REPORT Nº 125/01 CASE
12.388 YATAMA NICARAGUA December
3, 2001
I.
SUMMARY
1.
On April 26, 2001, the organization Yabti Tasba Masraka Nanih Asia
Takanka, YATAMA, the Centro Nicaragüense de Derechos Humanos (CENIDH),
and the Center for Justice and International Law (CEJIL) (hereinafter
“the petitioners”) submitted to the Inter-American Commission on Human
Rights (hereinafter “the Commission” or “the IACHR”) a petition
against the Republic of Nicaragua (hereinafter the “Nicaraguan State”,
“Nicaragua,” or “the State”) for the alleged violation of rights
enshrined in Articles XX (right to vote and participate in government) and
XXI (right to assemble) of the American Declaration of the Rights and
Duties of Man (hereinafter “the American Declaration”) and in Articles
8 (right to a fair trial), 23 (political rights), 24 (equality before the
law), and 25 (judicial protection), in conjunction with Article 1(1)
(obligation to respect the rights) of the American Convention on Human
Rights (hereinafter “the Convention” or “the American
Convention”).[1]
The complaint is related to alleged irregularities committed by the
Supreme Electoral Council and the courts of justice of Nicaragua, to the
detriment of the victims’ political rights.
2.
With respect to admissibility, the petitioners allege that their
petition is admissible because it meets the requirements set forth at
Article 46 of the Convention. The
Nicaraguan State failed to avail itself of the procedural opportunity
afforded by the Convention to make arguments related to admissibility.
3.
The Commission, after analyzing the petition, the parties’
positions, and the requirements set out at Articles 46 and 47 of the
Convention, concluded that it is competent to hear the claim, and declared
the petition admissible.
II.
PROCESSING BEFORE THE COMMISSION
4.
On April 26, 2001, the Commission received the complaint by the
petitioners against the Nicaraguan State, and by note of May 15, 2001,
proceeded to send the State the pertinent parts of the petition, and to
request that, as provided in Article 30 of the Commission’s Rules of
Procedure (hereinafter “the Rules of Procedure”), it make its
observations within two months so as to determine how to proceed with the
complaint. On August 9, 2001,
the Commission reiterated to the State that it should make observations on
the petition, and gave it an additional 15 days to do so.
The Nicaraguan State did not exercise the option to make
observations on the petition within the procedural opportunity and time
frame afforded by Article 48 of the Convention and Article 30 of the Rules
of Procedure. Nor did the
State request an extension of the time period.
III.
THE PARTIES’ POSITIONS
A.
The petitioners
5.
In the complaint, the petitioners state that YATAMA[2]
is an indigenous regional political party[3] in the autonomous regions of the Atlantic region
of Nicaragua, and that it decided to run candidates in the two electoral
regions of that larger region, for the elections for mayor and deputy
mayor (of the municipal governments), and members of the municipal
councils, to be held November 5, 2000 .
YATAMA ran candidates in the North Atlantic Autonomous Region
(hereinafter “the RAAN”)[4] within the legal time limit set in the call for
municipal elections;[5] these were not challenged, and the list was
published in the written media, as ordered by the Electoral Law of
Nicaragua. In the South
Atlantic Autonomous Region (hereinafter “RAAS”), YATAMA decided to
participate[6]
in an alliance with two other regional political parties, the Partido
Indígena Multiétnico (PIM) and the Partido de Pueblos Costeños
(PPC). The PIM decided to
withdraw from the agreement before the alliance was formally established,
and the PPC, when registering candidates, did not get the number of
signatures established by the Electoral Law of Nicaragua to participate in
the elections. As the
alliance did not materialize, YATAMA, with full powers to participate in
the November 2000 elections, on July 20 sent the Supreme Electoral Council
(hereinafter “the CSE”) an urgent communication requesting that it be
authorized to participate in the RAAS individually, using only its name,
emblem, and list of candidates. The
CSE did not answer the request; accordingly, it was repeated on July 31,
August 8, and August 9, 2000.
6.
On August 15, 2000, the CSE handed down a resolution in which it
resolved: First, not to
approve YATAMA’s request to register as YATAMA candidates those
presented by the YATAMA/PPC Alliance in the South Atlantic Autonomous
Region, and second, not to register the candidates submitted by YATAMA in
the North Atlantic Autonomous Region.
The CSE based its resolution on the failure of the Partido de
los Pueblos Costeños to obtain the number of signatures required of
political parties for participating in elections, under Nicaragua’s
Electoral Law, and that the candidates presented by YATAMA did not cover
the percentage of municipalities and candidacies required by the Electoral
Law.
7.
