceedings before
the Court and that the latter was not willing to do so. The Court
therefore finds that Ms Ban is not one of Mr Makuc's closest
relatives and notes that the inheritance proceedings following the
late applicant's death are still pending and that, as far as the
Court is aware, his heirs have not yet been determined. Moreover, the
Court finds that the case concerns issues falling primarily under
Article 8 of the Convention which are closely linked to Mr Makuc's
person. Finally, regard being had to the fact that the application
was brought by eleven applicants and that the proceedings before the
Court continue in respect of ten applicants, the Court considers that
the question of the protection of the general interest necessitating
consideration of the applicant Mr Makuc's complaints is redundant.
Therefore, the Court finds that the applicant's cousin does not have
a legal interest to pursue the application. It follows that this part
of the application is incompatible ratione personae with the
provisions of the Convention and must be rejected in accordance with
Article 35 § 4.
II. ADMISSIBILITY
1. The parties' submissions
(a) The respondent Government's
preliminary objections
- The
respondent Government submitted that the application was incompatible
with the provisions of the Convention ratione materiae, since
the regulation of citizenship and residence was outside the scope of
the Convention (they referred to Üner v. the
Netherlands [GC], no. 46410/99, § 54, ECHR
2006-XII). Furthermore, the right to citizenship had never been
denied to any of the applicants, given that they had failed to apply
for it. Equally, most of the applicants had never applied for
permanent residence in Slovenia.
- In
any event, the applicants' complaints did not come within the
Court's jurisdiction ratione temporis, as the
instantaneous acts which the applicants claim to be the source of the
alleged violations – the entry into force of the independence
legislation and the subsequent transfer of the applicants' names from
the Register of Permanent Residence – took place in 1992, that
is, before 28 June 1994, the date on which the Convention
and Protocol No. 1 entered into force in respect of Slovenia (they
referred to Malhous, cited above).
- Nor
did the Court have jurisdiction to examine the subsequent
proceedings, which were inextricably linked with the first event,
outside the Court's jurisdiction (they cited Moldovan and Others
and Rostaş and Others v. Romania (dec.),
nos. 41138/98 and 64320/01, 13 March 2001; Voroshilov
v. Russia (dec.), no. 21501/02, 8 December 2005;
and Kadiķis v. Latvia (dec.), no.
47634/99, 29 June 2000).
- In
particular, as to the allegations by the applicant Ms Ana Mezga that
she had been deprived of her right to maternity leave, the respondent
Government maintained that her maternity leave should have lasted
until 26 July 1992 at the latest, which was also before the
entry into force of the Convention in respect of Slovenia.
- In
addition, the respondent Government alleged non-compliance with the
six-month rule under Article 35 § 1 of the Convention. Relying
on the Posti and Rahko v. Finland judgment (no. 27824/95, §
40, ECHR 2002 VII), they maintained that the situation in issue
could not be construed as a “continuing situation” for
the purposes of the six-month rule. Under the Court's case-law, a
distinction had to be drawn between situations of continuing
violations and their consequences, which might be lasting although
the violation itself occurred at a precisely determined moment.
- Furthermore,
the respondent Government maintained that the applicants had already
initially failed to exhaust domestic legal remedies as required by
Article 35 § 1 of the Convention either with regard to Slovenian
citizenship under the Citizenship Act or with regard to new residence
permits under the Aliens Act. The transfer from one Register to the
other one was merely a consequence of their failure, the entry in a
Register having a merely declaratory nature.
- In
the Government's view, the applicants should have applied for
permanent resident permits under the 1999 Aliens Act or the Legal
Status Act and, eventually, after exhaustion of the remedies at their
disposal in the framework of administrative proceedings, they should
have lodged a constitutional appeal. Regard being had to the
Constitutional Court's decisions, in particular that of 3 April 2003,
the applicants could have effectively safeguarded their rights before
the Constitutional Court, which enjoyed full jurisdiction under
section 60 of the Constitutional Court Act, a provision which had
been applied on several occasions (see paragraph 216 above). In a
number of cases brought by the “erased”, the
Constitutional Court had granted such appeals and filled the legal
vacuum arising from the legislature's failure to enforce the
Constitutional Court's decision (see paragraphs 245-257 above).
- In
particular, the applicants Mr Kurić, Mr Dabetić and Mrs and
Mr Ristanović had never applied for permanent residence
permits. Ms Mezga had initiated proceedings, which, however, had
been terminated because of her lack of cooperation. Furthermore, Mr
Ademi's application had been rejected for lack of evidence. Neither
Ms Mezga nor Mr Ademi had brought an administrative complaint. Mr
Berisha's and Mr Minić's requests for
residence permits had been rejected and they had instigated
administrative dispute proceedings, which were still pending. Eight
of the applicants had thus neither brought any proceedings nor
properly exhausted the domestic legal remedies at their disposal.
- In
addition, the respondent Government maintained that the applicants Mr
Petreš and Mr Jovanović could
no longer claim to be “victims” of the alleged violations
under Article 34 of the Convention since
they had received permanent residence permits. Neither could Ms Mezga
claim to be a “victim” of the alleged violation, since
she had received a five-year temporary residence permit.
- Moreover,
the applicants Mr Ljubomir Petreš, Mr Mustafa Kurić and
Mr Jovan Jovanović, in complaining about their pension
rights under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, had also failed to exhaust
domestic legal remedies, the right to a pension having no statute of
limitations and being inalienable under the Pension and Invalidity
Insurance Act. The applicants' allegations about the loss of their
social-security contributions were therefore unfounded; the
applicants' pension qualifying periods had never been deleted from
the records of the Pension and Invalidity Institute of Slovenia.
Therefore, it was still open to the applicants to start proceedings,
as they were entitled to acquire a pension if they met the conditions
specified by law (see, for example, Müller v. Austria,
no. 5849/72,
Commission's report of 1 October 1975, Decisions and Reports (DR) 3,
p. 25).
- As
to the submissions by the Serbian Government as a third-party
intervener (see paragraphs 298-302 below), the respondent Government
disputed them.
- Finally,
the respondent Government maintained that the application was in any
event manifestly ill-founded under Article 35 § 3 of the
Convention.
(b) The applicants
- With
regard to the existence of a continuous violation, the applicants
alleged that decision of the respondent Government to transfer the
names from one register to another occurred at a specifically defined
moment. However, the applicants' complaints were not based on that
act but rather on the subsequent legal and factual situation brought
about by the “erasure”, which had still not been
remedied. There was therefore no doubt that the situation was one of
a continuing violation (the applicants referred to Hutten-Czapska
v. Poland [GC], no. 35014/97, §§ 152-153, ECHR
2006 VIII, and Skrzyński v. Poland, no. 38672/02,
§§ 39-42, 6 September 2007).
- This
finding unavoidably affected the Court's jurisdiction ratione
temporis. Under the above-mentioned case-law, from the
ratification date onwards all of the State's alleged acts and
omissions had to conform to the Convention or its Protocols and
subsequent facts fell within the Court's jurisdiction, even where
they were merely extensions of an already existing situation.
- Under
the Court's case-law, the six-month rule was not applicable in the
event of violations which had a continuous character. In particular,
the respondent Government had not done anything to implement the
Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003. Moreover, the
remedies at the applicants' disposal were not effective. The
applicants believed that they were relieved from the obligation to
exhaust domestic legal remedies, since their situation derived from
unlawful administrative practices and because of their situation of
extreme vulnerability (they cited Aksoy v. Turkey, 18 December
1996, §§ 52-57, Reports 1996-VI).
- As
to the exhaustion of domestic remedies, in the applicants' opinion
none of the existing domestic remedies could be considered effective,
given that there was no systemic law remedying the situation of the
“erased”. In such circumstances it would be illusory to
use remedies such as an administrative dispute in the expectation
that the Administrative Court would apply the Constitutional Court's
guidelines, given to the silence of the authorities. Even if one
favourable decision were to be handed down, it would probably be
quickly annulled by a subsequent law. In any event, most of the
applicants had brought judicial proceedings against the relevant
first-instance decisions, but it was illusory to expect a favourable
outcome. The burden that the respondent Government wished to place on
the applicants was completely disproportionate; it was seeking to
shift the entire responsibility for the “erasure” onto
the victims.
- As
to the four applicants who had allegedly never applied for residence
permits, Mr Kurić and Mr Dabetić had
used the domestic legal remedies at their disposal, whereas
Mrs and Mr Ristanović did not fulfil the conditions under
the existing legislation since the Constitutional Court's decision
had not been applied. As to Ms Mezga, whose request had allegedly
been rejected because of her inactivity, it was difficult for people
with non-regulated status to assemble the documents proving
uninterrupted residence in Slovenia. Finally, the proceedings
initiated by Mr Berisha and Mr Minić were still pending. In any
event, those proceedings could not be considered effective (see
paragraphs 158 and 189-192 above).
- The
applicants maintained that those who had received permanent residence
permits ex nunc were also still victims of the alleged
violations of the Convention. Contrary to the relevant case-law
(Eckle v. Germany, 15 July 1982, Series A no. 51),
the respondent Government had not recognised the existence of a
violation and no redress had been offered to the applicants in terms
of compensation.
