Inter-American Commission on Human Rights

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (the IACHR[1] or, in the three other official languages  Spanish, French, and Portuguese  CIDH, Comisión Interamericana de los Derechos Humanos, Commission Interaméricaine des Droits de l'Homme, Comissão Interamericana de Direitos Humanos) is an autonomous organ of the Organization of American States (OAS).

Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
English abbreviation logo
AbbreviationIACHR
Formation1959
PurposeHuman Rights monitoring in the Americas
Location
Region served
Americas
(ACHR signatories,
OAS members)
Membership
Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Barbados, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, The Bahamas, Trinidad and Tobago, United States, Uruguay, Venezuela
Executive Secretary
Maria Claudia Pulido (Interim)
Parent organization
Organization of American States
WebsiteIACHR

The separate Inter-American Court of Human Rights is an autonomous judicial institution based in the city of San José, Costa Rica. Together the Court and the Commission make up the human rights protection system of the OAS.

The IACHR is a permanent body, with headquarters in Washington, D.C., United States, and it meets in regular and special sessions several times a year to examine allegations of human rights violations in the hemisphere.[2]

Its human rights duties stem from three documents:

History of the Inter-American human rights system

The inter-American system for the protection of human rights emerged with the adoption of the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man by the OAS in April 1948  the first international human rights instrument of a general nature, predating the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by more than six months.[5][6]

The IACHR was created in 1959. It held its first meeting in 1960, and it conducted its first on-site visit to inspect the human rights situation in the Dominican Republic in 1961.[6]

A major step in the development of the system was taken in 1965 when the Commission was expressly authorized to examine specific cases of human rights violations. Since that date the IACHR has received thousands of petitions and has processed in excess of 12,000 individual cases.[6]

In 1969, the guiding principles behind the American Declaration were taken, reshaped, and restated in the American Convention on Human Rights. The Convention defines the human rights that the states parties are required to respect and guarantee, and it also ordered the establishment of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. It is currently binding on 24 of the OAS's 35 member states.[5]

Functions

The main task of the IACHR is to promote the observance and defense of human rights in the Americas.[7]

In pursuit of this mandate it:

  • Receives, analyzes, and investigates individual petitions alleging violations of specific human rights protected by the American Convention on Human Rights.
  • Works to resolve petitions in a collaborative way that is amiable to both parties.
  • Monitors the general human rights situation in the OAS's member states and, when necessary, prepares and publishes country-specific human rights reports.
  • Conducts on-site visits to examine members' general human rights situation or to investigate specific cases.
  • Encourages public awareness about human rights and related issues throughout the hemisphere.
  • Holds conferences, seminars, and meetings with governments, NGOs, academic institutions, etc. to inform and raise awareness about issues relating to the inter-American human rights system.
  • Issues member states with recommendations that, if adopted, would further the cause of human rights protection.
  • Requests that states adopt precautionary measures to prevent serious and irreparable harm to human rights in urgent cases.[8]
  • Refers cases to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, and litigates those same cases before the Court.
  • Asks the Inter-American Court to provide advisory opinions on matters relating to the interpretation of the Convention or other related instruments.

Rapporteurships and units

The IACHR has created several rapporteurships, a special rapporteurship and a unit to monitor OAS states' compliance with inter-American human rights treaties in the following areas:[9]

  • Rapporteurship on Migrant Workers and their Families[10]
  • Rapporteurship on the Rights of Women (the first rapporteurship created by the IACHR in 1994)[11]
  • Rapporteurship on the Rights of the Child[12]
  • Rapporteurship on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples[13]
  • Rapporteurship on the Rights of Persons Deprived of Liberty[14]
  • Rapporteurship on the Rights of Afro-Descendants and against Racial Discrimination[15]
  • Rapporteurship on Human Rights Defenders[16]

The Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression and Economic, Social, Cultural, and Environmental Rights are the two special rapporteurships of the IACHR, having a rapporteur dedicated full-time to the job.[9] The other rapporteurships are in the hands of the commissioners, who have other functions at the IACHR and also their own jobs in their home countries, since their work as commissioners is unpaid.

