Source: http://www.worldcourts.com/achpr/eng/decisions/2008.05_IHRDA_v_Angola.htm
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 15:10:45+00:00

Document:
1. The complaint is filed by the Institute for Human Rights and Development in Africa (IHRDA) on behalf of Mr. Esmaila Connateh and 13 other Gambians deported from Angola in March, April and May of 2004.
2. The complaint alleges the capricious arrest and deportation, in violation of their human and peoples' rights, of the said Gambians who were alleged to have been legally residing and working in Angola.
3. It is alleged that the government of Angola put into effect the Operaçao Brilhante, a campaign with the objective of expelling foreigners from Angola. Many foreigners were deported from many areas especially those in the diamond mining areas. The complainants, who are of Gambian nationality, alleged that they were arbitrarily arrested, detained and later deported from Angola without any legal protection. It is estimated that 126,247 foreigners were deported from Angola.
4. The complaint further alleges that those expelled were maltreated due to their nationalities and origin, and in the process the Angolan authorities confiscated their official documents, including passports, visas, residence permits, work authorization. In some cases, money was demanded from them, and those who could not afford the money were seriously beaten.
5. The Complainant alleges further that those expelled were detained in detention centres in different areas of Angola including Cafunfu, Kisangili, Saurimo, and Launda, under conditions which were not suitable for human habitation. It is alleged that the detention camps were initially used to house animals and contained a plethora of animal waste. The detainees were faced with harsh conditions such as: no medical attention; lack of food; poor sanitation. For instance, there where there were only 2 buckets of water provided for 500 detainees to use in the bathroom; the bathroom was not separated from the sleeping and eating areas.
6. The complaint further alleges that the Angolan Armed Forces raided villages where the victims resided. They were arrested in their homes as well as on the streets at checkpoints. There was no arrest warrants issued or any reason given for the arrests. Moreover, the victims were not provided access to courts of law in order to challenge the reasons for their arrests.
7. It is further alleged that the victims' property was seized and they were denied to take their property during the alleged deportation. Some of the items that were confiscated from them they left behind, and that were confiscated from them include: television sets, shoes, wristwatches, clothing, generators, television, furniture and cash.
8. According to the complainant, although the victims had work permits and relevant documents to engage in mining activities in Angola, they were arrested on the mere premise that foreigners were not allowed to engage in mining activities in the country.
9. The Complainant alleges violation of Articles 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7(1) (a), 12(4) (5), 14 and 15 of the African Charter on Human and People's Rights.
10. The Complaint was dated 4 October 2004 and received at the Secretariat of the African Commission on 6 October 2004.
11. At its 36th Ordinary Session held in Dakar, Senegal from 2d November to 7 December 2004, the African Commission examined the complaint and decided to be seized thereof.
12. On 23 December 2004, the Secretariat wrote to the Complainant and Respondent State informing them of this decision and requesting them to forward their written submissions on admissibility before the 37th Ordinary Session of the Commission.
13. Similar reminders were sent out to the parties on 2 February and 4 April 2005.
14. On 14 April 2005, the Secretariat received the complainant's written submission on admissibility, which was forwarded to the Respondent State on 23 April 2005.
15. At its 37th Ordinary Session held in Banjul, The Gambia from 27 April to 11 May 2005, the African Commission considered this Communication and deferred its decision on admissibility to the 38th Ordinary Session.
16. On 12 May 2005, the Secretariat wrote to both parties to inform them of this decision and requested the Respondent State to forward its written submissions on admissibility before the 38th Ordinary Session.
17. On 12 September 2005, the Secretariat sent a reminder to the Respondent State.
18. At the 38th Ordinary Session held from the 21 November to 5 December 2005 in Banjul, The Gambia, the African Commission considered the communication and deferred its decision on admissibility to the 39th Ordinary Session to allow the respondent state more time to forward its submissions.
19. On 30 January 2006, the Secretariat wrote to the Complainant informing it of this decision.
20. On 5 February 2006, a similar notification was emailed and also sent by DHL to the Respondent state also requesting it to forward its written submissions on admissibility.
21. At its 39th Ordinary Session, the African Commission considered this communication and declared it admissible.
22. The Secretariat of the African Commission informed the parties of this decision and requested them to forward their submissions on the merits before the 40th Ordinary Session. The Respondent State's delegates were also provided with copies of this decision during the 39th Ordinary Session.
