Tech & Rights

From CIA Prisons to Care Homes, Poland Struggles With ECHR Verdicts

A report by the Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights on Poland’s implementation of European Court of Human Rights judgments finds that many decisions are still awaiting action, in part because Parliament has been dragging its heels.

by Małgorzata Szuleka

The Foundation appreciated the efforts taken by Polish authorities over the years to disseminate and implement the standards developed by the Council of Europe. There are still many decisions, however, that have not been carried out by the Polish government; there is also much to do in the area of legislation.

Parliamentary support needed

The Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights (HFHR) also referred to institutional problems in its report, noting that the full implementation of European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) judgments is somewhat hindered due to the current Parliament’s failure to appoint a Permanent Subcommittee for the Implementation of Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights. Such a subcommittee was established by the previous Parliament.

"The establishment of the subcommittee in 2014 was widely approved by domestic institutions and the Council of Europe, which has been long calling for an increased involvement of national parliaments in the enforcement process. The significance of Parliament’s participation in the monitoring of the implementation of ECtHR judgments has been emphasized on many occasions by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe,” Dominika Bychawska-Siniarska, a member of the HFHR’s Board, points out.

Recurring violations

The HFHR's report discusses the implementation of judgments in cases relating to the freedom of speech or the absence of a legislative review of the Juvenile Justice Act. A particular analytical focus was also put on the national authorities’ compliance with the recommendations issued in the judgments on CIA secret prisons.

"In the report, the Foundation analyzed the implementation of judgments in key thematic areas in which violations generally continue to appear, such as placements at nursing homes, high-risk prisoner status, problems concerning pre-trial detention or the excessive length of proceedings," notes Katarzyna Wiśniewska, a lawyer working for the HFHR.

Unilateral declarations

The report also emphasized that many cases were resolved with the government’s unilateral declaration, which limits the ability of the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers to supervise the implementation of such declarations and monitor their actual influence on domestic practices.

“Here, an institutional change is needed in the procedures of the Committee of Ministers," the HFHR noted.

The report may be accessed here.

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