August 2005
I. Background
On 29 November 1986, a
unit of the National Army of Suriname surrounded the N’djuka maroon
village of Moiwana and then proceeded to kill at least 39 members
of the community. Many others were wounded and they, together with
the other survivors, were forced to flee through the forest until
they reached safety in French Guiana. For some this was a three
to four day walk carrying wounded family members.
In 1989, the civilian police,
particularly Inspector Herman Gooding, attempted to investigate
the massacre. Two persons were arrested in April 1989, but were
released when a fully armed unit of the Military Police surrounded
the police station and forced the civilian police to hand them over.
One of the detainees was taken to an event at a nearby military
barracks where he was given a hero’s reception. At the same venue,
high ranking military officers declared that the massacre had been
ordered by them and that military operations were not subject to
investigation. Threats were also made against Inspector Gooding.
In August 1990, Inspector Gooding was shot and his body left beside
the road near the office of the then-deputy commander of the Military
police. The officers assisting Inspector Gooding fled the country
and were granted political asylum in The Netherlands.
Despite numerous complaints
and requests for an investigation submitted by the NGO Moiwana ’86,
which acted on behalf of the survivors of the massacre, Suriname failed to initiate an investigation.
In 1993, when presented with evidence of a mass grave at Moiwana
village, the authorities called in a pathologist who, along with
civil and military police, exhumed the remains of five adults and
four children. However, this preliminary investigation was cut short
after government ministers declared that Suriname’s economic problems must take precedence
and that an Amnesty Law, adopted in 1992, precluded any prosecution
of persons involved.
From 1993 until 1997, the
survivors and Moiwana ’86 submitted further requests for investigation,
culminating with initiation of a private prosecution procedure under
the Code of Criminal Procedure in 1996. This was submitted to the
Attorney General and then the President of the Court when the Attorney
General failed to respond. After the Attorney General failed to
respond to two requests from the President of the Court regarding
the case, the President of the Court simply referred the survivors
back to the Attorney General again.
Deciding that it was impossible
to obtain justice in Suriname, the survivors submitted a formal
complaint to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. The
complaint was submitted in July 1997 and requested the Commission’s
assistance to address the human rights violations associated with
the massacre and subsequent denial of justice. The Commission declared
the case admissible in March 2000 and found Suriname in violation of 11 articles of the
American Declaration on the Rights and Duties of Man and the American
Convention on Human Rights in March 2002.
The Commission recommended, among others, that Suriname investigate the massacre, prosecute those responsible and compensate
the survivors and next of kin. It also observed that the massacre
constituted a crime against humanity in violation of international
criminal law.
Suriname responded to the case for the first
time in April 2002 and requested an extension of two months in order
to review the case and the Commission’s recommendations. A further
extension of four months was granted at Suriname’s request in August 2002 and the
survivors were asked by the Commission to provide their views on
whether the case should be submitted to the Inter-American Court
of Human Rights. This was submitted in October 2002 and stated,
should Suriname fail to comply with the Commission’s
recommendations within the allotted time, that it would be both
necessary and appropriate to submit the case to the Inter-American Court. After Suriname failed to provide information about
its compliance with the Commission’s recommendations, the Commission
submitted the case to the Court on 20 December 2002. A hearing was
held at the Court on 9 September 2004 and final written arguments
were submitted in October 2004.
II. Violations
On 15 June 2005, the Inter-American
Court unanimously
ruled that Suriname had violated the human rights of 130 named members of the village
of Moiwana and ordered that Suriname repair the violations. The Court found violations of article 5 (the
right to humane treatment), article 22 (the right to freedom of
movement and residence), article 21 (the right to property), and
articles 8, 25 and 1 (the right to judicial guarantees and protection).
A. Article
5
Article 5(1) of the American Convention provides that “Every person has
the right to have his physical, mental, and moral integrity respected.”
The Court observed that Suriname’s failure to provide justice to the victims had
prevented and continues to prevent the Moiwana community members
from properly honoring their deceased loved ones and has contributed
to their forced separation from their traditional lands; “both situations
compromise the rights enshrined in Article 5 of the Convention.
Furthermore, the personal integrity of the community members has
been undermined as a result of the obstruction of their persistent
efforts to obtain justice for the attack on their village, particularly
in light of the N’djuka emphasis upon punishing offenses in a suitable
manner.”
After analyzing the various impacts on the community and its members, the
Court concluded that “the Moiwana community members have endured
significant emotional, psychological, spiritual and economic hardship
– suffering to a such a degree as to result in the State’s violation
of Article 5(1) of the American Convention, in relation to Article
1(1) of that treaty, to the detriment of said community members.”
