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REPORT
Nº 20/02 INADMISSIBILITY PETITION
11.627 SANTOS
HERNÁN GALEAS GONZÁLEZ HONDURAS February
27, 2002 I. SUMMARY 1.
On May 14, 1996, the organizations, Rights International, The Center for
International Human Rights Law, and Central American Political Asylum
Project American Friends Service Committee (hereinafter “the
petitioners”) lodged a petition with the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights (hereinafter “the Commission”), alleging the
international responsibility of the Republic of Honduras (hereinafter
“Honduras”, “the State” or the “Honduran State”) for
violation of several rights enshrined in the American Convention on
Human Rights (hereinafter the “Convention” or the “American
Convention”) in Articles 1(1) (obligation to respect rights), 7 (right
to personal liberty), 13 (freedom of thought and expression), and 24
(right to equal protection), to the detriment of Mr. Santos Hernán
Galeas González (hereinafter “Mr. Galeas” or “the alleged
victim”). 2.
From 1980 to 1987, Mr. Galeas vented various opinions, inter
alia, regarding alleged acts of corruption by various public
officials, arms trafficking, drug trafficking, and extrajudicial
executions. In 1989, the Colegio
de Periodistas de Honduras [Journalists’ Association of Honduras]
(hereinafter “CPH”) instituted criminal proceedings against Mr.
Galeas, charging him with illegal assumption of powers and professional
title to the detriment of the CPH. According to the petitioners, the
foregoing was an act of reprisal against documents published by Mr.
Galeas. The alleged victim was later released on bail pending trial,
after which the proceeding progressed no further. The petitioners
alleged that the aforesaid proceeding as well as the obligation for
journalists in Honduras to be members of a professional association
constitute a violation of the freedom of expression of Mr. Galeas. 3.
Mr. Galeas was later dismissed from his job and the CPH sent, according
to the petitioners, a circular to the various mass media outlets in
Honduras warning that Mr. Galeas was not licensed to work as a
journalist and there was a fine of 5,000 lempiras for any that hired
him. Further, Mr. Galeas is purported to have received death threats,
which prompted him to leave the country. 4.
According to the petitioners, from 1991 to 1992 Mr. Galeas worked
as a journalist in Venezuela and returned to Honduras in February 1992,
where he alleges that he received another threat from a public official,
which apparently encouraged to move to the United States, where he was
granted political asylum on August 2, 1994. 5.
The State denied the existence of such threats, and held that the statute
of limitations on the case brought by the CPH against Mr. Galeas had
run, and therefore the latter should not be afraid to return to the
country. The State further
said that the CPH is a private entity, for which reason its acts do not
give rise to the international responsibility of the Honduran State. 6.
The Commission, after reviewing the positions of the parties regarding
exhaustion of domestic procedures and the other admissibility
requirements under Articles 46 and 47 of the Convention, finds that the
instant case is inadmissible. II. PROCESSING BY
THE COMMISSION 7.
On May 22, 1996, the Commission opened case 11.627, pursuant to the
provisions contained in the Rules of Procedure in force, and requested
the petitioners to translate the petition, in order to transmit it to
the State of Honduras. On December 18, 1996, the Commission received the
Spanish version of the petition lodged by the petitioners and on March
25, 1997, transmitted the pertinent portions thereof to the State,
granting it 90 days to submit its reply. The State replied on August 14,
1997, and the pertinent portions of the reply were duly conveyed to the
petitioners. 8.
On October 22, 1997, the petitioners presented their observations to the
reply of the State, and these were duly forwarded to the Honduran State
on November 21 of that year. On December 18, 1997, the State submitted a
brief containing comments on the petitioners’ observations, the
pertinent parts of which were sent to the petitioners on January 21,
1998. 9.
On April 4, 1998, the petitioners sent additional information to the
Commission, and on April 27 of that year the Commission transmitted the
pertinent portions to the Honduran State. On August 13, 1998, the State
requested translations of said documents. The petitioners again sent
additional information in May 1999. In November 2000, the IACHR
requested information from the petitioners on specific aspects, part of
which was provided in December 2000.