- As
to the alleged violation of the pension rights of the applicants Mr
Ljubomir Petreš, Mr Mustafa Kurić and Mr Jovan
Jovanović, they maintained that in the rare context of State
succession the successor State had been obliged to adopt all
necessary measures to ensure the right to peaceful enjoyment of their
possessions, to release contributions already paid and to grant them
pension rights, for the periods before and after the “erasure”,
that were at least proportionate to the allowance to which they would
have been entitled on the basis of a readjusted salary at the time of
the “erasure”.
- As
to the Government's submissions that their allegations were in any
event manifestly ill-founded, the applicants referred to the
respondent Government's obligation of notification, in particular in
the circumstances of State succession, and on the unlawfulness of the
“erasure” carried out ex officio, as recognised
also by the Constitutional Court.
(c) The intervening Government
- The
Serbian Government stated that they were filing third-party
submissions given the significance of the issues at stake and the
initial context of the alleged violations, namely the dissolution of
the SFRY.
- By
virtue of a generally accepted principle of international law, an
international treaty was not applicable to acts or facts that had
occurred or to situations that had ceased to exist before the said
treaty entered into force and was ratified by the State in question.
The same was valid for the Convention and the Court's jurisdiction
ratione temporis
to hear the case.
- However,
the “continuing violation doctrine” could play an
important role in safeguarding the rights guaranteed by the
Convention since the applicants did not seek redress for any instant
effect of the respondent State's failure to regulate their legal
status but for the fact that the existing legal lacuna had grave
ramifications on their enjoyment of the right to private and family
life over a number of years. In any event, the alleged violations had
existed continually since the date of the entry into force of the
Convention in respect of Slovenia, 28 June 1994.
- As
to the respondent Government's objections that the applicants had
failed to exhaust the domestic legal remedies at their disposal, the
intervening Government submitted that the given legal remedies had
proved to be both ineffective and inadequate in the circumstances of
the instant case.
- Since
the applicants had no effective domestic remedy at their disposal for
the grievances they had suffered, the starting-point of the six-month
time-limit could only be the challenged act or omission of the
authorities. Breaches of the Convention which were the outcome of a
legal provision – in the instant case a series of laws that had
not regulated the matter in an adequate manner – had been
considered by the Court to give rise to the “continuing
situation doctrine”. In the instant case, the maintenance in
force of legislation that had been declared unconstitutional by the
Constitutional Court, on account of the State authorities'
inactivity, constituted continuing interference with the applicants'
right to respect for their private and family life.
2. The
Court's assessment
- As
to the respondent Government's preliminary objection that the
applicants' complaints under Article 8 of the Convention were
inadmissible ratione materiae
with the provisions of the Convention, the Court considers
that, having regard to the parties' observations, this part of the
application raises complex questions of fact and law, the
determination of which should depend on an examination of the merits.
This part of the application cannot therefore be regarded as
manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of
the Convention. No other ground for declaring it inadmissible has
been established (see Makuc and Others
(dec.), no. 26828/06, §§ 166-169, 31 May 2007,
and Slivenko and Others v. Latvia (dec.) [GC], no.
48321/99, § 88, ECHR 2002-II (extracts)).
304. As to the Court's jurisdiction
ratione temporis,
the Court reiterates that it covers only the period after the
date of ratification of the Convention and its Protocols by the
respondent State. After ratification, the State's acts must conform
to the Convention or its Protocols and subsequent facts fall within
the Court's jurisdiction even where they are merely extensions of an
already existing situation (see, for example, Almeida Garrett,
Mascarenhas Falcão and Others v. Portugal,
nos. 29813/96 and 30229/96, § 43, ECHR 2000-I).
Accordingly, the Court is competent to examine the facts of the
present case for their compatibility with the Convention only in so
far as they occurred after 28 June 1994, the date of the ratification
of the Convention and Protocol No. 1 by Slovenia.
It may, however, have regard to the facts prior to ratification
inasmuch as they could be considered to have created a continuous
situation extending beyond that date or may be relevant for the
understanding of facts occurring after that date (see Hutten-Czapska,
cited above, §§ 147-153).
- The
Court observes that the applicants' complaints relate to the overall
situation affecting them as a result of the lack of compliance with
the Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003 finding
the “erasure” unconstitutional. This situation obtained
on 28 June 1994 and continues more than 15 years after the entry into
force of the Convention and its Protocols for Slovenia (contrast
Šilih v. Slovenia [GC], no. 71463/01, § 140,
ECHR 2009-...). The respondent Government's plea of lack of
jurisdiction ratione temporis must accordingly be dismissed.
- The
Court further reiterates that the six-month rule is not applicable in
the event of violations which have a continuous character. The
respondent Government's plea that the six-month rule has not been
complied with must accordingly be dismissed.
- As
to the respondent Government's objection that the applicant
Ms Mezga's complaints under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 were
incompatible ratione temporis with the provisions of the
Convention, the Court finds that the applicant was on maternity leave
in 1992 (see paragraph 128 above), which was prior to the
ratification of Protocol No. 1 by Slovenia. These complaints must
therefore be declared incompatible ratione temporis with the
provisions of the Convention and rejected in accordance with Article
35 §§ 3 and 4 of the Convention.
- As
to the respondent Government's plea that the applicants failed to
exhaust domestic legal remedies, the Court reiterates that the
Constitutional Court found the “erasure” unconstitutional
on various occasions and that the applicants essentially complain
about the lack of compliance with those decisions. In these
circumstances, the respondent Government's plea of a failure to
exhaust domestic remedies must be dismissed (see Tokić
and Others v. Bosnia and Herzegovina, nos. 12455/04,
14140/05, 12906/06 and 26028/06, §§ 57 and 58, 8 July
2008).
309. Finally,
the respondent Government raised an objection that the
applicants Mr Petreš and Mr Jovanović
could no longer claim to be “victims”
of the alleged violations under Article 34 of the Convention
since they had received permanent residence permits. Neither could
Ms Mezga claim to be a “victim” of the alleged
violation since she had received a five-year temporary residence
permit.
- The
Court finds that on 3 March 2009 the
applicants Mr Petreš and Mr
Jovanović were issued ex officio supplementary
residence permits on the basis of point no. 8 of the operative part
of the Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003, awarding them
residence status from 26 February 1992 onwards (see paragraphs
57, 101-103 and 116-118 above).
311. The
Court finds that the material facts complained of by the applicants
have ceased to exist and that the issuing of the retroactive
residence permits, in line with the Constitutional Court's decision,
constitutes an adequate and sufficient remedy for their complaints
under Articles 8, 13 and 14 of the Convention. It follows that they
can no longer claim to be the “victims” of the alleged
violations (see, mutatis mutandis,
Shevanova v. Latvia (striking out) [GC], no. 58822/00,
§§ 48-50, 7 December 2007, and Kaftailova v. Latvia
(striking out) [GC], no. 59643/00, §§ 52-54, 7
December 2007).
- On
the other hand, such permits have never been issued in respect of the
applicant Ms Mezga. The respondent Government's objection in respect
of that applicant must therefore be dismissed.
- As
to the alleged violation of the pension rights of the applicants Mr
Ljubomir Petreš, Mr Mustafa Kurić and Mr Jovan
Jovanović, the Court reiterates that if a Contracting State has
in force legislation providing for the payment as of right of a
welfare benefit – whether conditional or not on the prior
payment of contributions – that legislation must be regarded as
generating a proprietary interest falling within the ambit of Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 for persons satisfying its requirements
(see Stec and Others v. the United Kingdom (dec.) [GC],
nos. 65731/01 and 65900/01, § 54, ECHR 2005 X;
Andrejeva v. Latvia [GC], no. 55707/00, § 77, ECHR
2009 ...; and Predojević and Others
v. Slovenia (dec.), nos. 43445/98,
49740/99, 49747/99, 54217/00, 7 June 2001).
- The
Court notes, however, that none of the three applicants has initiated
proceedings before the Institute of Pension and Invalidity Insurance
in order to vindicate his pension rights. They have thus failed
properly to exhaust domestic legal remedies as provided by Article 35
§ 1 of the Convention.
315. Accordingly,
the Court declares the complaints under Articles 8, 13 and 14 of the
Convention admissible in respect of the applicants Mr Mustafa
Kurić, Mr Velimir Dabetić, Ms Ana Mezga, Mrs Ljubenka
Ristanović, Mr Tripun Ristanović, Mr Ali Berisha, Mr Ilfan
Sadik Ademi, and Mr Zoran Minić.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION
- Under
Article 8 of the Convention, the applicants alleged that they had
been arbitrarily deprived of the possibility of acquiring Slovenian
citizenship and/or of preserving their status as permanent residents
after Slovenia declared its independence in 1991, because they were
not in a position to submit a formal request for citizenship within
the short period set out in the domestic legislation. As a result, on
26 February 1992 their names had been unlawfully “erased”
from the Register of Permanent Residents.
