derogation Flashcards

1
Q

There is a conflict between human rights and the need to maintain security.
Maintaining security is a public goal that sometimes requires what?

A

interfering with the liberty of individuals

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2
Q

There is an arguable need to balance the goals of human rights and the need to maintain security; for example what could too much emphasis on the interests of individuals result in and what could too much deference to government’s security goals mean?

A

judges overriding government’s legitimate attempts to keep its citizens safe

or that core rights of individuals are undermined

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3
Q

There are circumstances where it should be appropriate to restrict a certain level of application of some rights in extreme circumstances, such as in emergencies, though what did Dworkin in the Guardian argue?

A

that you cannot calculate human rights based on cost

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4
Q

There are circumstances where it should be appropriate to restrict a certain level of application of some rights in extreme circumstances, such as in emergencies, though who argued that you cannot calculate human rights based on cost

A

Dworkin in the Guardian

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5
Q

What are the 2 approaches to managing the conflict between security and human rights?

A

1) uphold rights even if it comes at the cost of security

2) balance between security and rights through proportionality analysis (minimal interference)

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6
Q

Article 15 of the Convention declares that there are some rights which must be upheld in all circumstances, no matter how dire the political situation or state of emergency ; these are known as non derogable rights
what are they?

A

There are 4 ‘absolute’ non-derogable rights (s.2):
1) Article 2, right to life

2) Article 3, the right not to be subjected to torture or inhuman or degrading treatment
3) Article 4(1), the right not to be subjected to forced labour
4) Article 7, the right not to be subjected to retrospective criminal laws or penalties

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7
Q

there are derivable rights with no general proportionality test but can be derogated from in emergencies what are they?

A

article 5 and

article 6

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8
Q

there are qualified derogable rights are subject to a general proportionality test what are these?

A

articles 8 and

articles 11

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9
Q

what is article 2

A

right to life

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10
Q

what is article 3

A

the right not to be subjected to torture or inhuman or degrading treatment

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11
Q

what is article 4(1)

A

the right not to be subjected to forced labour

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12
Q

what is article 7

A

the right not to be subjected to retrospective criminal laws or penalties

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13
Q

“human rights are both fundamental and contestable” and for this reason there is a better approach in establishing a hierarchy of rights to allow security considerations

who said this?

A

andrew ashworth in ‘security, terrrosim and human rights’

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14
Q

who said that A human right should be strong enough to override a simple argument that public safety or the public good would be enhanced if the right were curtailed

A

Raz 1986

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15
Q

what did raz comment in 1986?

A

that A human right should be strong enough to override a simple argument that public safety or the public good would be enhanced if the right were curtailed

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16
Q

what does para 1 Art 15 say?

A

“In time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation any High Contracting Party may take measures derogating from its obligations under this Convention to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of the situation, provided that such measures are not inconsistent with its other obligations under international law”.

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17
Q

What does para 2 Art 15 say?

A

“No derogation from Article 2, except in respect of deaths resulting from lawful acts of war, or from Articles 3, 4 (paragraph 1) and 7 shall be made under this provision”.

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18
Q

Some of these non derogable rights do however have exceptions in extremely defined circumstances such as what?

A

Article 2 (right to life)permits the use of force which is no more than absolutely necessary
• (a) in defence of any person from unlawful violence;
• (b) in order to effect a lawful arrest or to prevent the escape of a person lawfully detained;
• (c) in action lawfully taken for the purpose of quelling a riot or insurrection

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19
Q

What happened in the case of Gafen v Germany which is an example of how a non derogable cannot be breached?

A

The police threatened the man who killed a child and demanded a ransom with considerable suffering.
HELD:
The ECtHR held that the threat of torture was inhuman treatment and constituted a violation of Article 3 as torture, inhuman or degrading treatment cannot be inflicted even in circumstances where the life of an individual is at ris

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20
Q

The police threatened the man who killed a child and demanded a ransom with considerable suffering.
HELD:
The ECtHR held that the threat of torture was inhuman treatment and constituted a violation of Article 3 as torture, inhuman or degrading treatment cannot be inflicted even in circumstances where the life of an individual is at ris

A

What happened in the case of Gafen v Germany which is an example of how a non derogable cannot be breached?

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21
Q

What does para 3 of Article 15 state?

A

that The High Contracting State shall keep the Secretary General of the Council of Europe fully informed of the measures which it has taken

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22
Q

What is Article 17?