On August 18, 2000, the petitioners filed a motion for review (recurso
de revisión) before the Supreme Electoral Council against the
above-mentioned resolution, yet it did not obtain a response within the
period provided for in Nicaraguan legislation.
On August 30, 2000, YATAMA brought an amparo
action against the CSE before the Court of Appeals, North Atlantic
District, Civil and Labor Chamber, for its above-noted resolution of
August 15. On October 11, the
appellate court decided to process the appeal, and suspended the effects
of the resolution challenged. The
Supreme Court, on October 25, 2000, declared that the amparo
action pursued by YATAMA was unfounded; it based its decision on the final
paragraph of Article 173 of the Constitution of Nicaragua, which notes:
“No appeal shall be taken, regular or special, of the rulings of
the Supreme Council on electoral matters.”
YATAMA was notified of that decision on October 26, 2000.
8.
The petitioners allege that their petition is admissible because
domestic remedies have been exhausted as per Article 46(1)(a) of the
Convention.
B.
The State
9.
The State did not present observations or arguments on the petition
within the two months granted by the Commission, nor did it seek an
extension of that term.
IV.
ANALYSIS OF COMPETENCE AND ADMISSIBILITY
A.
Preliminary considerations
10.
The Commission regrets that the Nicaraguan State has not availed
itself of the procedural opportunity provided for at Article 48 of the
Convention and Article 30 of the Rules of Procedure, its right to send
information, make observations, controvert or challenge the admissibility
of the complaint submitted by the petitioners, failing to avail itself of
the procedural rights afforded by the inter-American system of human
rights. The Commission
considers that the State has tacitly waived its right to controvert or
call into question the admissibility requirements of the petition. B.
Competence ratione loci,
ratione personae, ratione temporis and
ratione materiae of
the Commission
11.
The petitioners are authorized by Article 44 of the American
Convention to present complaints to the Commission. The complaint
indicates as alleged victims individuals with respect to whom the
Nicaraguan State undertook to respect and guarantee the rights enshrined
in the Convention. As regards
the State, the Commission observes that Nicaragua is a state party to the
American Convention, having ratified it September 25, 1979. Accordingly,
the Commission is competent ratione
personae to examine the petition.
12.
The Commission is competent ratione
loci to hear this petition insofar as it alleges violations of rights
protected in the American Convention in the territory of Nicaragua, which
is a state party.
13.
The Commission is competent ratione
temporis insofar as the facts alleged in the petition took place when
the obligation to respect and ensure the rights established in the
Convention was already in force for the Nicaraguan State.
14.
With respect to competence ratione
materiae, the petitioners ask the Commission to declare that the State
violated the rights to a fair trial (Article 8), political rights (Article
23), equality before the law (Article 24), and judicial protection
(Article 25), and the obligation to respect the rights (Article 1(1)),
established in the Convention, as well as the right to vote and to
participation in government (Article XX) and the right of assembly
(Article XXI) of the Declaration.
15.
The Commission considers that once the Convention entered into
force for the State, the Convention, and not the Declaration, became the
primary source of law applicable by the Commission,[7]
so long as the petition refers to an alleged violation of rights that are
identical in both instruments,[8]
and not a continuing violation. In the instant case, there is similarity
in the subject matter as between the provisions of the Declaration and the
Convention invoked by the petitioners. Accordingly, the right to vote and
participate in government (Article XX) and the right of assembly (Article
XXI), enshrined in the Declaration, are subsumed in the provisions that
provide for the rights protected at Articles 23 and 15 of the Convention.
Therefore, as regards those violations of the Declaration, the Commission
shall refer only to the provisions of the Convention.
16.
In view of the foregoing, the Commission is competent ratione
materiae because the petition alleges violations of human rights
contained in Articles 8, 15, 23, 24, and 25 of the American Convention.
C.
Admissibility requirements
a.
Exhaustion of domestic remedies
17.
Article 46(1)(a) of the Convention establishes that one of the
requirements for admitting a petition is “that the remedies under
domestic law have been pursued and exhausted in accordance with generally
recognized principles of international law.”
18.
The petitioners allege that they have exhausted domestic remedies.
19.
The Commission observes that the State has not raised any objection
arguing that this requirement has not been met, which is tantamount to a
tacit waiver of the right to call into question or challenge the
admissibility of the complaint. In
view of the foregoing, the Commission determines that the petition
analyzed satisfies the requirements set forth at Article 46(1)(a) of the
Convention. Further, the Commission verifies that the remedies provided
for by Nicaraguan legislation for such cases have been exhausted.
D.
Time period for submission
20.
Article 46(1)(b) of the American Convention provides that one of
the requirements for the admissibility of a petition is that it must be
“lodged within a period of six months from the date on which the party
alleging violation of his rights was notified of the final judgment.”
21.