- Subsequently,
the applicants had not been in a position to seek Slovenian
citizenship or to apply for permanent residence in Slovenia. Some of
the applicants were also unable to acquire citizenship of any other
successor State of the former SRFY and have become, de facto,
stateless persons. The repercussions of these events had been severe
for the applicants' private and family lives and in breach of Article
8 of the Convention. The situation had remained essentially unchanged
even after the Constitutional Court's decision of 1999 declaring the
“erasure” unconstitutional, the subsequent adoption of
the Legal Status Act and the Constitutional Court's decision of 2003
declaring certain provisions of the latter act unconstitutional.
- Article
8 of the Convention provides:
“1. Everyone has the right to respect
for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public
authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in
accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in
the interests of national security, public safety or the economic
well-being of the country, 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.”
1. The parties' submissions
(a) The applicants
- The
applicants, many of whom had been living in Slovenia for decades,
maintained that with the “erasure” from the Register of
Permanent Residents on 26 February 1992, they had become “aliens”
overnight and had been deprived of all of the civil, political,
social and economic rights which permanent residence conferred. They
stated that the respondent Government had breached Article 8 of the
Convention through a series of interrelated acts (denial of permanent
residence or citizenship, deportations) and omissions (lack of
notification, failure to implement the Constitutional Court's
judgments, failure to adopt appropriate legislative measures to
regulate the legal status of the “erased”) which had the
direct consequence of interfering with the applicants' enjoyment of
their right to respect for private and family life (they cited Botta
v. Italy, 24 February 1998, § 32, Reports 1998 I).
- As
to the respondent Government's submissions that adequate means had
been used to inform the applicants of the time-limit for applying for
Slovenian citizenship under the Citizenship Act and about the
transfer from one Register to another in 1992, the applicants
maintained that none of them had ever been properly informed. The
alleged sufficiency of the means used was inconsistent with the
extremely high number of the “erased”. Subsequently, some
of the applicants did receive notification to “regulate their
status” but on such occasions their documents were taken away
by the local authority. This made it more difficult for them in
subsequent proceedings to satisfy one of the conditions laid down in
the Legal Status Act, which was to prove that they had in fact lived
uninterruptedly in Slovenia since 1991. The respondent Government had
therefore breached the applicants' right to private life, both from
the procedural and from the substantive aspect, due to inappropriate
notification and to the “erasure” (the applicants
referred to Guerra and Others v. Italy, 19 February 1998,
Reports 1998 I). Finally, the burden of proof as to the
proper notification or taking away of the documents should instead be
incumbent on the respondent Government.
- Moreover,
the provisions of the Aliens Act, to which the applicants became
subject on 26 February 1992, were neither accessible nor foreseeable,
since the Aliens Act had been designed to regulate the status of
illegal aliens. In addition, the overall conduct of the Slovenian
authorities had been arbitrary. In the applicants' view, the
respondent Government's interference was not proportionate to any
legitimate aim pursued.
- The
applicants further contested the respondent Government's submissions
alleging that their complaints had been based on a “simple
misunderstanding of a difference between registration of a permanent
residence at the material time and a permanent residence permit”.
It was correct to say that the registration of a permanent residence
had a merely declaratory effect. However, removing a person's name
from the Register of Permanent Residence had an evidently negative
constitutive effect, the latter being equivalent to the withdrawal of
a permanent residence permit from a “real” alien. This
was pointed out in the Constitutional Court's decision of 4 February
1999, finding that the provisions of the Aliens Act were
discriminatory towards the “erased” because they had
differentiated between “real” aliens with residence
permits acquired in the former SFRY and the “erased” who
were treated instead as illegal migrants.
- As
to the respondent Government's submissions that the transferral from
one Register into the other did not impede the applicants' continued
residence on Slovenian territory and that the presence of the
“erased” was by and large tolerated, sufficed it to say
that many were forcibly deported from Slovenia, including five of the
applicants.
- The
respondent Government had also maintained that the term “erasure”
was used unjustifiably, thus denying the existence of a structural
problem in Slovenia. Had this been the case, the situation of the
“erased” would not have been heavily criticised by a
number of international human rights bodies for the serious and
systemic violations of basic rights which still derived from this
phenomenon. In support of their argument, the respondent Government
merely relied on international documents issued at the beginning of
the 1990s when the problem was unknown to the public.
- Subsequently,
the Council of Europe's Advisory Committee on the Framework
Convention for the Protection of National Minorities, the Committee
of Ministers, the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance
and the Commissioner for Human Rights as well as the United Nations'
Human Rights Committee, the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
and the Committee on the Rights of Child had all found that the lack
of regulation of the legal status of the “erased” and of
the implementation of the Constitutional Court's decision, setting
out this obligation, entailed a range of serious consequences in
connection with full enjoyment of basic rights. This required a rapid
intervention from the respondent Government which should have
resolved the situation with a retroactive recognition of permanent
residence and preparation of appropriate measures to redress the
damage done (see paragraphs 262-271 above).
- The
applicants submitted that the existence of a structural problem was
of key importance to the present case. The situation would not be
considered as fully redressed until the Slovenian authorities took
full responsibility for adopting general measures with regard to the
“erased”. The applicants' case was not “an isolated
incident nor attributable to the particular turn of events in [their]
case” but, as in the Broniowski v. Poland case
([GC], no. 31443/96, § 189, ECHR 2004 V), “rather the
consequence of administrative and regulatory conduct on the part of
the authorities” directed towards an identifiable group of
persons: ex-SFRY citizens who had not acquired Slovenian citizenship.
According to recent data issued by the Ministry of Interior, there
were 25,671 such persons at the time of “erasure”, of
whom 13,426 persons did not have regulated status in Slovenia
and their current residence was unknown.
- As
to the respondent Government's submissions that in any event the
existing legislation had been interpreted in the applicants' favour
after the “erasure” or that laws had been passed enabling
the “erased” to regulate their status, the applicants
stated that the Constitutional Court had found in 1999 that the
Government had exceeded its competence when adopting its decision of
3 September 1992, since it had not permitted the legislature to fill
the legal void (see paragraph 222 above). It was true that the Legal
Status Act was the only Act on which the “erased” could
rely, but it was insufficient to regulate the applicants' legal
status. The Act included a condition of uninterrupted residence on
Slovenian territory from the moment of the “erasure”, a
condition that was difficult to prove even for those who had never
left the country. Besides, the permanent residence permits had only
an ex nunc effect. In the applicants' view, following the
Constitutional Court's decision of 4 April 2003, the only effective
remedy for regulating the situation of the “erased” was
the adoption of a comprehensive law.
- Contrary
to the respondent Government's submissions, the applicants maintained
that the present case was clearly distinguishable from the Sisojeva
and Others v. Latvia judgment ([GC], no. 60654/00, ECHR
2007-II). In that case the applicants, who lived in Latvia, applied
for permanent residence there, while they had also subsequently
obtained Russian passports. Their status had been revoked by the
Latvian authorities solely because of the applicants' unlawful
behaviour. In contrast, the applicants in the present case had not
actively created the situation in which they found themselves (here
they referred to Sisojeva and Others, cited above, § 94).
In addition, the Latvian authorities had sent a series of letters to
the applicants explaining the procedure to be followed in order to
regulate their stay in Latvia and the applicants had failed to comply
with those instructions. In contrast, the applicants in the present
case had never been directly notified. Moreover, all of the
applicants in the present case had made efforts to regulate their
status; ten of them had applied for a permanent residence permit or
brought court proceedings.
- In
the Sisojeva and Others judgment the Court had attached
considerable weight to the fact that had the applicants followed the
measures indicated by the respondent Government, they would have been
able to exercise freely their right to private and family life under
Article 8 of the Convention. On the contrary, in the present case the
applicants did not have any effective remedy for regaining these
rights under the current Slovenian legislation.
- Finally,
after the deadline for applying for citizenship had expired, four of
the applicants had become “stateless” and not just
“aliens”. The Republic of Slovenia wrongly assumed that
all persons from the other SFRY Republics who had permanent residence
in Slovenia had citizenship of one of these republics and could
therefore acquire citizenship of one of the new successor States.
International obligations relating to statelessness should have been
applied accordingly (see paragraphs 260-261, 267 and 272 above).
(b) The respondent Government
- The
respondent Government stated at the outset that at its independence,
through both the Statement of Good Intentions and the independence
legislation, the Republic of Slovenia had granted the acquisition of
Slovenian citizenship by naturalisation to citizens of the other
former republics of the SFRY with permanent residence in Slovenia
under exceptionally favourable conditions. In addition, the 1991
Constitutional Law guaranteed them equality of treatment with
Slovenian citizens until the acquisition of Slovenian citizenship or
the expiry of the time-limits set by the Aliens Act (see paragraph
214 above). However, bearing in mind the necessity of forming a
corpus of Slovenian citizens – especially in view of the 1992
parliamentary elections – this equality in treatment could not
last indefinitely. Therefore, it was up to the permanent residents
without Slovenian citizenship to seize the opportunity to acquire
citizenship of the independent Slovenia; this was not granted
automatically. Such a decision would have breached their right to
choose whether or not they wished to become Slovenian citizens.
