Abstract:
This thesis is targeted at evaluating investigations findings and recommendation
enforcement practice of EHRC- Bahir Dar branch office thereby assessing the problems
faced by the Branch office in its endeavor to ensure implementation of its
recommendations. It has assessed the procedure investigation is guided and how
investigation findings and recommendations are prepared and reported to the concerned
bodies. It also tries to examine what enforcement mechanisms the branch office applied to
enforce its recommendations, how much these tools are successful in making sure
compliance with recommendations and to provide effective remedies for victims of human
rights violations. In this thesis, to achieve this purpose qualitative research approach was
employed and both primary and secondary data sources were used. The primary data
include data from interviews, reviews of annual reports of the branch office and
investigation files and recommendations and reports of the branch office submitted to the
ANRS State council, Law and Administration Affaires Standing Committee of ANRS State
Council and occasionally to the President of ANRS on recommendation enforcement
challenges. It also include data from analysis of relevant provisions of establishing laws of
EHRC,EIO, some NHRIs of other countries, Investigations and Mediation Directives of
EHRC, FDRE Constitution, Paris principles and other relevant international, regional
and national laws . The secondary data used in the study include reviews of relevant books,
thesis and other documents on the internet which are related to the research problem. The
thesis has finally found that despite its failure to exercise its formal enforcement power, the
branch office has employed various non-confrontational enforcement tools to ensure
implementation of its recommendations. These include reporting to the ANRS State council
and concerned Standing committee, roundtable discussions, and field supervisions as well
as warning letter. In fact, these enforcement tools are proved ineffective to ensure
compliance with recommendations when the cooperation of respondents is missing.
Consequently, majority of the recommendations were remained unexecuted. The major
problem that encumber adequate implementation of recommendations were resistance by
respondents on different grounds such as citing legal bases for their actions, failures of the
branch office to exercise its legal enforcement power which is a direct result of its failure
to fulfill the necessary requirement to use such power and legal gaps related to the
Commission’s enforcement power are worthy of mentioning. As result of these conclusions,
the thesis recommends that the branch office is expected to conduct exhaustive
investigation and forward more convincing and strong recommendations by identifying the
pertinent body liable for the violations; it should also begin the use of its formal
enforcement power by satisfying necessary preconditions and in the meantime, it should
urge the head office to make a proposal for the amendment of its establishing law to
empower it and the branch offices to take appropriate legal action which directly targeted
at enforcing their non-complied recommendations and ensuring appropriate remedies.