23. On August 21 August 2006, the Secretariat of the African Commission received the submissions of the Complainant on the merits, which was forwarded to the Respondent State.
24. At its 40th Ordinary Session, the African Commission deferred the consideration of the communication on the merits pending the written submission on the same by the Respondent State.
25. A copy of the Complainant's submission on merits was availed to the delegates of the Respondent State at the session.
26. At the request of the Angolan delegates present at the second brainstorming meeting on the African Commission in Maseru, Lesotho in April this year, the Secretariat of the African Commission emailed a copy of the Complainant's written submission on to the Respondent State's embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in May 2007.
27. At its 41st Ordinary Session, the African Commission deferred the consideration of the matter to the 42nd Ordinary Session.
28. On 8 July 2007, the Secretariat of the African Commission notified both parties of this decision.
29. On 11 September 2007, the Secretariat of African Commission wrote to the Respondent State requesting it to forward to the African Commission its written submissions and/or observations on the merits at its earliest convenience.
30. The Respondent State is yet to forward its written submission on the merits.
31. At its 42nd ordinary session, the Commission considered the communication and decided to defer it to its 43 session due to lack of time.
32. By note verbale of 19 December 2007 and letter of the same date, both parties were notified of the Commission's decision.
33. The Complainant submitted its written submissions on the merits. The respondent state, however, failed to respond to the various notifications addressed to it in the context of this Communication.
34. In the face of the state's failure to address itself to the complaint filed against it, the African Commission has no option but to proceed with its consideration of the Communication in accordance with its Rules of Procedure. In Communications 155/1996 -Social and Economic Rights Action Center, Center for Economic and Social Rights / Federal Republic of Nigeria, and 159/1996 Union Inter Africaine des Droits de l'Homme, Federation Internationale des Ligues des Droits de l'Homme, Rencontre Africaine des Droits de l'Homme, Organisation Nationale des Droits de l'Homme au Sénégal and Association Malienne des Droits de l'Homme/Republic of Angola, The African Commission decided that it would proceeded to consider Communications on the basis of the submission of complainants and information at its disposal, even if the State fails to submit.
35. In its submission on admissibility, the Complainant alleges that the Angolan government embarked on a campaign termed Operagao Brilhante, which was characterised by the systematic process of identifying and rounding up of foreigners working and residing in the diamond-mining regions of Angola, resulting in the detention and deportation of the victims. It avers that tens of thousands of non-nationals were deported from Angola, including Mr. Esmaila Connateh and 13 other Gambians on whose behalf the present complaint is filed. Their immediate arrest, and the absence of prior notice being given to them, resulted in the automatic loss of their property. And during the course of the arrests, Angolan authorities confiscated and destroyed the identity documents belonging to the complainants, including their Gambian passports and visas, residence permits and work permits which explicitly authorized the Gambians to live and work in Angola. Physical property was inevitably abandoned with no possibility for the transfer of such to the Gambia and large amounts of money were extorted from the foreigners by the Angolan authorities. The complainant alleges that the victims were detained for several weeks, and some for months in a series of detention centres within Angola, under conditions below acceptable minimum human rights standards. Principles of due process of law and respect for international human rights norms were not respected during the process from arrest to their deportation.
36. The Complainant further avers that the deportees were not given any opportunity to contest or challenge the irregularity and illegality of the detention and expulsion by the Angolan government in a court of law. That they did not have access to legal counsel was provided at any stage before their deportations that no national local remedy was made available to the Gambian nationals at any stage prior to the deportations. It further claims that as a matter of physical impossibility, therefore notes national remedies are no longer available to the Gambians as they are now no longer in the territory of Angola.
37. The African Commission notes that there are no indications in the submissions of the Complainant that warrant a declaration of inadmissibility of the present communication. In terms of Article 56 (5) of the African Charter, however, the African Commission has further examined the assertions of the complainant on the matter as outlined in the preceding paragraphs. Article 56 (5) stipulates that Communications shall be considered only if they "are sent after exhausting local remedies, if any, unless it is obvious that this procedure is unduly prolonged."
38. It is a well-established rule of customary international law that before international proceedings are instituted against a State, the various domestic remedies provided by the State should have been approached. This is also known as the exhaustion of local remedies rule, which is a principle under international law permitting States to solve their internal problems in accordance with their own constitutional procedures before accepted international mechanisms can be invoked.