A

This Article has been rarely applied by the court and is aimed at the actions of groups, including extreme right wing groups such as Combat 18 or ISIS intended to undermine the Convention rights

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23
Q

What case is Article 17 actually used?

A

Leishideux v France

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24
Q

Leishideux v France is a case whereby Article 17 is actually used
discuss this case

A

A case heard by the ECHR regarding a group justifying pro-Nazi policy which the court ruled could not be allowed to enjoy the protections of Art 10.
HELD: 
the protections in Article 17, the prohibition of abuse of rights, could restrict the right of free speech granted under Art 10

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25
Q

A case heard by the ECHR regarding a group justifying pro-Nazi policy which the court ruled could not be allowed to enjoy the protections of Art 10.
HELD: 
the protections in Article 17, the prohibition of abuse of rights, could restrict the right of free speech granted under Art 10

A

Leishideux v France is a case whereby Article 17 is actually used
discuss this case

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26
Q

what is article 5

A

right to liberty and security

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27
Q

what is article 6

A

right to fair trial

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28
Q

When will article 5 and 6 be derogated from?

A

“[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation”

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29
Q

“[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation” articles 5 and 6 can be derogated.
How must an emergency be defined?

A

within the application of the margin of appreciation doctrine

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30
Q

“[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation” articles 5 and 6 can be derogated.
an emergency must be defined within the application of the margin of appreciation doctrine
What case is this considered in?

A

Lawless v Ireland

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31
Q

“[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation” articles 5 and 6 can be derogated.
an emergency must be defined within the application of the margin of appreciation doctrine
This is considered in Lawless v Ireland
discuss case

A

Lawless was a member of the IRA who was imprisoned in Ireland under a provision subject to a derogation notice. The ECtHR had 2 issues.
1) whether there existed a state of emergency in ireland as defined by Art 15 and if so
2) whether the measures introduced were proportionate to the extingenies of the situation
HELD:
the ECtHR held that the phrase ‘public emergency threatening the life of nation’ when given its natural and customary meaning referred to an exceptional situation of crisis or emergency which affects the whole population and constitutes a threat to the organized life of the community of which the state is composed..’
these conditions were deemed to exist for 3 reasons
1) the existence of a secret army engaged in unconstitutional activities such as violence in the Republic of Ireland
2) the army was operating outside the territory of the State
3) the steady and alarming increase in terrorist activities

32
Q

in lawless v ireland the court found the existence of a public emergency (narrowly in this case) for 3 reasons which met the definition ; what are they?

A

1) the existence of a secret army engaged in unconstitutional activities such as violence in the Republic of Ireland
2) the army was operating outside the territory of the State
3) the steady and alarming increase in terrorist activities

33
Q

under “[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation” articles 5 and 6 can be derogated.
The Greek Case defined a public emergency as having to have 4 characteristics; what are they?

A

1) it must be actual or imminent
2) its effects must involve the whole nation
3) the continuance of the organised life of the community must be threatened
4) The criss or danger must be exceptional

34
Q

under “[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation” articles 5 and 6 can be derogated.
What happened in the case of Ireland v UK

A

Case concerned measures used on suspected members of the IRA
HELD:
“It falls in the first place to each contracting state, with its responsibility for ‘the life of [its] nation’, to determine whether that life is threatened by a ‘public emergency’ and, if so, how far it is necessary to go in attempting to overcome the emergency
By reason of their direct and continuous contact with the pressing needs of the moment, the national authorities are in principle in a better position than the international judge to decide both on the presence of such an emergency and on the nature and scope of derogations necessary to avert it. In this matter, article 15(1) leaves those authorities a wide margin of appreciation”.

35
Q

Case concerned measures used on suspected members of the IRA
HELD:
“It falls in the first place to each contracting state, with its responsibility for ‘the life of [its] nation’, to determine whether that life is threatened by a ‘public emergency’ and, if so, how far it is necessary to go in attempting to overcome the emergency
By reason of their direct and continuous contact with the pressing needs of the moment, the national authorities are in principle in a better position than the international judge to decide both on the presence of such an emergency and on the nature and scope of derogations necessary to avert it. In this matter, article 15(1) leaves those authorities a wide margin of appreciation”.

A

under “[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation” articles 5 and 6 can be derogated.
What happened in the case of Ireland v UK

36
Q

In regards to A v UK under “[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation” articles 5 and 6 can be derogated. What demonstrates that the UK was given a wide margin of appreciation?

