Additional efforts needed to care for the homeless during the coronavirus epidemic

Date of article: 02/04/2020

Daily News of: 03/04/2020

Country:  Croatia

Author: People's Ombudsman of Croatia

Article language: en

Homeless people are one of the most vulnerable groups in our society, both in regular times and during the coronavirus epidemic. They have a weak immune system, generally do not have a primary care physician or access to information via TV or mobile phone as they do not possess them, and because of their extremely poor financial status and living conditions, they are unable to maintain basic hygiene or follow the recommended preventive measures.

According to the available information, Plan for the accommodation of the homeless people in the Republic of Croatia and Plan for the accommodation of the homeless people in extreme winter conditions for 2019/2020 will be used during the COVID-19 epidemic. It was also suggested that homeless people without the adequate housing or living space during the day be allowed to eat in the soup kitchens, respecting CIPH measures, and they can use the services of examination checkpoints organised in local health centres. Also, in cooperation with the Red Cross City Society, the City of Zagreb provided additional capacities for up to 40 persons at the Kosnica Shelter.

After being informed that a large number of homeless people are still staying in public places and non-residential buildings since the epidemic was proclaimed, Ombudswoman Lora Vidović requested information from the Ministry of Demography, Family, Youth and Social Policy whether additional provisional housing for the homeless, possibly in heated tents or housing containers that were used after the catastrophic floods in 2014, is being planned or is already organised. The same inquiry was also sent to the City of Zagreb and the Red Cross City Society after the strong recent earthquake. She also requested the Ministry of the Interior to inform her about the manner in which it implemented the Decision on the measures of strict restraint of staying on the streets and other public places, as well as the manner in which police officers inform the homeless people about all taken measures, additional accommodation and all other forms of care available to this vulnerable group of citizens during the epidemic.

Living conditions in the open and in earthquake-damaged buildings in public places do not provide sufficient protection for the homeless, nor do they make possible to control the spread of the epidemic among them, which can also reflect on the overall health situation. It is therefore necessary to make additional efforts to take care of this extremely vulnerable group of citizens.

Data on the number of homeless people in Croatia vary, but the Croatian Homeless Network estimates that there are about 2 thousand persons without any roof over their heads, and estimations according to the ETHOS typology, which includes those who have unsafe or inadequate housing, show that this number grows up to 10 thousand.

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Judgement of the Court of Justice of the EU: The hiring out of motor vehicles equipped with radio receivers does not constitute a communication to the public subject to payment of royalties

Date of article: 02/04/2020

Daily News of: 03/04/2020

Country:  EUROPE

Author: Court of Justice of the European Union

Article language: en

Link to the complete press release: https://curia.europa.eu/jcms/upload/docs/application/pdf/2020-04/cp200043en.pdf

Languages: en fr sv

Court of Justice of the European Union

PRESS RELEASE No 43/20

Luxembourg, 2 April 2020
Judgment in Case C-753/18

Föreningen Svenska Tonsättares Internationella Musikbyrå u.p.a. (Stim) and Svenska artisters och musikers intresseorganisation ek. för. (SAMI) v Fleetmanager Sweden AB and Nordisk Biluthyrning AB
 
The hiring out of motor vehicles equipped with radio receivers does not constitute a communication to the public subject to payment of royalties
 
Föreningen Svenska Tonsättares Internationella Musikbyrå u.p.a. (‘Stim’) is the Swedish organisation which collectively manages copyright in music and Svenska artisters och musikers intresseorganisation ek. för. (‘SAMI’) is the Swedish organisation managing the related rights of performers. The companies Fleetmanager Sweden AB (‘Fleetmanager’) and Nordisk Biluthyrning AB (‘NB’) are motor vehicle rental companies established in Sweden. They offer, directly or through intermediaries, hired vehicles equipped with radio receivers, in particular for periods not exceeding 29 days, which is regarded under national law as a short-term hire.
Stim

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Mapping child protection data systems

Date of article: 02/04/2020

Daily News of: 03/04/2020

Country:  EUROPE

Author: European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights

Article language: en

On 31 March, FRA took part in a meeting of the Research Advisory Group on mapping child protection data systems across EU Member States.

With this research Eurochild, in partnership with UNICEF, aims to improve the monitoring and reporting on children without (or at risk of losing) parental care. Participants provided input to the structure, content, concepts and methodology of the planned research.

FRA stressed the opportunities of current EU policy developments such as the EU’s proposed Child Guarantee and new child rights strategy.

FRA’s expert advice is based on its own work on mapping child protection systems and national minimum age requirements, e.g. for care decisions, and its focus on guardianship systems and guidance to protecting child victims of trafficking.