The Unit on the Rights of Lesbian, Gay, Trans, Bisexual, and Intersex Persons was created in 2011.

The IACHR also has a Press and Outreach Office.[17]

Petitions

The Commission processes petitions lodged with it pursuant to its Rules of Procedure.

Petitions may be filed by NGOs or individuals. Unlike most court filings, petitions are confidential documents and are not made public. Petitions must meet three requirements; domestic remedies must have already been tried and failed (exhaustion), petitions must be filed within six months of the last action taken in a domestic system (timeliness), petitions can not be before another court (duplication of procedure).

Once a petition has been filed, it follows the following procedure:[7]

  • Petition is forwarded to the Secretariat and reviewed for completeness; if complete, it is registered and is given a case number. This is where the state is notified of the petition.
  • Petition reviewed for admissibility.
  • The Commission tries to find a friendly settlement.
  • If no settlement is found, then briefs are filed by each side on the merits of the case.
  • The Commission then files a report on the merits, known as an Article 50 report from relevant article of the Convention. This is a basically a ruling by the Commission with recommendations on how to solve the conflict. The Article 50 report is sent to the state. This is a confidential report; the petitioner does not get a full copy of this report.
  • The state is given two months to comply with the recommendations of the report.
  • The petitioner then has one month to file a petition asking for the issue to be sent to the Inter-American Court (only applicable if the State in question has recognized the competence of the Inter-American Court).
  • The Commission has three months, from the date the Article 50 report is given to the state, to either publish the Article 50 report or send the case to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. Alternatively, the Commission can also choose to monitor the situation. The American Convention establishes that if the report is not submitted to the Court within three months it may not be submitted in the future, but if the State asks for more time in order to comply with the recommendations of the Article 50 report, the Commission might grant it on the condition that the State signs a waiver on this requirement.

Criticisms

Politicization and position in debatable matters

The Commission's performance has not been always welcomed. Among others, Venezuela has criticized its politicization. Many others criticize the Commission's stress in some rights instead of some others. These criticisms have given rise to what was called the "Strengthening process of the Commission". This process began in 2011, led by the States belonging to the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas.[18][19]

Location of its headquarters

Officers of Ecuador, Argentina, Bolivia, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, supported the motion for moving the Commission's headquarters, which are currently in Washington, D.C. These countries suggested moving the IACHR's headquarters to a Member State to the American Convention of Human Rights. Among the suggested countries were Argentina, Costa Rica and Peru.

Composition

The IACHR's ranking officers are its seven commissioners. The commissioners are elected by the OAS General Assembly, for four-year terms, with the possibility of re-election on one occasion, for a maximum period in office of eight years. They serve in a personal capacity and are not considered to represent their countries of origin but rather "all the member countries of the Organization" (Art. 35 of the Convention). The Convention (Art. 34) says that they must "be persons of high moral character and recognized competence in the field of human rights". No two nationals of the same member state may be commissioners simultaneously (Art. 37), and commissioners are required to refrain from participating in the discussion of cases involving their home countries.

Current commissioners

NameStatePositionElectedTerm
Joel Hernández García MexicoPresident20172018–2021
Antonia Urrejola Noguera ChileFirst Vice-President20172018–2021
Flávia Piovesan BrazilSecond Vice-President20172018–2021
Margarette May Macaulay JamaicaCommissioner20152016–2023
Esmeralda Arosemena de Troitiño  Panama Commissioner 2015 2016–2023
Julissa Mantilla Falcón  PeruCommissioner20192020–2023
Edgar Stuardo Ralón Orellana  ChileCommissioner20192020–2023
Source: IACHR Composition.

