In
the Sidiropoulos and others v. Greece judgement of 10 July 1998,
the
European Court of Human Rights found that the refusal to register
the association "Home of Macedonian Culture" in Florina
constituted an interference with the freedom of association as guaranteed
by Article 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Five years
after the decision of the European Court of Human Rights, this association
has still not been registered despite the repeated applications made
by its members (see recent decision 243/19/12/03 of the Florina Single-Member
Court of First Instance one more time negative; the applicants have
applied again to the Appeal Court in Kozani). It seems contradictory
that at a stage where the EU is asking the candidate countries to
fully implement the "Copenhagen criteria", some Member
States do not honour their own legal obligations towards international
treaties.
Is the
Commission informed on the repetitive Greek practice of not complying
with the European Court of Human Rights' judgements? Does the Commission
consider that this kind of situations are incompatible with the principle
of the rule of law which the Contracting States undertook to respect
when they ratified the European Convention on Human Rights?
Is the
Commission intending to ask the Greek state to behave differently,
honouring its obligations and its written assurances that it will
implement the ECHR decision? |