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FOURTH
SECTION
CASE OF
CIORAP v. MOLDOVA
(Application
no. 12066/02)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
19
June 2007
This judgment will
become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 § 2
of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Ciorap v. Moldova,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Sir Nicolas Bratza, President,
Mr J.
Casadevall,
Mr G. Bonello,
Mr K. Traja,
Mr S.
Pavlovschi,
Mr L. Garlicki,
Ms L. Mijović, judges,
and
Mrs F. Aracı, Deputy Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 29 May 2007,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 14437/05) against the Republic
of Moldova lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by Mr Tudor Ciorap (“the applicant”)
on 5 December 2001.
- The
applicant, who was granted legal aid, was represented by
Mr V. Iordachi from “Lawyers for Human Rights”,
a non-governmental organisation based in Chişinău. The
Moldovan Government (“the Government”) were represented
by their Agent, Mr V. Pârlog.
- The
applicant complained under Article 3 of the Convention (inhuman
conditions of detention and force-feeding), under Article 6 § 1
(access to court in regard to his force-feeding), under Article 8
(censorship of correspondence, the right to meet his family in
private) and under Article 10 (access to the internal
regulations of the remand centre).
- The
application was allocated to the Fourth Section of the Court (Rule 52
§ 1 of the Rules of Court). On 11 October 2005 a Chamber of that
Section declared the application partly inadmissible and decided to
communicate the remaining complaints to the Government. Under the
provisions of Article 29 § 3 of the Convention, it decided to
examine the merits of the application at the
same time as its admissibility.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The applicant was born in 1965 and lives in Chişinău.
- The
facts of the case, as submitted by the parties, may be summarised as
follows.
- The applicant worked for “Social Amnesty”,
an NGO specialising in offering legal help to persons deprived of
their liberty. He claims that as a result of his activities he became
the target of persecution. In two sets of proceedings he was charged
with a number of serious fraud offences. The applicant is a second
degree invalid and has been diagnosed with “mosaic
schizophrenia”.
1. Conditions of detention
- On
23 October 2000 the applicant was arrested. On 6 November 2000 he was
transferred to the remand centre of the Ministry of Justice (also
known as prison no. 3, subsequently re-named prison no. 13) in
Chişinău. He spent certain periods of time in the Pruncul
detainee hospital. He was convicted of a number of crimes but is
still remanded on other charges.
- According to the applicant, the conditions of detention
were inhuman. In particular, he referred to the overcrowding in the
cells (which occasionally meant 2-3 detainees for each 2m2
of space), accompanied by the fact that detainees with infectious
diseases such as tuberculosis were kept together with other
detainees, especially during hunger-strikes; the presence of
parasitic insects; the lack of proper ventilation and access to
daylight; the rudimentary sanitary conditions which left no room for
privacy; the loud radio that was constantly on between 7 a.m. and
10 p.m. together with the very poor quantity and quality of food
served. Before 27 May 2005 electricity and cold water were only
available for several hours a day. The applicant described his food
ration for one day as consisting of 100 grams of porridge with water
twice a day and a soup consisting mostly of water for lunch, with an
additional 400 grams of bread for the whole day. In support of his
complaint regarding the overcrowding in the cell he gave the example
of his transfer to cell no. 11 on 2 August 2001, which he shared with
five other persons despite the fact that only two bunk beds were
available. He claimed that he had to sleep on the floor due to the
insufficiency of beds and had access only to electric light for six
hours a day. Another example was his detention in cell no. 17a, which
accommodated 10 persons in an area of 12m2.
- The
applicant referred to the report of the Committee for the Prevention
of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) for
2004 (see paragraph 47 below) and the report of the Ministry of
Justice regarding the conditions of detention in prison no. 13 (see
paragraph 43 below).
- According to the applicant, he complained to various
authorities about his conditions of detention. This was disputed by
the Government. The applicant submitted replies from the
Penitentiaries' Department and the Public Order Department at the
Ministry of Internal Affairs, which dealt, inter alia, with
the applicant's conditions of detention. In addition, he submitted
copies of his complaints to the Government and the administration of
prison no. 3, in which he also complained about the conditions of
detention. In its letter of 29 December 2003 the Penitentiaries'
Department conceded that prison no. 3 was “periodically
overcrowded”, which led to an increase in the spread of
pediculosis and skin disease. The presence of parasitic insects was
also confirmed, although no complaints had been received in this
respect from detainees. In 2002-2003 a major disinfection had been
carried out in the prison.
