PART FOUR: DISCRIMINATORY VIOLENCE AND HATE CRIME
At its most severe, discriminatory violence can amount to torture, or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.1119
This is clear on the face of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment, which lists discrimination as a recognized purpose under article 1 (1) of the Convention.1120
Both the Committee against Torture1121 and regional tribunals1122 have ruled on cases that they deemed
sufficiently severe to meet this high standard, including cases involving racially motivated pogroms against
minorities.1123 Discrimination may also form the basis of crimes prohibited under international humanitarian
law and customary international law, such as genocide and crimes against humanity. Given the especially
serious nature of these acts, they are subject to a dedicated international legal regime, which is beyond the
scope of the present guide.1124
RIGHT TO RECOGNITION OF A BIAS MOTIVE IN DISCRIMINATORY VIOLENCE
On 14 November 2013, Salifou Belemvire, originally from Burkina Faso, was the subject of an unprovoked
attack by S.I. while riding on public transport in Chisinau. While Mr. Belemvire was talking on a mobile
telephone, S.I. punched him without warning and proceeded to call him a number of racist epithets.
Formal charges of hooliganism under article 287 (1) of the Criminal Code were subsequently filed against
S.I. Under Moldovan law, “hooliganism” is defined as action carried out without any form of animus
or motivation.
PART FOUR
Mr. Belemvire participated in the investigation and legal proceedings first as a victim and subsequently as
a recognized injured party. Through his legal representative, he endeavoured repeatedly and at multiple
stages of the proceedings to have the prosecutor’s office or courts reclassify the act as one of several crimes
that would explicitly recognize the discriminatory character of the assault. He argued before domestic
tribunals and before the prosecutor’s office that international law required that racially discriminatory
acts be recognized as such. He argued that his right to effective remedy from racial discrimination would
not be respected if the criminal conviction did not recognize explicitly that the assault he had suffered had
been motivated by racial animus. He further argued, citing regional and international law, that violent
racist acts were “particularly invidious” and thus that it was particularly important for society that the
discriminatory character of the assault he had suffered be explicitly recognized. These arguments were
systematically disregarded by courts and the prosecutor’s office, with the effect that the prosecution
continued proceedings under article 287 (1).
On 22 October 2014, the Supreme Court of Justice of the Republic of Moldova rendered the final
domestic judgment upholding the lower court’s conviction of S.I. and his sentence of 18 months of
imprisonment.
Mr. Belemvire then submitted a complaint to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination,
in which he contended that the Moldovan authorities had violated a number of his rights under the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, by refusing to classify
the crime in a manner that would recognize its discriminatory character.
Ruling on the case, the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination held that article 6 of
the relevant Convention on the right to an effective remedy had been violated. The Committee held that
the investigation into the crime as conducted by the State party was incomplete without considering the
discriminatory motive of the defendant: “The State party should have included that aspect of the crime,
1119
See, for instance, Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, general recommendation No. 35 (2017), para. 16.
1120
For further discussion on this point, see Equal Rights Trust, Shouting Through the Walls: Discriminatory Torture and Ill-Treatment – Case
Studies from Jordan (London, 2017), pp. 9–27.
1121
Committee against Torture, Calfunao Paillalef v. Switzerland (CAT/C/68/D/882/2018), paras. 8.3–8.4 and 8.10.
1122
European Court of Human Rights, Aghdgomelashvili and Japaridze v. Georgia, Application No. 7224/11, Judgment, 8 October 2020,
paras. 35 and 42–50; Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Azul Rojas Marín et al. v. Peru, Judgment, 12 March 2020, paras. 163–167;
and African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, general comment No. 4 (2017), para. 13.
1123
Committee against Torture, Hajrizi Dzemajl et al. v. Yugoslavia (CAT/C/29/D/161/2000); and European Court of Human Rights,
Moldovan and others v. Romania, Application Nos. 41138/98 and 64320/01, Judgment No. 2, 12 July 2005.
1124
United Nations Office on Genocide Prevention and the Responsibility to Protect, “Publications and resources”. Available at www.un.org/
en/genocideprevention/publications-and-resources.shtml.
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