D. Human rights guarantees.
The question of financial barriers to access to justice deserves analysis under the Aarhus Public Participation Convention, the European Convention on Human Rights, the American Convention on Human Rights, and the African (Banjul) Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights. The following notes may provide a starting point for investigation.
The Aarhus Convention provides in Article 9, paragraphs 1 and 2, that a person who claims a denial of information or participation must have “access to a review procedure” in a court or other independent and impartial body. Similarly, paragraph 3 states that a person claiming that national environmental laws have been violated by private parties or public authorities must “have access to administrative or judicial procedures to challenge acts and omissions.”147 It is worth asking whether a person has such “access” if he or she must pay an excessive fee to gain that access, or risks losing a house or other assets if the case is lost. The answer is apparently that access is not available if costs raise a barrier, because paragraph 4 explicitly provides that the remedies in paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 must not be “prohibitively expensive.”148 In addition, paragraph 5 requires that each Party to the Aarhus Convention must “consider the establishment of appropriate assistance mechanisms to remove or reduce financial . . . barriers to access to justice.”149
The European Court of Human Rights ruled in 2005 that two citizens who were sued by McDonald’s Corporation for Defamation were denied the right to a fair trial and freedom of expression under Articles 6 and 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights because the Government of the United Kingdom refused to provide funding for their lawyers to defend them.150 In response, the Joint Committee on Human Rights of the House of Lords and House of Commons asserted that the Government’s guidance under the Access to Justice Act 1999 (which provides the statutory framework for civil legal aid in U.K.) “should make reference to the need to ensure that denial of legal aid would not disproportionately interfere with Article 10, taking into account the Strasbourg jurisprudence and Steel and Morris in particular.”151
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights rendered an advisory opinion in 1990 that inability to hire legal counsel for financial reasons could exempt litigants from the duty to exhaust domestic remedies before coming to the Inter-American Court.152
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