Past commissioners

José Zalaquett, President 2004
YearStateCommissionersPresident (post-2001)
Chairman (pre-2001)
1960–1963 VenezuelaRómulo Gallegos1960
1960–1964 El SalvadorReynaldo Galindo Pohl
1960–1968 EcuadorGonzalo Escudero
1960–1972 Costa RicaÁngela Acuña de Chacón
1960–1972 USADurward V. Sandifer
1960–1972 ChileManuel Bianchi Gundián
1960–1979 MexicoGabino Fraga
1964–1968 UruguayDaniel Hugo Martins
1964–1983 BrazilCarlos A. Dunshee de Abranches
1968–1972 PeruMario Alzamora Valdez
1968–1972 UruguayJustino Jiménez de Arechega
1972–1976 ArgentinaGenaro R. Carrió
1972–1976 USARobert F. Woodward
1972–1985 VenezuelaAndrés Aguilar
1976–1979 GuatemalaCarlos García Bauer
1976–1979 Costa RicaFernando Volio Jiménez
1976–1983 USATom J. Farer
1976–1978 ColombiaJosé Joaquín Gori
1978–1987 ColombiaMarco Gerardo Monroy Cabra
1980–1987 El SalvadorFranciso Bertrand Galindo
1980–1985 MexicoCésar Sepúlveda
1980–1985 Costa RicaLuis Demetrio Tinoco Castro
1984–1988 USAR. Bruce McColm
1984–1987 BoliviaLuis Adolfo Siles Salinas
1984–1991 BrazilGilda Maciel Correa Russomano
1986–1989 ArgentinaElsa Kelly
1986–1993 VenezuelaMarco Tulio Bruni-Celli
1986–1993 BarbadosOliver H. Jackman
1988–1991 USAJohn Reese Stevenson
1988–1995 HondurasLeo Valladares Lanza
1988–1995 JamaicaPatrick Lipton Robinson
1990–1997 ArgentinaÓscar Luján Fappiano
1992–1995 USAMichael Reisman
1994–1997 Trinidad and TobagoJohn S. Donaldson1997
1998–1999 BarbadosSir Henry de Boulay Forde
1992–1999 ColombiaÁlvaro Tirado Mejía1995
1996–1999 VenezuelaCarlos Ayala Corao1998
1996–1999 HaitiJean-Joseph Exumé
1994–2001 ChileClaudio Grossman1996
2001
1998–2001 BrazilHélio Bicudo2000
1999–2001 BarbadosPeter Laurie
2002–2002 PeruDiego García Sayán
1996–2003 USARobert K. Goldman1999
2000–2003 GuatemalaMarta Altolaguirre Larraondo2003
2000–2003 ArgentinaJuan E. Méndez2002
2000–2003 EcuadorJulio Prado Vallejo
2002–2005 PeruSusana Villarán
2001–2005 ChileJosé Zalaquett2004
2004–2007 ParaguayEvelio Fernández Arévalos2006
2004–2007 VenezuelaFreddy Gutiérrez
2002–2009 Antigua and BarbudaSir Clare Kamau Roberts
2004–2009 El SalvadorFlorentín Meléndez
2006–2009 ArgentinaVíctor Abramovich
2006–2009 USAPaolo Carozza2008
2004–2011 BrazilPaulo Sérgio Pinheiro
2008–2011 VenezuelaLuz Patricia Mejía2009
2009–2011 El SalvadorMaría Silvia Guillén
2010–2013 ColombiaRodrigo Escobar Gil
2010–2013 USADinah Shelton
2008–2015 ChileFelipe González Morales2010
2012–2015 Saint Lucia  Trinidad and TobagoRose-Marie Belle Antoine2015
2012–2015 JamaicaTracy Robinson2014
2012–2015 ParaguayRosa María Ortiz
2017–2019  Colombia Luis Ernesto Vargas Silva
2016–2019  Peru Francisco José Eguiguren Praeli

Executive Secretaries

The staff of the IACHR comprise its Secretariat, which is led by an Executive Secretary, who serves for what have recently been four-year, renewable contracts.

In August 2020, OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro announced that he would not renew Paulo Abrão's contract as Executive Secretary of the IACHR, citing 61 personnel complaints by staff of the organization.[20] The Commissioners of the IACHR had unanimously approved the contract extension in January 2020,[20] and expressed their "profound rejection" of Almagro's action "whose refusal to renew this contract breaks with a 20-year practice of respecting the IACHR’s decision to appoint its own Executive Secretary and thus makes it difficult to obtain truth, justice, and reparation for those whose labor rights have been affected." UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet, Human Rights Watch, and the Mexican government have also objected to Abrao's removal.[21][22]