B. Article 22
The attack on Moiwana village in 1986 resulted in the destruction of the
village and the forcible eviction of the survivors, who have been
unable to return to rebuild their village and maintain their relationships
with their ancestral lands to this day. The survivors remain internally
displaced in Suriname or continue to live in a refugee camp in French
Guiana. Article 22 of the American Convention establishes that “1.
Every person lawfully in the territory of a State Party has the
right to move about in it, and to reside in it subject to the provisions
of the law. 2. Every person has the right to leave any country freely,
including his own. […] 5. No one can be expelled from the territory
of the state of which he is a national or be deprived of the right
to enter it.”
Concerning article 22, the Court found that “many Moiwana community members
have remained in French Guiana, owing to fears for their safety
and the failure of the State’s criminal investigation [and that]
since their flight from Moiwana Village in 1986, both the refugees
in French Guiana and those who never left Suriname have typically
faced impoverished conditions and lack access to many basic services.” It continued
that “only when justice is obtained for the events of November 29,
1986 may the Moiwana community members: 1) appease the angry spirits
of their deceased family members and purify their traditional land;
and 2) no longer fear that further hostilities will be directed
toward their community. Those two elements, in turn, are indispensable
for their permanent return to Moiwana Village, which many – if not all – of the community members wish to accomplish….”
Finding a violation of article 22, the Court concluded that
the State has failed to both establish conditions,
as well as provide the means, that would allow the Moiwana community
members to return voluntarily, in safety and with dignity, to
their traditional lands, in relation to which they have a special
dependency and attachment – as there is objectively no guarantee
that their human rights, particularly their rights to life and
to personal integrity, will be secure. By not providing such elements
– including, foremost, an effective criminal investigation to
end the reigning impunity for the 1986 attack – Suriname has failed to ensure the rights of the Moiwana
survivors to move freely within the State and to choose their
place of residence. Furthermore, the State has effectively deprived
those community members still exiled in French Guiana of their
rights to enter their country and to remain there.
C. Article 21
Article 21 of the American Convention provides that: “1. Everyone has the
right to the use and enjoyment of his property. The law may subordinate
such use and enjoyment to the interest of society. 2. No one shall
be deprived of his property except upon payment of just compensation,
for reasons of public utility or social interest, and in the cases
and according to the forms established by law.” As discussed above
with regard to article 22, the Court found that Surianme’s failure
to investigate the massacre “has directly prevented the Moiwana
community members from voluntarily returning to live in their traditional
lands. Thus, Suriname has failed to both establish the conditions,
as well as provide the means, that would allow the community members
to live once again in safety and in peace in their ancestral territory….”
In order to assess if this situation also amounted to a violation of the
right to property as guaranteed by article 21 of the American Convention,
the Court determined that it must first assess whether Moiwana village
belonged to the victims. It began by noting
that under contemporary Surinamese law because no formal title had
been issued to Moiwana village that it belonged by default to the
State. However, referring to its prior decisions recognizing indigenous
peoples’ rights to lands and resources, the Court concluded that
although the Moiwana community members are not indigenous to the
region, Moiwana Village was settled by N’djuka clans late in the
19th Century and from that time until the 1986 attack,
“the community members lived in the area in strict adherence to
N’djuka custom.” It further
concluded that
the Moiwana community members, a N’djuka tribal
people, possess an “all-encompassing relationship” to their traditional
lands, and their concept of ownership regarding that territory
is not centered on the individual, but rather on the community
as a whole. Thus, this Court’s holding with regard to indigenous
communities and their communal rights to property under Article
21 of the Convention must also apply to the tribal Moiwana community
members: their traditional occupancy of Moiwana Village and its
surrounding lands – which has been recognized and respected by
neighboring N’djuka clans and indigenous communities over the
years … – should suffice to obtain State recognition of their
ownership. The precise boundaries of that territory, however,
may only be determined after due consultation with said neighboring
communities.
Finally, determining that
Suriname had violated article 21, the Court observed that “the Moiwana community members may be considered
the legitimate owners of their traditional lands; as a consequence,
they have the right to the use and enjoyment of that territory.
The facts demonstrate, nevertheless, that they have been deprived
of this right to the present day as a result of the events of November
1986 and the State’s subsequent failure to investigate those occurrences
adequately.”
D. Article
25 and 8
The Inter-American Court
and Commission have held numerous times that under the American Convention, States “have an
obligation to provide effective judicial remedies to victims of
human rights violations (Article 25) – remedies that must be substantiated
in accordance with the rules of due process of law (Article 8(1))
– all in keeping with the general obligation of such States to guarantee
the free and full exercise of the rights recognized by the Convention
to all persons subject to their jurisdiction (Article 1(1)).”