- This
pivotal time for establishment of a new State called for quick
decisions. Nevertheless, in the respondent Government's view, all
permanent residents had had an appropriate time period in which to
settle their status and were adequately informed of the new
legislation, which was sufficiently foreseeable (they referred to
Slivenko v. Latvia ([GC], no. 48321/99, §§
107, ECHR 2003 X). In addition to the publication in the
Official Gazette, the information had been disseminated through
public media and notices in municipalities. Some municipalities, for
instance those in Ljubljana, Maribor and Koper, had used personal
means of notification. Residents had been contacted either in person
or by phone, but mostly by ordinary mail and in certain cases also by
notification under the General Administrative Procedure Act. In any
event, it was quite reasonable to expect that the persons concerned
at that period would show appropriate interest in settling their
status, either by applying for citizenship or by regulating their
residence. Last but not least, it was important to reiterate a
universally recognised legal principle: ignorantia iuris nocet.
- As
already stated, the transitional provisions of the Citizenship Act,
based on the principle of preventing statelessness, provided for the
large-scale naturalisation of citizens of the other former republics
of the SFRY with permanent residence in Slovenia (see paragraphs 35
and 37 above). As to the regulation of the status of aliens, after
the entry into force of the Aliens Act, a distinction had to be drawn
between “aliens from the other former SFRY republics”,
subject to its section 81, who had previously registered their
permanent residence in Slovenia in the same way as Slovenian
citizens, and “real” aliens, who were in possession of
permanent residence permits under the Movement and Residence of
Aliens Act (see paragraphs 208 and 221 above).
- On
26 February 1992, after the expiry of the time-limit set by the
second paragraph of its section 81, there had no longer been any
legal basis for former SFRY citizens who had failed to apply for
Slovenian citizenship under the Citizenship Act to be entered in the
Register of Permanent Residents. As the existing legislation provided
for an ex officio updating of the registers on a daily basis
(see paragraph 211 above), the Ministry of the Interior had ordered
the transfer of the names of those concerned to a special register of
“aliens with non-regulated status”. Since this transfer
merely reflected their actual situation under the provisions of the
Aliens Act, it could not therefore be referred to as “erasure”.
Moreover, the persons concerned were not denied the right to continue
living in their current place of residence.
- The
applicants had wrongly alleged that in the SFRY permanent residence
had been acquired almost automatically by the SFRY citizens. SFRY
citizenship was indeed the legal basis for the registration of a
permanent residence but the person had to deregister his or her
previous permanent residence and adduce adequate evidence in order to
be entered into the Register. On the other hand, “real”
aliens had first to acquire permanent residence permits in order to
register their permanent residence. In such cases the registration
was therefore a mere consequence of the fact that an alien had
acquired a residence permit and was not constitutive of any right. On
the contrary, the issuance of a residence permit (whether permanent
or temporary) was a constitutive act. The respondent Government
maintained that the misunderstanding in the present case had been
created by the incorrect use of these two legal terms by the
applicants. The proper understanding of the two notions would render
the use of expressions “erasure” and “erased”
unjustified. Finally, the regulation of residence of aliens through a
system of residence permits was something common to all countries,
including countries of the European Union (see after paragraph 259
above).
- In
subsequent years the respondent Government had made several attempts
to regulate the situation of former SFRY citizens with non-regulated
status. In view of their large number, on 3 September 1992 the
Government had decided additionally to take into account, for the
purposes of calculating the three-year period of residence in
Slovenia necessary for a temporary residence permit, as laid down in
section 13 of the Aliens Act, the period before the Act's entry into
force. In this way a large number of “latecomers” had
been enabled to acquire a permanent residence permit; a total of
4,893 permits had thus been issued in the period from 1992 to 1997.
In addition, in 1994 the Ministry of the Interior had introduced a
computerised system for maintaining registers and all persons with
non-regulated status were notified by ordinary mail of the
possibilities available to them. Furthermore, the transitional
provisions of the Employment of Aliens Act enabled such persons to
acquire a work permit under certain conditions (see paragraph 230
above). Finally, the Slovenian authorities had, by and large,
tolerated the unlawful residence of people with non-regulated status
on Slovenian territory.
- As
the Government had already stated, the applicants had failed to take
the appropriate action both in 1991 and in subsequent years in order
to regulate their status. In any event, further to the Constitutional
Court's decision of 3 April 2003 declaring certain provisions of the
Legal Status Act unconstitutional (see paragraphs 56-57 and 250-255
above), the time-limit for applications for permanent residence
permit under the Legal Status Act had been opened again and the
applicants could have availed themselves of this possibility. As to
point no. 8 of the operative part of that decision, ordering the
Ministry to issue those who already had non-retroactive permits with
supplementary, ex tunc, permits – this was of relevance
only to the three applicants who were in such a situation. Indeed, on
3 March 2009 Mr Petreš and Mr Jovanović had received
supplementary permits (see paragraphs 103 and 118 above). Until then,
the applicants could have filed an action alleging a failure to
respond by the administrative authority; the Constitutional Court had
ruled that the Administrative Court could have followed the
Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003 in spite of the
unchanged legislation (see paragraph 257 above).
- The
respondent Government maintained that the approach adopted by
Slovenia in addressing this complex and sensitive issue, which was
also new for Europe as a whole, had been extremely positively
assessed by international organisations. On 1 December 1993 the
Council of Europe's Committee of Experts on Nationality had held that
Slovenia had dealt with this issue in full accordance with the
standards regulating citizenship in successor States. In 1995 the UN
Human Rights Committee had shared this view and the Sixth Committee
of the UN General Assembly had confirmed the compliance of Slovenian
legislation with international standards. It should also be stressed
that the respondent State had always complemented the relevant
legislation through cooperation between all governmental branches.
Inspired by the European legal examples, such as the Council of
Europe's European Convention on Nationality, Slovenia had
incorporated into its legislation the principles embraced in the
latter's Chapter 6, regulating citizenship in the case of succession,
in particular the principle of free will of the
persons concerned.
- Relying
on the Sisojeva and Others judgment (cited above, §
91), the respondent Government stated that Article 8 could not be
construed as guaranteeing, as such, the right to a particular type of
residence permit. Where the domestic legislation provided for several
different types, the Court must analyse the legal and practical
implications of issuing a particular permit. If the permit in
question allowed the holder to reside within the territory of the
host country and to exercise freely the right to respect for his or
her private and family life, the granting of such a permit
represented in principle a sufficient measure to meet the
requirements of that provision. This of course presupposed that the
alien had applied for a permit – it was not the responsibility
of the host country to grant him or her such a permit on its own
initiative.
- Even
if the Court found that the acts of the respondent State were in
breach of Article 8 of the Convention, in the respondent Government's
view, the independence legislation in the area of citizenship and the
status of aliens, and the subsequent acts, were designed to ensure
compliance with immigration laws and met the requirements of its
second paragraph. The regulation of citizenship and of the status of
aliens was an urgent need for every new State, provided that the
measure was proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued (they
referred to Olsson v. Sweden (no. 1), 24 March 1988, Series A
no. 130). Under the Court's case-law, every State had the right, as a
matter of well-established international law and subject to its
treaty obligations, to control the entry of non-nationals into its
territory (they cited Abdulaziz, Cabales and Balkandali v. the
United Kingdom, 28 May 1985, § 67, Series A no. 94). In
the respondent Government's view, the alleged interference was in
accordance with the law, pursued a legitimate goal and was necessary
in a democratic society. Every alien was required to regulate his or
her status in a country of which he or she was not a national. Such a
requirement was always legitimate and necessary in terms of ensuring
public safety, provided that the measure was proportionate to the
legitimate aims pursued, as in the present case. In addition,
Slovenia had not acted arbitrarily, since it had dealt with identical
situations in an identical way.
- The
applicants' situation did not originate in a “systemic problem”
(as defined in Broniowski, cited above, § 189). After
independence, Slovenia had offered former SFRY citizens an
opportunity to acquire citizenship of the new State. On the other
hand, the latter were aware that the provisions of the Aliens Act
would become applicable to them. As already stated, it was up to each
individual to decide whether to apply for citizenship or to
regularise his status as an alien.
- Finally,
when the Aliens Act had become applicable to the applicants, none of
them had been stateless; at that time they had all been citizens of
the SFRY and of their republics of origin. It was due to their own
inactivity that they had failed to assemble the required documents
for the proceedings in Slovenia. Furthermore, it was not the
responsibility of the respondent Government if the other former
Republics of the SFRY had passed stricter legislation on citizenship,
so that the applicants could not acquire citizenship of those States
either. As to the applicants' reliance on the 1999 Draft Articles on
Nationality of Natural Persons in relation to the Succession of
States, they were not yet in force.
(c) The third parties
- The
Serbian Government stated that they were limiting their comments to
the preliminary issues (see paragraphs 298-302 above) given that the
other third parties had made comments on the merits.
