Grand Chamber hearing concerning Georgia
The Court held a Grand Chamber hearing in the case of Tsaava and Others v. Georgia.
The case concerns the dispersal of a protest in 2019 from the front of the Parliament building in Tbilisi. The applicants were either participants in the demonstration, or journalists reporting on the protests. They allege, in particular, excessive use of force by the authorities resulting in their injury.
Chamber News

In the case of Vyacheslavova and Others v. Ukraine the Court held that there had been violations of the right to life/investigation on account of the authorities’ failure to do everything that could reasonably be expected of them to prevent the violence in Odesa on 2 May 2014, to stop that violence after its outbreak, to ensure timely rescue measures for people trapped in the fire, and to institute and conduct an effective investigation into the events. It also held that there had been a violation of the right to respect for private and family life in respect of one applicant concerning the delay in handing over her father’s body for burial.

In the case of F.B. v. Belgium the Court held that there had been a violation of the right to respect for private life of a foreign national who complained about the decision to terminate her care as an unaccompanied minor following an age assessment procedure.
The Court concluded, without ruling on the reliability of the bone tests or on the applicant's minority, that the procedure for assessing the applicant's age was not surrounded by sufficient guarantees under Article 8 of the Convention.

In the case I.C. v. the Republic of Moldova The Court has found multiple violations of the Convention.
The case concerned an intellectually disabled woman and her allegations that she had been forced to work for free and sexually abused after she had been removed from State care to live on a farm.
The Court noted that the legal and administrative framework concerning the removal from State care of persons with intellectual disabilities had flaws, particularly due to the lack of support services and monitoring. In the applicant’s case this had led to the authorities’ failure to take measures to protect her and/or to adequately investigate her allegations, as concerned either the labour exploitation or the rape. It found that the authorities had had a discriminatory attitude towards the applicant because she was a woman with an intellectual disability.
- Press release
- Press release (in Romanian)

In the case of X v. Cyprus, the Court held that there had been a lack of effective investigation and a violation of the right to respect for private and family life.
The case concerned the investigation into an alleged gang-rape of a young British woman in Ayia Napa in July 2019.
Identifying a number of failures in the investigation, the Court found, without expressing an opinion as to the suspects’ guilt, that the investigative and prosecutorial authorities’ response had fallen short of the State’s duty to effectively investigate the applicant’s allegations. The credibility of her allegations appeared to have been assessed through prejudicial gender stereotypes and victim-blaming attitudes.

In the case of Fraisse and Others v. France the Court held that there had been a violation of the right to life in its substantive aspect, and no violation of the same right in its procedural aspect.
The case concerned Rémi Fraisse, a twenty-one-year-old student, who died as a result of the explosion of a blast-effect dispersal weapon, namely an OF-F1 concussion grenade launched by Staff Sergeant J. in the context of a law-enforcement operation at the Sivens construction site (in the municipality of Lisle-sur-Tarn), during violent clashes between protesters opposed to the construction of a dam and mobile gendarmes forces.
Grand Chamber News

On 17 March 2025 a panel of 5 judges will examine sixteen Grand Chamber referral requests.

On 16 December 2024 the Court decided to refuse the request for an advisory opinion submitted by the High Court of Cassation and Justice of Romania.
The High Court requested that the ECHR give an advisory opinion on two questions concerning (1) the applicability of Article 8 (right to respect for private and family life) and (2) the level of precision required of the domestic law which had served as the legal basis for the dismissal. The Court decided not to accept the request, considering that it did not concern a question of principle, within the meaning of Article 1 § 1 of Protocol No. 16, which warranted examination by the Grand Chamber. Presenting an overview of its relevant caselaw, the Court showed that the requesting court already had guidance on Convention issues when determining the case before it. It thus saw no reason to elaborate further on the existing principles.
Hearings

