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HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 120. The Republic of Serbia is a party to eight of the nine major international instruments in the field of the protection of human rights: the Republic of Serbia has signed the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families, but has not ratified it, as the... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 121. The Republic of Serbia ratified 37 conventions of the Council of Europe, including the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the Protocols thereto. The Republic of Serbia ratified, in 2013, the Convention on the Prevention and Combating of Violence against Women and Domestic Vi... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The second part of the Constitution of the Republic of Serbia relates to the rights and freedoms of man and minorities. The fundamental principles of human and minority rights include: the direct applicability of guaranteed rights; the Constitution regulates the scope of constitutional guarantees; the Constitution regu... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The human rights and minority rights guaranteed by the Constitution may be limited by law if the Constitution permits such a limitation and for the purposes specified by the Constitution, to the extent necessary to meet the constitutional objective of limiting it in a democratic society. The Constitution specifies that... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 128. The Constitution guarantees the right of everyone to judicial protection in the event of violation or denial of any human or minority rights guaranteed by the Constitution, as well as the right to compensation for the consequences of the violation, and citizens have the right to appeal to international institution... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The Code of Criminal Procedure provides that a claim for compensation for damages arising out of the commission of a criminal offence or unlawful act defined by law as a criminal offence shall be considered at trial at the request of the party concerned, unless this would significantly delay the trial. The claim for co... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The public authorities establish from time to time working groups, formed in the form of think tanks, councils or coordination bodies on a temporary basis, to examine certain matters within their competence and to formulate proposals, opinions and technical explanations.These working groups act as advisory and supervis... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 134. The Ministries of Justice, Public Administration and Local Self-Government, Health, Social and Family Welfare, Education and Home Affairs are also responsible for the promotion and protection of human rights in their areas of competence. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 135. The Office of the Commissioner for Refugees and Migration was established by the Law on Refugees to provide professional and other services in connection with the care, return and integration of refugees and other related administrative tasks. In accordance with the Law on Migration Management and the Law on Asylu... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 137. The Ombudsman for Citizens is independent and autonomous in the performance of the tasks defined by law, which he exercises without interference. 156 The Parliament elects the Ombudsman for Citizens by a majority vote of all deputies, on the proposal of the Constitutional Affairs Committee. 157 The Ombudsman for C... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 139. The Ombudsman for Citizens is assisted by up to four deputies who assist him in carrying out the tasks defined by law, within the limits of the powers delegated to them. In delegating powers to deputies, the Ombudsman for Citizens shall, in particular, give specific instructions for the performance of the tasks wi... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 140. The Ombudsman submits an annual report to Parliament on his work and on the human rights situation, containing information on the activities carried out during the past year; information on the shortcomings in the work of the administrative bodies; recommendations on the improvement of useful practices and regulat... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 141. The Ombudsman acts as a national human rights institution in Serbia and in 2010 obtained the highest accreditation (status "A") issued by the Global Alliance of National Human Rights Institutions (GANHRI), which was renewed in 2015. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 143. The Youth Council is an advisory body of the Ombudsman, which has been in existence for 12 years and consists of 30 children aged 13 to 17, from all over Serbia, elected according to the principles of territorial representation, gender balance and participation of children from vulnerable groups. The funding of th... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 144. The Provincial Ombudsman is an institution established in 2002 in accordance with the decision of the Provincial Assembly on the Provincial Ombudsman. The Provincial Ombudsman is an independent and autonomous body of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina with the task of protecting the rights of citizens and monito... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 145. The Ombudsman is elected and dismissed by the Assembly of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina by a two-thirds majority vote of the total number of deputies. The Ombudsman enters into the matter as a result of complaints from citizens or on his own initiative on the basis of information provided by other sources, ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 147. The Local Self-Government Act provides that local self-government authorities may establish an ombudsman, who may exercise his or her activities independently and shall be empowered to exercise independent control over the rights of citizens and to ascertain any violations thereof where by their acts, decisions or... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 149. The 2009 Law on the Prohibition of Discrimination defines the Commissioner for the Protection of Equality as an independent public body that carries out the tasks entrusted to him by the Law in full independence. Amendments were made to the Law in May 2021, taking into account recommendations from the UN human rig... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 151. The Commissioner for the Protection of Equality is elected by Parliament by a majority vote of all Members, on a proposal from the Constitutional Affairs Committee 171 . The Commissioner is elected for a five-year term, renewable once only 172 . | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 152. The Commissioner submits to Parliament annual reports and special reports on the situation with regard to equality, warns the public of the most frequent, usual and serious cases of discrimination, monitors the implementation of the law, issues opinions on draft laws and regulations concerning the prohibition of d... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 154. The independent public body, the Public Information Commissioner, exercises its powers independently; it was created by the Law on Free Access to Public Interest Information in 2004 to guarantee the exercise of the right of access to public interest information held by public authorities. The Law on the Protection... