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FIFTH
SECTION
DECISION
Application no.
31098/08
HIZB UT-TAHRIR and others
against Germany
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fifth Section), sitting on
12 June 2012 as a Chamber composed of:
Dean
Spielmann,
President,
Mark
Villiger,
Karel
Jungwiert,
Boštjan
M. Zupančič,
Ann
Power-Forde,
Angelika
Nußberger,
André
Potocki, judges,
and
Claudia Westerdiek, Section Registrar,
Having
regard to the above application lodged on 25 June 2008,
Having
regard to the observations submitted by the respondent Government and
the observations in reply submitted by the applicants,
Having
deliberated, decides as follows:
THE FACTS
- The
first applicant, Hizb Ut-Tahrir, is an unincorporated association
which did not inform the Court of any registered address. The second
applicant, Mr Shaker Hussein Assem, an Austrian national who lives in
Germany, is the appointed representative of the first applicant for
the purposes of the proceedings before the Court. The third to
seventeenth applicants (see list appended) are members or supporters
of the first applicant residing in Germany and Romania (applicant no.
5). They were represented before the Court by Mr Tayab Ali of Irvine
Thanvi Natas solicitors, a law-firm practising in London.
The
German Government (“the Government”) were represented by
their agent, Ms Almut Wittling-Vogel, of the Federal Minstry of
Justice and by Mr Thomas Giegerich, professor of international law at
Kiel University.
Having
been informed on 15 June 2010 of their right to submit written
observations, the Austrian Government indicated to the Court that
they did not intend to take part in the proceedings. The Turkish
Government did not express an intention to take part in the
proceedings.
A. The circumstances of the case
1. Background to the case
- The
first applicant, whose name means “Liberation Party”,
describes itself as a “global Islamic political party and/or
religious society”. It was established in Jerusalem in 1953 and
advocates the overthrow of governments throughout the Muslim world
and their replacement by an Islamic State in the form of a recreated
Caliphate. The first applicant has achieved a small, but highly
committed following in a number of Middle Eastern states and has also
gained popularity among Muslims in Western Europe. In Germany, where
the first applicant has been active since the 1960s, it has
approximately two hundred followers.
2. The prohibition issued by the German Ministry of the
Interior
- On
10 January 2003 the German Federal Ministry of the Interior
(Bundesministerium des Innern) issued a decision by which it
proscribed the first applicant’s activities within German
territory under sections 3 § 1, 14 § 2 no. 4
in conjunction with sections 15 § 1 and 18 § 2 of the Law
on Associations (see relevant domestic law, below). It further
ordered the first applicant’s assets to be confiscated. Assets
of third parties were confiscated as far as they had been
intentionally used or were intended to be used to promote the first
applicant’s illegal activities.
- The
Ministry considered that the first applicant was a foreign private
association operating on an international scale and that there
existed no known sub-organisation in Germany. Its activities in
Germany included the distribution of leaflets and brochures and the
distribution of information via internet as well as, more recently,
the organisation of public events.
- The
Ministry considered that the first applicant’s activities were
directed against the principle of international understanding and
that the applicant advocated the use of violence as a means to
achieve its political goals. The organisation’s mouthpiece and
ideological platform in Germany was the quarterly magazine
“Explizit”.
- Basing
its decision on the book “The inevitability of the battle of
cultures”, published in 1953 by the organisation’s
founder, Taqiuddin An Nabhani, as well as on a number of
publications attributed to the first applicant, in particular
articles published in the magazine “Explizit”,
leaflets and publications on the organisation’s website, the
Ministry considered that the first applicant denied the right of the
State of Israel to exist and called for its destruction and for the
killing of Jews. This constituted an expression of the applicant’s
basic philosophical position, which included the “active
Jihad”. The applicant agitated in a targeted fashion
against Islamic States and the governments, which overthrow it
repeatedly called for. It pursued its objectives, which were directed
against the concept of international understanding, in a pro-actively
aggressive manner. It did not thereby restrict itself to merely
criticising existing political or social conditions or rejecting
peaceful coexistence between States and peoples but also called for
the armed struggle against the State of Israel, Jews and the
Governments of Islamic States.
- The
Ministry further considered that the first applicant was not a
political party, as it did not intend to stand for elections in
Germany. It further held that the first applicant was not to be
regarded as a religious or philosophical community (Religions-
oder Weltanschauungsgesellschaft), as it did not pursue
religious, but political objectives.
3. Proceedings before the Federal Administrative Court
- On
10 February 2003 the applicants, represented by counsel, lodged an
application against the prohibition order with the Federal
Administrative Court (Bundesverwaltungsgericht). They alleged,
in particular, that the prohibition violated their right to freedom
of religion under Article 4 of the Basic Law. They denied that they
advocated the use of violence.
- On
24 November 2003 the Federal Administrative Court ordered the first
applicant to submit evidence as to where the organisation was based.
On 7 January 2004 the first applicant pointed out that its
organisation was prohibited in all Arab states, they were thus forced
to work clandestinely and were unable to reveal the organisation’s
address.
- On
21 January 2004 the Federal Administrative Court severed the first
applicant’s application from the remainder of the proceedings
and declared it admissible. That court considered that the first
applicant had the legal standing to lodge an application against the
prohibition order. Furthermore, it had been properly represented
before the court. On the same day, the Federal Administrative Court
orally informed the applicants, that, under its established case-law
(compare paragraph 34, below) actions lodged by individual members of
a prohibited association were to be declared inadmissible. A decision
on the admissibility of the remaining applicants’ actions was
postponed until 25 February 2004.
- On
3 February 2004 the second to seventeenth applicants withdrew their
applications with reference to the indication given by the Federal
Administrative Court as to the inadmissibility of their applications.
On 19 February 2004 the Federal Administrative Court decided to
discontinue the proceedings insofar as they concerned the
applications lodged by these applicants.
- In
its submissions dated 8 and 29 November 2004, the first applicant
accepted that it was not to be regarded as a political party within
the meaning of the relevant law. The first applicant claimed,
however, that all its activities had a religious foundation and that
it enjoyed the protection of freedom of religion under the Basic Law.
It further submitted that the Government had misconstrued the nature
of its ideology, stressing, in particular, that the first applicant
promoted peaceful dialogue and had never advocated the use of
violence. It contested that the magazine “Explizit”
was the organisation’s mouthpiece. The first applicant further
pointed out that it did not seek to establish a “caliphate”
in any of the Western European democracies. Lastly, it complained of
a violation of its rights under Articles 9, 10 and 11 of the
Convention.
