The United Nations Human Rights Treaties



How to Complain About
 Human Rights Treaty Violations


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Jurisprudence

CCPR - Hungary

List of all admissibility decisions

Case NameComm NumberDateOutcome
I.S. v. Hungary389/198909 November 1990Inadmissible
Párkányi v. Hungary410/199022 March 1991Admissible
T.P. v. Hungary496/199230 March 1993Inadmissible
Kulomin v. Hungary521/199216 March 1994Admissible
E. and A.K. v. Hungary520/199207 April 1994Inadmissible
Kalaba v. Hungary735/199707 November 1997Inadmissible
Paladjian v. Hungary1106/200231 March 2004Inadmissible

Information is as of 24 August 2008.

CERD, CCPR, CAT, CEDAW, CMW, Disability Convention and Enforced disappearances Convention have optional complaint mechanisms, whereby an individual may complain to the respective treaty body that his or her rights under the treaty have been violated. The CMW and Enforced disappearances Convention complaint mechanisms are not yet in force.

Included in this section are:

  1. requests made by the treaty body for interim measures
  2. decisions to deal jointly with cases
  3. admissibility decisions (normally decisions determining a complaint is admissible are not issued separately and hence this category involves decisions in which complaints are found to be inadmissible)
  4. final views.

The Human Rights Committee (under CCPR), the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (under CERD), the Committee Against Torture (under CAT) and the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (under CEDAW) also formally follow up on final Views where a violation has been found. This information is included in the section entitled "Follow-up: Jurisprudence".