- The
Open Society Justice Initiative submitted that the violations at
issue in this case fell squarely within the scope of protection of
private life under Article 8. Although the Convention did not ensure
the right to a particular citizenship as such, the arbitrary denial
of citizenship might in certain circumstances violate Article 8
because of its impact on the private life of the individual
concerned. The Court also recognised circumstances in which the
expulsion of non-citizens or the denial of their application to join
family members in Convention States violated their right to family
life. The Court had found that that the right to private life was
bound up with “the network of personal, social and economic
relations that make up the private life of every human being”
which emerged through longstanding habitual residence. The precedents
in Slivenko (cited above, §§ 95- 96 and 122-128) and
Sisojeva and Others, (cited above, §§ 105 and
110) were particularly relevant to the present case.
- In
particular, as followed from the Court's partial decision on
admissibility, the applicants' ongoing lack of legal status was a
result of their “erasure” on 26 February 1992.
Subsequently, the procedures enabling long-term legal residents of
Slovenia who were citizens of other former SFRY republics to acquire
Slovenian citizenship at independence or to acquire legal residence
in Slovenia since that date had been complicated, the deadlines for
complying with these legal requirements had been short and notice to
the persons affected by these laws and procedures has been deficient.
Moreover, the respondent Government had failed to comply with the
Constitutional Court's 2003 decision to grant retroactive legal
permanent residence to “the erased”, among other
measures. Finally, the “erasure” itself and the
applicants' inability to regularise their legal status in Slovenia
have rendered most of the applicants stateless.
- In
the light of the Court's precedents mentioned above (see paragraph
344 above), the ongoing situation of “the erased”, who
had lived in legal uncertainty without citizenship, legal status or a
remedy for over 15 years, constituted an interference with their
right to private life. The instant case entailed not only Slovenia's
negative obligation under Article 8 to refrain from arbitrary
interference, but also its positive obligation to ensure that “the
erased” had an effective right to obtain permanent residence
status, placing them on the path to citizenship (they cited Cılız
v. the Netherlands, no. 29192/95, § 61, ECHR 2000 VIII).
The interests of “the erased” in securing legal residence
in Slovenia were especially weighty since legal residence status was
a prerequisite in Slovenia to acquiring citizenship through
naturalisation. The means pursued by Slovenia were disproportionate
to any legitimate aim underlying its action (they referred to
Slivenko, cited above, § 122).
- The
ongoing consequences of the loss of legal status violated fundamental
rights that were both inherent in and transcended Article 8 of the
Convention and were contrary to international law. The Council of
Europe had developed comprehensive standards on nationality and legal
status, focusing on the complexities that arose in the context of
State succession (see paragraphs 260-261 above).
2. The Court's assessment
(a) Interference with the applicants'
rights under Article 8 § 1 of the Convention
- The
applicants stated that they had been arbitrarily deprived of the
possibility of acquiring Slovenian citizenship. They complained about
the “erasure” of their names from the Register of
Permanent Residents on 26 February 1992 and about the severe
repercussions resulting from it for their private and family life,
which they alleged were in breach of Article 8 of the Convention, and
the loss of entitlement to various benefits and to enjoyment of a
wide array of rights. They complained in particular about the refusal
of the domestic authorities to comply with the Constitutional Court's
decision of 3 April 2003 and to grant them permanent
residence status retroactively.
- The
Court must first determine whether the applicants are entitled to
claim that they had a private life or a family life in Slovenia
within the meaning of Article 8 § 1 of the Convention, and, if
so, whether the overall situation affecting the applicants may give
rise to an issue under Article 8 of the Convention.
- The
Court reaffirms at the outset that a State is entitled, as a matter
of international law and subject to its treaty obligations, to
control the entry of aliens into its territory and their residence
there (see, among many other authorities, Abdulaziz, Cabales and
Balkandali v. the United Kingdom, 28 May 1985, § 67,
Series A no. 94; Boultif v. Switzerland, no. 54273/00,
§ 39, ECHR 2001 IX; and Üner, cited above,
§ 54).
- Nevertheless,
the decisions taken by States in the immigration sphere can in some
cases amount to interference with the right to respect for private
and family life secured by Article 8 § 1 of the Convention, in
particular where the persons concerned possess strong personal or
family ties in the host country which are liable to be seriously
affected by application of the measure in question. Such interference
is in breach of Article 8 unless it is “in accordance with the
law”, pursues one or more legitimate aims under the second
paragraph of that Article, and is “necessary in a democratic
society” in order to achieve them (see, for example, Moustaquim
v. Belgium, 18 February 1991, § 36, Series A no. 193;
Dalia v. France, 19 February 1998, § 52, Reports
1998-I; and Amrollahi v. Denmark, no. 56811/00, §
33, 11 July 2002).
- In
this connection, the Court reiterates that Article 8 also protects
the right to establish and develop relationships with other human
beings and the outside world (see Pretty v. the United Kingdom,
no. 2346/02, § 61, ECHR 2002-III) and can sometimes embrace
aspects of an individual's social identity (see Mikulić v.
Croatia, no. 53176/99, § 53, ECHR 2002-I). It must be
accepted that the totality of social ties between settled migrants
and the community in which they are living constitute part of the
concept of private life within the meaning of Article 8. Regardless
of the existence or otherwise of a family life, therefore, the Court
considers that the expulsion of a settled migrant constitutes
interference with his or her right to respect for private life. It
will depend on the circumstances of the particular case whether it is
appropriate for the Court to focus on the family life rather than the
private life aspect (see Üner,
cited above, § 59, and, mutatis mutandis, Slivenko,
cited above, § 95).
- The
Court further reiterates that no right to acquire or retain a
particular nationality is as such included among the rights and
freedoms guaranteed by the Convention or its Protocols. Nevertheless,
the Court does not exclude the possibility that an arbitrary denial
of citizenship might in certain circumstances raise an issue under
Article 8 of the Convention because of the impact of such a denial on
the private life of the individual (see X. v. Austria,
no. 5212/71, Commission decision of 5 October 1972, DR 43, p. 69,
Karassev v. Finland (dec.), no. 31414/96, ECHR
1999-II, Slivenko v. Latvia (dec.), cited above, § 77,
and Kuduzović v. Slovenia (dec.), no. 60723/00, 17 March
2005).
- Finally,
while the chief object of Article 8, which deals with the right
to respect for one's private and family life, is to protect the
individual against arbitrary interference by the public authorities,
it does not merely compel the State to abstain from such
interference: in addition to this negative undertaking, there may be
positive obligations inherent in effective respect for private or
family life (see, for example, Gül v. Switzerland,
19 February 1996, § 38, Reports 1996-I;
Ignaccolo-Zenide v. Romania, no. 31679/96, § 94,
ECHR 2000-I; and Mehemi v. France (no. 2), no. 53470/99,
§ 45, ECHR 2003-IV).
- Firstly,
as to the applicants' allegations concerning the lack of opportunity
to acquire Slovenian citizenship in 1991, the Court draws attention
to its decision on the admissibility and
reiterates that these complaints were declared incompatible ratione
temporis with the provisions of the Convention and rejected in
accordance with Article 35 §§ 3 and 4 of the Convention
(see, Makuc and
Others (dec.), cited above, §
165).
- Secondly,
the Court notes that before 26 February 1992, when the relevant parts
of the independence legislation became applicable to the applicants
and their names were transferred from the Register of Permanent
Residents into the Register of Aliens without a Residence
Permit (see paragraphs 38-39 above), they had
been living in the territory of the Republic of Slovenia for several
years, and most of them for decades. Some applicants were even born
there. Before that date all of the applicants had been in lawful
permanent residence on Slovenian territory under the SFRY legislation
applicable at the material time.
- It
is important to note that prior to 1991 the applicants did not enter
Slovenia as aliens but settled there as SFRY citizens and registered
their permanent residence in the same way as citizens of the then
Socialist Republic of Slovenia (see paragraphs 25-26 above). At the
moment of the “erasure” on 26 February 1992, the
applicants therefore had a stronger residence status than long-term
migrants, whose status is protected in a number of Contracting
States, and in comparison with aliens seeking to enter or remain in a
state after only a short period of time (see Üner,
cited above, §§ 55 and 56; Moustaquim, cited above,
§ 73; Maslov v. Austria [GC], no. 1638/03, § 73, 23
June 2008; and Radovanovic v. Austria, no. 42703/98, §
73, 22 April 2004).
- Thirdly,
although the “erasure” had been carried out before 28
June 1994, when the Convention and its Protocol No. 1 entered into
force in respect of Slovenia, on that date the applicants were –
and they continue to be – affected by the impugned measure,
which was found to be unlawful for the first time by the
Constitutional Court in its decision of 4 February 1999, both in
respect of the five applicants who were still living in Slovenia in
1994 and of those who had either been deported or had left Slovenia
(see paragraphs 51, 56 and 236-244 above).
- In
view of the individual circumstances of the applicants who had all
spent a substantial part of their lives in Slovenia (see paragraphs
83-86, 91-92, 104-106, 119, 127-129, 140-141, 145, 168, 180-181
above), the fact remains that they had developed there the network of
personal, social, cultural, linguistic and
economic relations that make up the private life of every human being
(see Slivenko, cited above, § 96). Most of them
have also developed family life in Slovenia or maintained ties with
their family living in Slovenia (see Moustaquim, cited
above, § 36). The Court concludes that the applicants had a
private and/or a family life in Slovenia at the material time within
the meaning of Article 8 § 1 of the Convention.