- On
8 August 2005 the Federal Administrative Court, by court order
without a prior oral hearing, rejected the first applicant’s
application as unfounded. Relying on the so-called “organisational
law” submitted by the applicants, the court considered that the
first applicant did not fulfil the requirements of a religious
community, as its activities did not include the exercise of a common
religious practice. Furthermore, the first applicant could not be
regarded as a philosophical community, as its existence and
activities were based on Islam.
- The
Federal Administrative Court further confirmed that the first
applicant’s activities were directed against the principle of
international understanding and were thus subject to prohibition
under Article 9 § 2 of the German Basic Law in conjunction with
the Law on Associations. Examining the sources already relied upon by
the Federal Ministry of the Interior, the court considered that
numerous statements were attributable to the applicant, which called
for the violent elimination of the State of Israel and for the
physical destruction of human lives and thus worked contrary to a
peaceful resolution of the Middle East conflict.
- The
Court considered that articles published in the magazine “Explizit”
contained denials of Israel’s right to exist and called for the
violent elimination of the State of Israel or for people to be
killed. The Article “Wie lange noch?” (How long?;
Explizit, issue no. 30 March to June 2002, p. 4 et seqq.)
addressed the political and military situation in Palestine. The
article sharply criticised the Saudi Arabian peace deal adopted at
the summit meeting of Arab States in Beirut in March 2002. This was
followed by criticism of the Palestinian authority, which was accused
of not pursuing the goal of
“freeing Palestine, but of handing over Palestine
in the name of the Palestinian people to the Jews.”
This
assessment was followed by the statement:
“As Muslims, we must be clear that the problem of
“Israel” is not a border issue but an existential issue.
The Zionist foreign body at the heart of the Islamic world can under
no circumstances be allowed to continue to exist...We repeat again
the unalterable Islamic duty: There can only be one response to the
Zionist aggression in Palestine: Jihad. Allah, the Exalted, commands:
“And slay them wherever ye catch them, and turn them out from
where they have turned you out” (Al Baquarah 2, Aya 191).”
This
was followed by the opinion that Israel was to be overcome by
military means and that the
“Muslim armies (had) never really fought against
the Zionist aggressor”.
-
The court considered that the call to Jihad in the article
represented a summons to violently eliminate the State of Israel. It
conceded that the term “Jihad” was multilayered in
Islamic usage, referring to more than just the “Holy War”.
The term described every endeavour, effort and strengthening of
Islam. What was decisive in the present context, however, was how the
term was to be understood by readers in the context of the article.
It was embedded in the statement that Israel could on no account be
allowed to continue to exist and the summons to eliminate the State
by military means. In this context there could be no doubt that the
call to Jihad was aimed at the violent destruction of Israel
as a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. This
interpretation corresponded to the quotation from the Qur’an
relied upon in the article. It did not have to be decided how this
quotation was to be understood in its original context. In the
context of the article, it constituted a call to take violent action
with the intention of causing physical destruction and banishment.
- In
the article “Fünfzig Jahre – Happy Birthday
Israel?” (Fifty years – Happy birthday
Israel?, Explizit, issue no. 5, April to June 1998, p. 2 et
seqq.) it was stated that the creation of the State of Israel to
the detriment of the Palestinian people was accompanied by crimes
against humanity and that Israel thus lacked legitimacy. The article
closed with the following statement:
“Whoever accepts the State of Israel is against
Allah’s commands and thus commits a serious sin.”
This
was followed by a quotation from the Qur’an of a “command
by Allah”:
“And fight for Allah against those who fight
against you, but do not transgress! Truly, Allah loves those who do
not transgress. And slay them wherever ye catch them, and turn them
out from where they have turned you out.”
- The
court considered that it could be left open whether the denial of
Israel’s right to exist already breached the concept of
international understanding. An any rate, that concept had been
interfered with as soon as the assertion was followed by a call
violently to eliminate the State of Israel, as had been the case with
regard to the quotation from the Qur’an.
- The
Federal Administrative Court analysed the content of one further
article published in the magazine Explizit in 2001 and
concluded that that article also contained a call for the destruction
of the State of Israel.
- According
to the court, there were a number of indications, which taken as a
whole, left no doubt that there was a close link between the magazine
“Explizit” and the first applicant, and that
therefore the articles discussed in the above were attributable to
the first applicant.
- The
call to eliminate the State of Israel by force and to kill people was
not restricted to the magazine “Explizit”. Among
other sources, the court referred to a transcript dated 8 August 2002
of a programme broadcast on Berlin local television about a debate on
the Middle East conflict at the Technical University of Berlin,
according to which the second applicant said the following with
regard to suicide attacks in Israel:
“These actions would be banned in Germany or in
other countries in the West – since Islam rejects violence
against civilians, but there are no civilians in Israel; all of them,
women and men, are part of the military and the founding of the State
of Israel was an act of aggression. Everyone who goes to Israel and
lives there is complicit in it. An attack on an institution with
adults inside is an act of self-defence. If children are also killed,
their parents are responsible for having decided to live in Israel.”
The
Federal Administrative Court considered that these statements, in
which the second applicant justified the physical destruction of
Israeli nationals, spoke for themselves. According to the court, the
same objective was reflected in a statement made by the second
applicant at an event held on 27 October 2002, during which he said:
“For us, Israel is a State of aggression. A State
of violence, a State of attack. That is why we are not prepared to
accept this State, to make peace with this Zionist entity. This State
was built upon the blood of Muslims, through aggression, through
violence and we have a duty as Muslims to liberate the land again.”
- According
to the Federal Administrative Court, the denial of Israel’s
right to exist, linked to the call to eliminate the State by force,
was also the subject matter of several of the first applicant’s
flyers. The court quoted, inter alia, a flyer dated 29 March
2001, which read:
“The whole of Palestine, from the sea to the
river, is Islamic territory. Muslims are duty bound to liberate it
from the rule of the Jews, even if it costs the lives of millions of
martyrs.”
Another
flyer dated 28 February 2002 contained the following:
“The Palestinian question is not a question of
withdrawing from the region called the Palestinian territories. Nor
is it a question of the withdrawal from the West Bank, the Gaza Strip
or from Jerusalem. It is the Jewish entity itself which unlawfully
appropriated Palestine. The solution is to uproot the Jewish entity
from the entire Palestinian territory. Thus speaks Allah: “And
slay them wherever ye catch them, and turn them out from where they
have turned you out”...(2:191). Every recognition, every
negotiation with the Jews is treason against Allah, His Prophet and
the believers. We are not allowed to accept this or to keep quiet
about it.”