The Court held three Grand Chamber hearings concerning three member States: Latvia, Lithuania and Poland.
The case R.A. and Others v. Poland concerns a group of 32 Afghan nationals who claim to have fled Afghanistan after the Taliban came to power. They were left stranded in a makeshift camp on the border between Belarus and Poland from 8 August until 23 October 2021.
The case H.M.M. and Others v. Latvia concerns alleged “pushbacks” in the vicinity of the Latvian Belarusian border starting from 10 August 2021.
The case C.O.C.G. and Others v. Lithuania concerns four Cuban nationals and their repeated attempts to enter Lithuania by crossing the border with Belarus.
- Press release: R.A. and Others v. Poland
- Press release: H.M.M. and Others v. Latvia
- Press release: C.O.C.G. and Others v. Lithuania
- Webcast of the hearing R.A. and Others v. Poland
- Webcast of the hearing H.M.M. and Others v. Latvia
- Webcast of the hearing C.O.C.G. and Others v. Lithuania
- Country profile: Latvia
- Country profile: Lithuania
- Country profile: Poland
Decisions

The Court has declared inadmissible the application in the case of Călin Georgescu v. Romania.
The case concerned the annulment by the Constitutional Court of Romania of the presidential elections of 2024, for which the applicant was a candidate.
The Court held that in the light of the constitutional structure of Romania, there was no indication that the powers of the President of Romania are such as to make that office part of the “legislature” of the respondent State, within the meaning of Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention, guaranteeing the right to free elections. Therefore, it rejected the complaint raised in that respect.
- Press release
- Press release (in Romanian)

The Court has declared inadmissible the application in the case of Kotnik and Jukič v. Slovenia.
The case concerned the emergency measures taken by the Bank of Slovenia in 2013 and 2014 to protect the financial system. As a result of the measures, subordinated bonds and shares belonging to the applicants had been voided without compensation.
The applicants complained that the Slovenian authorities had failed to implement a European Court judgment of 2021 in their favour. That judgment had ruled that it was essential that former holders of cancelled shares or bonds had a legal avenue to effectively challenge the interference with their property rights.
The Court noted that in 2024 a new law had come into force allowing former holders of cancelled bonds or shares to bring legal actions against the Bank of Slovenia, with the possibility of damages being awarded. It therefore rejected the applicants’ complaints because they had not yet used all the legal avenues available at national level.
Communication of cases
The Court has communicated to the Government of Türkiye five cases covering 1,000 other applications.
The applications concern convictions for membership of an armed terrorist organisation, based on the alleged use of the encrypted messaging application called ByLock.
The core issues raised by the applicants have already been judged in the Court’s Grand Chamber case Yüksel Yalçınkaya v. Türkiye. In that judgment the Court highlighted that there were over 8,000 applications on the Court’s docket involving similar complaints. These 1,000 apparently comparable applications are the fourth batch to be notified to the Turkish Government. Against that background, the Court decided not to put any questions to the parties or to require any observations on the applications.
Other News
On Friday 14 March 2025, the President of the Court, Marko Bošnjak, as well as a delegation of Judges from the Court, participated in an international conference on the theme The European Convention on Human Rights as a living instrument, co-organised by the ECHR, the Strasbourg University’s Law Faculty, the Institut Carré de Malberg and the René Cassin Foundation. The event, taking place in the context of the 75th anniversary celebrations of the European Convention on Human Rights, was held at the Strasbourg University’s Law Faculty.
The 40th René Cassin advocacy competition, consisting of mock legal proceedings in French based on the European Convention on Human Rights and open to students of law and political science, will be held at the Council of Europe from 18 to 22 March 2025.
The two most successful teams will meet in the final, to be held in the Court’s hearing room on 21 March 2025 at 2 p.m., before a panel of prominent figures including judges of the Court and academics.
- Press release
- More info
- Concours Cassin (in French only)
On 10 March 2025, the President of the Court, Marko Bošnjak, delivered a lecture on the role of courts in tackling democratic backsliding, at Harvard Law School, in Cambridge, Massachusetts (United States of America).