A

as even though the UK was the only Contracting State to lodged a derogation in response to the danger of Al’Qaeda, the Court held that it was for each Government as the guardian of their own people’s safety to make an assessment

37
Q

under “[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation” articles 5 and 6 can be derogated.
Strict circumstances
What happened in the case of
A v UK?

A

Case concerned foreign national suspected of terrorist involvement but could not be deported for fear of being tortured; which the UK government did after derogating from the Convention after assurances were given by the home nations that they would not be tortured on return
HELD:
The national authorities are better place than the international judge to decide on the presence of an emergency and the nature and scope of derogations necessary to avert it\
The Court is able to reach a contrary conclusion if it is satisfied that the national court misinterpreted Article 15

38
Q

Case concerned foreign national suspected of terrorist involvement but could not be deported for fear of being tortured; which the UK government did after derogating from the Convention after assurances were given by the home nations that they would not be tortured on return
HELD:
The national authorities are better place than the international judge to decide on the presence of an emergency and the nature and scope of derogations necessary to avert it\
The Court is able to reach a contrary conclusion if it is satisfied that the national court misinterpreted Article 15

A

under “[i]n time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation” articles 5 and 6 can be derogated.
Strict cirucumstances
What happened in the case of
A v UK?

39
Q

Who is responsible for ensuring the observance of the states’ engagements and are empowered to rule that states have gone beyond that required by the extingencies of the crisis

A

the court with the commission

40
Q

the court and commission are responsible for ensuring the observance of the states’ engagements and are empowered to rule that states have gone beyond that required by the extingencies of the crisis

in summary what does this mean?

A

that the domestic margin of appreciation is accompanied by a European supervision

41
Q

what does the doctrine of the margin of appreciation reflect?

A

the subsidiary role of the Court

42
Q

Traditionally wide margins of appreciation are given to what areas? (4)

A

1) emergencies
2) national security
3) matters of public morality
4) no uniform consensus in Europe

43
Q

Under strictly requires by the extingenies of the situation what is the question which must be considered?

A

Are the measures taken strictly required by the exigencies of the situation

44
Q

In which case did the court hold that the UK Government had not exceeded their margin of appreciation by derogating from their obligations under Article 5 to the extent that suspected terrorists were allowed to be held for 7 days without judicial control

A

Brannigan and McBridge

45
Q

Under strictly requires by the extingenies of the situation

What happened in the case of Brannigan and McBridge

A

In which case did the court hold that the UK Government had not exceeded their margin of appreciation by derogating from their obligations under Article 5 to the extent that suspected terrorists were allowed to be held for 7 days without judicial control

46
Q

What is the leading case in regards to strictly requires by the extingenies of the situation

A

Aksoy v Turkey

47
Q

the leading case in regards to strictly requires by the extingenies of the situation is Aksoy v Turkey
discuss case

A

In this case the applicant was detained for 14 days without being brought before a judge
The Government justified this measure by reference to the demands of police investigations with a terrorist organisation receiving outside support
HELD:
The court could not accept it necessary to hold a suspect for 14 days without judicial intervention as it is an exceptionally long period and no reasons were given why the fight against terrorism rendered judicial intervention impractical
It was also held that this left the suspect vulnerable to torture as the Commission considered the Turkish system as having insufficient safeguards to detainees

48
Q

In this case the applicant was detained for 14 days without being brought before a judge
The Government justified this measure by reference to the demands of police investigations with a terrorist organisation receiving outside support
HELD:
The court could not accept it necessary to hold a suspect for 14 days without judicial intervention as it is an exceptionally long period and no reasons were given why the fight against terrorism rendered judicial intervention impractical
It was also held that this left the suspect vulnerable to torture as the Commission considered the Turkish system as having insufficient safeguards to detainees

A

the leading case in regards to strictly requires by the extingenies of the situation is Aksoy v Turkey
discuss case

49
Q

How do the two cases of Branngan v McBridge and AKsoy v Turkey contrast even though both concerned the lengthy detention of terrorists without judicial control?