39. This, however, is not a strict requirement that must always be met. In the present communication, the African Commission notes that there were no domestic remedies available to the deportees as they were rounded up, detained and deported in such a manner that they could not gather their personal belongings or entrust same with friends and relatives for safe keeping, let alone be able to seize the appropriate authorities to challenge the manner of their detention, and subsequent expulsion.
40. Time and again, In Communication 71/1992 - Recontre Africaine pour la Defense des Droits de l'Homme/Republic of Zambia, the African Commission held that the mass expulsions, particularly following arrest and subsequent detentions, deny victims the opportunity to establish the legality of these actions in the courts. In the present case, there is no indication as to whether the deportees were accorded the opportunity to contact their families, much less attorneys, thereby making the requirement of exhausting local remedies impracticable.
41. It is not a contested fact that the Complainants are no longer in Angola the territory where the action arose, and that they are unable to return thereto to seek redress. For purposes of redress. This, in accordance with the Commission's decisions in Communications 87/1993 � Civil Liberties Organisation / Federal Republic of Nigeria and 101/1993 � Civil Liberties Organisation (in respect of the Nigerian Bar Association) / Federal Republic of Nigeria and 215/1998 � Rights International / Federal Republic of Nigeria, constitute constructive exhaustion of domestic remedies per the jurisprudence of the African Commission, and the latter could only but exempt the complainant from this particular requirement. In Communication 159/96 Union Inter Africaine des Droits de l'Homme, Federation Internationale des Ligues des Droits de l'Homme, Rencontre Africaine des Droits de l'Homme, Organisation Nationale des Droits de l'Homme au Sénégal and Association Malienne des Droits de l'Homme/Republic of Angola, the Commission arrived at a similar decision, holding that, it would be impractical to require the complainants to return to Angola for purposes of seeking redress in the national courts.
42. For the above reasons, the African Commission declares this communication admissible.
43. The Complainant prays the African Commission to find the Respondent State in violation of Articles 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7(1)(a), 12(4), 12(5), 14 and 15 of the African Charter as a result of the alleged systematic arrest, detention and subsequent deportation of thousands of foreigners from Angolan territory, including at least 205 Gambian nationals.
44. The African Commission will examine the allegations of the Complainant under each of the provisions of the African Charter alleged to have been violated by the Respondent State.
45. The Complainant alleges that the mass arrest, detention and expulsion of the Gambians from Angola violated their right to equal protection of the law. Equal protection of the law under Article 3 (2) relates to the right of all persons to have the same access to the law and courts and to be treated equally by the law and courts both in procedures and in the substance of the law. It is akin to the right to due process of the law, but in particular, applies to equal treatment as an element of fundamental fairness.
[FN1] 347 U.S 483 (1954).
47. In order for a Complainant to establish a successful claim under Article 3 (2) of the Charter therefore, it must show that, the Respondent State had not given the victims the same treatment it accorded to the others. Or that, the Respondent State had accorded favourable treatment to others in the same position as the victims.
48. In the present Communication, the Commission has examined the evidence submitted by the complainant and is of the view that it (the complainant) has not demonstrated the extent to which the victims in the present communication were treated differently from the other nationals arrested and detained under the same conditions. The Commission thus does not find the Respondent State to have violated Article 3 (2) of the African Charter.
49. Article 5 of the African Charter provides that "every individual shall have the right to the respect of the dignity inherent in a human being and to the recognition of his legal status. All forms of exploitation and degradation of man, particularly slavery, slave trade, torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment and treatment shall be prohibited".
[FN3] See the Commission's decision in Communication 225/1998, Huri-Laws v. Nigeria, para 27.
51. In further corroborating the failure of the Respondent State, the complaint alleges that guards frequently beat the Gambians and extorted money from them. Food was not regularly provided and medical attention was not readily available, despite repeated requests. Complainants were transported between detention centres in overcrowded cargo planes and lorries. The detention centre in Saurimo had no roof or walls and complainants were exposed to the elements of weather for five consecutive days. At the Cafunfu detention centre, bathroom facilities consisted solely of two buckets for over 500 detainees, and these were located in the same one room where all detainees were compelled to eat and sleep. This, for the African Commission, is clearly a violation of Article 5 of the African Charter since such a treatment cannot be called anything but degrading and inhuman.