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 155. The Public Information and Personal Data Protection Commissioner is responsible for ensuring compliance with the obligations of the public authorities under the above-mentioned two laws and for ensuring the application of these laws in accordance with his mandate. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 156. The Parliament elects the Commissioner by a majority vote of all Members of Parliament, on the proposal of the Public Administration Committee. The Commissioner is elected for a non-renewable eight-year term. The Commissioner's seat is in Belgrade, and the Commissioner may establish field offices 174. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 157. The Commissioner shall submit to Parliament an annual report on the measures taken by the authorities pursuant to the Law on Free Access to Public Information and on his action and expenditure. In addition to the annual report, he may send to the National Assembly such other reports as he deems necessary. 175. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 159. The Office of the Prosecutor-General represents the Republic of Serbia before the European Court of Human Rights, in accordance with the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the additional protocols to this Convention. Representation activities are carried out by the ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 164. The Parliament conducts international cooperation in its areas of competence with a view to preserving and developing peace, good-neighbourly relations and equality in cooperation with all countries. The Parliament also conducts parliamentary cooperation with bodies representing other States 182. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The working bodies of the urban assembly are the councils and commissions. The councils are responsible in particular for matters such as monitoring compliance with the provisions of the code of ethics; gender equality; youth; health; population; family and children; ageing and old age; human and minority rights; healt... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The Assembly shall adopt: decisions, programmes, strategies, plans, conclusions, procedures, declarations, resolutions, recommendations and any other relevant act in accordance with the law and the Statute and Rules of Procedure of the Assembly of the City of Belgrade; in addition, it shall adopt authentic interpretati... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The National Academy of Public Administration is the central institution of the system of vocational training of administrative staff, with State status as a public institution responsible for organizing activities of continuing education for adults. Established by the Act on the National Academy of Public Administrati... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 173. The Judicial Academy organizes and provides initial and continuing training for judges and prosecutors and organizes and provides vocational training for judicial and prosecutorial personnel; the Judicial Academy is the only one with competence in this field in the territory of the Republic of Serbia; a special pa... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 175. The catalogue of the continuing vocational training programme for teachers, educators and teaching assistants for the school years 2018/19, 2019/20 and 2020/21 has a total of 32 human rights programmes: 7 programmes focus on improving skills related to civic values, and 24 programmes focus on improving the capacit... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 180. The Government has adopted a strategy to establish a framework conducive to the development of civil society for the period 2022-2030, which sets out the legal and institutional framework necessary for civil society organizations to act independently and without hindrance and to encourage them to participate more ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The Republic of Serbia regularly submits reports to the UN Human Rights Council and participates in the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) process. The country is currently in its third cycle of the UPR, and submitted for the first time in February 2021 to the Human Rights Council a voluntary mid-term report under the thi... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 187. The process of reporting on the implementation of the recommendations of the United Nations and has been significantly facilitated by the establishment of a national mechanism to follow up on the recommendations of the United Nations in the field of human rights, and in response to the recommendation addressed to ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 188. The work of the Council is based on the principles of inclusiveness and transparency; inclusiveness means that, in addition to the executive, representatives of the National Assembly, independent bodies, civil society organizations and other relevant actors are involved in the work of the Council; this work is pub... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 190. The Council has drawn up a specific plan for the implementation of the recommendations of the United Nations, which currently contains 400 recommendations received and accepted from United Nations human rights mechanisms; Serbia has committed itself to their implementation; the plan contains the text of each recom... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 191. The Council also organizes thematic sessions at the initiative of civil society organizations on important issues related to the exercise of human rights in accordance with the international human rights instruments ratified by the Republic of Serbia. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 193. The Republic of Serbia was the subject of three rounds of the UPR (the third on 24 January 2018). The Government of the Republic of Serbia submitted a mid-term report to the Human Rights Council in February 2020. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 194. The fourth periodic report on the implementation of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women was considered on 28 February 2019. The report on priority recommendations Nos. 12a, 26a, 44 and 48g was submitted in April 2021. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 195. The second periodic report on the implementation of the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance was adopted by the Government of the Republic of Serbia on 11 July 2021. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The initial report on the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities was considered at the fifteenth session of the Committee on Persons with Disabilities on 5 and 6 April 2016 in Geneva. The report on the implementation of recommendations Nos. 34 and 54 was adopted by the Government on... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 197. The sixth to ninth periodic reports on the implementation of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination were adopted by the Government on 12 June 2020. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The third periodic report of the Republic of Serbia on the implementation of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment was adopted by the Government of Serbia on 28 March 2019. It was considered on 24 and 25 November 2021. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The third periodic report on the implementation of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights was considered by the Government of Serbia from 21 to 23 February 2022. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 201. The fourth and fifth periodic reports on the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child were adopted by the Government on 19 May 2022.
