International Conference on the former Yugoslavia.281 The
ECtHR noted that the exclusion of the applicants from
standing for elections pursued a legitimate aim of
restoring peace which was broadly compatible with the
general objectives of the ECHR as reflected in its
Preamble.282 This was so because at the time of enacting
the impugned constitutional provisions, a very fragile
ceasefire had been achieved on the ground. The
provisions aimed to end a brutal conflict which led to
‘ethnic cleansing’. To ensure peace, it was necessary to
acquire the approval of ‘constituent peoples’. This
explained, though it did not justify, the exclusion of other
communities from standing for elections. However, in light
of recent developments, the maintenance of the system
did not satisfy the requirement of proportionality, based
on the reasons discussed below.
First, the situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina has
significantly developed since the Dayton Peace
Agreement. The state joined NATO’s Partnership for
Peace in 2006, signed and ratified a Stabilization and
Association Agreement with the European Union in 2008,
successfully amended its Constitution in 2009 and
recently has been elected as a member of the UN
Security Council for a two-year term. Furthermore,
preparations are under way for the closure of an
international administration as an enforcement measure
under Chapter VII of the UN Charter. Therefore, the aim of
restoring peace is not as pressing as when the Dayton
Agreement was concluded.
Second, even though the ECHR does not prescribe a
particular electoral system, there exist mechanisms of
power-sharing which do not automatically lead to the total
exclusion of persons belonging to the 23 legally
recognized national minorities or a person who does not
want to identify him or herself as exclusively Bosniak,
Croat or Serb or who refuses to identify him or herself for
whatever reason, as the Opinions of the European
Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice
Commission) illustrate.283 Accordingly, there is the
possibility of achieving the same end by using alternative
means.284 For example, the Venice Commission
commented on several proposals285 which could address
the exclusion of minorities from standing for elections,
including indirect elections for the collective presidency
with the view of moving towards a single president in a
manner which ensured trust beyond the ethnic group to
which he or she belongs.286
Finally, as a member of the Council of Europe and a
candidate for EU membership, Bosnia and Herzegovina
has voluntarily assumed certain obligations. Thus, by
ratifying the ECHR and its Protocols, the state agreed to
meet the relevant standards. Moreover, Bosnia and
Herzegovina committed itself, within one year of its
28
accession, to review (with the assistance of the Venice
Commission) its electoral legislation and revise it where
necessary to comply with the Council of Europe
standards which inter alia include respect for minority
rights. This commitment is reaffirmed in the 2008
Stabilization and Association Agreement with the EU.287
Based on these considerations, the ECtHR concluded
that the applicants’ continued ineligibility to stand for
election to the House of Peoples of Bosnia and
Herzegovina lacked an objective and reasonable
justification and constituted a breach of Article 14 taken
together with Article 3 of Protocol 1. In addition, the
ECtHR found that an identical constitutional precondition
concerning eligibility to stand for elections to the
Presidency violated Article 1 of Protocol 12.
The case advances the right of minorities to political
participation in several respects. First, as discussed in the
section on non-discrimination, Article 1 of Protocol 12
widens the application of the principle of non-discrimination;
in this case it condemned discrimination against minorities
in political participation not only in the elected legislature,
that is, the right protected under Article 3 of Protocol 1, but
also in other bodies, such as the presidency.288
Moreover, the ECtHR granted the state only a narrow
margin of discretion, despite the government’s suggestion
that the ECtHR follow Ždanoka v Latvia in order to
reaffirm the states’ considerable latitude in establishing
electoral systems within their constitutional order and to
distinguish the case from Aziz v Cyprus, because
minorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina have not been
prevented from standing for elections in all bodies.
Furthermore, despite Judge Bonello’s strong criticism,289
the ECtHR was not influenced by historic and political
circumstances leading to the establishment of the current
electoral system in Bosnia and Herzegovina; instead, it
focused on the state’s firm commitments to review its
electoral legislation and guarantee political participation of
minorities in line with Council of Europe standards.
Accordingly, the potential of the principle of nondiscrimination to ensure effective participation of
minorities in the political life of states is becoming
increasingly significant. These developments may bring
the ECtHR’s case law in line with the jurisprudence of
other international and regional quasi-judicial bodies.
Thus, the HRC has been more generous than the ECtHR
in its interpretation of the right to stand for elections by
requiring states to avoid excluding persons who are
otherwise eligible to stand for election by unreasonable or
discriminatory requirements such as descent, or by reason
of political affiliation.290 Likewise, in Legal Resources
Foundation v Zambia 291 the ACHPR was less forgiving of
MINORITY GROUPS AND LITIGATION: A REVIEW OF DEVELOPMENTS IN INTERNATIONAL AND REGIONAL JURISPRUDENCE