Executive Secretary of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
NameCountryTermNotes
Luis Reque Bolivia 1960 – June 1976
Charles D. Moyer United States January – August 1977 Interim Executive Secretary.
Edmundo Vargas Carreño Chile September 1977 – March 1990
David J. Padilla United States March – June 1990 Interim Executive Secretary.
Edith Márquez Rodríguez Venezuela May 1990 – February 1996
David J. Padilla United States January – May 1996 Interim Executive Secretary.
Jorge Enrique Taiana Argentina March 1996 – July 2001
Santiago Canton Argentina August 2001 – June 2012
Emilio Alvarez Icaza Mexico August 2012 – August 2016
Paulo Abrão Brazil August 2016 – August 2020
María Claudia Pulido Colombia 17 August 2020 present Acting Executive Secretary.
Source: OAS, Former IACHR Executive Secretaries.

Human rights violations investigated by the Inter-American Commission

References

  1. OAS (1 August 2009). "OAS - Organization of American States: Democracy for peace, security, and development". www.oas.org. Retrieved 30 August 2020.
  2. OAS (1 August 2009). "OAS - Organization of American States: Democracy for peace, security, and development". www.oas.org. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  3. OAS
  4. Morsink, Johannes (1999). The Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Origins, Drafting, and Intent. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 131. ISBN 0-8122-3474-X.
  5. Goldman, Robert K. "History and Action: the Inter-American Human Rights System and the Role of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights." Human Rights Quarterly 31 (2009): 856-887.
  6. OAS (1 August 2009). "OAS - Organization of American States: Democracy for peace, security, and development". www.oas.org. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
  7. "INTRODUCTION" (PDF). Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  8. "Precautionary Measures". Organization of American States. June 2012. Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 20 August 2012.
  9. "Rapporteurship Distribution". www.oas.org. 1 August 2009. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
  10. Rapporteurship on Migrant Workers and their Families
  11. Rapporteurship on the Rights of Women
  12. Rapporteurship on the Rights of the Child
  13. Rapporteurship on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
  14. Rapporteurship on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
  15. Rapporteurship on the Rights of Afro-Descendants and against Racial Discrimination
  16. Rapporteurship on Human Rights Defenders
  17. "Contact the IACHR Press Office". www.oas.org. 1 August 2009. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
  18. "Controversial Inter-American Reforms Process to Continue | Inter Press Service". www.ipsnews.net. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  19. "Chipping at the foundations". 9 June 2012. Retrieved 19 November 2019 via The Economist.
  20. "OAS chief Almagro under fire for removal of top rights official". Buenos Aires Times. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  21. "Luis Almagro reafirma que no renovará a Paulo Abrao en la CIDH". El Espectador. Bogotá, Colombia. 28 August 2020. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  22. "OAS Leader Undermining Rights Body". Human Rights Watch. 27 August 2020. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  23. (in Spanish) La masacre de Trujillo fue escogida por la CNRR como eje de su informe sobre crímenes emblemáticos
  24. "Peru; New Defense Minister takes office". Defense Market Intelligence. 25 July 2012. Archived from the original on 6 November 2013. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  25. "Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (Organization of American States) REPORT Nº 98/03*" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 October 2011.
  26. Malone, Patrick (16 August 2011). "Human rights group questions court ruling". The Pueblo Chieftain.
  27. Michael Haggerson (31 March 2012). "Human rights court agrees to hear Guantanamo detainee case". The Jurist. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2012. The IACHR will investigate whether the US's failure to transfer Ameziane is in compliance with international human rights law.
  28. "Mexico: Expert report on Ayotzinapa disappearances highlights government's incompetence". Amnesty International. 6 September 2015. Retrieved 7 September 2015. A new report by a group of experts from the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights on the investigation of the disappearance of 43 students in Guerrero, Mexico, uncovers the authorities’ utter incompetence and lack of will to find the students and bring those responsible to justice, said Amnesty International.
  29. Cole, Diana Morita (27 September 2018), "Civil Rights Champion — Art Shibayama", Discover Nikkei
  30. Nakagawa, William (13 August 2020), "Rights commission rules in favor of Japanese Latin Americans kidnapped during WWII", Nichi Bei Weekly
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