E/C.12/74/D/70/2018
Right to be heard, best interests of the child and disproportionate impact
12.1 The Committee also notes that, at the time of the eviction order, the author’s children
were 11 months old and 9 years old. The Committee therefore considers it necessary to point
out that, as the best interests of the child or adolescent must be a primary consideration in all
decisions affecting the child or adolescent, the decision-making process must include an
evaluation of the possible impact (positive or negative) of the decision on the child or
adolescent concerned.43 The justification of a decision must show that this right has been
explicitly taken into account.44 States parties must ensure that, in all decisions affecting the
interests of children and adolescents, their best interests are adequately and systematically
assessed.45 This obligation is especially important in the face of enforcement measures, such
as forced evictions, that cause children disproportionate suffering.46
12.2 Accordingly, the Committee notes that, although the eviction was suspended twice,
taking into account the children’s health and schooling, it cannot be concluded from the
rulings of Trial Court No. 8 or the Provincial High Court that the judicial authorities
considered the best interests of the author’s children when ordering the eviction. The
arguments made in those rulings do not show that the courts in question undertook a specific
analysis of how an eviction could affect the author’s children or what the best decision would
be, considering that, pursuant to article 10 (3) of the Covenant, special measures of protection
and assistance should be taken on their behalf.
12.3 The Committee also notes that, in view of the principle of progressive autonomy, the
children should have been heard in the proceedings but were not. The courts also failed to
take into account the author’s situation as a female head of household with two children who
was on a precarious economic footing and the disproportionate impact that the eviction would
have on her and her children as a result of the discrimination faced by women, the lack of
equal opportunities for access to adequate housing and to employment and the share, larger
than that of men, of the caregiving burden that they bear.
Interim measures and eviction of the author
13.1 On 26 October 2018, the Working Group on Communications, acting on behalf of the
Committee, requested the State party to suspend the eviction of the author and her children
while the communication was being considered or, alternatively, to grant them adequate
housing in genuine and effective consultation with the author. Later, on 26 November 2018,
the Committee, in view of the imminence of the eviction, reiterated the request for interim
measures.
13.2 The Committee notes that, according to its jurisprudence, 47 the adoption of interim
measures pursuant to article 5 of the Optional Protocol48 is vital to the Committee’s fulfilment
of the responsibility entrusted to it under the Optional Protocol, as the reason for the existence
of interim measures is, inter alia, to preserve the integrity of the process, thereby ensuring
the effectiveness of the mechanism for protecting Covenant rights when there is a risk of
irreparable damage. 49 Failure to adopt such interim measures is incompatible with the
obligation to respect in good faith the procedure of individual communication established
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
GE.23-20361
Committee on the Rights of the Child, general comment No. 14 (2013) on the right of the child to
have his or her best interests taken as a primary consideration, para. 6 (c).
Ibid.
Ibid., para. 6 (a).
Ibid., general comment No. 21 (2017) on children in street situations, para. 50.
S.S.R. v. Spain (E/C.12/66/D/51/2018), paras. 7.6 and 7.7.
Committee against Torture, Thirugnanasampanthar v. Australia (CAT/C/61/D/614/2014), para. 6.1.
See also, mutatis mutandis, European Court of Human Rights (Grand Chamber), Mamatkulov and
Askarov v. Turkey (applications No. 46827/99 and No. 46951/99), judgment of 4 February 2005,
para. 128 (“Contracting States undertake to refrain from any act or omission that may hinder the
effective exercise of an individual applicant’s right of application. A failure by a Contracting State to
comply with interim measures is to be regarded as preventing the Court from effectively examining
the applicant’s complaint and as hindering the effective exercise of his or her right and, accordingly,
as a violation of article 34 of the European Convention on Human Rights”); and Committee against
Torture, Thirugnanasampanthar v. Australia, para. 6.1.
13