- In a letter to the prison administration dated 17
February 2002 the applicant complained about the absence of beds in
cell no. 72 where he was detained at that time, the detainees having
to sleep on wooden shelves. He referred to the limited access to
daylight and fresh air due to metal blinds covering the window and
the presence of strong smells and damp, as well as the presence of
parasitic insects, which prevented him from sleeping. In a letter
dated 26 May 2002 the applicant complained about his transfer for ten
days to solitary detention cell no. 7 which was very damp and caused
him to fear that he would contract tuberculosis. In addition, he had
not been given food for three days and there were rodents in the
cell. There was no furniture, except for a bed which was retracted
into the wall during daytime, the applicant having to sit on the bare
concrete floor. There was no window and he had electric light for
only 5-6 hours a day, leaving him in total darkness for the rest of
the time. He requested the visit of a doctor and his transfer to
another cell. It appears that the applicant did not receive a reply
to these two complaints and the Government have not commented on
them. In his “hunger-strike diary” the applicant noted
his transfer to cell no. 11 on 2 August 2001 and the presence of
five more persons there.
- According to a letter from the Ministry of Justice
dated 25 November 2005, the applicant had been detained in cells
nos. 2, 17a, 53, 70a, 84, 89 and 116 all measuring 8-12m2.
The number of detainees which those cells could accommodate was not
specified and no details were given as to the number of detainees who
had been actually detained in those cells together with the
applicant. The only exception was cell no. 116, where the applicant
was detained at the time of filing the observations (13 December
2005), which measured 10m2 and in which one other person
was detained. In a letter to another person detained in the same
cell, no. 116, dated 30 November 2005, the Prosecutor General's
Office stated that “all the persons detained in that cell have
a bed and bed linen”. The video recording submitted by the
Government showed two bunk beds in the cell, one of which was placed
across the toilet. According to the Government, electricity and cold
water were permanently available and there was natural light in each
cell. The applicant had the right to a bath every week. Food was
given in accordance with the relevant Government regulations,
including meat and fish “depending on availability”.
Detainees could buy food from the local shop and were allowed to
receive parcels from the outside. In addition, the applicant had been
treated on many occasions by various doctors as a result of his
hunger-strikes and self-mutilation and he benefited from the better
conditions in the prison hospital.
2. Force-feeding
(a) The applicant's force-feeding
- The applicant began a hunger-strike on 1 August 2001
as a result of alleged violations of his rights and those of his
family. Since no prosecutor came to discuss with him the alleged
violations for two weeks, on the night of 14 August 2001 he cut his
wrists and set fire to himself. He was treated and was subsequently
force-fed a number of times. The applicant submitted his
“hunger-strike diary”, in which he noted the dates and
manner of his force-feeding, his state of health during the relevant
period and his transfers to various cells. The applicant wrote that
he had requested to be given food intra-venously rather than by means
of a stomach tube.
- Following
the applicant's complaint, on 13 September 2001, the duty doctor made
a preliminary diagnosis: “right-sided inter-muscular inguinal
hernia?” (“hernie intermusculară
inghinală din dreapta?”). On
14 September 2001 a surgeon established the diagnosis: “abscess
of the connection of the fore wall?” (“abces
de legătură a peretelui anterior?”).
Treatment was ordered but the applicant refused it. He submitted
that, having refused treatment on 14 September 2001, he was
transferred for a few days to a dark, cold and damp solitary
confinement cell with no furniture.
- The prison psychiatrist who examined the applicant
several days after the incident of 14 August 2001 declared in court
that he had found that the applicant had been perfectly aware of the
consequences of his actions and had explained them as a last measure
of protest against abuses of his rights. The doctor added that he had
been pressured into signing an act declaring the applicant mentally
ill, which he refused to do. In August – September 2003 the
applicant underwent in-patient treatment after he had been diagnosed,
inter alia, with mosaic psychopathy.
- In an answer to the applicant's lawyer, the prison
administration confirmed that on 3 August 2001 the applicant had
begun a hunger-strike and was given a medical examination the same
day. On 15 August 2001 he cut his veins and set fire to himself and
was treated immediately. On 23 August the doctor found his state
of health relatively satisfactory. On 24 August a doctor found
that the applicant's health was deteriorating and ordered
force-feeding. He was force-fed a total of seven times, including on
28 August, 3, 5, 6, 7 and 10 September 2001. On 14 September
2001 the applicant was transferred to a detainee hospital and he
ended his hunger-strike on 4 October 2001. The feeding took
place on the basis of Article 33 of the Law on pre-trial
detention (see paragraph 40 below) and a special instruction (see
paragraph 41 below). That instruction had not been published but it
appears that the applicant had known its contents since he mentioned
it in his “hunger-strike diary”. The prison regulation
was not published either but did not contain any provision regarding
force-feeding. On 23 December 2003 a copy was exceptionally sent to
the applicant.
