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Inter-American Human Rights
Court is Meeting in Brazil
For the first time ever, the
Inter-American Human Rights
Court, which is part of the
Organization of American States
(OAS), and based in San José,
Costa Rica, is holding sessions
in Brazil.
Beginning today (March 28) and
running through Friday, the
Court is conducting its XXVII
Extraordinary Period of Sessions
in the Brazilian Federal Court
of Appeals (STJ).
Four cases are being judged: two
from Paraguay, one from Chile,
and one from Argentina. The
meetings are open to the public.
For the coordinator of the
international advisory office of
the Special Secretariat for
Human Rights (SEDH), Renata
Pelizon, "it is a very important
occasion for all Brazilians and
the country's legal workers, for
NGOs and state officials to
become better acquainted with
the way the court functions."
The court, which is the legal
organ of the Inter-American
Human Rights System, was founded
in November, 1969, when the
American Convention on Human
Rights, which has been in effect
since July, 1978, was drafted.
Its seat was established in the
capital of Costa Rica, San José,
on September 3, 1979, in
accordance with the Headquarters
Agreement signed with Costa
Rica.
In the itinerant session in
Brazil, Brazilian cases will not
be judged. According to Pelizon,
this is a way for the court to
maintain its impartiality.
This is only the third time the
court has met outside its Costa
Rica headquarters. The first
time was in Chile. The second
was last year in Paraguay, and
now it's Brazil's turn.
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