BENIN
Republic of Benin
Republique du Benin
Joined United Nations:  20 September 1960
Human Rights as assured by their constitution
Updated 08 July 2012
TITLE II: RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF THE INDIVIDUAL

Article 7
The rights and duties proclaimed and guaranteed by the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights adopted in 1981 by the
Organization of African Unity and ratified by Benin on January 20, 1986 shall be an integral part of the present Constitution and of
Beninese law.
Article 8
The human person is sacred and inviolable. The state has the absolute obligation to respect it and protect it. It shall guarantee him a full
blossoming out. To that end, it shall assure to its citizens equal access to health, education, culture, information, vocational training, and
employment.

Article 9
Every human being has a right to the development and full expansion of his person in his material, temporal and intellectual dimensions,
provided that he does not violate the rights of others nor infringe upon constitutional order and good manners.

Article 10
Every person has a right to culture. The state has the duty to safeguard and promote the national values of civilisations, as much material
as spiritual, as well as the cultural traditions.

Article 11
All communities comprising the Beninese nation shall enjoy the freedom to use their spoken and written languages and to develop their
own culture while respecting those of others. The state must promote the development of national languages of intercommunication.

Article 12
The state and public authorities shall guarantee the education of children and shall create conditions favourable to this end.

Article 13
The state shall provide for the education of the youth by public schools. Primary education shall be obligatory. The state shall assure
progressively free public education.

Article 14
Religious institutions and communities shall be able to co-operate equally in the education of the youth. Private schools, secular or
parochial, may be opened with the authorisation and control of the state. The private schools may benefit from state subsidies under
conditions determined by law.

Article 15
Each individual has the right to life, liberty, security and the integrity of his person.

Article 16
No one shall be arrested or accused except by virtue of a law promulgated prior to the charges against him. No citizen shall be forced into
exile.

Article 17
Any person accused of an unlawful act shall be presumed innocent until his culpability has been legally established in the course of a
public lawsuit during which all guarantees necessary to his free defence shall have been assured to him. No one shall be condemned for
actions or omissions which, at the moment when they were committed, did not constitute an infraction according to the national law.
Likewise, he may not have a more severe penalty inflicted than that which was applicable at the time when the offence was committed.

Article 18
No one shall be submitted to torture, nor to maltreatment, nor to cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment. No one shall have the right to
prevent a detainee or an accused person from being examined by a doctor of his choice. No one may be detained in a penal institution if
he does not fall under the provisions of a penal law in force. No one may be detained for a duration greater than forty-eight hours except
by a decision of the magistrate before whom he must have been presented. This delay may be prolonged only in circumstances
exceptionally provided for by law and may not exceed a period greater than eight days.

Article 19
Any individual or any agent of the state who shall be found responsible for an act of torture or of maltreatment or of cruel, inhumane or
degrading treatment in the exercise of, or at the time of the exercise of his duties, whether of his own initiative or whether under
instruction, shall be punished in accordance with the law. Any individual or any agent of the state shall be absolved of the duty of
obedience when the order received shall constitute a serious and manifest infringement with respect to human rights and public liberties.

Article 20
The domicile shall be inviolable. House visits or searches may be carried out only according to the forms and conditions provided by law.

Article 21
The secrecy of correspondence and of communications shall be guaranteed by law.

Article 22
Every person has the right to his property. No one shall be deprived of his property except for state-approved usefulness and in exchange
for a just and prerequisite compensation.

Article 23
Every person has the right to freedom of thought, of conscience, of religion, of creed, of opinion and of expression with respect for the
public order established by law and regulations. The exercise of a creed and the expression of beliefs shall take place with respect for the
secularity of the state. The institutions and the religious or philosophical communities shall have the right to develop without hindrances.
They shall not be subject to the guardianship of the state. They shall regulate and administer their affairs in an autonomous manner.

Article 24
Freedom of the press shall be recognised and guaranteed by the state. It shall be protected by the High Authority of Audio-Visuals and
Communications under the conditions fixed by an organic law.

Article 25
The state shall recognise and guarantee, under conditions fixed by law, the freedom to go and come, the freedom of association, of
assembly, of procession and of demonstration.

Article 26
The state shall assure to everyone equality before the law without distinction of origin, race, sex, religion, political opinion or social
position. Men and women are equal under the law. The state shall protect the family and particularly the mother and child. It shall take
care of handicapped and aged persons.

Article 27
Every person has the right to a healthy, satisfying and lasting environment and has the duty to defend it. The state shall watch over the
protection of the environment.

Article 28
The storage, handling, and removal of toxic wastes or pollutants originating from factories and other industrial or cottage industry units
installed in the national territory shall be regulated by law.

Article 29
The transportation, importation, storage, burying and the discharging on the national territory of toxic wastes or foreign pollutants and any
agreement relating to it shall constitute a crime against the nation. The applicable sanctions shall be defined by law.

Article 30
The state shall recognise for all citizens the right to work and shall strive to create conditions which shall make the enjoyment of this right
effective and shall guarantee to the worker just compensation for his services or for his production.

Article 31
The state shall recognise and guarantee the right to strike. Each worker may defend, under the conditions provided by law, his rights and
interests whether individually, whether collectively, or by trade union action. The right to strike shall be exercised under conditions
defined by law.

Article 32
The defence of the nation and of the integrity of the territory of the Republic is a sacred duty for every Beninese citizen. Military service
shall be obligatory. The conditions for the accomplishment of this duty shall be determined by law.

Article 33
All citizens of the Republic of Benin have the duty to work for the common good, to fulfil all of their civic and professional obligations,
and to pay their fiscal contributions.

Article 34
Each Beninese citizen, civilian or military, has the sacred duty to respect, in all circumstances, the Constitution and the established
constitutional order as well as the laws and regulations of the Republic.

Article 35
Citizens responsible for a public office or elected to a political office have the duty to fulfil it with conscience, competence, probity,
devotion, and loyalty in the interest of the common good.

Article 36
Each Beninese has the duty to respect and to consider his own kin without any discrimination; and to keep relations with others that shall
permit the safeguarding, the reinforcement and promotion of respect, dialogue and reciprocal tolerance with a view to peace and to
national cohesion.

Article 37
Public property shall be sacred and inviolable. Each Beninese citizen must respect it scrupulously and protect it. Any act of sabotage,
vandalism, corruption, diversion, dilapidation or illegal enrichment shall be suppressed under conditions provided by law.

Article 38
The state shall protect the rights and legitimate interests of Beninese citizens in a foreign country.

Article 39
Foreigners in the territory of the Republic of Benin shall have the benefit of the same rights and liberties as the Beninese citizens, and this
under the conditions determined by law. They must conform to the Constitution and to the laws and regulations of the Republic.

Article 40
The state has the duty to assure the diffusion and the teaching of the Constitution, of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948,
of the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights of 1981 as well as all of the international instruments duly ratified and relative to
human rights. The state must integrate the rights of the individual into the programs of literacy and of teaching in the various scholastic
and university academic cycles and into all the educational programs of the Armed Forces, of the Public Security Forces and of
comparable categories. The state must equally assure the diffusion and teaching of these same rights in the national languages by all the
means of mass communication, and particularly by radio and television.
On 2 December 1991, The Constitution of the Republic of Benin was adopted by referendum  
in accordance with standards set forth by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as is
required for admission consideration in the United Nations.  The following is the extract of
those amendments specifically pertaining to human rights.  For a full English translation of  
Benin's constitution, click
here.
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