At the Summit meeting held in September 2015, the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution A/RES/70/1 entitled "Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda f... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The Constitution provides that all are equal before the Constitution and the law, and that everyone has the right to equal legal protection, without discrimination; any direct or indirect discrimination, on any grounds whatsoever, particularly race, sex, national or social origin, birth, religion, political or other op... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The Prohibition of Discrimination Act regulates the general prohibition of discrimination, forms and cases of discrimination, and procedures for protection against discrimination, and also establishes the independent official function of the Commissioner for the Protection of Equality. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 205. The principle of equality, defined in the Law on the Prohibition of Discrimination, guarantees equality and the right to enjoy equal status and equal legal protection, irrespective of the characteristics of the person. Everyone is bound to respect the principle of equality, namely the prohibition of discrimination... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 209. The Penal Code punishes anyone, on the grounds of national or ethnic origin, race or religion, or of the absence of such links, or of political or other differences of belief, sex, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, language, education, social status, social origin, property status or other character... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 212. The anti-discrimination legal framework of the Republic of Serbia consists in part of anti-discrimination provisions contained in a number of laws governing certain aspects of social relations, the rights of national minorities, the rights of persons with disabilities, gender equality, education, social protection... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 213. The Anti-Discrimination Prevention and Protection Strategy 224 and the corresponding action plan were implemented until 2018. The implementation of the Action Plan has been monitored regularly and six quarterly reports have been prepared in total. A Council was formed for the first time with the Government to carr... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 217. The social protection reform, initiated in 2011, aims to establish integrated social protection through the development of services, the plurality of providers, and the improvement of the quality of professional services and services. Efforts are being made in this regard to move from a model based largely on resi... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 218. The social protection regulations define the quality standards of social protection services provided to the population, but there are still disparities in the coverage of these services in the territory of the Republic of Serbia. The registers of social action centres indicate that there were 10,857 children and ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 219. The number of children placed in foster care, or 5,000 children (88 per cent of children placed in foster care), is significantly higher in Serbia than that of children placed in residential care, or 600 children (12 per cent), but the percentage is lower in the case of children with disabilities, representing mor... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 222. The process of accreditation of social welfare service providers, a permanent process that guarantees a uniform quality of service, has led to an increase in the number of permits issued from one year to the next (from 54 in 2014 to 700 at the end of 2021). Individual child support services have been particularly ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 223. The strategy for deinstitutionalization and development of community welfare services for the period 2022-2026 includes measures and activities aimed at realizing the right of users to live in the community through the process of deinstitutionalization and social inclusion. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 225. The Social Welfare Act prohibits the placement of children under three years of age in a social welfare institution, except in the case of special circumstances and where there are particularly justified grounds for doing so, provided that a child under three years of age may not stay in an institution for more th... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 226. The measures adopted to put an end to irregularities in the accommodation of children and young people in social welfare institutions provide that social welfare centres must obtain the opinion of the competent ministry in advance for each case of accommodation of a child under 18 years of age, and if the accommod... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 227. The monitoring of the activities of social welfare centres and other competent institutions in the light of the general norm that children are not placed with social welfare institutions is also carried out through inspection visits and supervision of professional services provided by social welfare centres. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 231. The Pre-school Education and Education Act 227 requires that children with disabilities be enrolled in normal kindergarten classes or in a class suitable for the care of children with very complex disabilities, and that an individualized educational plan be drawn up for children whose education and education requi... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 241. The Coordinating Council for Gender Equality, established by decree in 2014 and headed by the Deputy Prime Minister, undertook a number of key activities during the reporting period to improve the status of women and promote gender equality. The Coordinating Council for Gender Equality, established by the Law on G... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 243. The Women's Parliamentary Network is an informal group to which all members of the Serbian National Assembly, regardless of their political affiliation, can join, if they so wish, in monitoring the implementation of existing legal solutions concerning women's health and education, the fight against violence agains... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 244. The number of gender equality bodies that exist in Serbia at the local level exceeds 100, while some local self-governments have at the same time gender equality bodies and a gender equality officer, and there is a clear political will to ensure the effective functioning of these bodies with the necessary support,... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 245. The adoption, on 20 May 2021, of the Law on Gender Equality 230 has brought about further significant improvements in the legislative and institutional framework in this area; a quota of 40 per cent of women has been imposed for the appointment of permanent delegations to represent the Republic of Serbia in intern... