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Aloeboetoe et al. v. Suriname

Inter-American Court of Human Rights.  10 September 1993 .

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

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Abstract

Human rights — Right to life — Right to humane treatment — Right to personal liberty — right to judicial protection — Treaties — American Convention on Human Rights, 1969 — Articles 1, 2, 4, 5, 7 and 25 of the Convention — Massacre in Suriname — Victims members of Saramaca tribe — Republic of Suriname accepting responsibility for violation of human rights

Relationship of international law and municipal law — Obligation to make reparation codified in Article 63(1) of American Convention on Human Rights, 1969 — Applicability of international law to all aspects of reparation — Scope, characteristics and beneficiaries of reparation — Whether such legal obligation subject to modification or suspension by municipal law of respondent State — Relevance of family law of Republic of Suriname — Whether applicable to Saramaca tribe — Determination of victims' successors for reparation purposes — Applicability of general principles of law — Article 38(1) (c) of Statute of International Court of Justice — Relevance of Saramaca custom

Damages — For human rights violations — Obligation to make reparation — Scope of compensation — Actual damages — Moral damages — Right to compensation for damages being transmitted to victims' successors — Determination of successors — Admissibility of claims by dependants — Whether whole Saramaca tribe entitled to moral damages — American Convention on Human Rights, 1969, Article 63(1)

Treaties — Nature of a treaty — Agreement with native American tribe — Whether a treaty — Validity — Jus cogens — Agreement contrary to subsequent norm of jus cogens

Type
Case Report
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2000

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