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Case Summaries | 12 SEP 2012

Duty to investigate torture and inhumane treatment

R(NM) v Secretary of State for Justice [2012] EWCA Civ 1182 (12 September 2012) The English Court of Appeal in R(NM) v Secretary of State for Justice has recently ruled that a State prison was not in breach of its investigative obligation under article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (the right to freedom from torture and cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment) as it conducted an investigation in proportion to the seriousness of an incident.

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Case Summaries | 11 SEP 2012

Victorian Supreme Court reads down the right to freedom of expression

Magee v Delaney [2012] VSC 407 (11 September 2012)The Supreme Court of Victoria has recently ruled on the scope of the right to freedom of expression under the Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities Act 2006 (Vic). In this case, Justice Kyrou held that the right to freedom of expression under the Charter is not engaged where the expression involves property damage, or threats of property damage.

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Case Summaries | 31 AUG 2012

Calling for stray cats not protected by right to freedom of expression

Thompson v Police [2012] NZHC 2234 (31 August 2012)The New Zealand High Court dismissed the appellant's appeal against convictions for disorderly behaviour on the ground that the appellant's conduct did not involve an exercise of her right of freedom of expression pursuant to section 14 of the Bill of Rights Act 1990 (NZ). The High Court found that the appellant’s conduct (“calling for stray cats”) had caused a disturbance which the public could not reasonably be expected to endure.

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Case Summaries | 29 AUG 2012

UN Human Rights Committee upholds freedom of association in Belarus

UN Human Rights Committee, Korneenko v Belarus, UN Doc CCPR/C/105/D/1226/2003 (29 August 2012) Viktor Korneenko resides in Gomel, Belarus, where he was the chairperson of the Gomel regional association of Civil Initiatives. This NGO was involved in election monitoring in Belarus. Civil Initiatives was dissolved by court order after Belarusian authorities fined Korneenko and confiscated the organisation’s computer equipment on the basis that Koreenko had violated a temporary presidential decree banning the use of computer equipment, received as “untied foreign aid”, from being used for political purposes.

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Case Summaries | 28 AUG 2012

Torture, forced eviction and the State’s obligation to provide an effective remedy

Chiti v Zambia, UN Doc CCPR/C/105/D/1303/2004 (28 August 2012) The UN Human Rights Committee considered an application against the State of Zambia lodged by the applicant, a Zambian national, on behalf of her children and her deceased husband, a former officer with the Zambian military. The Committee found that there had been a violation of articles 2, 7, 14, 17 and 23 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

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Case Summaries | 28 AUG 2012

Failure to provide effective protection against domestic violence violated CEDAW

Isatou Jallow v Bulgaria, UN Doc CEDAW/C/52/D/32/2011 (28 August 2012) The CEDAW Committee found that Bulgaria violated several articles of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women by failing to investigate domestic violence allegations, failing to take domestic violence into account in making court orders and failing to provide the complainant with information regarding the whereabouts of her child.

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Case Summaries | 24 AUG 2012

Delay not unreasonable where accused unaware of charges

Russell v Pangallo [2012] ACTMC 4 (24 August 2012) In the ACT Magistrates Court, a Magistrate held that a six year delay between the filing of a summons for a drink driving offence and the first court date for that offence did not constitute unreasonable delay giving rise to a breach of the ACT Human Rights Act 2004.

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Case Summaries | 15 AUG 2012

Prohibition against torture vs state immunity

Islamic Republic of Iran v Hashemi, 2012 QCCA 1449 (15 August 2012)The Court of Appeal in Quebec, Canada considered the tension between state immunity under the State Immunity Act 1985 (RSC), the prohibition against torture and the application of customary international law in relation to a Canadian citizen who had been subject to physical and sexual abuse and torture in Iran.

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Case Summaries | 15 AUG 2012

Support worker breached prohibition against cruel or degrading treatment by dragging man with disability across carpeted hallway

Davies v State of Victoria [2012] VSC 343 (15 August 2012)In a landmark decision, Justice Williams of the Supreme Court found that the conduct of a disability support worker in dragging a person with an intellectual disability across a carpeted hallway such as to cause a burn or abrasion constituted “cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment” contrary to section 10(b) of the Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities.

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Case Summaries | 3 AUG 2012

Stay of proceedings where human right breached, despite finding of guilt

R v Bellusci, 2012 SCC 44 (3 August 2012) SummaryThe full bench of Canada's Supreme Court has upheld a trial judge's decision to permanently stay proceedings against a prisoner who was found guilty of threatening to rape a prison guard's wife and children. Because the prisoner was assaulted during the incident, his rights were found to be infringed under the constitutional Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and a discretionary remedy available under section 24(1) was awarded on this basis.

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Case Summaries | 30 JUL 2012

Sex offender registration and the right to privacy

WBM v Chief Commissioner of Police [2012] VSCA 159 (30 July 2012)In this decision, the Court of Appeal upheld a Supreme Court trial division decision that the Sex Offenders Registration Act 2004 (Vic) applied to a particular offender. Although the Court made the decision without reliance on the Charter, the Court expressed the view that the legislation was compatible with the right to privacy under the Victorian Charter. The decision also considered the definition of the section 13 right to privacy, the role of comparative international human rights jurisprudence under the Charter and the scope of rights protected by the common law principle of legality.

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Case Summaries | 27 JUL 2012

No extradition to death penalty

Minister of Home Affairs and Others v Tsebe and Others [2012] ZACC 16 (27 July 2012) A majority of the Constitutional Court of South Africa has refused to extradite two people to Botswana on the basis that the South African Government cannot surrender a person to a country where he or she faces the death penalty without first seeking an assurance that the death penalty would not be imposed. Aptly summarised by Yacoob ADCJ, “this judgment leaves the government in no doubt that deportation, extradition or any form of removal under these circumstances is wholly unacceptable”.

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