CEDAW/C/62/D/53/2013
State party’s additional observations
6.1 On 14 October and 20 December 2013, the State party provided additional
observations reiterating that the communication should be deemed inadmissible
under article 4 (2) (c) of the Optional Protocol for lack of substantiation. The State
party noted the recently adopted views of the Committee in respect of the
extraterritorial application of the Convention, according to which States parties have
the obligation to protect women from being exposed to a real, personal and
foreseeable risk of serious forms of gender-based violence, irrespective of whether
such consequences take place outside the territorial boundaries of the State party
from which the person is being deported. A State party would therefore violate the
Convention if it returned a person to another State where it was foreseeable that
serious gender-based violence would occur. 9 Nevertheless, the State party
considered that, under that jurisprudence, the Convention had an extraterritorial
effect only in exceptional circumstances in which the person to be returned was at
risk of being deprived of his or her right to life or of being exposed to torture and
ill-treatment.
6.2 The State party considered that the facts as presented by the author did not
establish prima facie evidence of her allegations. She had only declared that the
persons behind the attacks that she suffered were probably members of her
husband’s family or her family because of their o bjection to the marriage. However,
no elements substantiated her allegations that the attacks were of such a nature that,
if returned to Pakistan, she would be at risk of persecution, qualifying for protection
under section 7 of the Aliens Act, or that she would be exposed to a real, personal
and foreseeable risk of serious forms of gender-based violence.
6.3 The State party further considered that the communication was inadmissible
under article 4 (2) (b) of the Optional Protocol because it was incompatib le with the
provisions of the Convention. It asserted that the positive duties under article 2 (d)
of the Convention did not encompass an obligation for States parties to refrain from
expelling a person who might be at risk of pain or suffering inflicted b y a private
person, without the consent or acquiescence of the relevant State. The State party
referred to the views of the Committee against Torture according to which torture
must be inflicted by, or at the instigation of, or with the consent or acquiesc ence of a
public official or other person acting in an official capacity. 10 The State party also
referred to the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights, which had
established that a State party could become responsible for acts committed agains t
an alien in his or her country of origin only if he or she was able to demonstrate that
the authorities of the receiving State were not able to obviate the risk by providing
appropriate protection. 11 The State party considered that such condition had not
been fulfilled in the present case because the author had never sought the protection
of the authorities in Pakistan. She had only stated that her neighbours had contacted
the police because she was unable to do so herself and that the police had replied
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9
10
11
8/16
Communication No. 33/2011, M.N.N. v. Denmark, decision of inadmissibility adopted on 15 July
2013, para. 8.10.
See Committee against Torture, communication Nos. 130/1999 and 131/1999, V.X.N. and H.N. v.
Sweden, views adopted on 15 May 2000.
See European Court of Human Rights, communication No. 24573/94, H.L.R. v. France, views
adopted on 22 April 1997, para. 40; communication No. 1948/04, Salah Sheekh v. The
Netherlands, views adopted on 12 December 2006, para. 137; communication No. 25904/07,
N.A. v. the United Kingdom, views adopted on 24 June 2008, para. 110.
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