- Lastly,
the court considered that the prohibition was proportionate. In this
connection, it observed that the first applicant did not enjoy
special protection under the Constitution as a religious or
philosophical community. It further considered that the Federal
Government did not have a milder means at their disposition to
achieve the pursued aim.
- On
3 October 2005 the first applicant submitted its comments on the
court order. It alleged, in particular, that the court’s
interpretation of the notion “religious community” had
been too restrictive and was not consistent with the case law of the
Federal Constitutional Court. It further requested an oral hearing to
be held.
- By
judgment of 25 January 2006, which was served on the applicants’
counsel on 6 March 2006, the Federal Administrative Court, following
a hearing, rejected the application as unfounded. At the outset, the
court confirmed its ruling that the applicant could not be regarded
as a religious community, as its aims were primarily of a political
nature, even if they were based on religious foundations.
- The
Federal Administrative Court further considered that, even assuming
that the first applicant could be regarded as a religious community
or a religious association (religiöser Verein), it
remained subject to prohibition under Article 9 § 2 of the Basic
Law. The court was satisfied that the conditions for a ban to be
issued were fulfilled because a multitude of public statements
attributable to the first applicant against the backdrop of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict called for the violent elimination of
the State of Israel and for people to be killed.
- The
Federal Administrative Court considered that the first applicant’s
objections against this ruling were not convincing. The evidence
presented in the court order was sufficient to justify the assumption
that the cited articles were attributable to the first applicant.
Irrespective of this fact, the first applicant’s calls for the
State of Israel to be eliminated by force and for people to be killed
were not only restricted to the magazine “Explizit”.
- The
court lastly found that, having regard to the seriousness of the
statements attributable to the first applicant, the measure taken had
to be regarded as proportionate even if the first applicant did enjoy
the right to religious freedom. It would, in particular, not have
been sufficient exclusively to ban the second applicant’s
activity, as the impugned statements were not only made by the second
applicant. Neither would it have been sufficient to ban the first
applicant from issuing statements on the Middle East conflict, as the
first applicant regarded it as a primary duty to combat and violently
to destroy the State of Israel. As was demonstrated by the multitude
of statements examined by the court in its court order, and had been
confirmed by the first applicant during the oral hearing, the first
applicant considered it as a main duty of the Caliphate to be created
to destroy the State of Israel. These statements had such a weight
that even the protection, which religious and philosophical
associations generally enjoyed under the Constitution, did not call
for renouncing the prohibition for the mere reason that the
statements had so far not been followed by actions.
4. Proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court
- On
3 April 2006 the first applicant lodged a constitutional complaint,
alleging, in particular, that the prohibition was disproportionate
and violated its right freely to assemble as a religious community
(religiöse Vereinigungsfreiheit) under Article 4 § 1
of the Basic Law. The first applicant complained, in particular, that
Article 9 § 2 of the Basic Law was not applicable in the instant
case. Furthermore, the prohibition order failed sufficiently to take
into account its interests as a religious community and was
disproportionate. According to the first applicant, it would have
been sufficient to order the second applicant or other members of the
association to refrain from making political statements on the Middle
East conflict. The first applicant further alleged that the impugned
decisions violated its rights under Articles 9, 10, 11 and 14 of the
Convention.
- On
27 December 2007 the Federal Constitutional Court, sitting as a panel
of three judges, refused to admit the first applicant’s
complaint for adjudication. According to that court, the complaint
was inadmissible because the first applicant was not qualified to
file a complaint as it did not have a registered address in Germany.
Pursuant to the relevant provisions of the Law on proceedings before
the Federal Constitutional Court, only those persons who could claim
a violation of their constitutional rights were entitled to lodge a
constitutional complaint. Article 19 § 3 of the Basic Law
provided that the basic rights also applied to domestic legal persons
to the extent that the nature of such rights permitted. The
applicant, however, was a foreign legal person. While it might be
considered that a foreign legal person based in another member State
of the European Union had a right to equal treatment under Community
Law, this did not apply in the first applicant’s case, as it
had not been established that the first applicant had a registered
office in another EU member State.
- This
decision was served on the first applicant’s counsel on
18 January 2008.
B. Relevant domestic law
1. Constitutional Law
- The
relevant provisions of the German Basic Law (Grundgesetz) read
as follows:
Article 2
[Personal freedoms]
“(1) Every person shall have the right
to free development of his personality insofar as he does not violate
the rights of others or offend against the constitutional order or
the moral law.”
Article 4
[Freedom of faith and conscience]
“(1) Freedom of faith and of
conscience, and freedom to profess a religious or philosophical
creed, shall be inviolable.
(2) The undisturbed practice of religion
shall be guaranteed.
...”
Article 9
[Freedom of association]
“(1) All Germans shall have the right
to form corporations and other associations.
(2) Associations whose aims or activities
contravene the criminal laws, or that are directed against the
constitutional order or the concept of international understanding,
shall be prohibited.
...”
Article 19
[Restriction of basic rights – Legal remedies]
“(1) Insofar as, under this Basic Law,
a basic right may be restricted by or pursuant to a law, such law
must apply generally and not merely to a single case. In addition,
the law must specify the basic right affected and the Article in
which it appears.
(2) In no case may the essence of a basic
right be affected.
(3) The basic rights shall also apply to
domestic legal persons to the extent that the nature of such rights
permits.
(4) Should any person’s rights be
violated by public authority, he may have recourse to the courts. If
no other jurisdiction has been established, recourse shall be to the
ordinary courts...”
2. The Law on Associations
- The
relevant sections of the Law on Associations (Vereinsgesetz) read
as follows:
Section 3
Banning
“(1) An association can only be treated
as being banned (Article 9 § 2 of the Basic Law) if the
competent authority established by decree that its aims or its
activity contravene the criminal law or that they are directed
against the constitutional order or against the idea of international
understanding ; the order shall decree the dissolution of the
association (ban). As a general rule, such ban shall entail
confiscations and seizure of
1. the association’s assets,
2...and
3. property of third parties provided that
the owner, by handling the items over to the association, has
deliberately promoted the association’s anti-constitutional
activities or if the items were intended to further such activities.
...”
Section 18
Geographical applicability of bans imposed on
associations
“...If a (foreign) association does not have a
sub-organisation within the geographical applicability of this Act,
the ban (section 3 paragraph 1) is directed against its activity
within that territory.”
Section 20
“Anyone who, within the geographical applicability
of this act, by pursuing an activity
(...)
4. contravenes an enforceable prohibition
under section 18 sentence 2 (...) will be sentenced to up to one
year’s imprisonment or to a fine.”
