Washington College of Law
Center For Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
RESOLUTION No. 14/86
CASE 9296 (NICARAGUA)
April 16, l986
HAVING SEEN:
- The petition received by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights on April 9,
l984,
according to which:
FELIZ ALBERTO ESTRADA SANDOVAL, 26 years of age, single, a painter
and
resident of Managua, was arrested on February 25, l983 in a combat zone and prisoners who had
been set free in El Chipote have stated that he is under arrest in that prison but there, his arrest
has been repeatedly denied to his family members.
- The transmission of the pertinent parts of that petition to the Government of Nicaragua
in
the note of June 18, l984, requesting it to provide such information as it deemed pertinent, as well
as
any information that would make it possible to ascertain whether, in the case that is the subject
matter
of this request, the remedies of domestic law had been exhausted.
- The communication of January 18, l985, which repeated the request for information of
June
l8, l984.
- The repetition of the request for information made in the note of February 26, l986,
which
informed the Government of Nicaragua that, should such information not be provided within a
period
of thirty days pursuant to Article 42 of the Regulations, the facts reported would be considered to
be
true.
CONSIDERING:
- That so far the Government of Nicaragua has not replied to the request for information
made
by the Commission concerning this case and that, in addition, the requirements of domestic law
have
been exhausted.
- That, by reason of their nature, the facts that are the subject matter of the petition, do
not
permit the application in this case of the friendly settlement procedure.
- That Article 42 of the Regulations of the Commission stipulate the following:
The facts reported in the petition whose pertinent parts have been transmitted to
the
Government of the State in reference shall be presumed to be true if, during the maximum
period set by the Commission under the provisions of Article 34, paragraph 5, the Government
has not provided the pertinent information, as long as other evidence does not lead to a different
conclusion.
- That, in addition to not replying to the repeated requests for information, the
Government
of Nicaragua has so far not allowed a member of the Commission and an official of the Secretariat
to
go to that country to clarify certain aspects relating to this case, pursuant to the provisions of
Article
48.1 d of the American Convention on Human Rights to which Nicaragua is a State
Party.
- That in its observations to Resolution 14/86 the Nicaraguan Government stated that
Mr. Feliz
Alberto Estrada Sandoval has not been detained and there are no restrictions regarding his
freedom of
movement in the country; adding that:
The information supplied by the claimants does not appear to correspond with
reality.
It is relevant to point out to this Honorable Commission that the places where this person was
allegedly detained are zones in which counterrevolutionary bands enter and leave and in which
a climate of danger and movement typical of war zones exists. In such zones, in which the
backwardness is not notorious, there is not even a population census. The above circumstances
impede the rapid gathering of information.
- The observations of the Government are a general response and do not address the
details
of the facts presented by the claimant, for which reason the Commission finds that these
observations
do not cast doubt upon the conclusions to which it arrived in Resolution 14/86.
- That the General Assembly of the Organization of American States declared in
Resolution
666 (XIII-0/83) that "the practice of the forced disappearance of persons in the Americas is an
affront
to the conscience of the hemisphere and constitutes a crime against humanity."
In view whereof:
THE INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS,
RESOLVES:
- To consider true the facts reported in the communication of April 9, l984 concerning
the
arrest and subsequent disappearance of Mr. Feliz Alberto Estrada Sandoval.
- To declare that the Government of Nicaragua has violated the right to personal liberty
(Article 7) and the right to life (Article 4) set forth in the American Convention on Human Rights
to
which Nicaragua is a State Party.
- To recommend to the Government of Nicaragua that it order a thorough investigation
of the
facts reported in order to identify the persons responsible, and prosecute and punish them in
accordance
with the law and that it adopt the necessary measures to prevent repetition of such serious events.
- To confirm Resolution 14/16, include it in its Annual Report to the General Assembly
of the
Organization of American States, in accordance with Article 63, g of the Regulations of
the
Commission, and to communicate it to the claimant.
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