Abstract

The emergence of regional human rights systems depicts one of the greatest achievements in the internationalization of human rights. The foundation of the charter paved the way for the birth of the court thereafter. The African Court is established by virtue of the 1998 protocol to the Charter and the court is built upon an arsenal of protective and remedial techniques. The establishment of the court has reset the stage and created a new platform for the protection of human rights in Africa. The cardinal objective of the paper is to investigate the role of African Court on human and Peoples’ rights protection in Libya Crises taking the case of Saif Al Islam Gaddafi. The paper has utilized qualitative methodology. The government of Libya responded with brutal force against civilian protesters in contravention of international human rights and humanitarian law. The security force of the government of Libya killed many protesters as well. This situation intensified human rights violations and enforced many of the peoples to displace. The court issued an important ruling in March 2011, ordering provisional measures against Libya in the armed conflict in its territory. Libya government denied the claims of human rights violations in its territory and showed its willingness to subject itself to criminal investigations by the Court if necessary. The issue of the fund, independence, commitment and competence of judges to interpret mandate and jurisdiction, the willingness of the states to support and to abide by court decisions, and powers of the concerned body to enforce court decisions hampered the court from being effective. Generally, African States act in good faith with respect to the decisions of the African Human Rights Court, the court becomes more import.

Highlights

  • The emergence of regional human rights systems depicts one of the greatest achievements in the internationalization of human rights [1]

  • Unless African States act in good faith with respect to the decisions of the African Human Rights Court, the court becomes no more significant

  • The African Court is established by virtue of the 1998 protocol to the Charter and the court is built upon an arsenal of protective and remedial techniques

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Summary

Introduction

The emergence of regional human rights systems depicts one of the greatest achievements in the internationalization of human rights [1]. Since the establishment of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, norms and institutions for the protection and promotion of human rights grown-up steadily. The African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights (hereinafter- the court) was established by 1998 protocol to the Africa Charter on Human and Peoples Rights (hereinafter-the protocol) and entered in to force since 2004 [6; 7; 4; 8]. The court is in operation and performed different tasks on the issues of human rights The purpose of this piece of paper is to examine the role of the court in the promotion and protection of human rights with particular reference to the 2011 Libyan Crises and the case of Saif Al Islam. The Libyan crises and Saif Al Islam’s cases is intentionally chosen to demonstrate how the institution is loose and remains ineffective on the issues of African human rights politics

African court on human and peoples rights
Conclusion
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