A

as in ireland the court found that there were effetive safeguards in operation against arbitrary behaviour and a legally enforceable right to consult a solicitor 48 hours after the time of arrest as well as being able to inform a friend of their detention however in Turkey, the applicant was given no access to a lawyer, doctor, relative or friend and left completely at the mercy of those holding him

50
Q

What is the leading case in regards to proportionality and judicial deference in determining an emergency

A

A and Others v UK

Belmarsh Case

51
Q

the leading case in regards to proportionality and judicial deference in determining an emergency is A and others v UK (Belmarsh Case)
discuss case

A

9 defendants, all foreign nationals living in the UK were detained without trial in the Belmarsh prison because of their suspected links to terrorist organisations
WHY?
Following 9/11 the UK Gov concluded there was a public emergency threatening the life of the nation
HELD:
imminent?
AG held that an emergency could be regarded as imminent if an atrocity was credibly threatened by a body such as Al-Qaeda
temporary?
the ECtHR’s reasoning has advanced by emphasising that a state of emergency does not have to be temporary and thus has abolished the very concept that justifies a state of emergency

The HOL declared the relevant legislation incompatible; the government did not prove that the extingenies of the situation warranted such a derogation

52
Q

9 defendants, all foreign nationals living in the UK were detained without trial in the Belmarsh prison because of their suspected links to terrorist organisations
WHY?
Following 9/11 the UK Gov concluded there was a public emergency threatening the life of the nation
HELD:
imminent?
AG held that an emergency could be regarded as imminent if an atrocity was credibly threatened by a body such as Al-Qaeda
temporary?
the ECtHR’s reasoning has advanced by emphasising that a state of emergency does not have to be temporary and thus has abolished the very concept that justifies a state of emergency

The HOL declared the relevant legislation incompatible; the government did not prove that the extingenies of the situation warranted such a derogation

A

the leading case in regards to proportionality and judicial deference in determining an emergency is A and others v UK (Belmarsh Case)
discuss case

53
Q

In regards to the Belmarsh Case, what did David Pannick QC note?

A

that the UK suffered no attack like 9/11 and the US nor any of the 40+ states in the Council of Europe has introduced similar measures
No reason why detention without trial is ‘strictly required’ in the UK alone
the HOL held that the question of proportionality is ultimately a judicial decision

54
Q

The ECHR has provided Contracting States with a wide margin of appreciation in assessing whether the emergency exists and if necessary which steps are necessary as in which 2 cases?

A

Ireland v UK and

brannigan and McBridge v UK

55
Q

The ECHR has provided Contracting States with a wide margin of appreciation in assessing whether the emergency exists and if necessary which steps are necessary as in Ireland v UK and Brannigan and McBridge v UK though what is this accompanied by?

A

European supervision

56
Q

The ECHR has provided Contracting States with a wide margin of appreciation in assessing whether the emergency exists and if necessary which steps are necessary as in Ireland v UK and Brannigan and McBridge v UK though this is accompanied by European supervision. For example what circumstances worked in favour of the derogation in Brannigan and McBridge ?

A

3,000 deaths in Northern Ireland and 40,000 terrorist incidents from 1972-1992

57
Q

which section of article 15 ensures that member states must follow procedural requirements?

A
article 3(3) 
that The High Contracting State shall keep the Secretary General of the Council of Europe fully informed of the measures which it has taken
58
Q

What has A Greene commented has created a permanent state of emergency where so all temporary powers are perpetuated and human rights enroached upon?

A

the events of the 20th and early 21st century particular the aftermath of 9/11

59
Q

briefly what are the two limbs of Art 15 ?

A

that there must exist a threat to the life of the nation and

that measures taken on foot of a declaration of emergency must be proportionate to the exigencies of the situation

60
Q

what is the effect of the fact that The threshold that a phenomenon (emergency) must cross in order to justify a declaration is set extremely low, and the level of scrutiny the ECtHR that applies

A

this renders the first limb of Art 15 merely a procedural hurdle to be crossed rather than an effective line

61
Q

How has the ECtHR’s reasoning in Belmarsh advanced?

A

by emphasizing that a state of emergency does not have to be temporary and in doing so, has abolished the very concept that justifies a state of emergency.

62
Q

the ECtHR’s reasoning in Belmarsh advanced further by emphasizing that a state of emergency does not have to be temporary and in doing so, has abolished the very concept that justifies a state of emergency.
instead what is the duration of the emergency ?

A

it is merely another factor to be taken into account when assessing whether the measures taken on foot of a declaration are proportionate to the exigencies of the situation.

63
Q

emergency does not describe a specific phenomenon, instead it is an umbrella term; thus a war or armed insurrection may meet this threshold as would a serious natural disaster or outbreak of disease despite the substantive differences between them. However why must an emergency be broad?

A

given the intangible, sudden and unforeseen nature of ‘emergency’ and so restricted by a more rigorous definition is of minimal assistance

64
Q

the effect of a declaration of emergency is to permit and facilitate a response that would not be possible were normal conditions to prevail. In a liberal democratic order, what are the constraints in which derogation can overrule>

A

human rights, separation of powers doctrine and the rule of law

65
Q

A Greene suggests that it is the temporality of emergency that makes often-draconian measure palatable. What case conflicts with this?