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Las quejas que recibe el Procurador del Común durante el confinamiento

Date of article: 01/04/2020

Daily News of: 03/04/2020

Country:  Spain - Castilla y León

Author: Regional Ombudsman of Castilla y León

Article language: es

01/04/2020
 

Imagen Las quejas que recibe el Procurador del Común durante el confinamiento

El confinamiento ante la rápida propagación de la enfermedad causada por virus SARS-CoV-2 se hace perceptible en todos los ámbitos. Incluido el de las quejas que atiende el Procurador del Común de Castilla y León. Sobre ello habló el titular de la Institución, Tomás Quintana, en la Ventana Castilla y León (Cadena SER).

Escuchar entrevista

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Bombing of the Haiphong harbour in Vietnam. A Polish ship's crew member has been unsuccessfully demanding compensation for almost 50 years

Date of article: 02/04/2020

Daily News of: 03/04/2020

Country:  Poland

Author: Polish Ombudsman

Article language: en

  • The Commissioner received a request to undertake the case of Mr Andrzej, a crew member of the Polish ship MS "Joseph Conrad". The ship was bombed during the attack of the American Air Force on the Haifong harbour in Vietnam in December 1972.
  • As a result of the bombing, several people died and some of the crew members got injured, among them Mr. Andrzej. Although the American authorities declared many times that they would pay compensation to the victims of the attack, the claimant has not received any compensation to this day.
  • The Commissioner undertook the case and decided to ask the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to provide explanations on this matter, in particular on the Ministry's efforts to provide assistance to victims and to recover the promised compensation.

On December 20, 1792, around 4:30 a.m., the US Air Force attacked the Haifong port in Vietnam. At that time a Polish ship MS "Joseph Conrad", whose crew member was Mr. Andrzej Kulesza, was stationed in the harbour. The ship was distinctly marked with Polish flags, and the American side had received the information that some Polish merchant ships were supposed to be located in the port of Haifong during this period.

In response to this incident, the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs urged a US Embassy worker and presented him a protest note stating that "the bombing of the Polish ship constituted an act in flagrant contradiction to accepted standards of international law and the state of Polish-American relations at that time".

The Polish authorities initially asked the U.S. government to provide clarification on the incident, withholding at the same time the the right to seek compensation for those who were affected by the attack. Nevertheless, to this day no decisive measures have been taken to enforce the promised compensation. The victims were only informed about the impossibility of seeking compensation in the U.S. courts due to the prescription of the case.

In the Commissioner's opinion , the claim of the victim demanding payment of compensation is legitimate. The attack on the Polish ship by the American forces constituted a violation of the right to life, under Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and Article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. According to these provisions, the right to life should have an all-arounf effect, and, as a consequence, it is not only necessary for states to refrain from actions leading to the deprivation of life, but also to undertake active measures to increase its protection.

In the present case, a compensation should therefore be envisaged not only in order to indemnify the injured party, but also to publicly acknowledge the responsibility of the State for arbitrary violations of the right to life, even if non-intentional. The absence of such action results in an additional sense of harm and injustice among victims due to an impunity of the State in this regard.

It is the duty of the Polish public authorities to ensure that their citizens who have been affected by the attack are helped to protect their rights. This obligation results from the Article 38 of the Constitution of the Republic of Poland and Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Under these provisions the citizens should be, inter alia, protected against any use of force, which can potentially result in death, and which is not "absolutely necessary" nor legitimate.

Although the provisions of the Convention were not yet binding for Poland at the time of the attack in 1972, in the Commissioner's view, they should be applied in the case due to the doctrine of "continuing violation", i.e. a continuous activity of the State resulting in a persistent infringement of the individual's rights (ECHR judgment in the case Iordache v. Romania). The violation in the case consists in a continuing lack of effective action of Polish authorities and the failure to provide to the victim an effective remedy as referred to in the Article 13 of the Convention.

Due to the jurisdictional immunity of the state in individual civil cases, it is not possible to pursue any compensation from the American authorities before the national courts in Poland, and the only possible way in this regard is provided within on the ground of international law and diplomacy.

In the Commissioner's view, the obligation to proceed to ensure that the rights of the victim are respected is therefore incumbent on other Polish public authorities, in particular the executive, whose responsibilities include international relations activites and consular assistance. Failing to take necessary and appropriate action in this regard may constitute grounds for the civil liability of the Polish State  for "an unlawful act or omission in the exercise of public authority" (Article 417 of the Civil Code).

The Commissioner has decided to address the Parliamentary, Legal, Treaty, Consular, United Nations and Human Rights Affairs Undersecretary of State, Mr Piotr Wawrzyk, to provide detailed explanations of the actions taken so far by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Government of the Republic of Poland to enforce compensation from the United States of America for damage resulting from the 1972 attack by the Air Force on Haifong Airport in Vietnam and to assess the possibility of taking further action at present.

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