and territorial situation and in accordance with the domestic legislation of the
State."
The fact that this provision is not an operative rule of international law but a mere
proposal to which reference is nevertheless made in other international treaties creates
a special situation that makes the task of interpreting this text a difficult one. The
Commission feels that in this instance account should be taken not only of the ordinary
meaning of the terms used but also of the relevant travaux préparatoires, the other work
carried out within the Council of Europe with regard to the protection of national
minorities, the practices of member States as regards the right of the minorities to have
at their disposal local or autonomous authorities, and the attitudes adopted by Council
of Europe member States towards this provision (see, mutatis mutandis Articles 30 and
31 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties of 1969).
All these elements capable of revealing the substance of the right of minorities to
have at their disposal local or autonomous authorities as it may be understood and
applied by European States.
2. Elements to be taken into consideration for the purpose of
interpretating Article 11 in general
a. The travaux préparatoires: the report proposing the adoption of Recommendation
1201 (1993) (WORMS report)
The introductory report by Mr WORMS is not very helpful for the purpose of
interpretating Article 11. It simply indicates that "Articles 10 and 11 deal with rights
which may have political consequences. They have been drafted having in mind the need
to preserve in any case the integrity of the State. Contacts with citizens of another
country shall take place while duly "respecting the territorial integrity of the State". As
regards the status of appropriate local authorities to allow a certain degree of
administrative autonomy of the regions where minorities are in a majority, these
authorities can only be established in accordance with the domestic legislation of the
State".
b. Work carried out in the Council of Europe with regard to the protection of the
rights of minorities
The Venice Commission's proposal for a European Convention for Protection of
Minorities does not contain any right for persons belonging to minorities to have at their
disposal local or autonomous authorities. Article 14 paragraph 1 of the Commission's
proposal provides that "States shall favour the effective participation of minorities in
public affairs, in particular decisions affecting the regions where they live or the matters
affecting them".
In the Vienna Declaration of Heads of State and Government of the member States
of the Council of Europe, of 9 October 1993, it is recognised that the creation of a climate
of tolerance and dialogue is necessary for participation by everyone in public life. An
important contribution to this can be made by local and regional authorities.
The Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities did not
borrow from Article 11 of the Parliamentary Assembly's proposal the idea of granting to
persons belonging to national minorities in the regions where they are a majority "the
right to have at their disposal appropriate local or autonomous authorities or to have a
special status". In this Convention the right to have a special status is in fact replaced by
a provision based partly on the Venice Commission's proposal: Article 15 of the
Framework Convention guarantees the right to effective participation of persons belonging
to national minorities in public affairs affecting them. However, no reference is made to
local authorities. From the stand point of the Framework Convention, participation in
public affairs is above all a question of personal autonomy, not of local autonomy.
Nor has the case-law of the European Convention on Human Rights implied that
some provisions of this Convention could be used for the purpose of claiming a right to a
special status. The European Commission of Human Rights has twice declared that the
Convention does not include any right for national minorities to self-determination (No.
6742/75, DR/3 p. 98, concerning Germans who formerly lived in Czechoslovakia; No.
7230/75, DR/7 p. 109, concerning the population of Surinam). Article 3 of Protocol No. 1
(guaranteeing electoral rights) does not apply to elections to non-legislative bodies such
as municipal councils (No. 10650/83, DR/42, p. 212), nor does it guarantee any right of
national minorities to separate political representation (Nos. 9278/81 and 9415/81,
decision of 3 October 1983, DR/35 p. 30) (See footnote 1).
It follows from the foregoing that international law cannot in principle impose on
States any territorial solutions to the problem of minorities and that States are not in
principle required to introduce any forms of decentralisation for minorities (see also
Article 35 paragraph 2 of the Copenhagen Declaration).
c. The attitude of States towards Article 11
The treaty of 5 April 1995 between Hungary and Croatia refers to
Recommendation 1201, and contracting parties did not make any declaration when
ratifying it.
