Home spotlight How court added toilet flushing to list of rights violations

How court added toilet flushing to list of rights violations

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We have been told that basic human rights include —Freedom from discrimination, the right to equality between men and women, the right to life, freedom from torture, freedom from slavery, the right to liberty and security of person, right to be treated with humanity in detention and freedom of movement.

However, a top Italian court has added the sound of a flushing toilet at night to the list of human rights violations.

The ruling by the European Court comes after a 19-year legal battle that started when a couple living in a flat near La Spezia complained that their neighbour’s new toilet was keeping them awake with “intolerable noises.”

A lower court had earlier ruled against that couple and they took the case higher to an appeal court in the northern city of Genoa. The court ordered an investigation into the complaint, which showed facts on why the toilet was so loud. According to the Time of London, four brothers who owned the apartment close to the couple had set their water tank on a nine-inch wall not far from the couple’s headboard.

It turned out that the court was considerate of the couple’s struggle to get good sleep. The noise of flushing “aggravated by frequent night use” distorts their quality of life, which is in violation of the right to freely exercise daily habits that were established by the European Convention on Human Rights, the appellate judge said, according to Il Giornale.

And so for breaching the European Convention on Human Rights the court ruled, the brothers would have to move the water tank plus payment of about $565 to the couple for every year since the device was installed, approximately $10,760 in total.

In turn, the brothers asked Italy’s Supreme Court to intervene, but that panel ruled against them. The European Court of Human Rights had upheld the “right to respect for one’s private and family life,” the high court said, according to Il Giornale. The judge added that the nighttime flushing’s interference with rest also violated the Italian constitution’s right to health.

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