"RELATING TO CERTAIN ASPECTS OF THE LAWS ON THE USE OF LANGUAGES
IN EDUCATION IN BELGIUM" v. BELGIUM (MERITS) JUDGMENT
23
Protocol (P1-1, P1-2, P1-3), for it does no more than prohibit any
discrimination in the enjoyment of these rights and freedoms. Article 14
(art. 14) is not, therefore, either separately or in conjunction with other
Articles of the Convention or the Protocol, the source of any rights not
enshrined in the Convention and the Protocol; equally it does not transform
the negative obligations resulting from these instruments into duties to
provide something. In reality its function is to determine the exact sphere of
Application ratione personae of the rights and freedoms safeguarded.
Consequently, a breach of Article 14 (art. 14) is inconceivable without a
simultaneous violation of an Article protecting a right or freedom unless
that Article imposes positive obligations. However, the Articles invoked by
the Applicants in conjunction with Article 14 - Article 8 (art. 14+8) of the
Convention and Article 2 of the Protocol (art. 14P1-2) - give rise purely to
obligations of non-interference. After the judgment of 9th February 1967,
the Belgian Government completed and slightly modified its argument on
the point in question. In its opinion, the first decisions of the Commission
seemed to indicate that Article 14 (art. 14) "served no practical legal
purpose and that its presence in the Convention was purely psychological in
intention". More recently the Commission has sought to "reconcile two at
first sight incompatible principles, firstly that Article 14 (art. 14) should
serve a practical legal purpose", and secondly that it "relates only to the
rights and freedoms safeguarded". The Belgian Government does not
dispute "the merits" of such an "attempted legal analysis"; however, the
solution adopted by the Commission does not seem to it to "pay sufficient
regard to the second principle". For in its opinion "the practical effect of
Article 14 (art. 14)" is limited to two cases: "where the provisions of the
Convention and Protocol place on the High Contracting Parties positive
obligations, compliance with which necessitates action by the authorities of
these States" (e.g. Article 6 (art. 6) of the Convention and Article 3 of the
Protocol (P1-3)) and where they create "negative or self-executing
obligations" but "exceptionally allow" the States to "derogate from these
obligations in certain circumstances" (e.g. Articles 2-5 of the Convention
(art. 2, art. 3, art. 4, art. 5) and paragraph 2 of Articles 8-11 (art. 8-2, art. 92, art. 10-2, art. 11-2)). This does not hold good in a third situation, that of
an Article which "places on States a mere duty to refrain from action but
contains no general stipulation concerning exceptions or derogations" (e.g.
Article 2 of the Protocol) (P1-2). Article 14 (art. 14) does not apply to
"positive benefits" and "favours" that a State may, without being bound to
do so by the Convention, "grant" in order to "facilitate the exercise" of a
freedom safeguarded by an Article of this kind: to accept the contrary view
is to "turn a negative obligation into a positive one", "in certain
circumstances", an act which is in no way authorised by the Convention and
the Protocol.