The treaty of 19 March 1995 between Slovakia and Hungary on good neighbourly
relations and friendly cooperation [Article 15 paragraph 4(b)] refers to Recommendation
1201, but the Government of Slovakia made the following declaration when ratifying it:
"The Government of the Republic of Slovakia declares that at no time did it accept or
enshrine in the treaty any formulation founded on recognition of the principle of collective
rights for minorities or allowing of the creation of autonomous structures on an ethnic
basis."
It seems, lastly, that the inclusion of a reference to Recommendation 1201, in
particular to Article 11, is at the centre of the negotiations concerning a bilateral treaty
between Hungary and Rumania.
States seem in fact to be afraid that the right to have appropriate local or
autonomous administrations, combined with the right to transfrontier contacts (Article
10 of the draft protocol), may promote secessionist tendencies. Even those States which,
while adhering to the principle of unitarity have granted a large degree of regional
autonomy hesitate to accept binding international instruments on the right of minorities
to a certain autonomy. As pointed out by H. KLEBES (See footnote 2), sensitivity towards any autonomy
of national minorities is still too great in many States: there is a fear of cultural autonomy
leading to administrative autonomy, followed by secession.
d. The practices of European States in respect of the rights of minorities to have at
their disposal local or autonomous authorities
In the course of its work, the Commission has already observed the diversity of
legal models of protection of minorities in Europe, a diversity which reflects the
complexity of situations and, hence, the variety of solutions adopted by the different
States to deal with the problem concerned (See footnote 3). The Commission's work and a study of
national systems for protecting minorities do not reveal the existence of any common
practice in the matter of territorial autonomy, even in general terms.
In the Commission's view, the above-mentioned elements indicate:
_ that any attempt to interpret Article 11 of Recommendation 1201 (1993) should be
very cautious; and
_ that, having regard to the present state of international law, a broad approach to
the right of minorities to have local or autonomous authorities at their disposal is
possible only in the presence of a binding instrument of international law, which
is not the case in this instance.
3. Interpretation of Article 11 of Recommendation 1201 (1993)
a. "... the persons belonging to a national minority ..."
Holders of the right provided for in Article 11 are "the persons belonging to a
national minority", not the minorities as such, although, in the Commission's view, despite
this formulation, the right to autonomy is conceivable only as a right exercised in
association with others. Therefore, the right in question does not imply for States either
its acceptance of an organised ethnic entity within their territories, or adherence to the
concept of ethnic pluralism as a component of the people or the nation, a concept which
might affect any unitarity of the State. The presentation of the minority phenomenon in
Article 11 is no different from that in the other provisions of the text proposed in
Recommendation 1201: it is indirect and based on recognition of individual rights, albeit
exercised in association with others (ie. collectively), a point merely mentioned in the
Slovak declaration accompanying the ratification of the neighbourhood treaty with
Hungary. This element should nevertheless be taken into consideration for the purpose
of interpretating the substance of the right provided for in Article 11.
Article 1 gives a definition of the term "national minority". This denotes a group
of persons in a State who: reside in the territory of a State and are citizens thereof;
maintain long-standing firm and lasting ties with that State; display distinctive ethnic,
cultural, religious or linguistic characteristics; are sufficiently representative, although
smaller in number than the rest of the population of that State or of a region of that
State; and are motivated by a concern to preserve together what constitutes their common
identity.
It follows from this definition that the persons to whom the rights included in
Recommendation 1201 are guaranteed are nationals (citizens), of the State, not foreign
migrants. This is further underlined by the fact that only persons belonging to "historical"
minorities (having "long-standing, firm and lasting ties" with the State) can enjoy them.
The expression "long-standing, firm and lasting ties with that State" should be so
interpreted as to include ties with the territory of a State as a component of the latter.
In this way persons belonging to a minority will not lose minority status as a result of the
transfer of the territory to another State or to a new State, and Recommendation 1201
will retain its relevance in the event of such territorial transfer or of State succession -
assuming, of course, that the persons concerned continue to be in a minority.
b. "... in the regions where they are a majority ..."