[FN4] Communication 224/1998 - Media Rights Agenda v. Nigeria, para 71.
[FN5] See the Commission's decision in Communications 48/1990, 50/1991, 52/1991 and 89/1993 - Amnesty International, Comité Loosli Bachelard, Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, Association of Members of the Episcopal Conference of East Africa v. Sudan, para 54.
[FN6] See the Commission's decision in Communication 78/1992 - Krishna Achuthan v. Malawi, 64/92, Amnesty International v. Malawi, para 7.
[FN7] See the Commission's decision in Communication 151/1996 - Civil Liberties Organisation v. Nigeria, para 27. See also, at the international level, the UN Human Rights Committee's views in Communication 253/1987 - Kelly v. Jamaica where it held that respect of the inherent dignity of the human being required provisions of adequate medical care and food and basic sanitation facilities during detention. In Kalenga v. Zambia, the UN Human Rights Committee went further to state that where the complainant was denied access to food and medical assistance during his detention, the detention did not respect the inherent dignity of the human being.
[FN8] See Communication 232/1999 - John D. Ouko v. Kenya, para 24 in which the Commission held that a violation of the Minimum Standards of Treatment in the United Nations Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment effectively constitutes a violation of Article 5 of the Charter.
53. There is nothing from the Respondent State to counter these allegations and the African Commission, thus, is of the view that Angola is in violation of Article 5 of the African Charter.
[FN9] See Media Rights Agenda v. /Nigeria, para 43.
[FN10] See Free Legal Assistance Group, Lawyers' Committee for Human Rights, Union Interafricaine des Droits de l'Homme, Les Témoins de Jehovah v. Zaire, 25/89, 47/90, 56/91, 100/93, para 42.
[FN11] See Organisation Mondiale Contre La Torture and Association Internationale des Juristes Democrates, Commission Internationale des Juristes (C.I.J.), Union Interafricaine des Droits de l'Homme v. Rwanda, 27/89, 46/91, 49/91, 99/93, para 29.
55. In the present case, there is nothing from the Respondent State to indicate that the manner of victims' arrests and subsequent expulsion was not arbitrary as alleged by the complainant. As the complainant puts it, at no point were any of the victims shown a warrant or any other document relating to the charges under which the arrests were being carried out. The African Commission thus finds the Respondent State to have violated Article 6 of the African Charter.
56. Article 7(a) of the African Charter provides that "every individual shall have the right to have his cause heard. This comprises: "the right to an appeal to competent national organs against acts of violating his fundamental rights as recognized and guaranteed by conventions, laws, regulations and customs in force".
57. The complaint alleges that prior to expulsion, the complainants were held in several Angolan detention centres, including Canfunfu, Saurimo and Kisangili. They were held there arbitrarily as they knew of no laws forbidding their residence and work in Angola prior to their arrest, and that during their detention they were afforded no explanations as to their arrest and detention and no the opportunity to speak to a lawyer or go before a judge.
58. The complaint alleges that circumstances of this case made it impossible for complainants to access the Angolan courts or other national organs to question their arrest, detention and deportation. The abrupt manner in which they were arrested, detained and deported denied them of the opportunity to engage a lawyer to take their case to court to challenge the regularity and legality of their arrest, detention and deportation. The African Commission has ruled that every individual has the right to appeal to competent national organs for violations of his/her fundamental rights, and as such, if one is detained without charge or trial [FN12] and there exists no legal remedy to challenge the detention,[FN13] it is a clear violation of Article 7(1)(a).
[FN12] See Communications 143/1995 and 150/1996 - Constitutional Rights Project and Civil Liberties Organisation v. Nigeria, para. 28.
[FN13] See Huri-Laws v. Nigeria, above para. 45.
59. In Communication 71/1992 - RADDHO v. Zambia, where the deportees similarly were denied "the opportunity to seize the Zambian courts to challenge their detention or deportation," the African Commission found this to constitute violation of the deportees' rights under Article 7.[FN14] Similarly, in Communication 159/1996 - UIDH, FIDH, RADDHO, ONDH v. Angola, the African Commission held that the State failed to afford the victims with the "opportunity to challenge the matter before the competent jurisdictions which should have ruled on their detention, as well as on the regularity and legality of the decision to expel them was a violation of Article 7(1) a of the African Charter.