In the petition under study, the IACHR has established that there
has been a tacit waiver on the part of the Nicaraguan State of its right
to invoke the objection of failure to exhaust domestic remedies;
accordingly, the requirement of Article 46(1)(b) of the American
Convention does not apply.
22.
Nonetheless, the Convention requirements for exhaustion of domestic
remedies and submission within six months of notification of the judgment
exhausting domestic remedies are independent.
Therefore, the Inter-American Commission must determine whether the
petition under study was submitted within a reasonable time. In this
regard, the IACHR observes that the original communication from the
petitioner was received April 26, 2001.
Considering the particular circumstances of the petition under
analysis, especially considering that the Supreme Court, on October 26,
2000, gave notice of the resolution that declared the amparo
action filed by YATAMA to be unfounded, the IACHR considers that it was
submitted within a reasonable time.
23.
In view of the foregoing, the Commission determines that the
petition analyzed meets the requirement set out at Article 46(1)(b) of the
Convention.
E.
Duplication of procedures and res
judicata
24.
Articles 46(1)(c) and 47(d) of the Convention establish as
admissibility requirements that the subject matter of the petition or
communication must not be pending before another international body for
settlement, and that it not be substantially the same as a prior petition
already examined by the Commission or by another international
organization.
25.
It does not appear from the record that the subject matter of this
petition is pending before another international procedure for settlement,
or that it reproduces a petition already examined by the Commission or by
any other international organization.
As the State has failed to answer, no challenge has been raised
alleging failure to satisfy this requirement.
26.
Accordingly, the Commission concludes that the requirements
established in Articles 46(1)(c) and 47(d) of the Convention have been
met.
F.
Characterization of the facts alleged
27.
Article 47(b) of the Convention establishes that any petition will
be inadmissible that “does not state facts that tend to establish a
violation of the rights guaranteed by this Convention.”
28.
The Commission considers that the petitioners’ allegations, if
proven, could tend to establish a violation of the rights guaranteed in
Articles 8, 15, 23, 24, and 25 of the Convention, in conjunction with
Article 1(1) of the Convention.
29.
Based on the foregoing, the Commission considers that the
requirements established at Article 47(b) and (c) of the American
Convention have been satisfied.
V.
CONCLUSIONS
30.
The Commission concludes that it is competent to take cognizance of
the complaint submitted by the petitioners, and that the petition is
admissible under Articles 46 and 47 of the Convention.
31.
Based on the foregoing arguments of fact and law, and without
prejudging on the merits, THE INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN
RIGHTS, DECIDES:
1.
To declare admissible the petitioners’ complaint regarding the
alleged violation of Articles 8, 15, 23, 24, 25, and 1(1) of the
Convention, to the detriment of the candidates to mayor, deputy mayor, and
municipal council presented by YATAMA for the municipal elections of
November 5, 2000, in the North Atlantic Autonomous Region and the South
Atlantic Autonomous Region.
2.
To give notice of this decision to the Nicaraguan State and to the
petitioners.
3.
To continue with the analysis of the merits of this case.
4.
To publish this decision and include it in its Annual Report to the
OAS General Assembly.
Adopted by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, December
3, 2001. (Signed):
Claudio Grossman, President; Juan E. Méndez, First Vice-President;
Marta Altolaguirre, Second Vice-President; Commissioners Robert Goldman,
Peter Laurie, and Julio Prado Vallejo.
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[1]
The petitioners note that the Nicaraguan State also violated the
rights enshrined in Articles 21, 25, 26, and 27 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, of the United Nations, and
Convention Nº 169, concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples in
Independent Countries, of the International Labor Organization.
Nonetheless, in the final section of this application setting
forth the relief sought, they ask the IACHR to declare that the
Nicaraguan State has violated the above-noted articles of the
Convention and the Declaration. [2]
The acronym “YATAMA” is the abbreviation, in Miskito, of Yabti
Tasba Masraka Nanih Asia Takanka, which mean “organization of the
children of mother earth.” [3]
On May 4, 2000, the Supreme Electoral Council of Nicaragua gave legal
recognition to the indigenous organization YATAMA as a regional
political party. [4]
YATAMA candidates to the RAAN:
Municipality of Puerto Cabezas:
Rodolfo Spear Smith, for mayor; Anicia Matamoros Bushey, for
deputy-mayor; Ovencio Maikell Barwell, Elmer Emsly Blanco, Winston
Joel Livy, Roberto Labonte Centeno, Minario Emsly Wilson, for the
municipal council.
Municipality of San Juan del Río Coco Waspan: Calistro
Osorio Bans M., for deputy mayor; Diego Guzmán Vanegas Allington,
Gilberto Williams Jirón, Lucio Alfred Lacayo Kitler, Armando Thomas,
Bernaldo García Pantin, Remigio Narciso Zepeda, Antonio Reyes Waldan,
Antonio Avila Gutiérrez, for the municipal council.
