Privacy Rights/History/Country sources/Gabon: Difference between revisions
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|contents=Article 1 of the constitution lays out fundamental rights granted within the state (Constitute Project, “Gabon [[Probable year::1991]] rev. [[Probable year::2011]]” ). Section 5 of Article 1 protects the privacy of correspondence. Section 12 claims the inviolability of the domicile. The current constitution is based on the [[Probable year::1961]] constitution, though it was rewritten in [[Probable year::1991]]. | |contents=Article 1 of the constitution lays out fundamental rights granted within the state (Constitute Project, “Gabon [[Probable year:: 1991]] rev. [[Probable year:: 2011]]” ). Section 5 of Article 1 protects the privacy of correspondence. Section 12 claims the inviolability of the domicile. The current constitution is based on the [[Probable year:: 1961]] constitution, though it was rewritten in [[Probable year:: 1991]]. | ||
https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Gabon_[[Probable year::2011]]? lang=en | https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Gabon_[[Probable year:: 2011]]? lang=en | ||
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Latest revision as of 22:12, 28 December 2022
What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right?
Gabon
Article 1 of the constitution lays out fundamental rights granted within the state (Constitute Project, “Gabon 1991 rev. 2011” ). Section 5 of Article 1 protects the privacy of correspondence. Section 12 claims the inviolability of the domicile. The current constitution is based on the 1961 constitution, though it was rewritten in 1991.
https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Gabon_2011? lang=en