- At
the time of the entry into force of the Convention and its Protocol
No. 1 in respect of Slovenia, the applicants therefore found
themselves in a precarious situation subsequent to the break-up of
the SFRY, as did many other ordinary individuals in comparable
circumstances in the aftermath of the First and Second World War, or
after the change in State boundaries in central and eastern Europe
following the fall of the Berlin Wall.
- Consequently,
the Court considers that the prolonged refusal of the Slovenian
authorities to regulate the applicants' situation comprehensively, in
line with the Constitutional Court's decisions, in particular the
failure to pass appropriate legislation (see paragraphs 237-257
above) and to issue permanent residence permits to individual
applicants, constitutes an interference with the exercise of the
applicants' rights to respect for their private and/or family life,
especially in cases of statelesness. It remains to be considered
whether that interference was compatible with the second paragraph of
Article 8 of the Convention, that is, whether it was “in
accordance with the law”, pursued one or more of the legitimate
aims listed in that paragraph and was “necessary in a
democratic society”.
(b) Justification of the interference
- Such
interference will be in breach of Article 8 of the Convention unless
it can be justified under paragraph 2 of Article 8 as being “in
accordance with the law”, as pursuing one or more of the
legitimate aims listed therein, and as being “necessary in a
democratic society” in order to achieve the aim or aims
concerned.
- According
to the Court's established case-law, the expression “in
accordance with the law” requires that the impugned measure
should have some basis in domestic law, and it also refers to the
quality of the law in question, requiring that it should be
accessible to the person concerned and foreseeable as to its effects
(see Slivenko, cited above, § 100).
- The
Court reiterates that the “erasure” of the applicants'
names from the Register of Permanent Residents, together with the
names of more than 25,000 former SFRY citizens, occurred on 26
February 1992, when the second paragraph of section 81 of the Aliens
Act became applicable (see paragraphs 38 and 65 above).
- The
applicants alleged that the provisions of the Aliens Act were neither
accessible nor foreseeable, since the Aliens Act had been designed to
regulate the status of illegal aliens whereas they had permanent
residence status at the material time. They also maintained that they
had never been properly informed about the “erasure” (see
paragraphs 319-320 above). The respondent Government disputed those
allegations (see paragraph 332 above).
- The
Court reiterates that it is primarily for the national authorities,
notably the courts, to interpret and apply domestic law (see Amann
v. Switzerland [GC], no. 27798/95, §§ 52-54, ECHR
2000 II, and Slivenko, cited above, § 105).
- In
this connection the Court notes that the
Constitutional Court held in its
decision of 4 February 1999 that section 81 of the Aliens Act was
unconstitutional, since it had not set out the conditions for
acquisition of permanent residence for those subject to its second
paragraph, that is, citizens of the other former SFRY republics who
had permanent residence in Slovenia and in fact lived on the
Slovenian territory at the material time and had either failed to
apply for Slovenian citizenship or whose requests had not been
granted. The Constitutional Court held that the rule of law had been
infringed since neither the Aliens Act nor a separate act regulated
the transition of the legal status of such persons towards the status
of aliens living in Slovenia. After the expiry of the deadlines set
out in its second paragraph, such persons found themselves in a
precarious legal position. This in itself could constitute a
violation of Article 8 of the Convention.
- The
Constitutional Court further found that such persons, citizens of the
former SFRY with permanent residence status in Slovenia, were in a
less favourable legal position than “real” aliens who had
lived in Slovenia since before independence and whose permanent
residence permits remained valid under section 82 of the Aliens Act.
There were no objective reasons for such differential treatment. This
also breached the principle of equality guaranteed by Article 14 of
the Constitution not only to Slovenian citizens but also to all
persons whose legal situation was regulated by law.
- Moreover,
the application of section 13 in conjunction with section 16 of
the Aliens Act to the acquisition of a temporary or permanent
residence permit (see paragraph 221 above) in order to regulate the
situation of such persons was, in the Constitutional Court's view,
inappropriate; they were being treated as though they were aliens who
had only recently entered Slovenia with a valid passport and a visa
and wished to remain on Slovenian territory longer than the validity
of the visa would allow them to. The Constitutional Court also found
that in subsequent years one of the reasons why such persons could
not regulate their status was the difficulty of obtaining documents
from their States of origin, on account of the state of war.
- The
Constitutional Court further noted that one of the first consequences
of the unregulated legal status of such persons was the transferral
of their names into the register of aliens, without any notification.
It held that there was no legal basis for this measure; neither the
Aliens Act nor the Inhabitants' Residence Evidence and Population
Registry Act provided for an ex lege deregistration and
transferral (see paragraphs 39, 209, 221 and 237 above).
- Following
the Constitutional Court's decision of 4 February 1999, the Legal
Status Act was passed in order to regulate the situation of “the
erased”. However, on 3 April 2003 the Constitutional Court
reiterated its ruling of 4 February 1999. It further held that the
Legal Status Act was unconstitutional, in particular since it failed
to grant “the erased” retroactive permanent residence
permits and to regulate the situation of those deported. It also
struck down the three-month time-limit for lodging an application for
a permanent residence permit as too short (see paragraph 250 above).
- The Constitutional Court
therefore found both on 4 February 1999 and 3 April 2003 that the
impugned measure was unlawful since the Aliens Act had not foreseen
the regulation of the status of the “erased”, who
received no official notification about the change in their status
(see paragraphs 51, 56-57, 237-244 and 250-255 above).
- The
Court does not see any reason to depart from the decisions of the
Constitutional Court (see Janković v. Bosnia and
Herzegovina (dec.), no. 5172/03, 16 May 2006) and finds that this
unlawfulness obtained at the moment of the entry into force of the
Convention and its Protocol No. 1 in respect of Slovenia, 28 June
1994, and still obtains more than 15 years later for the majority of
the applicants, the legislative and administrative authorities not
having complied with the judicial decisions (see, mutatis
mutandis, Taşkın
and Others v. Turkey, no. 46117/99, §§ 123-126, ECHR
2004 X).
374. The
Court further recognises the efforts of the Slovenian authorities
both at the moment of the declaration of independence, enabling a
large majority of the former SFRY citizens living in Slovenia to
acquire Slovenian citizenship under favourable conditions, and in the
following years, in particular further to the Constitutional Court's
decisions, to adopt legislation remedying the situation of the
“erased” to which group the applicants belong. A large
proportion of the “erased” were able either to acquire
Slovenian citizenship or to obtain a residence permit
(see paragraphs 29, 32-37, 46, 54, 55, 57, 66 and 254).
- However, in spite of several
legislative and administrative endeavours, the legal situation of the
majority of the applicants, who had their habitual residence in
Slovenia at the material time, remains unsettled. In this connection,
it has to be noted that on 8 March 2010 the amendments and
supplements to the Legal Status Act were passed by Parliament,
although at the time of the consideration of this judgment they
have not yet entered into force (see paragraphs 43 and 49-69 above).
- The Court notes that the dissolution of the SFRY
and the fact that the registers of citizens in the SFRY were not
always accurate created a special and complicated situation (see
paragraphs 24, 27, 97, 174, 239 and 253 above). However, in the light
of relevant international-law standards aimed at the avoidance
of statelessness, especially in situations of State succession (see
paragraphs 260-261, 267 and 272 above),
and in view of its findings above, the Court finds that there has
been a violation of Article 8.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 13 OF THE CONVENTION IN
CONJUNCTION WITH ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION
- Under
Article 13, taken in conjunction with Article 8 of the Convention,
the applicants maintained that they had no effective remedy at their
disposal in order to secure compliance with the Constitutional
Court's decision of 3 April 2003.
Article
13 of the Convention provides:
Article 13
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth
in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy
before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has
been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”
1. The parties' submissions
(a) The applicants
- The
applicants complained in particular about the legislature's failure
to adopt a systemic law, which was indispensable for their full
reintegration, as required by the Constitutional Court's decision of
3 April 2003.
- They
alleged that in the absence of any document concerning their
“erasure” it was difficult for them to prove in the
subsequent proceedings that they met the requirements set out in the
Slovenian legislation for the acquisition of a permanent residence
permit and/or citizenship.
(b) The respondent Government
- The
respondent Government disputed that argument and submitted that the
remedies available in the Slovenian system were effective both in
theory and in practice (see paragraphs 283-284 and 337 above).
(c) The third parties
- The
Peace Institute and the Legal Information Centre for Non-Governmental
Organisations maintained that the “erased” had in general
exhausted all the remedies at their disposal, including that of a
constitutional complaint. As a result of the State's failure to
enforce the Constitutional Court's decision of 3 April 2003, which
was legally binding, the applicants' right to an effective remedy had
been violated. The authorities did prepare three draft laws with a
view to securing enforcement of the Constitutional Court's decision –
namely the Technical Act, the systemic Act and the draft
Constitutional Law – but all had been blocked. In any event,
the situation of the “erased” was not properly addressed
in any of these draft laws. It followed that the legal system in
Slovenia did not provide for any effective remedies in respect of the
“erased”, owing to a lack of political will.