A minority must constitute a majority in a "region" for Article 11 to be applicable.
However, it is very difficult to define the term "region" in the context of this provision.
In principle, the term should be construed in its geographical, not administrative
or political, sense. But it also has an historical dimension which is not unconnected with
the settlement of various groups in a particular territory.
In fact, States have a large margin of appreciation in defining what they regard
as a "region". However, the designation of a particular territory as a "region" for the
purposes of the application of Article 11 must be done in good faith. In particular, it
should not be aimed at rendering Article 11 inapplicable, nor be arbitrary (see, in this
context, Article 16 of the Framework Convention). On the contrary, if should be based on
objective criteria and have regard to the minority phenomenon. In the course of its own
work, the Commission explicitly stated that it was necessary for States to take into
account the presence of one or more minorities on their soil when dividing the territory
into political or administrative sub-divisions as well as into electoral constituencies
(explanatory report to the Venice Commission's proposal for a European Convention for
the Protection of Minorities, paragraph 42).
The phrase "in a majority" should also be interpreted in the light of the aim
pursued by Article 11. Being allowed to have local or autonomous authorities represents
the most consummate fulfilment of the demands of concentrated minorities within unitary
States; a federal state may in fact go further in this field (see on this point the Venice
Commission Report on the Protection of Minorities in Federal and Regional States) (See footnote 4).
Moreover, the phrase should be understood not as denoting a mere numerical
relationship but as implying that the minority has settled and is concentrated in the
region concerned.
c. "... have the right to have at their disposal appropriate local or autonomous
authorities or to have a special status ..."
Article 11 foresees the right to enjoy a certain autonomy by three means (local
authorities, autonomous authorities and special status), which it does not define.
It can be stated in general terms that the right guaranteed in Article 11 cannot be
interpreted as requiring measures that would fundamentally affect the structure of the
State, eventhough a federal or regional structure allows minorities residing in the
territory of the State to be accorded a degree of autonomy through the grant of a
territorial basis of their own where they can pursue a policy via autonomous institutions.
Nor does Article 11 impose a specific model of local autonomy institutions: the variety of
models in Europe is such that none can be advocated as the one to be adopted by all
States.
The State will therefore have a wide choice of options for discharging its
obligations under Article 11.
* Appropriate local or autonomous administrations
Some important indications of the substance of the right to enjoy a certain
autonomy can be obtained from the European Charter of Local Self-Government. Under
this instrument, local authorities must be capable "of regulating and managing a
substantial share of public affairs under their own responsibility and in the interest of the
local population" (Article 3.1 of the Charter). Moreover, the Charter provides a set of
elements concerning the implications of this "right to regulate and manage a substantial
share of public affairs". Thus:
_ this right shall be exercised by councils or assemblies composed of members freely
elected by secret ballot on the basis of direct equal universal suffrage, and which
may possess executive organs responsible to them (Article 3.2 of the Charter);
_ local authorities must be able to exercise their initiative with regard to any matter
which is not excluded from their competence nor assigned to any other authority,
since public responsibilities shall generally be exercised, in preference, by those
authorities which are closest to the citizen (Articles 4.2 and 4.3 of the Charter);
_ local authorities shall be able to determine their own internal administrative
structures in order to adapt them to local needs and ensure effective management
(Article 6 of the Charter);
_ any administrative supervision of local authorities may only be exercised according
to such procedures and in such cases as are provided for by the constitution or by
statute; this supervision shall aim only at ensuring compliance with the law and
with constitutional principles; it may be exercised with regard to expediency by
higher-level authorities in respect of tasks the execution of which is delegated to
local authorities (Article 8 of the Charter);
_ local authorities shall have the right of recourse to a judicial remedy in order to
secure free exercise of their powers and respect for such principles of local self-government, as are enshrined in the constitution or domestic legislation (Article
11 of the Charter).
These are simply guidelines which should inspire the practice of States when
discharging their obligations under Article 11; they are not actual requirements deriving
from Article 11.