[FN14] See Communication 71/1992 - Rencontre Africaine pour la Defense des Droits de l'Homme v. Zambia, para. 30.
60. The African Commission is thus of the view that, given the facts before it, the Respondent State is thus in violation of Article 7(1) (a) of the African Charter.
61. Article 12 (4) of the African Charter provides that "a non-national legally admitted in a territory of a State Party to the present Charter, may only be expelled from it by virtue of a decision taken in accordance with the law.
62. The complaint alleges that the victims in the present Communication were subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention and subsequent expulsion and were denied due process of law before their expulsion from Angola. Prior to their deportation, complainants were not taken before a court of law to answer any charge concerning their activities and stay in Angola or without a decision or order made in accordance with the applicable laws. It is alleged by the complainants that the victims were legally in the territory of the Respondent State, and when they presented their legal documents to the authorities, they were either confiscated or destroyed. The African Commission finds no contrary submission from the Respondent State to challenge these allegations.
[FN16] The UN Human Rights Committee, ICCPR, A/57/40 vol. I (2002) at para. 76 (13).
65. The African Commission notes that the import of this provision under the African Charter is to ensure that due process is followed before legally admitted non-nationals are expelled from a Member State. Very clearly, the situation as presented by the complainant did not afford those expelled due process of law for protection of the rights that have been alleged to be violated by the Respondent State and that they were not allowed access to the remedies under domestic law to at least challenge, if not reverse, their expulsion. [FN18] The African Commission thus holds the Respondent State in violation of the provisions of Article 12(4) of the African Charter.
[FN18] Communication 232/99 � John Ouko/Kenya.
66. Article 12(5) of the African Charter reads "the mass expulsion of non-nationals shall be prohibited. Mass expulsion shall be that which is aimed at national, racial, ethnic or religious groups".
67. In the present communication, the Complainant alleges that the group of Gambians was expelled from Angola en masse on May23, 2004.[FN19] In addition to the 217 Gambians, tens of thousands of other non-nationals have been expelled from Angola in the same year. The complaint further alleges that the Angolan government itself reported that 126,247 foreigners had been repatriated as of 14 May 2004. It quotes a United Nations estimate that 3,500 of this number originate from West Africa, with much of the remainder coming from the Democratic Republic of Congo.[FN20] It adds that nationals from many different countries have been affected, including individuals from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Guinea Conakry, Mali, Mauritania, Côte d'Ivoire, Senegal and Sierra Leone. These expulsions were hastily carried out, permitting little in the way of advance planning and coordination of resettlement assistance for those expelled.[FN21] It claims that the number, coupled with the subsequent expulsions under such conditions constitute mass expulsions under Article 12(5) of the African Charter.
[FN19] See, for instance, Ebrima JT Kubaji, 217 Gambians Deported from Angola, The Daily Observer, 24 May 2004 at 24; Lugard WE Osayande, Consular meets deportees, The Daily Observer, 27 May 2003 at 24 (both available at http://www.observer.gm).
[FN20] Angola - Guinea: Deported Guineans complain of ill treatment, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 11 Jun. 2004 at http://www.irinnews.org/print.asp?ReportID=41644.
[FN21] Humanitarian Situation in Angola Monthly Analysis Apr 2004, The United Nations Office of Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 30 Apr. 2004 at http://www.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/6686f45896f15dbc852567ae00530132/41292ac0a994 c0eb85256e9a00697388?OpenDocument ("Unfortunately, the entire process of this round of �Operação Brilhante' was poorly executed, without respect for the dignity of those involved and rife with abuses, significant human rights abuses.").
[FN22] 159/96 Union Inter Africaine des Droits de l'Homme, Federation Internationale des Ligues des Droits de l'Homme, Rencontre Africaine des Droits de l'Homme, Organisation Nationale des Droits de l'Homme au Sénégal and Association Malienne des Droits de l 'Homme/Angola.