In the Moiwana case, the
Court looked at a number of issues related to the victims’ right
to judicial protection and guarantees. In doing so, it concluded
that “it has been proven … as well as expressly recognized by Suriname, that State actors were involved in the November 29, 1986 attack that
killed at least 39 defenseless Moiwana Village residents – including
infants, women and the elderly – and wounded many others. Thus,
the facts portray a disturbing scenario of multiple extrajudicial
executions; with respect to such a situation, the Tribunal’s case
law is unmistakable: the State has an ex officio duty to initiate, without delay,
a serious, impartial, and effective investigation.
… Therefore, the Moiwana
community members have the following rights: to have the deaths
and violations to personal integrity occurring in 1986 effectively
investigated by state authorities, to have those responsible for
the unlawful acts prosecuted and appropriately punished, and to
receive compensation for damages and injuries suffered.”
Discussing the attempts
of the survivors to obtain justice and Suriname’s failure to adequately respond
to those attempts, the Court observed that
Suriname’s manifest inactivity in the face of
this case’s extremely serious facts – despite pressures to investigate
the 1986 attack from the alleged victims as well as the State’s
own legislative branch – shows a patent disregard for the principle
of due diligence. Indeed, as recently as the public hearing held
before this Court on September 9, 2004, not even Suriname’s Attorney
General himself could describe with any degree of specificity
the current state of the Moiwana investigation. The Tribunal,
then, shares the assessment of the United Nations Human Rights
Committee, which, in its 2004 Concluding Observations on the human
rights situation in Suriname, stated:
investigations into […] the 1986 Moiwana massacre
remain pending and have not yet produced concrete results. [The
information supplied that the case is] still being investigated
is disturbing, especially given the lapse of time since [its]
occurrence. The Committee further considers that this situation
reflects a lack of effective remedies available to victims of
human rights violations […].
The Court further observes that
there is abundant evidence in the record that attests to the involvement
of Suriname’s military regime in the overt obstruction of justice
in the instant case. Army Commander Desire Bouterse’s forcible
release of Orlando Swedo and his statement forbidding the further
investigation of military operations by the civilian police serve
as irrefutable examples.
The Court then held that
“Suriname’s seriously deficient investigation into the 1986 attack
upon Moiwana Village, its violent obstruction of justice, and the
extended period of time that has transpired without the clarification
of the facts and the punishment of the responsible parties have
defied the standards for access to justice and due process established
in the American Convention,” and therefore, Suriname has violated
articles 25, 8 and 1 of the American Convention.
Finally, the Court stated
that domestic laws, such as the 1992 Amnesty Law or any statute
of limitation may not be invoked to impede the ordered investigation
and prosecution otherwise “the
rights found in the American Convention would be deprived of effective
protection.”
III. Reparations
The Court identified 130 victims in the
Moiwana case and ordered that Suriname make reparations to remedy
the violations discussed above as follows:
A. Investigation and Prosecution
The State shall fulfill
its obligation to investigate the facts of the case, as well as
identify, prosecute, and punish the responsible parties. In particular,
“the State must immediately carry out an effective,
swift investigation and judicial process, leading to the clarification
of the facts, punishment of the responsible parties and appropriate
compensation of the victims. The results of these processes must
be publicly disseminated by the State, so that the Surinamese society
may know the truth regarding the facts of the instant case.”
To comply with it obligations, the State must also
a) remove all obstacles, de facto and de jure, that perpetuate impunity; b) use all means at
its disposal to expedite the investigation and judicial process;
c) sanction, according to the appropriate domestic laws, any public
officials, as well as private individuals, who are found responsible
for having obstructed the criminal investigation into the attack
on Moiwana Village; and d) provide adequate safety guarantees
to the victims, other witnesses, judicial officers, prosecutors,
and other relevant law enforcement officials.
B. Return of Remains
The State shall, as soon as possible, recover
the remains of the Moiwana community members killed during the events
of November 29, 1986, and deliver them to the surviving community
members so that the appropriate rituals may be performed and the
remains interred in a place of the victims’ choosing.
C. Recognition
of Collective Title to Traditional Lands
The State shall adopt legislative,
administrative, and other measures as are necessary to ensure the
property rights of the members of the Moiwana community in relation
to the traditional territories from which they were expelled, and
provide for the members’ use and enjoyment of those territories.
These measures shall include the creation of an effective mechanism
for the delimitation, demarcation and titling of their traditional
territories.