* Special status
The meaning of the term "special status" is, admittedly, somewhat vague; but it
does reflect the desire of the authors of Article 11 to allow States to depart from the
traditional patterns of local government. In this respect the State remains free to
determine what will be the scope of this special status. In the absence of any common
practice capable of specifying the minimum requirements of such status, the scope of the
right to have a special status should be determined by reference to the aims of Article 11
in general and the presumed will of the Council of Europe member States. Some examples
can be found in the special statuses existing in Italy or Spain, without this precluding the
solution of personal autonomy.
In the Commission's opinion, any "special status" should be founded on the will to
enable persons belonging to a minority to participate effectively in decision-making
concerning the regions in which they live or in matters affecting them. The institutions
which make up this special status should be capable of representing the minorities and
ensuring that persons belonging to the minorities:
_ will be consulted whenever the Parties are contemplating legislative or
administrative measures liable to affect them directly;
_ will be involved in the preparation, evaluation and implementation of national and
regional development plans and programmes liable to affect them directly;
_ will effectively participate in the decision-making process and elected bodies at
both national and local level, particularly in the fields of culture, education,
religion, information and social affairs.
These are only minimum requirements. A special status can, of course, go much
further by endowing a region where a minority is in the majority with legislative and
executive power of its own in respect of regional affairs, thus introducing a system akin
to partial federalisation of the State.
d. "... matching the specific historical and territorial situation ..."
The phrase "matching the specific historical and territorial situation" serves a
twofold function:
First, it demands from States to take into account the traditions of the minorities
concerned and their specific needs. In this respect it supplements the adjective
"appropriate" in the same provision.
Secondly, it introduces the possibility of modulating the application of this right
between one State and another and even between one minority and another within the
same State. The application of Article 11 will not, therefore, be uniform but will be
adapted to allow for the great diversity of situations of national minorities. The case-law
of the institutions of the European Convention on Human Rights has succeeded in
striking a balance between the State's discretionary power to evaluate the individual
circumstances of each specific case and the European monitoring required by the
Convention, and it is reasonable to suppose that a similar balance will also be maintained
within the framework of Article 11.
e. "... in accordance with the domestic legislation of the State ..."
First of all, the fact that the local or autonomous authorities and the special status
which minorities should have must be in accordance with the national legislation of the
State sets the limits of this right. It is the State that prescribes the legal framework
within which the right may be exercised, and international protection will be accorded
only as long as the right is exercised legally.
At the same time, however, the above phrase contains a guarantee that a legal
framework will exist for the exercise of the right.
Moreover, according to the established case-law of the institutions of the European
Convention on Human Rights, the discretionary power which the State has in laying down
the legal system concerned is limited by the fact that the system must itself be compatible
with the Convention and its Protocols. In particular, it must not have the effect of robbing
Article 11 of its substance.
4. Article 11 of Recommendation 1201 (1993) in conjunction with Articles 13
and 14 of the same Recommendation
Articles 13 and 14 read as follows:
Article 13
"The exercise of the rights of freedoms listed in this protocol fully applies to the
persons belonging to the majority in the whole of the State but who constitute a
minority in one or several of its regions."
Article 14
"The exercise of the rights and freedoms listed in this protocol are not meant to
restrict the duties and responsibilities of the citizens of the State. However, this
exercise may only be made subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or
penalties as are prescribed by law and necessary in a democratic society in the
interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention
of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals or for the protection of
the rights and freedoms of others."
The possibility of Article 13 being applied in combination with Article 11 of
Recommendation 1201 cannot be precluded.
As for Article 14, it allows the exercise of the rights guaranteed, including the one
referred to in Article 11, to be restricted by measures prescribed by law which are
necessary in a democratic society for aims recognised as legitimate by the Convention,
among which appear national security and territorial integrity. The case-law of the
European Convention on Human Rights concerning the interpretation of paragraphs 2 of
Articles 8-11, in particular the principle of proportionality, comes into the reckoning here.