A

belmarsh which has emphasised that a state of emergency does not have to be temporary and in doing so, has abolished the very concept that justifies a state of emergency.

66
Q

Many academics have argued that the state of emergency has now become so frequent that it is essentially permanent. Why is this?

A

due to modern day terrorism which has created a novel challenge

67
Q

What is the effect of the modern day terrorist threat?

A

emergencies are now intangible and no longer easily identifiable or limited to individual, spatial or temporal contexts

68
Q

What do the monism or business as usual models of crisis management reject?

A

the notion that emergencies justify any alteration in the ordinary scheme of governance. \ Emergency therefore creates no additional power that the state may use to defend itself.

69
Q

he monism or business as usual models of crisis management reject the notion that emergencies justify any alteration in the ordinary scheme of governance. \ Emergency therefore creates no additional power that the state may use to defend itself.
What country is an example of the business as usual model?

A

the US Apart from the provision that Congress may suspend the writ of habeas corpus in a time of war, the US Constitution is silent on emergency powers.This has led the US Supreme Court to hold in the ex Parte Milligan case, that the same law applies in war as in peace. the “business as usual” approach to offer a more robust defense of human rights than the state of emergency

70
Q

Article 15 does not afford a state ______ _______o deal with a threat as it sees fit, once a state of emergency is declared. Rather the second limb of Article 15 requires that such measures be “proportionate to the exigencies of the situation.”

A

carte blanche

71
Q

The two limbs of Art 15 appear to be well conditioned however ….

A

they are framed in quite broad language meaning that a public emergency covers a potentially infinite array of crises

72
Q

Lawless presents the image of a judicially active court declaring its jurisdiction to review the decision of a sovereign state as to the existence of an emergency.
however what is the reality?

A

his is substantially tempered by the wide margin of appreciation afforded to a state when assessing whether an emergency exists or not.. Thus, despite appearing to assess whether a state of emergency exists or not, the ECtHR’s approach in Lawless renders the first limb of Article 15 redundant, as serious scrutiny of whether such a state exists is not undertaken.

73
Q

Lawless presents the image of a judicially active court declaring its jurisdiction to review the decision of a sovereign state as to the existence of an emergency.
this is substantially tempered by the wide margin of appreciation afforded to a state when assessing whether an emergency exists or not.. Thus, despite appearing to assess whether a state of emergency exists or not, the ECtHR’s approach in Lawless renders the first limb of Article 15 redundant, as serious scrutiny of whether such a state exists is not undertaken.
Instead what does the ECtHR focus on in Lawless?

A

he second limb: whether the measures enacted were proportionate to the exigencies of the situation

74
Q

In Belmarsh, the ECtHR declared that “the national authorities are, in principle, better placed than the international judge to decide …. on the presence of such an emergency.”87 Accordingly, a wide margin of appreciation should be left to the national authorities. The declaration of a state of emergency by the UK was therefore not challenged, despite the fact that it was the only Council of the European Union Member State to lodge a derogation notice under Article 15 of the ECHR, even though it was not the only country at risk of a terrorist attack
What position did the ECtHR take?

A

The ECtHR took an almost-identical position to the majority, focusing little attention on whether an emergency existed, concentrating instead on whether the measures enacted were proportionate to the exigencies of the situation

75
Q

To date there is only one example in which a declaration fo emergency was rejected by the Commission ; what is it ?

A

The Greek Case

76
Q

The ECtHR in Belmarsh further damages this shielding effect by eliminating the exceptional nature that phenomena must constitute to trigger a state of emergency, by declaring that emergency under Article 15 does not necessarily have to be temporary.102
instead what does it become?

A

duration becomes merely another factor in deterring whether the measures undertaken were proportionate to the exigencies of the situation.1

77
Q

How would u conclude Art 15 limbs?

A

Describing the two limbs of Article 15 as two barriers protecting human rights is inaccurate. The requirement that a state of emergency must exist in order to derogate from treaty obligations does little to protect human rightsnstead, the requirement that a state of emergency be declared is little more than an administrative procedure, facilitating the encroachment of human rights, rather than containing them. Focusing only on whether the measures are proportionate to the exigencies of the situation is not sufficient, and only serves to further blur the distinction between normalcy and emergency. The ECtHR must ensure this by effectively scrutinizing the decision of a Member State to declare a state of emergency in the first instance.