Reform of the European Court of Human Rights Debate

Full Debate: Read Full Debate
Department: Ministry of Justice

Reform of the European Court of Human Rights

Lord Clarke of Nottingham Excerpts
Monday 23rd April 2012

(12 years ago)

Written Statements
Read Full debate Read Hansard Text Read Debate Ministerial Extracts
Lord Clarke of Nottingham Portrait The Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice (Mr Kenneth Clarke)
- Hansard - -

My right hon. Friend the Foreign Secretary and I wish to update the House on the Government’s efforts to reform the European Court of Human Rights as part of the UK’s chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe.

The Brighton declaration, the package of reforms to the Court which has been the priority for the UK’s chairmanship, was formally adopted on Friday. This was the culmination of the Brighton conference, where Justice Ministers, Foreign Ministers and senior officials from across the 47 Council of Europe member states met to discuss the UK chairmanship’s package of reforms.

The declaration itself is the result of a process which the UK took over when it assumed the chairmanship in November. The Prime Minister outlined his ambitions for reform of the Court in a speech to the Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly in January. Through the Brighton declaration, we have succeeded in agreeing substantial reforms in each of the areas he set out.

First, we have strengthened subsidiarity and the margin of appreciation by securing agreement to insert these key principles into the convention itself. The member states will amend the admissibility criteria of the convention. And we have sent an unequivocal message from all 47 states to the Court that it should from now on use the existing criteria to ensure that it consistently does not reconsider cases that have already been properly handled by national courts, unless they raise a serious question of interpretation or application of the convention.

Secondly, we have agreed measures to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the Court by cutting the time limit for making applications to the Court from six months to four; giving the Court tools to improve the efficiency with which it processes cases; and amending the convention so that the Court can routinely get rid of trivial cases.

Thirdly, we have secured measures which will ensure that the Court and its judgments are of the highest possible quality by making sure that the main development of case law is only by the Grand Chamber, comprising the Court’s most senior judges; improving procedures to ensure that the judges of the Court are experienced and well-qualified for the job; and making sure that the rules of office allow every judge to serve a full nine-year term on the Court.

Member states also agreed a further process for longer-term reform of the Court.

These represent significant changes to the convention system, which now need to be implemented fully, and the necessary convention amendments drafted and agreed. Gaining the unanimous agreement of 47 countries is no easy task and we are grateful for the constructive negotiations we have held with our European partners.

We expect the effect of the measures in the declaration to be that fewer cases are considered by the Court. Where cases do go to Strasbourg, the Court should be able to focus more on the important cases and do so more quickly. The result is a strengthening of the human rights protection for the 800 million citizens across the Council of Europe.

A copy of the declaration will be placed in the Libraries of both Houses.