- The
Open Society Justice Initiative submitted that the circumstances of
the “erasure” contained all the hallmarks of substantive
and procedural arbitrariness; there were no individualised civil or
administrative avenues for review of the measure. In addition, the
Constitutional Court's ruling was not complied with. Those elements
demonstrated that the applicants had no access to an effective remedy
under Article 13 taken in conjunction with Article 8 of the
Convention.
2. The
Court's assessment
383. The
Court reiterates that the standards of Article 13 require a party to
the Convention to guarantee a domestic remedy allowing the competent
domestic authority to address the substance of the relevant
Convention complaint and to award appropriate relief, although
Contracting States are afforded some discretion as to the manner in
which they conform to their obligations under this provision (see
Lukenda v. Slovenia,
no. 23032/02, §§ 86-88, ECHR
2005-X).
- The
Court reiterates that in spite of the legislative and administrative
endeavours made in order to comply with the Constitutional Court's
leading decisions of 1999 and 2003, the latter have still not been
fully implemented.
- In
view of its finding under Article 8 of the Convention (see paragraphs
371-376 above), the Court holds that the respondent Government have
failed to establish that the remedies at the applicants' disposal can
be regarded as effective remedies.
- Accordingly,
there has been a violation of Article 13 of the Convention.
V. ALLEGED
VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 14 OF THE CONVENTION IN CONJUNCTION WITH ARTICLE
8 OF THE CONVENTION
- Relying
on Article 14 of the Convention, read in conjunction with Article 8
of the Convention, the applicants claimed that they had been
discriminated against in enjoying their rights on the ground of
national origin, when compared to other foreign citizens who
continued to live in Slovenia on the basis of temporary or permanent
residence permits.
- Article
14 provides:
“The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set
forth in [the] Convention shall be secured without discrimination on
any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political
or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a
national minority, property, birth or other status.”
1. The parties' submissions
(a) The applicants
- The
applicants also claimed under Article 14 of the Convention that they
had been discriminated against in the enjoyment of their Convention
rights as guaranteed by Article 8 of the Convention.
- In
particular, they claimed that they had been treated less favourably
than those aliens who had not been subject to the “erasure”
of their names from the Register in 1992 because they had acquired
Slovenian citizenship on the basis of the Citizenship Act, those who
had only temporary residence in Slovenia before independence but had
subsequently retained that status, and those who had been subject to
the “erasure” but had subsequently received either
permanent residence under the Legal Status Act or Slovenian
citizenship pursuant to the amended Citizenship Act.
- Finally,
the applicants contested the respondent Government's allegations that
positive discrimination had been carried out in respect of them since
they were not subject to deportation; five of the applicants had in
fact been deported.
(b) The
respondent Government
- In
the respondent Government's view, the applicants' position was
incorrectly linked to their transfer from the Register rather than to
the fact that they, as aliens, had not acquired permanent residence
permits. The applicants were treated like all other aliens without a
residence permit. On the other hand, the permanent residence permits
of the “real aliens” referred to in section 82 of the
Aliens Act had never been revoked. The applicants and the real
“aliens” had therefore never been in a comparable
situation.
- Moreover,
the applicants were by and large subject to positive discrimination,
since they were in principle not deported from Slovenia. The
above-mentioned decision of the Government of 3 September 1992,
taking into account the period before the entry into force of the
Aliens Act in issuing a permanent residence permit (see paragraph 222
above), was yet another sign of positive discrimination.
(c) The
third parties
- The
Peace Institute and the Legal Information Centre for Non-Governmental
Organisations stated that the “erased” had been and
continued to be subject to direct discrimination on the ground of not
obtaining Slovenian citizenship, and to both direct and indirect
discrimination on the ground of ethnicity. The provisions of the
draft laws contained stricter conditions for the “erased”
than for other aliens and continued to be discriminatory, contrary to
the Council Directive 2000/43/EC implementing the principle of equal
treatment between persons irrespective of racial and ethnic origin.
The “erasure” and all its consequences had been
intentional and systematically planned and implemented: in 1991 the
politicians had been clearly aware of the legal void in respect of
former SFRY citizens who would fail to apply for Slovenian
citizenship, yet the Slovenian authorities had failed to properly
inform them about the consequences of not applying for citizenship
and had consistently denied that the “erasure” had taken
place until 2002, when the first figures were made public.
- The
Open Society Justice Initiative maintained that the “erasure”
was a discriminatory measure, in breach of Article 14 taken in
conjunction with Article 8 of the Convention. It treated citizens of
the other former SFRY republics living in Slovenia less favourably
than aliens who were legal residents in Slovenia prior to
independence, thus discriminating on the basis of national origin.
The erasure also disproportionately affected non-ethnic Slovenes,
ex-SFRY minorities, and Roma, therefore discriminating among
residents also on ethnic grounds.
- The
Equal Rights Trust submitted that the instant case offered an
opportunity for the development of legal interpretations regarding
discrimination under Article 14 of the Convention based on national
origin, nationality and statelessness, particularly following State
succession, in relation to the right to respect for private and
family life (Article 8) and the right to property (Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1).
- Distinctions
made as a consequence of the “erasure” in the instant
case could lead to long-term and continuous discrimination against
individuals. Many of the “erased” had lost their jobs,
work status and homes. A number lived without adequate housing or
were detained, or kept in transit centres, and they had lost the
opportunity to buy the housing they lived in owing to their lack of
legal status. The “erasure” was discriminatory not only
as far as other former SFRY nationalities were concerned, but also in
relation to members of Roma communities.
- The
prohibition of discrimination had been recognised as of fundamental
importance in the Court's jurisprudence, in the law of many of the
Council of Europe's member States including Slovenia, and in
international law. It clearly covered both direct and indirect
discrimination (D.H. and Others v. the Czech Republic [GC],
no. 57325/00, § 175, ECHR 2007 XII). In addition, other
Council of Europe bodies had interpreted the right to
non-discrimination as requiring positive action on the part of member
States. In the instant case, this would encompass positive
legislative movements in order to regulate the legal status of the
“erased” and enforcement of the Constitutional Court's
decisions.
- Moreover,
the failure to provide protection for the applicants who had become
stateless on 26 February 1992 had resulted in a violation of
Article 14 in combination with Article 8. Statelessness was
regarded as one of the most prominent sources of disadvantage and
discrimination globally under international law and also under the
Council of Europe's instruments.
2. The
Court's assessment
- In
view of its finding of a violation of Article 8 of the Convention
(see paragraphs 368 and 371-376 above), the Court considers that it
is not necessary to rule on the applicants' complaints under Article
14 of the Convention taken in conjunction with Article 8 (see
Slivenko, cited above, § 134).
VI. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 46 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 46 of the Convention provides:
“1. The High Contracting Parties
undertake to abide by the final judgment of the Court in any case to
which they are parties.
2. The final judgment of the Court shall be
transmitted to the Committee of Ministers, which shall supervise its
execution.”
- It is inherent in the Court's findings that the
violation of the applicants' rights guaranteed by Articles 8 and 13
of the Convention originates in the failure of the Slovenian
legislative and administrative authorities to regulate the situation
of the applicants, which is representative of that of a wider group
of the “erased”, in line with the decisions of the
Constitutional Court, and in particular its decision of 3 April 2003
(see paragraphs 56-57 and 250-255 above).
- The
existence of that problem and the unconstitutionality and
unlawfulness of the legislation were recognised by the Slovenian
judicial authorities, for the first time by the Constitutional
Court's decision of 4 February 1999, and subsequently confirmed
by a number of its rulings referred to in detail in the present
judgment (see paragraphs 236-257 above).
- Endorsing
that assessment, the Court concludes that the facts of the case
disclose the existence, within the Slovenian legal order, of a
shortcoming as a consequence of which the remaining group of the
“erased” are still denied their rights to a private
and/or family life in Slovenia and to effective remedies in this
respect. It also finds that the deficiencies in national law and
practice identified in the applicants' case may give rise to numerous
subsequent well-founded applications (see paragraph 65 above).
- The
Court points out that, in the context of the execution of judgments
in accordance with Article 46 of the Convention, a judgment in which
it finds a breach imposes on the respondent State a legal obligation
under that provision to put an end to the breach and to make
reparation for its consequences in such a way as to restore as far as
possible the situation existing before the breach. If, on the other
hand, national law does not allow – or allows only partial –
reparation to be made for the consequences of the breach, Article 41
empowers the Court to afford the injured party such satisfaction as
appears to it to be appropriate. It follows, inter alia, that
a judgment in which the Court finds a violation of the Convention or
its Protocols imposes on the respondent State a legal obligation not
just to pay those concerned the sums awarded by way of just
satisfaction, but also to choose, subject to supervision by the
Committee of Ministers, the general and/or, if appropriate,
individual measures to be adopted in its domestic legal order to put
an end to the violation found by the Court and make all feasible
reparation for its consequences in such a way as to restore as far as
possible the situation existing before the breach (see Scozzari
and Giunta v. Italy [GC], nos. 39221/98 and 41963/98,
§ 249, ECHR 2000-VIII; Assanidze v. Georgia [GC], no.