The Commission reiterated its request for information on December
22, 2000, without the petitioners sending their reply. III.
POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES A. Position of the
petitioners 10.
According to the petition, in 1988, the Journalists’ Association of
Honduras (CPH) revoked Mr. Galeas’ license to work as a journalist due
to opinions aired by him against the government. On March 12, 1989, that
institution, based on the provisions contained in Article 293 of the
Criminal Code of the Republic of Honduras, filed a criminal suit against
Mr. Galeas for the illegal exercise of journalism, specifically, for the
“crime of illegal assumption of powers and professional title to the
detriment of the Journalists’ Association of Honduras”. On December
27, 1989, Mr. Galeas was released on bail pending trial.
The petitioners say that in November 1989, Mr. Galeas divulged
information about an alleged order to murder three political leaders
from a high-ranking military official, as a result of which he allegedly
began to receive threats that were not properly investigated by the
State. 11.
On June 28, 1990, Radio Tegucigalpa suspended Mr. Galeas from his duties
as “advertising agent and news reader”, citing as its reason that he
was prohibited by the CPH from exercising such functions because he was
the subject of a criminal prosecution in the courts. By virtue of the
foregoing Mr. Galeas purportedly was unable to find another job with any
mass media outlet in Honduras. Mr. Galeas alleged that on February 17,
1991, as a result of a warning from Gilberto Goldstein, a presidential
secretary and personal friend of his, he had to leave the country bound
for Venezuela because he feared for his life and his liberty. 12.
The petitioners say that Mr. Galeas worked as a journalist at Canal
8 de Venezolana de Televisión and on December 3, 1991, was
appointed correspondent for Brújula Internacional in Kuwait. In view of the fact that this
appointment required that he obtain a visa in order to travel to the
United States, Mr. Galeas allegedly pursued the necessary procedure at
the said country’s consulate in Venezuela, which refused him a visa
because he was not a Venezuelan citizen. On the instructions of his
employer, Mr. Galeas was apparently compelled to return to Honduras in
order to acquire said visa. Once in Honduras, in February 1992, Mr.
Galeas was allegedly again warned by a Honduran congressman that he
should leave the country, otherwise the CPH would reactivate his case.
Mr. Galeas traveled to the United States, where he later applied for
political asylum, which he was granted on August 2, 1994. 13.
The petitioners submit that by requiring Mr. Galeas’ compulsory
membership of the CPH, and as a result of the failure to investigate and
avert the threats to his personal security, the following rights have
been violated to his detriment: right to freedom of expression and not
to be censored for his political opinions (Article 13); right to
personal security (Article 7); right to a fair trial (Article 8(1));
right to judicial protection (Article 25); right to equal protection
(Article 24); as well as the duty to investigate arising from the
obligation to ensure rights provided in Article 1(1) of the American
Convention. B. Position of the State 14.
The Honduran State alleged that domestic remedies were not exhausted and,
therefore, that the requirements contained in Article 46 have not been
met, since the alleged victim does not allegedly have reasonable motives
to fear for his personal security or freedom and, accordingly, had the
possibility to exhaust domestic remedies. 15.
As to merits of the matter, the State held that the proceeding initiated
against Mr. Galeas had been in accordance with the laws in force in
Honduras, inter alia, the
Constitution and the Law on Compulsory Membership of Professional
Associations [Ley de Colegiación Profesional Obligatoria], under which the
exercise of the profession of journalism is supposedly subject to
certain requirements. Further, the State presented several items of
written evidence that attested that Mr. Galeas was not a registered
member of the CPH, or of the Honduran Press Association, and that he had
never been a student at the Journalism School of the Universidad
Nacional Autónoma de Honduras. By the same token, the Honduran
State argued that the body that caused the alleged violation of Mr.
