V.
CONSIDERATION OF COMMUNICATIONS UNDER THE OPTIONAL PROTOCOL
606. Under the Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, individuals who claim that any of their rights enumerated in
the Covenant have been violated and who have exhausted all available domestic
remedies may submit written communications to the Human Rights Committee for
consideration. Of the 112 States that have ratified or acceded to the
Covenant, 66 have accepted the Committee's competence to deal with individual
complaints by becoming parties to the Optional Protocol (see annex I,
sect* C ) . Since the CoTrmittee's last report to the General Assembly, 11
States have ratified or acceded to the Optional Protocol: Angola, Australia,
Benin, Bulgaria, Chile, Cyprus, Estonia, Lithuania, Poland, the Russian
Federation and Seychelles, Ho communication can be examined by the Committee
if it concerns a State party to the Covenant that is not also a party to the
Optional Protocol.
607. Consideration of communications under the Optional Protocol is
confidential and takes place in closed meetings (art. 5 (3) of the Optional
Protocol). All documents pertaining to the work of the Committee under the
Optional Protocol (submissions from the parties and other working documents of
the Committee) are confidential. The texts of final decisions of the
Committee, consisting of views adopted under article 5 (4) of the Optional
Protocol, are however made public. As regards decisions declaring a
communication inadmissible, which are also final, the Committee has decided
that it will normally make these decisions public, substituting initials for
the names of the alleged victim(s) and the author(s).
A.
Progress of work
608. The Committee started its work under the Optional Protocol at its second
session in 1977. Since then, 514 communications concerning 42 States parties
have been registered for consideration by the Committee, including 46 placed
before it at its forty-third to forty-fifth sessions, covered by the present
report.
609. The status of the 514 communications registered for consideration by the
Human Rights Committee so far is as follows;
(a) Concluded by views under article 5, paragraph 4, of the Optional
Protocol: 138;
(b) Declared inadmissible:
155;
<c)
Discontinued or withdrawn:
80;
(d)
Declared admissible, but not yet concluded:
(e)
Pending at the pre-admissibility stage: 92.
49;
610. In addition, the secretariat of the Committee has several hundred
communications on file, in respect of which the authors have been advised that
further information would be needed before their communications could be
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