I don't know the exact legal framework, but it seems likely that the ethics commission has no power to give the ICGA directions.
Prior to recent changes, the applicable sanctions the EC could give are largely listed at the end of this interpretative
document, namely: warning, reprimand, fine, and various others, some of which apply only to individuals. An example of a
warning was for Nigel Short calling Azmaiparashvili a dunderhead, and an example of a
reprimand was the use of phrases like "slave of mafia from fide" by Bjelica. The complaint by Rajlich asked FIDE to stop recognising the ICGA, which the (former) Code of Ethics 3.1 allowed by:
...affiliated organizations acting in contravention to this code can be temporarily excluded from membership....
Incidentally, the new
Ethics rules (see Annex n31 bis) also allow sanctions of: return of awards, revocation of titles and sports results (previously the EC had no competence on this), and social work. I can only imagine what the Rybka Forum would think adequate "social work" for the ICGA would be...
In that case "asking to reconsider the life-time ban" effectively means "we consider the life-time ban to be wrong".
I would say that both the conclusion and the written motivation make it clear (somewhat painfully, via citations from Swiss law on associations) that any "wrongness" of the ban was based upon two facets, namely that the ICGA Statutes did not specify its permissibility, and that Rajlich was not made sufficiently aware that something beyond tournament disqualification was at stake. I don't think the EC was concerned whether the ban was "wrong" in any sense other than this. The exact phrase used in the conclusion was: the ICGA
has to be invited to modify their statutes in accordance with FIDE principles and rules. The suggestion of considering
revising the lifetime ban sanction imposed against Mr Rajlich was conjunctively mentioned earlier, but not repeated in the conclusion.
The Ethics Commission apparently found a violation of the principle of legality ...
By my reading of the EC decision, the ICGA
caused FIDE to appear in an unjustifiable unfavourable light and in this way damage its reputation (2.2.10) by a
violation of rules that are mandatory for FIDE and FIDE organisations, namely that to impose a sanction an association must have a sufficiently clear statutory basis and procedural guarantees (the EC decision cites Swiss law as particularly applicable to FIDE, and notes that any national law would have something similar as an absolute minimum). This has certainly been something that the EC has been worried about over the last few years with the increase of cheating cases, namely that FIDE member federations (and affiliated organisations) should have a sufficient legal basis to carry out their own sanctions when desired, and this was one reason that the "joint competency" (for specific cheating cases) was proposed (see the
EC Report, eg page 5, after bemoaning that:
Unfortunately, no member federation get the message until now, probably because they have not yet been adequately informed and because they need to receive assistance to reinforce their internal structures it suggests
minimal procedural rules for the evaluation of breaches of ethics can be added as mandatory for all FIDE members, as a part of FIDE Handbook).
and now you cite a set of guidelines dating from November 2014 as if they could be applied to an incident from how many years ago?
Perhaps my intent wasn't clear, but I did offset that paragraph and put "Incidentally" at its head... At any rate, there are two issues for the ICGA, namely how to revise their Statutes as "invited" by the EC, and how to deal
ex post facto (if at all) with the lifetime ban of Rajlich. As far as I can tell, the ICGA (currently) has no proper basis for
any sanction, though the EC decision seems to imply (for the purposes of FIDE ethics) that
FIDE rules could be applied and thus a (maximum) 3-year ban could have been assessed.
For that matter, FIDE itself is a bit dodgy in this, given that (see page 5 of the above-linked EC Report) FIDE considers its Code of Ethics as
part of the Handbook but it is not a part of the Statutes (which are listed in A1 of the Handbook), while the EC decision cites Swiss law as saying:
There must be a sufficiently clear statutory basis for a penalty in the statutes or bylaws of the association. Maybe the FIDE Constitutional Commission will end up addressing this, but I think currently they are claiming the ability to change the offences/penalties w/o changing the Statutes proper, relying on the statue A1.8.1:
The Ethics Commission shall consider any alleged breaches of FIDE Code of Ethics as specified in the FIDE Code of Ethics and in accordance with the Ethics Commission Procedural Rules. Depending upon the context, this could be seen as an improper delegation of what properly belongs to the General Assembly (namely to authority to modify Statutes [eg A1.4.1], specifically the basis for and extent of sanctions), as modifying the Handbook is easier than modifying Statutes. [Another example, FIDE tried to ban Touze for 5 years after the 2005 World Youth Champs, and had it overturned by the CAS, who noted FIDE's own 3-year limit].