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 248. The country adopted the Strategy to Prevent and Combat Violence against Women and Domestic Violence (2021-2025) 232, which establishes mechanisms to prevent, protect, punish and assist victims of gender-based violence and domestic violence, as well as to monitor and evaluate the strategy. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 250. The Financial Support for Families with Children Act expands the rights of other beneficiaries and relaxes the conditions for their exercise. The right to benefit for the birth of a child and the special care or care provided to a child is | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 252. The Judicial Academy is conducting ongoing training on discrimination and gender-based violence for prosecutors and judges, while the Ministry of Justice, in conjunction with the adoption of the Domestic Violence Prevention Act, has launched a campaign and website entitled "Exclusion of Violence", which breaks dow... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 256. The gender equality index used in the Republic of Serbia is the result of cooperation between the Coordination Council for Gender Equality, the Team for Social Inclusion and Poverty Reduction, the Statistical Office, UN-Women, the Development Initiative Group and the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE). ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 259. The Parliament acts in the field of the protection of the rights of the child through a specific body, the Commission on the Rights of the Child, established in 2010, which at the institutional level confirms Serbia's particular emphasis on the rights of the child. The fact that this commission is always headed by... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 262. The following bodies are also involved in the implementation of activities related to the rights of the child: Council for the Evaluation and Reform of the Activities of the Criminal Procedure and Enforcement Bodies for Juveniles (2009); Council for Persons with Disabilities (2013); Council for the Follow-up to th... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 264. The National Youth Strategy (2015-2025) sets out fundamental principles for the improvement of the social situation of young people and the creation of conditions conducive to the realization of their rights and interests in all fields. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 265. The Strategy for the Prevention and Protection of Violence against Children (2020-2023) 235 is the general instrument by which society intends to provide a sustained and systematic response to violence against children, taking into account the changing problems, risks and threats, and in line with them, through a ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 266. The National Coalition for the Abolition of Child Marriage was formed in 2019 at the initiative of the Coordinating Council for Gender Equality and the UNICEF office in Serbia. Its overall objective is to contribute to ending child marriage in Serbia, particularly among the Roma population, through the targeted an... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 267. The "Reception of newborns" programme provides parents with an electronic service that enables them, from maternity onwards, to declare the birth of the child in the birth register, to register the child's place of residence and to register him/her for health insurance, easily, quickly and without having to go to ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 273. The Republic of Serbia has opted for a humanitarian treatment of the problem of mixed migratory flows, which involves providing assistance to all migrants, regardless of their legal situation. The Republic of Serbia has been exposed to increased pressure from mixed migratory flows in its territory for several year... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The integration programme in the Republic of Serbia, which lasts one year, is aimed at persons who have obtained the right to asylum in the Republic of Serbia; it is a permanent programme; within the framework of integration, the Office of the Commissioner for Refugees and Migration provides persons who have obtained t... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 282. The determination of the Republic of Serbia to achieve permanent solutions for refugees and displaced persons and to ensure their living conditions is reflected in the substantial funds provided for that purpose in the national budget, and at the same time the substantial financial support it received for this pur... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 283. The Office of the Commissioner for Refugees and Migration issues annual instructions on programmes for the integration of refugees, the improvement of the living conditions of displaced persons and the reintegration of returnees under the readmission agreement, including incentives, measures and activities for the... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 285. The Republic of Serbia continues to carry out sub-projects approved under the Regional Housing Programme, which provides for no less than 7,550 housing solutions for refugees, and to date a total of 6,231 housing solutions have been delivered under this programme. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 287. The Office of the Commissioner continues to provide assistance for the voluntary return of refugees to their countries of origin, even if they are limited in number, and to provide support in administrative procedures, transport and reintegration. Each year, the Office provides assistance for the return of a dozen... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 288. The Office of the Commissioner for Refugees and Migration, in cooperation with UNHCR, regularly monitors the situation and needs of displaced persons in Serbia. According to the latest data available, there are currently 15,875 internally displaced households in Serbia with needs (households whose housing problem ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 293. The Institute for the Advancement of Education and Education, at the request of the Labris organization, reviewed the content of school textbooks approved for secondary school in order to verify the existence of discriminatory content related to sexual orientation; seven of the eight textbooks examined had shortco... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 295. The Ministry of Culture and Information allocates substantial funds for the co-financing of projects selected by tender and for individual grants in the field of public information, by supporting projects for television, radio, Internet media, print media and news agencies that contribute to raising public awarene... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 299. The Constitution of the Republic of Serbia provides that members of national minorities may elect their national councils in order to exercise their right to autonomy in the fields of education, culture, information and official use of languages and scripts.