Additionally, Suriname
shall (a) “take these measures with the participation
and informed consent of the victims as expressed through their representatives,
the members of the other Cottica N’djuka villages and the neighboring
indigenous communities, including the community of Alfonsdorp;” and, (b)
“[u]ntil the Moiwana community members’ right to property with respect
to their traditional territories is secured, Suriname shall refrain
from actions – either of State agents or third parties acting with
State acquiescence or tolerance – that would affect the existence,
value, use or enjoyment of the property located in the geographical
area where the Moiwana community members traditionally lived until
the events of November 29, 1986.”
D. Guarantees of Safety for those who Return
The State shall guarantee
the safety of those community members who decide to return to Moiwana
Village. In order to do this, “the State shall send representatives every month
to Moiwana Village during the first year, in order to consult with the Moiwana residents.
If the community members express concern regarding their safety
during those monthly meetings, the State must take appropriate measures
to guarantee their security, which shall be designed in strict consultation
with said community members.” The Court also
noted that “only the community members themselves can decide
when exactly it would be appropriate to return to Moiwana Village.”
E. Community Development Fund
The State shall establish,
as a measure of collective reparations to the community, a community
development fund of US$1.2 million, “which will be directed to health, housing and educational programs for
the Moiwana community members [and] shall be completed within a
period of five years from the date of notification of the present
judgment.” The fund
will be run and administered by an ‘implementation committee’ composed
of one person selected by the victims, one by the government and
one by mutual agreement. If this is not established within six months
of the date of the notification due to failure to agree on the members,
the Court may call the parties for a hearing and order a solution.
F. Public
Apology
The State shall carry out
a public ceremony, whereby Suriname recognizes its international responsibility
and issues an apology. “This public ceremony shall be performed
with the participation of the Gaanman, the leader of the N’djuka people, as well as high-ranking
State authorities, and shall be publicized through the national
media. Furthermore, in consideration of the particular circumstances
of the instant case, the event must also honor the memory of Herman
Gooding, the civilian police official who was murdered due to his
courageous efforts to investigate the events of November 29, 1986.”
G. Construction
of a Memorial
The State shall build a
memorial in a suitable public location. The
memorial’s design and location shall be decided upon in consultation
with the victims’ representatives, and shall be completed within
one year from the date of notification of the judgment.
H. Compensation
for Material Damages
The State shall pay compensation
of US$3,000.00 for material damages to each of the 130 victims because
the “proven facts indicate that the Moiwana community members were
violently forced from their homes and traditional lands into a situation
of ongoing displacement, whether in French Guiana or elsewhere in
Suriname…. Moreover, they have suffered poverty
and deprivation since their flight from Moiwana Village, as their
ability to practice their customary means of subsistence and livelihood
has been drastically limited.”
This compensation must be paid within one year of the notification
of the judgment (15 July 2005).
J. Compensation for Moral Damages
The State shall pay compensation of US$10,000.00
to each victim for moral damages within one year. The Court’s assessment
of moral damages particularly took into account the following factors:
(a) the victims’ inability, despite persistent efforts, to obtain
justice for the attack on their village, especially in light of
the N’djuka emphasis upon punishing offenses in an appropriate manner.
According to the Court, such “long-standing impunity, fostered by
violent State efforts to obstruct justice …, humiliates and infuriates
the community members, as much as it fills them with dread that
that offended spirits will seek revenge upon them…;”
(b) that the victims’ do not know what
has happened to the remains of their loved ones, and, as a result,
they cannot honor and bury them in accordance with fundamental
norms of N’djuka culture, which causes them deep anguish and despair….
Since the various death rituals have not been performed according
to N’djuka tradition, the community members fear “spiritually-caused
illnesses,” which they believe can affect the entire natural lineage
and, if reconciliation is not achieved, will persist through generations;
and
(c) the Moiwana community members’ connection to their ancestral territory
was brusquely severed – dispersing them throughout Suriname< and
French Guiana. Since a N’djuka community’s relationship to its
traditional land is of vital spiritual, cultural and material
importance, their forced displacement has devastated them emotionally,
spiritually, culturally, and economically….
K. Compensation
for Costs
The State shall pay the compensation within one year for the costs incurred
in seeking to resolve the Moiwana case locally and before the inter-American
human rights system in the amount of US$45,000.00.
L. Compliance
The Court will monitor compliance with the judgment and will close the
case only once the State has fully implemented all of the provisions.
Within one year of the date of notification of the judgment, Suriname must provide the Court with a report on the measures
taken to comply with the Court’s orders.
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