Galeas’ rights is not a State institution but one of the private
professional entities that exist in Honduras, and, accordingly it would
not have been the State of Honduras that instituted a legal action
against Mr. Galeas. 16.
Further, the State said that there was no evidence of persecution of Mr.
Galeas and that the time elapsed since the suit brought by the CPH
“leads us to infer that the statute of limitations has already run on
the legal or court proceedings,”[1] which would indicate that
that there is no reason for the petitioner to fear that he might be
imprisoned for his past behavior. For this reason, the State alleged
that the petition before the IACHR was filed “extemporaneously and
late.”[2]
The State alleged that the petitioner’s fear was apparently
founded on his own irregular conduct, and presented to the Commission
written evidence that Mr. Galeas had been arrested for larceny in 1983,
because he allegedly collected undue payments in the name of the radio
station for which he worked at the time.. IV. ANALYSIS
A.
Competence ratione
personae, ratione materiae, ratione temporis and
ratione loci of the Inter-American Commission 17.
Under Article 44 of
the American Convention and 23 of the Rules of Procedure, the
petitioners, as a legally recognized nongovernmental entity, may lodge
petitions with the IACHR, concerning
alleged violations of the American Convention (procedural
standing). As to the State, the Commission finds that Honduras is a
state party to the American Convention, having ratified it on September
8, 1977. The petition cites as the alleged victim Mr. Santos Hernán
Galeas González, a natural person on whose behalf Honduras undertook to
respect and ensure the rights enshrined in the Convention. Accordingly,
the Commission has ratione
personae competence to examine the petition. 18.
The petition
contains allegations, which, if proven, could constitute violations of
human rights protected in the American Convention. Therefore, the
Commission has ratione materiae
competence to take up the petition. 19.
By the same token,
the Commission has ratione
temporis competence, inasmuch as the events alleged in the petition
are purported to have occurred when the duty to respect and ensure the
rights recognized in the Convention was in force for the State. 20.
Finally, the
Commission has ratione loci
competence to take cognizance of the petition because it describes
violations of rights protected in the American Convention that allegedly
occurred within the territory of the Honduran State. B. Admissibility
requirements a. Exhaustion of
domestic remedies 21.
Non-exhaustion of domestic remedies is not in dispute, since both parties
concur that the remedies under domestic law were not used. Accordingly,
at issue is whether or not the exceptions contained in Article 46 (b)
apply in the instant case. 22.
The Honduran State said that Mr. Galeas had access to the judicial
remedies designed to find unconstitutional the law that requires
compulsory membership of a professional organization for journalists and
the internal regulations of the CPH, which were not used by Mr. Galeas.
It also mentioned the competent authorities to which he could have
turned. Mr. Galeas did not
dispute this fact, for which reason the IACHR believes that the latter
had no intention of exhausting domestic remedies in that regard. The
Inter-American Court has previously held that “[i]t It
must not be rashly presumed that a State Party to the Convention has
failed to comply with its obligation to provide effective domestic
remedies.”[3]
Based on the foregoing, since the State has shown the existence of said
remedies, it is up to the petitioner to prove their ineffectiveness,
which did not happen in the instant case. 23.
Nonetheless, the Commission finds that the petitioner submitted
substantial arguments to the effect that he was prevented from using the
domestic jurisdiction, which were not properly investigated by the
Honduran State. 24.
In that connection, the petitioners denounced wiretapping and threats of
death and imprisonment by agents of the State, referring concretely to
three threats: the first by Colonel Amaya, a member of the Armed Forces
of Honduras; later Mr. Galeas supposedly received a call from Mr.
Gilberto Goldstein, First Secretary of the then-President of Honduras,
who allegedly warned him to leave the country immediately; and the
third, on Mr. Galeas’ return to Honduras in 1992, was purportedly
proffered by Mr. Rodolfo Irías Navas, who is said to have issued him
similar warnings. 25.