- Under
the established case-law of the Federal Administrative Court (compare
judgment of 13 August 1984, no. 1 A 26/83 and decision of 3 April
2003, no. 6 A 5/02), individual members of an association are not
entitled to lodge actions against the banning of the respective
association, because the ban exclusively affects the legal position
of the respective association, and not the individual rights of its
members.
COMPLAINTS
- The
applicants complain under Articles 6, 13 and/or 14 of the Convention
about the unfairness of the proceedings before and about the
decisions given by the German courts. Relying on Articles 9, 10, 11
and 14 of the Convention, the applicants further complain about the
prohibition of the first applicant’s activities.
THE LAW
I. COMPLAINTS LODGED BY THE SECOND TO SEVENTEENTH
APPLICANT
- Relying
on Articles 6, 9, 10, 11, 13 and 14 of the Convention, the applicants
nos. 2 – 17 complained about the ban imposed on the first
applicant’s activities and about the unfairness of the
subsequent court proceedings. They further complained under Article 1
of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention about the confiscation of their
assets.
A. Submissions by the Government
- According
to the Government, the individual applicants had failed to exhaust
domestic remedies within the meaning of Article 35 § 1 of the
Convention. They pointed out that applicant no. 13 was not even named
in the written action before the Federal Administrative Court and
that there were indications that he appeared under various names,
which in itself raised a question under Article 35 § 2 (a) of
the Convention.
- The
applicants nos. 2-12 and 14-17 had failed to exhaust domestic
remedies as they had failed to have recourse to the Federal
Constitutional Court. Although the constitutional complaint was an
extraordinary remedy, the Federal Constitutional Court strictly
scrutinised the public acts challenged by any such admissible
complaint, using fundamental rights standards similar to those
embodied in the Convention.
- The
individual applicants had not been prevented from availing themselves
of this remedy in the instant case. During the oral hearing on
21 January 2004 the Federal Administrative Court indicated to
the applicants’ counsel that, under the established case-law of
the Federal Administrative Court (see paragraph 34, above),
individual members of an association were not entitled to lodge an
application against the banning order. The court gave this indication
in order to give legal hearing to the applicants and, where
appropriate, to afford them the opportunity to save further costs by
withdrawing their application. The applicants nos. 2-12 and 14-17
were afforded more than a month to consider, together with their
counsel, their reaction to this indication. Firstly, they could have
tried to persuade the court to alter its case-law and eventually have
lodged a constitutional complaint against any decision of the Federal
Administrative Court declaring their application inadmissible. Even
though some of the applicants could not rely on Article 9 of the
Basic Law, which was reserved to German nationals, they could claim
an interference with the general freedom to act enshrined in Article
2 § 1 of the Basic Law. While that Article might offer a
somewhat lower standard of protection in comparison with Article 9 of
the Basic Law, it certainly made available a review by the Federal
Constitutional Court of the need for and suitability of the
interference.
- The
Government further submitted that it would originally also have been
possible for the individual applicants to lodge a constitutional
complaint directly against the banning order. Instead, the
applicants, who were represented by counsel, evidently took the
strategic decision to concentrate fully on the first applicant’s
proceedings, and hence forfeited the path both to the Federal
Constitutional Court and to the Court.
- By way of an alternative, the Government submitted
that the applicants nos. 2 – 17 had failed to lodge their
motion with the Court within the six months’ time-limit
following the issue of the banning order of the Federal Ministry of
Justice, which constituted the final national ruling for them.
B. Submissions by the applicants
- The
applicants submitted that applicant no. 13 lodged the application
with the Federal Administrative Court under a different name, which
was due to the different naming conventions in Arabic and German
documents.
- The
individual applicants further submitted that they withdrew their
motion before the Federal Administrative Court following that court’s
oral directions to the effect that their claims were inadmissible and
in view of the fact that the Federal Administrative Court had
declared the first applicant’s motion admissible. They pointed
out that their position would have been protected if the German
courts had overturned the first applicant’s prohibition, as the
first applicant’s interests and those of its individual members
were effectively aligned. On appeal before the Federal Constitutional
Court, that court de facto reversed the decision of the
Federal Administrative Court and ruled the challenge brought by the
first applicant inadmissible. Had the Federal Administrative Court
taken this stance, the individual applicants would not have withdrawn
their complaints, but would have proceeded to have them determined.
- Under
the Court’s case law, an applicant was not obliged to pursue
domestic remedies where there were no reasonable prospects of
success. In the instant case, the Federal Administrative Court had
directed the applicants nos. 2-17 that continuing their legal
challenge would be futile and that they would be at risk of an
adverse costs’ order. By pursuing the first applicant’s
appeal in isolation, the individual applicants were pursuing the
remedy, which the Federal Administrative Court had directed to be
their appropriate way of redress. The Government’s submissions
were, therefore, entirely inconsistent with the Court’s
jurisprudence to the effect that Contracting Parties should be
precluded from relying on futile remedies to prevent access to
supervisory jurisdiction.
- The
applicants nos. 2 to 17 had no opportunity to assert their Convention
rights before the domestic courts. Since the assertion of the rights
of the individual members were nonetheless intimately bound up with
the challenge brought by the first applicant, it was appropriate for
the individual applicants to await the outcome of the first
applicant’s challenge before the constitutional court before
making their application to the Court.
- The
individual applicants further submitted that it appeared from the
Government’s submissions that none of the proposed courses of
action would have had reasonable prospect of success. Thus, the
Government submitted that the applicants should have proceeded with a
manifestly inadmissible action before the Federal Administrative
Court in order to make a complaint to the Federal Constitutional
Court in order to avail themselves of a remedy that afforded them an
admittedly inferior level of protection.
- The
applicants finally submitted that they complied with the six months’
time-limit as the lack of a remedy constituted a continuing violation
of their rights.
C. Assessment by the Court
- The
Court reiterates that the purpose of Article 35 § 1 is to afford
the Contracting States the opportunity of preventing or putting right
the violations alleged against them before those allegations are
submitted to it. Thus, the complaint to be submitted to the Court
must first have been made to the appropriate national courts, at
least in substance, in accordance with the formal requirements of
domestic law and within the prescribed time limits.
Nevertheless, the only remedies that must be exhausted are those that
are effective and capable of redressing the alleged violation (see,
among many other authorities, Remli v. France, 23 April 1996,
§ 33, Reports 1996-II, and Paksas v. Lithuania [GC], no.
34932/04, § 45, 6 January 2011).