The National Councils of National Minorities are a form ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 303. The Law on Civil Servants of Autonomous Provinces and Local Self-Government 244 , the Law on Amendments to the Law on Public Bodies 245 and the Law on Amendments to the Law on the Civil Service 246 provide the legal basis for the positive measures taken to promote the employment of members of all national minoriti... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 309. The revised Strategy for the Social Inclusion of Roma Men and Women in the Republic of Serbia (2022-2026), which provides for concrete measures and activities to improve the situation of Roma, has been adopted. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 312. The work of the health ombudsmen has produced unprecedented results with regard to the health of Roma men and women. This action has been considered by the European Commission as the most effective measure of public policies for the inclusion of Roma men and women. In 2019, 85 health ombudsmen trained by the publi... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 319. The expulsion of persons living in informal settlements is carried out in accordance with the highest international human rights standards; the Housing and Maintenance of Buildings Act specifies at what time and under what conditions the expulsion procedure can be carried out and what legal protection is granted u... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 320. The Constitution of the Republic of Serbia guarantees the right of everyone to judicial protection in case of violation or denial of any human or minority rights guaranteed by the Constitution, as well as the right to compensation for the consequences of the violation 249. Everyone has the right to equal protectio... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 321. The Criminal Code 251 criminalizes violations of the right to a legal remedy, preventing others from exercising their right to file a petition, to institute a trial, to appeal, to raise an objection or to avail themselves of any other remedy, as well as to submit any other effective communication, which is punisha... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 322. The following ordinary remedies are available in criminal proceedings: the possibility of appealing a first instance judgement; the possibility of appealing a second instance judgment; and a possible appeal against a first instance decision of an administrative court. The party concerned may appeal against the fir... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | The constitutional remedy is a special legal remedy for the protection of human rights. The Constitution of the Republic of Serbia states that a constitutional remedy may be lodged against the specific decisions or acts of State organs or organizations that have received delegation of public authority that violate or d... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 332. The total number of Serb localities in the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija was estimated at 427 in June 1999, compared to only 116 today, which means that there has been a "ethnic cleansing" of 311 Serb localities. The only multi-ethnic city in the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija is the north... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SRB-2022-fr-parsed | 334. The legal insecurity suffered by members of all non-majority groups is measured by the systematic institutional discrimination against Serbs and members of other groups, as international human rights instruments are often misinterpreted or not respected, as well as the rules issued by the UNMIK administration and ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SSD-2020-fr-parsed | 1. The present core document has been prepared in accordance with the general guidelines of the Human Rights Committee on the format and content of periodic reports submitted by States parties. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SSD-2020-fr-parsed | 2. The present document contains information on the legal frameworks for the protection and promotion of human rights in the country and on measures taken to eliminate all forms of discrimination in the enjoyment of civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SSD-2020-fr-parsed | 11. The country ' s main source of income is oil, whose production accounts for almost 90 per cent of gross domestic product; other sources of income are agriculture, trade, fisheries, forestry, tourism, hydroelectric power generation and mining; however, most of these resources are not fully exploited. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SSD-2020-fr-parsed | 14. The capital of South Sudan is Juba. The country operates under a decentralized system of governance, the executive of which is headed by a president. The basic norm is the 2011 Transitional Constitution (as amended), which recognizes the ethnic and cultural diversity of the country (art. 1, para. 4). South Sudan's ... | operative |
HRI-CORE-SSD-2020-fr-parsed | 18. The electoral system is governed by the National Elections Act 2012. Although no elections have taken place since independence, the country has an eight-member national electoral commission, of which only one is a woman. 7 Twenty-eight political parties are registered in the country; only two are headed by a woman. | operative |
HRI-CORE-SSD-2020-fr-parsed | 19. The activities of non-governmental organizations are governed by the Non-Governmental Organizations Act 2016, which is a direct application of article 52 of the Transitional Constitution. This Act provides a regulatory framework for the registration, coordination and monitoring of the activities of non-governmental... | operative |
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