71503/01, § 198, ECHR 2004-II; Maestri v. Italy [GC],
no. 39748/98, § 47, ECHR 2004-I; and Viaşu
v. Romania, no. 75951/01, § 79, 9 December 2008).
- Furthermore,
subject to monitoring by the Committee of Ministers, the respondent
State remains free to choose the means by which it will discharge its
legal obligation under Article 46 of the Convention, provided that
such means are compatible with the conclusions set out in the Court's
judgment (see Scozzari and Giunta, cited above, § 249,
and Broniowski, cited above, § 192). This discretion as
to the manner of execution of a judgment reflects the freedom of
choice attached to the primary obligation of the Contracting States
under the Convention to secure the rights and freedoms guaranteed
(Article 1) (see, mutatis mutandis, Papamichalopoulos and
Others v. Greece (Article 50), 31 October 1995, § 34, Series
A no. 330 B).
- As
already stated, although it is in principle not for the Court to
determine what remedial measures may be appropriate to satisfy the
respondent State's obligations under Article 46 of the Convention,
the Court would observe that, by its very nature, the violation found
in the instant case on account of the failure by the Slovenian
legislative and administrative authorities to comply with the
Constitutional Court's decisions clearly indicates the appropriate
general and individual measures to be adopted in the Slovenian
domestic legal order so that the violations found may be remedied:
enactment of appropriate legislation and regulation of the situation
of the individual applicants by issuing retroactive permanent
residence permits (see, mutatis mutandis, L. v. Lithuania,
no. 27527/03, § 74, ECHR 2007 X, and Viaşu,
cited above, § 83).
VII. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants requested that permanent residence status be awarded to
them retroactively, on the basis of the Constitutional Court's
decision of 3 April 2003, and claimed awards for pecuniary and
non-pecuniary damage as well as reimbursement of costs and expenses
incurred in the proceedings.
- Article
41 of the Convention specifies as follows:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Damage
1. Pecuniary damage
(a) The applicants
- The
applicants maintained that they had sustained extensive pecuniary
damage and that there was a direct connection between the established
violations and the various types of damage. Each applicant with no
income requested an amount corresponding to the total monthly social
allowances that he/she should have received, including those for
children and a housing allowance, if any, with interest. In addition,
in 1991 beneficiaries of “specially protected tenancies”
had acquired the right to buy the apartments in which they lived
under favourable conditions. For those applicants who had had such a
right and were unable to use it, compensation corresponding to the
current market value of their apartments was requested.
- The
applicant Mr Kurić requested a total of EUR 54,559.24, of which
EUR 145.43 was for the administrative costs of his application for
Slovenian citizenship.
The
applicant Mr Dabetić requested a total of EUR 92,351.35, of
which EUR 70,000 was for the apartment.
The
applicant Ms Mezga requested a total of EUR of 82,140.51, including
maternity benefits.
The
applicants Mrs and Mr Ristanović requested a total of
EUR 77,757.24, of which EUR 5,500 was for Mr Ristanović's
schooling expenses in Serbia and EUR 265 for expenses for Bosnian
documents and health insurance for travelling to Slovenia.
The
applicant Mr Berisha requested a total of EUR 112,679.22 for him and
his family, of which EUR 5,200 was for lawyer's fees.
The
applicant Mr Sadik requested a total of EUR 72,798.44, of which EUR
70,000 was for the apartment, EUR 1,750 for health expenses, EUR 108
for administrative expenses for a visa application and EUR 136 for
administrative expenses for a passport application.
The
applicant Mr Minić requested a total of EUR 23,230.51, of which
EUR 500 was for administrative costs for visa applications,
EUR 145.43 for administrative costs for the application for
citizenship and EUR 20.86 for court fees in the administrative
proceedings.
(b) The respondent Government
- The
Government maintained that the applicants had formulated their claims
in respect of pecuniary damage rather approximately and were
exaggerated. In their view, the Court could not speculate about the
outcome of the proceedings concerning, for instance, social
assistance or housing rights.
- Furthermore,
the claims of the applicants Mustafa Kurić, Ljubenka and Tripun
Ristanović, Ilfan Ademi Sadik and Zoran Minić for
reimbursement of the amounts paid for visas, passports, applications
for citizenship and permanent residence permits, etc., were
completely unfounded.
2. Non-pecuniary damage
(a) The applicants
- In
the applicants' view, the “erasure” had had extremely
serious consequences for them and caused dramatic and wide-ranging
upheaval in their lives: unregulated status, loss of employment,
living conditions unworthy of a human being, and serious health
problems for many of them. In short, they had sustained different
forms of suffering recognised by the Court's case-law: pain and
feelings of deep instability and insecurity about the future, which
they had endured for an extremely long period, anxiety deriving from
the danger of deportation, a deep sensation of anxiety and sadness
because of xenophobic attitudes and the absence of effective
remedies.
- The
applicants proposed that the Court examine their just satisfaction
claims separately under Rule 75 of the Rules of Court.
- They
considered that payment of an amount of EUR 200,000 to each applicant
would constitute an appropriate award in respect of non-pecuniary
damage.
- In
addition, contrary to the respondent Government's contention that
compensation could be claimed only where the Court had established a
violation, they submitted that under Rule 43 § 4, “when an
application has been struck out, the costs shall be at the discretion
of the Court ...” (referring to Shevanova, cited above,
§§ 53-56).
(b) The respondent Government
- The
Government maintained that this sum was totally exaggerated in view
of the Court's case-law (they referred to Slivenko, cited
above, § 167) and of the average monthly income in
Slovenia, and was also unsubstantiated.
3. Costs and expenses
(a) The applicants
- The
applicants claimed EUR 62,272.50 plus taxes and other fees, which
amounted to EUR 76,798.54, for expenses and costs connected with the
procedure before the Court. They had been represented by a number of
lawyers who had carried out a great deal of preparatory and legal
work. In particular, this sum covered the studying of fairly complex
legislation and the case-law connected with the “erased”,
analysis of the situations of the individual applicants, contacts
with the applicants and travelling, preparation of briefs, etc.
- Furthermore,
given the exceptional circumstances of the case and the applicants'
extremely poor living conditions, the representatives had agreed to
waive their fees if the Court found no violation in the present case
and, if the Court found a violation of the applicants' Convention
rights, to be compensated only at the end of the proceedings and
within the amounts awarded under that head, no payment having been
made so far by the applicants.
(b) The respondent Government
- As
to the costs incurred with regard to the representation before the
Court, the respondent Government stated that the applicants'
representative had declared to the Slovenian press that he was
representing the applicants for free. In their view the law firm was
therefore not entitled to any reimbursement of their costs and
expenses.
4. The Court's assessment
- In
the circumstances of the case, and given that the Court has indicated
to the respondent Government which general and individual measures
are to be adopted in its domestic legal order to put an end to the
violations found, the Court considers that the question of
compensation for pecuniary and/or non-pecuniary damage is not ready
for decision. That question must accordingly be reserved and the
subsequent procedure fixed, having due regard to any agreement which
might be reached between the respondent Government and the applicants
(Rule 75 § 1 of the Rules of Court) and in the light of
such measures as may be taken by the respondent Government in
execution of the present judgment.
- Finally, as regards the costs and expenses already
claimed in respect of the proceedings before the Court up to the
present, the Court finds that the applicants' representatives failed
to submit relevant documents supporting their claim for
reimbursement, for instance quantification of hours and copies of
bills where possible. It follows that the Court is unable to make an
adequate estimation and that the question of reimbursement of costs
and expenses must accordingly also be reserved.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Holds that Ms Marija Ban does not have
standing to continue the present proceedings in the applicant Mr
Makuc's stead;
- Declares
admissible the complaints under Article 8,
13, 14 of the Convention in respect of the applicants
Mr Mustafa Kurić, Mr Velimir Dabetić, Ms Ana Mezga,
Mrs Ljubenka Ristanović, Mr Tripun Ristanović, Mr Ali
Berisha, Mr Ilfan Sadik Ademi and Mr Zoran Minić and the
remainder of the complaints inadmissible;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 8 of the Convention;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 13 of the Convention;
- Holds that no separate issue arises under
Article 14 in conjunction with Article 8 of the Convention;
- Holds that the respondent State must, through
appropriate general and individual measures, secure to the applicants
the right to a private and/or family life and effective remedies in
this respect;
- Holds that, as far as the financial award to the
applicants for any pecuniary or non-pecuniary damage resulting from
the violations found in the present case is concerned, as well as the
reimbursement of costs and the expenses incurred in the proceedings,
the question of the application of Article 41 is not ready for
decision and accordingly,
(a) reserves
the said question as a whole;
(b) invites
the Government and the applicant to submit, within six months from
the date of notification of this judgment, their written observations
on the matter and, in particular, to notify the Court of any
agreement that they may reach;
(c) reserves
the further procedure and delegates to the President of the
Court the power to fix the same if need be.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 13 July 2010, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Santiago Quesada Josep Casadevall
Registrar President