- More
specifically, the only remedies which Article 35 § 1 of the
Convention requires being exhausted are those that relate to the
breaches alleged and at the same time are available and sufficient.
The existence of such remedies must be sufficiently certain not only
in theory but also in practice, failing which they will lack the
requisite accessibility and effectiveness (see, for example, Selmouni
v. France [GC], no. 25803/94, § 75, ECHR 1999-V). It is
incumbent on the Government claiming non exhaustion to convince
the Court that the remedy was an effective one available in theory
and in practice at the relevant time. However, once this burden of
proof has been discharged, it falls to the applicant to establish
that the remedy advanced by the Government was in fact exhausted or
was for some reason inadequate and ineffective in the particular
circumstances of the case or that there existed special circumstances
absolving him or her from the requirement (see Akdivar and Others
v. Turkey, 16 September 1996, § 68, Reports 1996-IV;
Kleyn and Others v. the Netherlands [GC], nos. 39343/98,
39651/98, 43147/98 and 46664/99, § 156, ECHR 2003-VI and Mooren
v. Germany [GC], no. 11364/03, § 118, 9 July 2009).
- The
Court further recalls its case-law to the effect that a complaint to
the Federal Constitutional Court — other than in cases
concerning the excessive length of proceedings — is an
effective remedy capable of providing redress for a violation of
Convention rights (compare Haase v. Germany, no.
11057/02, § 63, ECHR 2004 III (extracts); Mork
v. Germany, nos. 31047/04 and 43386/08, §§
38-39, 9 June 2011; Popovic v. Germany, no. 34236/06, §
41, 13 January 2011 and — with regard to the exception for
complaints about the excessive lenght of proceedings — Rumpf
v. Germany, no. 46344/06, § 51, 2 September 2010, and the
case-law cited therein). This principle is not called into question
by the fact that the Federal Constitutional Court might examine a
complaint about a violation of the right to freedom of association
lodged by the applicants under the more general right of freedom to
act enshrined in Article 2 (1) of the Basic Law.
- Turning
to the circumstances of the instant case, the Court notes that the
applicants nos. 2 – 17, who were represented by counsel
throughout the domestic proceedings, lodged their applications
against the prohibition order with the Federal Administrative Court
jointly with the first applicant. On 21 January 2004 the Federal
Administrative Court declared the first applicant’s complaint
admissible and orally expressed the opinion that it considered the
applications lodged by the remaining applicants to be inadmissible.
Following this indication, on 3 February 2004 the applicants
nos. 2 – 17 withdrew their applications before the Federal
Administrative Court. Consequently, the applicants nos. 2 - 17 did
not pursue their proceedings before the Federal Administrative Court,
and did not lodge a complaint with the Federal Constitutional Court.
- The
Court does not consider that the individual applicants had been
prevented from further pursuing the proceedings before the domestic
courts. As regards the argument that the individual applicants had
merely followed the instructions given by the Federal Administrative
Court, the Court observes, at the outset, that the applicants had
been instructed by counsel throughout the proceedings and had been
given sufficient time to consider the legal consequences of their
procedural actions. The Court further notes that the instructions
given by the Federal Administrative Court had not been misleading,
but reflected that court’s established case-law and only
concerned the proceedings before that court. The applicants did not
submit that they had been exposed to any undue pressure to withdraw
their complaints; the risk to bear the costs of the proceedings in
case the applications were declared inadmissible being inherent in
all court proceedings. Furthermore, there is no indication that the
applicants would have been prevented from challenging the case-law of
the Federal Administrative Court and, eventually, lodging a
constitutional complaint against any decision on admissibility.
- As
to the individual applicants’ argument that they relied on the
Federal Administrative Court’s decision to declare the first
applicant’s application admissible – a decision which,
according to the applicants, had been later on overturned by the
Federal Constitutional Court — the Court observes, at the
outset, that the Federal Administrative Court’s admissibility
decision exclusively concerned the first applicant’s
application before that court. It did not contain any prognosis as to
the possible outcome of a constitutional complaint which the first
applicant might lodge after the termination of the administrative
court proceedings. The Court further observes that the Federal
Administrative Court fully examined the merits of the first
applicant’s challenge against the prohibition order.
Conversely, the Federal Constitutional Court did not rule on the
admissibility of the original challenge before the Federal
Administrative Court, but confined itself to stating that the first
applicant could not claim a violation of its constitutional rights
before that court. It follows that the Federal Constitutional Court’s
ruling cannot be said to have overturned the Federal Administrative
Court’s decision on admissibility.
- Under
these circumstances, the Court considers that the individual
applicants have not established that there existed any special
circumstances absolving them from the requirement of pursuing their
action before the Federal Administrative Court and of lodging a
constitutional complaint.
- It
follows that the complaints lodged by the applicants no. 2-17 must be
rejected under Article 35 §§ 1 and 4 of the
Convention for non exhaustion of domestic remedies.
II. COMPLAINTS LODGED BY THE FIRST APPLICANT
A. Six months’ time-limit
- According
to the Government, the first applicant failed to comply with the
six-months’ time-limit, which started to run for the first
applicant with the judgment of the Federal Administrative Court of 25
January 2006. The constitutional complaint subsequently filed by the
first applicant was recognisably not an effective remedy, as it was
clearly inadmissible in light of Article 19 § 3 of the Basic
Law. Under the Court’s established case law, such a remedy was
unable to stay the running of the six-months’ time limit.
- The
first applicant contested this argument.
- The
Court recalls that the six months’ time limit imposed by
Article 35 § 1 of the Convention requires applicants to
lodge their applications within six months of the final decision in
the process of exhaustion of domestic remedies. Only remedies which
are normal and effective are required to be taken. The test to be
applied in evaluating compliance with the six-months’ rule is
whether an applicant has attempted to lodge “misconceived
applications to bodies or institutions which have no power or
competence to offer effective redress” for his or her
complaints (see, for example, Fernie v. the United Kingdom
(dec.), no. 14881/04, 5 January 2006, and Beiere v. Latvia,
no. 30954/05, § 28, 29 November 2011).
- Turning
to the circumstances of the present case, the Court observes that the
Federal Administrative Court, in its court order dated 8 August 2005
and in its judgment dated 25 January 2006, examined the merits of the
first applicant’s complaints under Articles 4 and 9 of the
Basic Law (see paragraph 32, above), without raising the issue
whether the first applicant, having regard to its capacity as a
foreign association, might be excluded by Article 19 § 3 from
relying on these constitutional rights. Under these circumstances,
the Court does not consider that the constitutional complaint, in
which the applicant relied on the same constitutional rights
previously examined by the Federal Administrative Court, could a
priori be regarded as a “misconceived application”.
