Twentieth Century Totalitarian Regimes, Lustration, and Guilt for Crimes of the Past: Challenges and Dangers for the Strasbourg Court

IF 0.5 4区 社会学 Q3 LAW Review of Central and East European Law Pub Date : 2019-03-28 DOI:10.1163/15730352-04401004
B. Bowring
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Abstract

This article addresses a key contemporary problem confronting the Strasbourg Court. While it is well established that seeking the historical truth is an integral part of the right to freedom of expression, it cannot be the role of the Strasbourg Court to arbitrate underlying historical issues (Dzhugashvili v. Russia, 2014). Still less can it be for the Court to decide on individual or collective guilt for crimes of the past, rather than on violations of Convention rights. For example, the Court has found many violations of human rights in the more recent armed conflicts in Northern Ireland, South-East Turkey, Chechnya, or the Basque Country, but has never sought to pronounce on the legal or moral issues underlying these conflicts, or on their deep historical roots. However, the existence of the ussr for more than 70 years, and 12 years of Nazism in Germany, leading to wwii, dominated the 20th century in Europe. These have both been described as totalitarian regimes. The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 followed by the collapse of the ussr in 1991 led to dramatic changes not only in statehood and political systems, but also a strong desire for states emerging from the ussr or Soviet domination to purge the past, and to identify and punish wrongdoers. Various forms of lustration have been a product of this desire, with the exception of the Russian Federation, where the characterization and proper evaluation of its Soviet past are questions still unresolved. Increasingly the Strasbourg Court has been called on to decide highly controversial cases, for example Ždanoka v. Latvia (2006), Vajnai v. Hungary (2008), Kononov v. Latvia (2010), Korobov v. Estonia (2013), Soro v. Estonia (2015). The author was counsel for the applicants in some of these cases. I ask: what are the dangers and challenges for the Strasbourg Court in adjudicating such cases, and how can it avoid the appearance of taking sides in bitter and intractable arguments?
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20世纪的极权主义政权、幻影和对过去罪行的罪责:斯特拉斯堡法院面临的挑战和危险
本文论述了斯特拉斯堡法院面临的一个当代关键问题。虽然众所周知,寻求历史真相是言论自由权的一个组成部分,但斯特拉斯堡法院的作用不能是仲裁潜在的历史问题(Dzhugashvili v. Russia, 2014)。法院更不可能就个人或集体对过去罪行的罪行作出裁决,而只能就违反《公约》权利的行为作出裁决。例如,法院在北爱尔兰、土耳其东南部、车臣或巴斯克地区最近发生的武装冲突中发现了许多侵犯人权的行为,但从未试图就这些冲突背后的法律或道德问题或其深刻的历史根源发表意见。然而,苏联存在了70多年,德国纳粹主义持续了12年,导致了第二次世界大战,主宰了20世纪的欧洲。这两个国家都被描述为极权主义政权。1989年柏林墙倒塌,随后是1991年苏联解体,这不仅导致了国家地位和政治制度的巨大变化,也导致了从苏联或苏联统治下崛起的国家清理过去、识别和惩罚违法者的强烈愿望。各种形式的启示都是这种愿望的产物,但俄罗斯联邦除外,在那里,对其苏维埃历史的描述和适当评价仍然是尚未解决的问题。斯特拉斯堡法院越来越多地被要求裁决极具争议的案件,例如Ždanoka诉拉脱维亚案(2006年)、Vajnai诉匈牙利案(2008年)、Kononov诉拉脱维亚案(2010年)、Korobov诉爱沙尼亚案(2013年)、Soro诉爱沙尼亚案(2015年)。作者曾在其中一些案件中担任申请人的律师。我问:斯特拉斯堡法院在裁决此类案件时面临哪些危险和挑战?它如何才能避免在激烈而棘手的争论中站队?
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: Review of Central and East European Law critically examines issues of legal doctrine and practice in the CIS and CEE regions. An important aspect of this is, for example, the harmonization of legal principles and rules; another facet is the legal impact of the intertwining of domestic economies, on the one hand, with regional economies and the processes of international trade and investment on the other. The Review offers a forum for discussion of topical questions of public and private law. The Review encourages comparative research; it is hoped that, in this way, additional insights in legal developments can be communicated to those interested in questions, not only of law, but also of politics, economics, and of society of the CIS and CEE countries.
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