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 Disappearance of victim in Gambia: ECOWAS Court orders Ghana to release documents to applicant

The ECOWAS Court of Justice last Friday ordered the Republic of Ghana to release to Isaac Mensah documents on investigations into the enforced disappearance of his father and subsequent actions, within four months of the service of the judg­ment.

Justice Edward Amoako Asante, ECOWAS Court Judge Rapporteur, held that Ghana violated the right to information of Isaac Mensah, and ordered the state to provide him with information he requested.

The documents Isaac Mensah demanded included a 2009 UN/ECOWAS Investigation Report, the coroner’s report on bodies evacu­ated to Ghana, and report on dis­bursement of money paid by The Gambia to the affected families, among others.

The court in itsjudgment, dismissed all other claims sought by Isaac Mensah, and the Regis­tered Trustees of African Network Against Extrajudicial Killings and Enforced Disappearances (ANEKED) against the Republic of Ghana concerning the arrest, detention, and disappearance of some West African migrants in The Gambia, in July, 2005.

In the application filed on No­vember 18, 2020, the applicants alleged that Peter Mensah, a Gha­naian, and father of Isaac Mensah, was among some West African mi­grants travelling to Europe through The Gambia, who were arrested by state security agents of The Gambia and killed or disappeared.

The applicants averred that Ghana violated its human rights obligations under the African Charter and the International Cov­enant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) by its failure to thorough­ly investigate the enforced disap­pearance of Peter Mensah in The Gambia, provide effective remedy and grant the applicants access to information relating to the unlaw­ful detention and disappearance of Peter Mensah.

The applicants asked the court to direct the state to conduct an effective investigation into the dis­appearance of Peter Mensah, give copies of past fact-finding reports and other requested documents to the applicants, and pay US$1.5 million as compensation to the first applicant, Isaac Mensah.

In response, the Ghanaian authorities challenged the compe­tence of the ECOWAS Court to hear the matter since the incident occurred in The Gambia, outside the jurisdiction of Ghana.

Ghana also objected the admis­sibility of the application on the grounds that the applicants did not establish their relationship to Peter Mensah, the primary victim of the alleged human rights violations.

Ghana, therefore, asked the court to dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction and inadmissibility.

However, the court declared it had jurisdiction over Isaac Men­sah’s claim relating to violation of the right to information, but declined jurisdiction over alleged violation of the prohibition against enforced disappearance, right to effective remedy and right to truth.

The ECOWAS Court noted that incidents forming the basis of those claims occurred outside the territory of the Republic of Ghana, therefore, the court did not have jurisdiction over them.

The court declared the first ap­plicant’s application relating to the violation of the right to informa­tion was admissible, but he lacked the capacity to sue on behalf of other 23 individuals, claiming to be members of the Mensah family due to lack of authorisation to sue on their behalf.

It also struck out the second applicant, Registered Trustees of African Network Against Extra­judicial Killings and Enforced Disappearances (ANEKED) from the suit for lack of evidence of any mandate to bring the application on behalf of the applicants.

Justice Gberi-BèOuattara and Justice Ricardo Claúdio Monteiro Gonçalves were also on the bench. –GNA

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