Therefore, in the particular circumstances of the case, the Court
considers that the process of the exhaustion of domestic remedies
with regard to the applicant’s complaints culminated in the
final decision which the Federal Constitutional Court issued on
27 December 2007, which was served on the first applicant’s
counsel on 18 January 2008. It follows that the first applicant
has to be regarded as having complied with the six-month rule.
B. Alleged violation of Article 11 of the Convention
- The
first applicant complained that the ban imposed on its activities
violated its right to freedom of association, guaranteed by Article
11 of the Convention, which provides:
“1. Everyone has the right to freedom
of peaceful assembly and to freedom of association with others,
including the right to form and to join trade unions for the
protection of his interests.
2. No restrictions shall be placed on the
exercise of these rights other than such as are prescribed by law and
are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national
security or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the protection of health or morals or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others. This Article shall not prevent the
imposition of lawful restrictions on the exercise of these rights by
members of the armed forces, of the police or of the administration
of the state.”
1. Submissions by the Government
- The
Government considered that the interference with the first
applicant’s rights were justified under paragraph 2 of Article
11. The Ban was in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Law
on Association in conjunction with Article 9 § 2 of the Basic
Law.
- According
to the Government, the conditions laid down in the domestic law for
the banning of the first applicant’s activities were met. The
first applicant was seriously opposed to the notion of international
understanding, because it quite openly disputed the right of Israel
to exist, and hence opposed any peaceful settlement of the Middle
East conflict. It further favoured the use of violence as a means to
enforce its political and religious aims. This could be documented by
means of a large number of documents, which the Federal
Administrative Court had listed in detail and evaluated thoroughly.
- The
prerequisite laid down in the domestic law that an association had to
be in opposition to the “notion of international understanding”
(Article 9 § 2 of the Basic Law) was sufficiently clearly
determined in that it included associations which were opposed to the
right of existence and the security of a foreign State and called for
its elimination by force. As a reaction to the aggressive policy
pursued by the National Socialist regime, the Basic Law imposed an
obligation on the German authorities actively to promote peace
whenever international security was in danger. This included actions
against pro-war propaganda of private associations. No less than
denying the Holocaust, such violent propaganda constituted an abuse
of rights under the Convention (Article 17 of the Convention). In
this context, the Government considered that it also had to be taken
into account that the first applicant ultimately wished to abolish
the rights and freedoms of the Convention by establishing the
worldwide dominance of the Caliphate and Sharia.
- The
Government further considered that the ban was necessary in a
democratic society in the interest of public security, public order
and the right and freedoms of others. Public security within the
meaning of the Convention, seen in the context of the 4th
recital of the preamble, according to which human rights and
fundamental freedoms constitute the basis of world peace, also
included international security and world peace. Public order in
Germany also included the special relationship with Israel. The
Government underlined in this context its special commitment to the
security of the State of Israel.
- As
the Federal Administrative Court had stated in detail, there were no
less intrusive means to avert the danger to the security of Israel
emanating from the first applicant. The Federal Administrative Court
had particularly pointed out that the “liberation of Palestine”
from dominance by the State of Israel constituted one of the main
concerns of the association and of all of its members. The imposition
of a ban relating only to anti Israeli propaganda would not have
been as effective as one would certainly have had to anticipate that
the first applicant would simply agitate against Israel less openly.
This applied all the more given that the first applicant was
organised on a conspiratorial basis.
- The
Government finally submitted that, in accordance with Article 16
of the Convention, interference with the first applicant’s
rights under Article 11 of the Convention was at best subject to a
restricted review. They pointed out that the first applicant was a
foreign association which was headquartered outside Germany and whose
activities were also directed from abroad.
2. Submissions by the first applicant
- The
first applicant contested these arguments. It submitted, in
particular, that it did not take any violent actions against Israel,
did not accept violence to achieve its religious and political
objectives and did not pursue anti-Semitic propaganda. The Explizit
magazine was not the mouthpiece of the association and the first
applicant could not be held accountable for any views expressed
therein. Furthermore, the first applicant did not reject the
Convention and did not operate on a “conspiratorial”
basis.
- According
to the applicant, the reasons put forward by the Government could not
justify an interference with its rights under Article 11. The
protection of “international understanding” was not
defined with sufficient legal certainty and did not constitute a
ground of justification recognised under paragraph 2 of Article 11.
The Government had failed to demonstrate that there was any threat to
the public order or security within Germany itself. Even assuming
that Contracting Parties could take steps to protect the public
security of other States such as Israel, the Government had failed to
provide any substantiated evidence that the applicants posed any real
threat to the public order or security of Israel or Europe as a
whole.
- There
was no indication that the rights and freedoms of Israelis were
violated by the exercise of the applicant’s right of
association. On the contrary, the State of Israel allowed prominent
members of the first applicant publicly to deliver speeches and
openly to take part in demonstrations in the first applicant’s
name. Neither did the first applicant’s activities cause any
risk or damage to Germany’s international relations. In any
event, the measure taken was disproportionate.
- According
to the applicant, the factual basis relied upon by the Government was
incorrect. In particular, while it was true that the first applicant
disputed the lawfulness of the formation and activities of the State
of Israel, there was no foundation for the suggestion that it
necessarily opposed “any peaceful settlement of the Middle East
conflict”. The first applicant did not “favour force as a
means to enforce its political and religious goals”. On the
contrary, the first applicant refused in principle any violent means
to achieve its objectives. The first applicant’s “support
of those who took actions pursuant to legitimate, proportionate
self-defence against violent and unlawful acts in Palestine [was] no
different from other groups of individuals defending themselves in a
military conflict.” In a statement dated 18 July 2011, which
the applicants submitted with their observations in reply to the
Government’s submissions, the second applicant explained his
statement made at the Technical University in Berlin (see paragraph
21, above) as follows:
“This lecture was given by me and was in response
to the Jenin Massacre. It was about the development of Israel since
its creation in 1948. Following that lecture, a journalist asked me
about suicide missions and immediately asked me about children
getting killed in these operations. I answered this question in the
way suggested but I didn’t mean that children should be killed
as asserted by Germany. The correct answer is that children cannot be
targeted in any way and this includes in Israel. The Islamic law
states clearly that killing of children in any war zone should be
avoided.
In my answer I sought to emphasise that there will be
times in the context of conflict that actions which result in the
death of civilians may be lawful or, in Islamic terms, “permissible”.