69. The Respondent State has failed to advance any argument to justify its actions. As shown above, the position of the African Commission regarding mass expulsions is clear. And as the complainant avers, "simply because the victims were a part of a larger group of non-nationals, not just Gambians, but also other West and Central Africans, does not negate discrimination on the part of the Respondent State," and that the fact that "so many aliens received the same treatment is tantamount to an admission of a violation of Article 12(5)." Moreover, the fact that the deportees as a group were arrested over a period of several months at different places and may have been served with deportation orders on different dates does not qualify, for purposes of the African Commission, to be sufficient to negate the en masse element of the expulsions.[FN24] The African Commission underscores that any expulsions or deportations must comply with the human rights obligations found in the African Charter. Accordingly, the African Commission finds the Respondent State in violation of Article 12 (5) of the African Charter.
[FN24] Id. at para. 27.
70. The African Charter is not unique in prohibiting mass expulsions. The European Convention on Human Rights provides some protection against expulsion. The Fourth Protocol to the same Convention similarly prohibits collective expulsion of aliens as well as the expulsion of nationals from their own state. Its Seventh Protocol prohibits expulsion of an alien lawfully resident in a state except when a decision to that effect is taken in accordance with law. Here, the person concerned is entitled to submit reasons against the expulsion, have the case reviewed and be represented for these purposes before a competent authority.
71. The complaint alleges that, members of the Angolan Armed Forces raided villages where victims were living and began shooting live ammunition down the street, deliberately targeting items that would explode, such as generators. In the resulting confusion, mass numbers of people were arrested, including some of the complainants. Other complainants were arrested at checkpoints on the street. Violence frequently accompanied these arrests and victims' possessions were confiscated. In several cases, Angolan authorities attempted to extort money from complainants before proceeding to arrest them. Following their arrest, complainants were immediately taken to various detention centres where they were kept until their expulsion from the country.
72. The Complainant alleges that in the course of the arrest, victims' property was confiscated by Angolan authorities, including television sets, shoes, wrist watches and clothing. It further claims that the abruptness of their arrest forced them to leave behind all property in Angola giving them no opportunity to make arrangements regarding the transport or disposal of their belongings.
[FN25] See Huri-Laws / Nigeria, above at para 53.
74. Article 15 of the African Charter provides that: "Every individual shall have the right to work under equitable and satisfactory conditions, and shall receive equal pay for equal work".
75. The Complainant alleges that the victims were in possession of official documents, including passports, visas, work and residence permits, allowing them to stay and work legally in Angola. The victims were required on a monthly basis to pay for their work permits that enabled them to continue working in the mines.
Nevertheless, they were arrested on the grounds that foreigners were not permitted to engage in mining activities in Angola.
76. As indicated above, the Respondent State has regrettably not forwarded any arguments to refute any of the allegations made in this communications including the alleged violation under Article 15 of the African Charter. The facts indicate and the African Commission agrees that the abrupt expulsion without any possibility of due process or recourse to national courts to challenge the Respondent State's actions severely compromised the victims' right to continue working in Angola under equitable and satisfactory conditions. Accordingly, the African Commission holds that the Respondent States actions of arbitrary arrest, detention and subsequent deportation resulted in persons who were lawfully working in Angola losing their jobs in a manner that is in violation of Article 15 of the African Charter.
77. The complaint alleges that the circumstances under which the victims were expelled constitute a violation of Article 2 of the African Charter in that the victims had been living in Angola for varying lengths of time, after having obtained official documentation, including visas, residence and work permits, in order to lawfully reside and work in Angola. Several of the victims were engaged in diamond mining and had paid appropriate sums of money each month to obtain the required licenses. Nevertheless, despite possession of proper documentation, the victims were arrested, detained and expelled, and their property and documentation were confiscated, specifically because they were foreigners.
[FN26] See Communication 241 /2001 - Purohit and Moore / The Gambia, para 49.
79. The facts as presented by the Complainant are not challenged by the Respondent State as the latter has not sent any submission whatsoever. It appears that the victims were targets of a government action which aimed at rounding up and deporting foreigners or non-nationals. Although governments have the right to regulate entry, exit and stay of foreign nationals in their territories, and as the complainant rightly avers that although the African Charter does not bar deportations per se, the African Commission reaffirms its position that "a state's right to expel individuals is not absolute and it is subject to certain restraints," one of those restraints being a bar against discrimination based on national origin. As mentioned above, there is no submission from the Respondent State countering this in that the victims belonged to a larger group which did not consist of only Gambian nationals, but nationals of several foreign countries. However, even if such an argument were to be advanced here, the Commission has previously ruled that "the simultaneous expulsion of nationals of many countries does not negate the charge of discrimination."
