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{"id":242061,"date":"2021-01-09T17:30:04","date_gmt":"2021-01-09T12:00:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.scconline.com\/blog\/?p=242061"},"modified":"2021-01-09T17:53:12","modified_gmt":"2021-01-09T12:23:12","slug":"laws-which-criminalise-being-a-vagabond-or-homeless-are-contrary-to-the-african-charter-of-human-and-peoples-rights","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogscconline-staging.azurewebsites.net\/post\/2021\/01\/09\/laws-which-criminalise-being-a-vagabond-or-homeless-are-contrary-to-the-african-charter-of-human-and-peoples-rights\/","title":{"rendered":"Laws which criminalise \u201cbeing a vagabond or homeless\u201d are contrary to the African Charter of Human and People\u2019s Rights"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
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African Court on Human and People\u2019s Rights: <\/strong>While deliberating upon a request for Advisory Opinion filed by the Pan African Lawyers Union (hereinafter PALU) regarding compatibility of \u2018Vagrancy Laws\u2019 with the African Charter of Human and People\u2019s Rights and other Human Rights instruments applicable in Africa, the Court unanimously observed that Vagrancy Laws, which contain offences criminalising the status of a person as being without a fixed home, employment or means of subsistence, as having no fixed abode nor means of subsistence, and trade or profession etc; laws that order the forcible removal of any person declared to be a vagrant; and laws that permit the arrest without a warrant of a person suspected of being a vagrant,<\/em><\/strong> are incompatible with Articles 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 12 and 18 of the African Charter. The Court declared that there is a \u201cpositive obligation\u201d on the State Parties to review, repeal or amend their vagrancy laws and related laws to comply with the Charter, the Children\u2019s Rights Charter and the Women\u2019s Rights Protocol within reasonable time and that this obligation requires them to take all necessary measures, in the shortest possible time.<\/p>\n

It was submitted by the PALU that a number of Member States of the African Union still have laws that criminalise the status of individuals as being poor, homeless or unemployed as opposed to specific culpable acts. PALU submitted before the Court that these laws are overly broad and confer too wide a discretion on law enforcement agencies to decide who to arrest which impacts disproportionately on vulnerable individuals in society.<\/p>\n

The PALU put forth the following requests for an opinion from the Court-<\/p>\n