Where, as in Palestine, an occupying state acting unlawfully has put
civilians and children into an area of conflict there is a risk that
harm may come to them. If that happens it will not, necessarily and
of itself, make the self-defence unlawful. Deliberately targeting
civilians, or acting in a disproportionate manner falls outside the
context of legitimate self-defence and would be unlawful and
impermissible.
For those reasons, I consider that my views as to what
is lawful or permissible, are in essence no different from what may
be lawful or permissible in any armed conflict in accordance with
established principles of international law: there may,
unfortunately, be civilian casualties within any conflict but they
may be caused by one side or the other deliberately and improperly
bringing civilians into the region of danger. Even then, they should
be avoided if at all possible to do so in a way that is consistent
with legitimate self-defence.”
- Furthermore,
the first applicant contested that the Government could rely on
Article 16 – which had, under the case-law of the Court, to be
construed narrowly – or on Article 17. In this respect, the
first applicant submitted, in particular, that it did not search to
gain political power or to achieve any political aims inside Germany
or in Europe, that it sought to establish a Caliphate that
included the establishment of equal rights for citizens including
minorities, an independent judiciary and a system of political
parties and that it did not advocate the use of violence as a means
of achieving its aims.
3. Assessment by the Court
- The
Court reiterates its case-law on Article 17 of the Convention as
summarised in the judgment in the case of Paksas, cited
above, §§ 87-88:
“87. The Court reiterates, firstly,
that “the purpose of Article 17, in so far as it refers to
groups or to individuals, is to make it impossible for them to derive
from the Convention a right to engage in any activity or perform any
act aimed at destroying any of the rights and freedoms set forth in
the Convention; ... therefore, no person may be able to take
advantage of the provisions of the Convention to perform acts aimed
at destroying the aforesaid rights and freedoms ...” (see
Lawless v. Ireland, 1 July 1961, § 7, pp. 45-46, Series
A no. 3). Since the general purpose of Article 17 is, in other words,
to prevent individuals or groups with totalitarian aims from
exploiting in their own interests the principles enunciated in the
Convention (see W.P. and Others v. Poland (dec.), no.
42264/98, ECHR 2004-VII, and Norwood v. the United Kingdom,
no. 23131/03, ECHR 2004-XI), this Article is applicable only on an
exceptional basis and in extreme cases, as indeed is illustrated by
the Court’s case law.
88. The Court has held, in particular, that a
“remark directed against the Convention’s underlying
values” is removed from the protection of Article 10 by Article
17 (see Lehideux and Isorni v. France, 23 September 1998, §
53, Reports 1998-VII, and Garaudy v. France (dec.), no.
65831/01, ECHR 2003-IX). Thus, in Garaudy (ibid.), which
concerned, in particular, the conviction for denial of crimes against
humanity of the author of a book that systematically denied such
crimes perpetrated by the Nazis against the Jewish community, the
Court found the applicant’s Article 10 complaint incompatible
ratione materiae with the provisions of the Convention. It
based that conclusion on the observation that the main content and
general tenor of the applicant’s book, and thus its aim, were
markedly revisionist and therefore ran counter to the fundamental
values of the Convention and of democracy, namely justice and peace,
and inferred from that observation that he had attempted to deflect
Article 10 from its real purpose by using his right to freedom of
expression for ends which were contrary to the text and spirit of the
Convention (see also Witzsch v. Germany (dec.), no.
4785/03, 13 December 2005). The Court reached the same conclusion in,
for example, Norwood ((dec.), cited above) and Pavel Ivanov
v. Russia ((dec.), no. 35222/04, 20 February 2007), which
concerned the use of freedom of expression for Islamophobic and
anti-Semitic purposes respectively. In Orban and Others v. France
(no. 20985/05, § 35, 15 January 2005) it noted that statements
pursuing the unequivocal aim of justifying war crimes such as torture
or summary executions likewise amounted to deflecting Article 10 from
its real purpose. In the same vein, the Court has held that Article
17 of the Convention prevented the founders of an association whose
memorandum of association had anti-Semitic connotations from relying
on the right to freedom of association under Article 11 of the
Convention to challenge its prohibition, noting in particular that
the applicants were essentially seeking to employ that Article as a
basis under the Convention for a right to engage in activities
contrary to the text and spirit of the Convention (see W.P. and
Others, cited above).”
- Turning
to the circumstances of the instant case, the Court observes that the
Federal Administrative Court, having carefully analysed a substantial
number of written statements published in magazine articles, flyers
and transcripts of public statements made by the second applicant,
concluded that the first applicant did not only deny the State of
Israel’s right to exist, but called for the violent destruction
of this State and for the banishment and killing of its inhabitants.
The Federal Administrative Court further considered that the
propagation of these aims was one of the first applicant’s main
concerns. The Court observes that this assessment was not only based
on articles published in the magazine “Explizit” –
for which the first applicant denies responsibility – but also
on a number of articles undisputably published by the first applicant
and on two public statements made by the second applicant, who acts
as the first applicant’s representative in the instant
proceedings. The Court notes, in particular, that the second
applicant, in the above mentionned statements, repeatedly justified
suicide attacks in which civilians were killed in Israel and that
neither the first nor the second applicant distanced themselves from
this stance during the proceedings before the Court (compare, in
particular, paragraphs 21 and 70, above).
- Having
regard to the above, the Court considers that the first applicant
attempts to deflect Article 11 of the Convention from its real
purpose by employing this right for ends which are clearly contrary
to the values of the Convention, notably the committment to the
peaceful settlement of international conflicts and to the sanctity of
human life. Consequently, the Court finds that, by reason of Article
17 of the Convention, the first applicant may not benefit from the
protection afforded by Article 11 of the Convention.
- It
follows that this complaint is incompatible ratione materiae
with the provisions of the Convention within the meaning of Article
35 § 3 (a) and must be rejected in accordance with
Article 35 § 4.
C. Alleged violation of Articles 9 and 10 of the
Convention
- The
first applicant further complained that the prohibition order
violated its rights to freedom of religion and to freedom of
expression under Articles 9 and 10 of the Convention, which read as
follows:
Article 9
“1. Everyone has the right to freedom
of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to
change his religion or belief and freedom, either alone or in
community with others and in public or private, to manifest his
religion or belief, in worship, teaching, practice and observance.
2. Freedom to manifest one’s religion
or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are
prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the
interests of public safety, for the protection of public order,
health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of
others.”
Article 10
“1. Everyone has the right to freedom
of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and
to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by
public authority and regardless of frontiers. This Article shall not
prevent states from requiring the licensing of broadcasting,
television or cinema enterprises.