Municipality of Bonanza:
Mario Peralta Bands, for mayor; Jorge Chacón Wilson, candidate
for deputy mayor; Ceferino Wilson Bell, Patricio López Dixon, Icasio
Dixon Reyes, for municipal council.
Municipality of Rosita:
Cristina Poveda Montiel, for mayor; Edison Johnny Anderson,
Andrés López Martínez, for deputy mayor. [5]
The deadline for submission of candidates was July 15, 2000. [6]
YATAMA’s candidates to the RAAS were:
Municipality of Bluefields: Manuel Salvador Paguagua
García, for mayor, Yahaira Yvonne Amador Gadea, for deputy mayor;
Eustacio Flores Wilson, Ashmet Alexander Ally, Julio Cesar Delagado
Pacheco, Israel Díaz Amador, Angela Gibson Morales, Reynaldo Lagos
Amador, Eduardo Alexander Siu Estrada, Isabel Reyna Estrada Colindres,
Lillian Elizabeth Francis Wilson, Carlos John Omeir, Nelly Sánchez
Castillo, Flor Deliz Bravo Carr, William Wong López, Genny Mitchell
Omeir, Sergio Warren León Corea, Olga Orelia Shepperd Hodgson, for
municipal council.
Municipality of El Tortuguero: Gorge Antonio Gutiérrez
Robledo, for mayor, Pastora Carmen García Guillén, for deputy mayor,
Jacinta Pérez González, Juana María Jirón Rodríguez, Alejandro
Miranda Reyes, Sandra Esther Reyes López, Emelina Valle Solano,
Andrea Lira Gaitán, Guillermina López García, and Hilda María
Miranda Reyes, for municipal council. Municipality of Sandy Bay
Sirpi Desembocadura: Roberto Chow Molina, for mayor; Edward Nixon
Ellis Brooks, for deputy mayor; Kramwel Frank James, Donald Wilson
Martínez Roland, Cristina Josefina Hills Thompson, Carolina Socorro
Hurtado Rocha, Carlos Julian Prudo, Norman Marcelina Inglish,
Belarmino Young Richard, and Hipólito García López, for municipal
council.
Municipality of Laguna de Perlas:
Rodolfo Chang Bennett, for mayor; Alonso Florencio Willis
Tucker, for deputy mayor; Liston Hooker Allen, Constantino Franklin
Humpheys Hodgson, Jason Kenred Gutiérrez Peralta, Arlen Joan Peralta
Davis, Wiliam Martín, Catalina Hamphys, Ilva Bernard, and Wilma
Taylor, for municipal council.
Municipality of Kukra Hill: Juan Casterio Reyes Craford,
for mayor; José Mateo López Rigby, for deputy mayor; Dionicio Márquez
Méndez, Ruth Vargas Smith, Leonor Hayde Maesk Thompson, Miguel Amador
Huete, Alicia Reyes, Roberto Ramos Renis, Hilda Estela Méndez, and
Samuel Walter Lemos Fedrick, for municipal council.
Municipality of Com Island: Dayne Wiston Cash Cassanova,
for mayor; Cristina Morris Anisal, for deputy mayor; Lorenzo Fidencio
Britton Calderon, Keston Orville López Lewis, Lowell Alvin Rigby
Downs, Marlene del Socorro Hebert Escorcia, Vaden Davis Downs White,
Erick Alvaro Archobol Lavonte, and Olga María Leyman Francis, for
municipal council.
Municipality of La Cruz de Río Grande: Exibia Alarcón
Herrera, for mayor; Gloria Maritza Colindres Romero, for deputy mayo;,
Angela Barbarina Hurtado, Juan Francisco Díaz Matamoro, Marcelino
Lanzas Amador, Juan Carlos Loaisiga, Digno Díaz González, Gloria
Isabel Lira Díaz, Maritza Colado Plazaola, and Teodora Duarte
Sequeira, for municipal council. [7]
The I/A Court H.R. has indicated: “For the States Parties to the
Convention, the specific source of their obligations with respect to
the protection of human rights is, in principle, the Convention
itself.”
Advisory Opinion OC-10/89 (Interpretation of the American
Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man Within the Framework of
Article 64 of the American Convention on Human Rights), of July 14,
1989, para. 46. [8]
The I/A Court H.R. has stated that “these States cannot escape the
obligations they have as members of the OAS under the Declaration,
notwithstanding the fact that the Convention is the governing
instrument for the States Parties thereto.” Advisory Opinion
OC-10/89, of July 14, 1989, para. 46. |