The Commission finds that this situation of personal insecurity would
have prevented Mr. Galeas from using the judicial mechanisms designed to
protect his personal security and physical integrity. 26.
The arguments cited enable the Commission to determine that the exception
to the requirement of prior exhaustion of domestic remedies contained in
Article 46(2)(b) of the Convention applies in the instant case. Article
46(2)(b) provides that: The
provisions of paragraphs 1.a and 1.b of this article shall not be
applicable when:
b.
the
party alleging violation of his rights has been denied access to the
remedies under domestic law or has been prevented from exhausting them. 27.
Accordingly, the Commission finds that the requirement of prior
exhaustion of remedies under domestic law provided in Article 46(2)(b)
does not apply in this case. b.
Timeliness of the petition 28.
Given that the exception to the requirement of prior exhaustion of
domestic remedies applied in this case, the Commission must determine if
the petition was lodged in reasonable time as stipulated in Article 32,
second paragraph of the Rules of Procedure of the Commission. In this
respect, the Commission finds that four years elapsed after the last
alleged violation before the petitioners lodged their petition with the
IACHR. That is, the last threat was received in February 1992, after
which Mr. Galeas decided to move to the United States. In the opinion of
the Commission, in the instant case four years does not constitute a
reasonable time, since the alleged victim could have filed his complaint
at any time following his departure from Honduras. Even if one accepts
the petitioner’s argument that the date should be calculated from the
time asylum in the United States was granted in 1994, the IACHR notes
that two more years elapsed before the petition was lodged in 1996,
which also exceeds the limits of reasonableness. 29.
The Commission considers that the argument of the petitioners that they
did not know about the possibility of presenting individual petitions to
the IACHR until October 1995 is not valid in this case. Even in the best-case scenario for the petitioner, in which
the Commission were to accept his ignorance of the procedure before the
IACHR, the record shows that the petition was lodged in May 1996; in
other words, seven months after he or his lawyer allegedly learned of
the possibility to present individual petitions to the IACHR. 30.
Article 32 of the Rules of Procedure of the IACHR provides that: In those cases in which the exceptions to the requirement of prior exhaustion of domestic remedies are applicable, the petition shall be presented within a reasonable period of time, as determined by the Commission. For this purpose, the Commission shall consider the date on which the alleged violation of rights occurred and the circumstances of each case. 31.
Therefore, the Commission finds that the instant petition was lodged
outside the time period provided in Article 32 of the Rules of Procedure
of the IACHR. V.
CONCLUSIONS 32.
Given that the IACHR has determined that the instant petition
does not meet the requirement of timely presentation, after the
exception to the rule of prior exhaustion of domestic proved applicable,
it is not necessary to refer to the other arguments of the parties in
connection with Articles 46 and 47 of the American Convention. 33.
Accordingly, the
Commission concludes that the petition under review does not meet the
requirement provided in Article 32(2) of the Rules of Procedure of the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and is inadmissible in
accordance with Article 47(a) of the American Convention. 34.
Based on the
foregoing factual and legal arguments, THE
INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS, DECIDES: 1.
To declare the
instant case inadmissible. 2.
To notify the
petitioners and the State of this decision. 3.
To make public this
decision and to include it in its Annual Report to the General Assembly
of the OAS. Done
and signed at the headquarters of the Inter-American Commission on Human
Rights, in the city of Washington, D.C., on the 27 day of the month of
February in the year 2002. (Signed) Juan Méndez,
President; Marta Altolaguirre, First Vice-President; José Zalaquett,
Second Vice-President; Commissioners:
Robert K. Goldman and Clare K. Roberts. [ Table of Contents | Previous | Next ] [1]
See official letter Nº183-DDHN of December 18, 1997, sent to the
IACHR the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Honduras. [2]
See official letter Nº183-DDHN of December 18, 1997, sent to the
IACHR the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Honduras,
p.4. [3]
Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Velásquez Rodríguez Case,
Judgment of July 29, 1988, para. 60.
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