2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it
carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such
formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed
by law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of
national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the
prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or
morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for
preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or
for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”
- The
Government submitted that the applicant had failed to exhaust
domestic remedies, as it had failed to complain about a violation of
its right to freedom of expression before the domestic courts. The
applicant contested that argument.
- Even
assuming exhaustion of domestic remedies with regard to the complaint
under Article 10 of the Convention, the Court, having regard to
the conclusions reached with regard to the complaint under Article 11
(see paragraph 74, above), considers that these complaints are
incompatible ratione materiae with the provisions of the
Convention within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 (a)
and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 § 4.
D. Alleged violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 of
the Convention
- The
first applicant complained that the confiscation of its assets
violated its right to the peaceful enjoyment of its possessions under
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 of the Convention, which provides:
“Every natural or legal person is entitled to the
peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of
his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the
conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of
international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way
impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems
necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the
general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other
contributions or penalties.”
- The
Government submitted that the applicant had not raised this complaint
before the domestic courts and had thus failed to exhaust domestic
remedies. The applicant contested that argument.
- The
Court notes that the first applicant has not established that it has
complained about a violation of its property rights before the
domestic courts. In any event, the Court considers that the
confiscation of the first applicant’s assets constitutes a
secondary effect of the prohibition order. Having regard to its
assessment of the first applicant’s complaint under Article 11,
the court considers that the applicant’s complaint does not
disclose any appearance of a violation of the right set out in
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention. It follows that this
complaint is manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected in
accordance with Article 35 §§ 3 (a) and 4 of the
Convention.
E. Alleged violation of Articles 6 and 14 of the
Convention
- The
first applicant complained about the alleged unfairness and
discriminatory nature of the proceedings before the domestic courts,
relying on Articles 6 and 14 of the Convention, which read, insofar
as relevant:
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ... everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by [a]
... tribunal ...”
“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.”
- The
Government submitted that the prohibition order was a classical
measure under police law in the exercise of national sovereignty. The
confiscation of assets was to be regarded as an incidental
consequence of that order which did not bring the proceedings within
the scope of Article 6 of the Convention (the Government referred to
the case of Yazar and Others v. Turkey, nos. 22723/93,
22724/93 and 22725/93, §§ 63 et seq., ECHR 2002 II).
- The
first applicant submitted that the prohibition order was directly
decisive of its financial interests. In contrast to the circumstances
in the Yazar case, the German authorities were granted a
discretionary power under the Associations Act to order the
confiscation of the applicant’s asset. Consequently, the
Constitutional Court’s decision was directly decisive of the
applicants’ private law rights.
- The
Court observes, at the outset, that Article 17 of the Convention does
not bar an applicant from relying on his or her procedural rights
under Article 6 of the Convention (compare Lawless v. Ireland (no.
3), 1 July 1961, pp. 45-46, § 7, Series A no. 3). The Court
further observes that Article 6 § 1 under its civil limb is only
applicable if the proceedings concerned a “dispute” over
a “civil right”. The Court reiterates that it has
previously found that a dispute over a political party’s right
to continue its political activities concerned a political right par
excellence and as such did not qualify for protection under
Article 6 § 1 of the Convention (see Refah Partisi (the
Welfare Party) and Others v. Turkey (dec.), nos. 41340/98,
41342/98, 41343/98 and 41344/98, 3 October 2000 and Yazar and
Others, cited above, §§ 66-67). Notwithstanding
the fact that the applicant’s political activities are,
according to the applicant’s submissions, religiously
motivated, the Court considers this principle to be applicable in the
instant case. It is true that the prohibition order also contained a
confiscation clause and that on that account a dispute could have
arisen over a pecuniary right, and hence a civil right within the
meaning of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention. However, the first
applicant did not establish that it complained about the confiscation
of its assets before the domestic courts. Accordingly, the “dispute”
in question did not in any way concern the first applicant’s
right to the peaceful enjoyment of its possessions. Accordingly,
Article 6 of the Convention is not applicable in the instant case.
Having
regard to its strictly accessory nature (Prince Hans-Adam II of
Liechtenstein v. Germany [GC], no. 42527/98, §§ 33 et
seq.), ECHR 2001 VIII) the same applies to Article 14 of the
Convention.
- It
follows that the complaints raised by the first applicant under
Articles 6 and 14 are incompatible ratione materiae with the
provisions of the Convention within the meaning of Article 35 § 3
(a) and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 § 4.
F. Alleged violation of Articles 13 and 14 of the
Convention
- The
first applicant complained about having been deprived of an effective
remedy against the prohibition order and about having been denied
access to such remedy on discriminatory grounds. He relied on Article
13 in conjunction with Article 14 of the Convention, which read as
follows:
“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.”
“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.”
- The
Government contested that argument.
- The
Court has found above (see §§ 74, above) that the first
applicant was precluded by Article 17 of the Convention from relying
on its Convention rights with respect to the prohibition order. It
follows that the applicant cannot arguably claim a violation of a
Convention right in this respect.
- It
follows that this complaint is incompatible ratione materiae
with the provisions of the Convention within the meaning of Article
35 § 3 (a) and must be rejected in accordance with
Article 35 § 4.
For these reasons, the Court by a majority
Declares the application inadmissible.
Claudia Westerdiek Dean Spielmann
Registrar President
Appendix
List
of applicants:
1.
|
HIZB UT-TAHRIR
|
(an association)
|
|
2.
|
HUSSEIN ASSEM
|
Shaker
|
Austrian
|
3.
|
BADRAN
|
Osama
|
unknown
|
4.
|
AL-SHAWI
|
Nemier
|
German
|
5.
|
QADAN
|
Ahmad
|
Israeli
|
6.
|
AL-NAFA
|
Baker
|
Jordanian
|
7.
|
AYOUB
|
Foad Hamid
|
Iraqi
|
8.
|
OZER
|
Ahmet
|
Turkish
|
9.
|
NAJI
|
Mohammed
|
Yemeni
|
10.
|
ASAD
|
Mahmud
|
Jordanian
|
11.
|
ALABDALLA
|
Fadi
|
Jordanian
|
12.
|
AQRABAWI
|
Mohammed
|
German
|
13.
|
MANSUR
|
Habes Asad
|
Jordanian
|
14.
|
GILIC
|
Hasan Hüseyin
|
German
|
15.
|
SABANUC
|
Ali Serkan
|
German
|
16.
|
SHAQURA
|
Mohammed
|
Palestinian
|
17.
|
ABBAS
|
Kamal
|
German
|