[FN27] See, for example, General Recommendation 30 of the UN Committee on the Elimination Racial Discrimination (CERD), HRI/GEN/1/Rev.7/Add.1, at para. 3.
81. Article 1 of the African Charter reads:"the Member States of the Organisation of African Unity, parties to the present Charter shall recognise the rights, duties and freedoms enshrined in the Charter and shall undertake to adopt legislative or other measures to give effect to them".
82. The Complainant alleges that "a violation of any provision of the Charter automatically means a violation of Article 1, so that �If a State party to the Charter fails to recognise the provisions of the same, there is no doubt that it is in violation of this Article."[FN28] The African Commission is of the view that State parties to the African Charter (including the Respondent State) have the obligation of recognising the rights, duties and freedoms enshrined in the Charter, as well as the responsibility of providing an environment in which those rights and freedoms can be enjoyed through the adoption of legislative or other measures that give effect to them.
[FN28] Communications 147/95 and 149/96, Sir Dawda K Jawara v. The Gambia, paragraph 46.
83. The African Commission had held that Article 1 of the African Charter proclaims a fundamental principle that not only do the States Parties recognise the rights, duties and freedoms enshrined in the Charter, they also commit themselves to respect them and to take measures to give effect to them.[FN29] In other words, if a State Party fails to ensure respect of the rights contained in the African Charter, this constitutes a violation of the African Charter even if the State or its agents were not the perpetrators of the violation. The actions of the Respondent State constitute a violation of certain provisions of the Charter and hence in violation of the provisions of Article 1 of the African Charter, since instead of adopting measures to promote and protect human rights, the Respondent Stare pursued a course of action which failed to take into account the various safeguards envisioned by the African Charter.
84. The African Commission wishes to emphasis that there is nothing in the African Charter that requires Member States of the African Union to guarantee for non-nationals an absolute right to enter and/or reside in their territories. This, however, does not in anyway mean that the African Charter gives Member States the free hand to unnecessarily and without due process deal with non-nationals to such an extent that they are denied the basic guarantees enshrined under the African Charter for the benefit of everyone. Member States may deny entry to or withdraw residence permits from non-nationals for various reasons including national security, public policy or public health. Even in such extreme circumstances as expulsion, however, the affected individuals should be allowed to challenge the order/decision to expel them before competent authorities, or have their cases reviewed, and have access to legal counsel, among others. Such procedural safeguards aim at making sure that non-nationals enjoy the equal protection of the law in their country of residence, ensure that their daily lives are not arbitrarily interfered with, and that they are not sent back/deported/expelled to countries or places they are likely to suffer from torture, inhuman or degrading treatment, or death, among others.
For these reasons, the African Commission finds the Respondent State in violation of Articles 1, 2, 5, 6, 7(1)(a), 12(4), 12(5), 14 and 15 of the African Charter, but holds that there wasn't enough evidence to establish a violation of Article 3 of the Charter.
85. In its submission, the Complainant pleads the African Commission to order the Respondent State to remedy the violations enumerated above by way of , including but not limited to, replacing the travel and work documents of the complainants, which were taken from them at the time of their arrest prior to their expulsion; reinstating the victims to works they had been lawfully engaged in and paying compensation to the victims as a result of unlawful mass expulsion; ensuring the restitution of complainants' property forcibly taken from them at the time of their arrest prior to their expulsion, providing for compensation to those complainants physically harmed as a result of their inhumane arrest and detention and clarify and make the necessary changes in its deportation procedures, such that the process from arrest through detention and deportation comply with the provisions of the African Charter on Human and People's Rights.
86. The African Commission recommends that the Respondent State take the necessary measures to redress the violations enumerated in the preceding paragraphs, taking into account its obligations under Article 1 of the African Charter and the exigencies of the situation.
 Establish a Commission of inquiry to investigate the circumstances under which the victims were expelled and ensure the payment of adequate compensation of all those whose rights were violated in the process.
 The African Commission further requests that the Republic of Angola report back to it, at a later stage, measures it has taken to implement the recommendations made in this communication.
Done at the 43rd Ordinary Session in Ezulwini, Kingdom of Swaziland, from 7 - 22 May, 2008.

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