Month: July 2008

  • Shipping News

    Shipping News

    On 10 July the Court issued a judgment in the case of Medvedyev and others v. France on the length of legal detention under exceptional circumstances. The case related to the apprehension of the Winner, a cargo ship, by the French authorities on the high

    Continue reading →

  • Ballot Box Judgments

    Ballot Box Judgments

    Voting is not just a contentious issue in Zimbabwe, as several European Court judgments of this week show. The Grand Chamber ruled on Tuesday in the case of Yumak & Sadak v. Turkey that a 10% threshold for parliamentary elections did not violate the Convention

    Continue reading →

  • Red Star Judgment

    Red Star Judgment

    The symbol of the red star was at the core of a dispute on which the European Court of Human Rights decided yesterday. In its judgment in the case of Vajnai v. Hungary it found a violation of the freedom of expression (Art. 10 ECHR).

    Continue reading →

  • Keeping Track of Disappearances

    Keeping Track of Disappearances

    Last week, the European Court handed down judgments in three new disappearance cases, finding amongst others violations of the right to life: Ruslan Umarov v. Russia, Musayeva v. Russia, and Akhiyadova v. Russia. I have earlier commented that the stream of this kind of cases

    Continue reading →

  • What’s in a Name (Again)?

    What’s in a Name (Again)?

    “Names are central elements of self-identification and self-definition.” That is what the Court held in last week’s judgment in the case of Daróczy v. Hungary. The case concerned a widow who was forced to change her name. When she married, in 1950, the applicant adopted

    Continue reading →

  • Eavesdropping confined

    Eavesdropping confined

    Yesterday, the European Court of Human Rights gave an important ruling on the legality of intercepting telephone and email communications in Liberty and others v. the United Kingdom. The applicants, three NGOs from the United Kingdom and Ireland complained about the interception of their communications

    Continue reading →

  • Evidence Obtained Through Violation of Article 3 ECHR

    Evidence Obtained Through Violation of Article 3 ECHR

    In what must have been one of its the most difficult cases, the European Court yesterday ruled in Gäfgen v. Germany. Yesterday’s judgment is the apex of long and highly publicised judicial proceedings. In 2003, the applicant, Magnus Gäfgen, was sentenced to life imprisonment for

    Continue reading →

Subscribe


Further Reading

Earlier posts

2026
2025
2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008