- According to documents submitted by the Government,
the applicant was escorted to court hearings on 4 and 13 September
2001. The applicant noted in his “hunger-strike diary”
that he had not been fed on 4 and 13 September 2001 since he had
been brought to court on those dates. In response to the Court's
request to submit all relevant medical documents concerning the
applicant's force-feeding, including the results of any medical tests
made, the Government submitted the following documents. Several types
of medical investigations of the applicant's health took place after
11 September 2001, including blood and urine analyses, cardiac and
other measurements. According to the register of visits by the duty
doctor, the applicant's health was satisfactory during most of the
period 1 – 21 August 2001. On 23 August 2001 the duty
doctor found that the applicant's health was “relatively
satisfactory” but considered that he was not sufficiently fit
to participate in criminal investigation actions, having complained
of general weakness and dizziness. On 24 August 2001 the duty doctor
noted “Force-feeding was administered in accordance with the
instruction (milk 800ml, sugar 50gr)”. Similar remarks were
made on 28 August 2001, 3, 5, 6, 7 and 10 September 2001. On a
number of these dates, the duty doctor noted that the applicant's
health had been “relatively satisfactory”, while on 5
September 2001 it was “satisfactory”. No indication of
the nature of the food administered was noted for the dates
5-7 September 2001.
(b) Court proceedings regarding the
applicant's force-feeding
- In October 2001 the applicant lodged a complaint about
the force-feeding and about the pain and humiliation caused by that
process. He described the process as follows: he was always
handcuffed, even though he never physically resisted force-feeding
but simply refused to take food as a form of protest. The prison
staff forced him to open his mouth by pulling his hair, gripping his
neck and stepping on his feet until he could no longer bear the pain
and opened his mouth. His mouth was then fixed in an open position by
means of a metal mouth-widener. His tongue was pulled out of his
mouth with a pair of metal tongs which he claims left it numb and
bleeding each time. A hard tube was inserted as far as his stomach
through which liquidised food passed into his stomach provoking, on
some occasions, sharp pain. When the metal holder was removed from
his mouth, he bled, he could not feel his tongue and was unable to
speak. The instruments used for his force-feeding were not fitted
with single-use, soft protection layers to prevent pain and
infection.
- According to the witness statement made in court by
C.S., a nurse who personally witnessed the applicant's force-feeding,
the applicant had not always resisted force-feeding and no
handcuffing had been necessary on such occasions, but it was a
mandatory procedure, which she considered to be painful, but
necessary to save lives. B.A., a generalist who personally force-fed
the applicant, declared in court that occasionally the food
introduced “did not correspond to the instruction”.
- V.B.,
a detainee in the same remand centre, gave evidence in court that he
had seen blood on the applicant and on other detainees after they had
been force-fed. The applicant requested to be fed milk or to be given
vitamins through an intra-venous drip. He also submitted copies of
decisions to place him in a solitary cell for periods of 10 days for
hunger-strikes on 22 April and 15 October 1994, 19 and 28 July, 21
August, 31 October, 24 November and 4 December 1995. The latter
sanction mentioned that the applicant “categorically continued
to refuse to take food”.
- On 4 November 2001 the Centru District Court refused
to examine the complaint because it did not comply with procedural
requirements. On 18 February 2002 that court again refused to
examine his complaint on the same ground. On 25 April 2002 the
Chişinău Regional Court quashed that decision and ordered a
re-hearing, finding that the applicant, as a detainee, could not
fully observe the formalities and that the specific nature of his
complaint warranted an examination of his case on the merits.
- On
7 November 2002 the Centru District Court rejected his claim as
unfounded. It focused on the lawfulness of force-feeding and
qualified his refusal to eat as a violation of detention rules. On 30
April 2003 the Chişinău Regional Court upheld that
judgment.
- On
19 April 2003 the Supreme Court of Justice quashed the previous
judgments and ordered a full re-hearing. The court noted that the
lower courts had not established clearly whether medical necessity
had been the basis for the force-feeding of the applicant.
- On
9 October 2003 Article 33 of the Law on Remand (which had provided
for the force-feeding of detainees on hunger-strike) was amended to
expressly prohibit the force-feeding of detainees.
- On
15 February 2005 the Centru District Court rejected his claims as
unfounded. It found that the law (applicable at the time), which
provided for the force-feeding of detainees who refused to eat, was
not contrary to national or international human rights standards,
aiming as it did at protecting the lives of such detainees. The
applicant's force-feeding was based on medical necessity as
established by the medical personnel and his handcuffing and other
restrictive measures were necessary to protect him from danger to his
health and life. The court found that in view of his resistance to
force-feeding it was necessary to apply to him “special means,
including handcuffs” and that it did not amount to inhuman or
degrading treatment. The court did not deal with the witness
statements of C.S., B.A. or V.B. (see paragraphs 20 and 21 above).
- On
26 April 2005 the Chişinău Court of Appeal upheld that
judgment, essentially repeating the reasons of the Centru District
Court. The court noted that the witnesses heard by the lower court
had denied having tortured the applicant and that there was no
evidence to support his claim.
- The
applicant appealed to the Supreme Court of Justice, relying, inter
alia, on evidence of damage to his health as a result of
force-feeding such as a broken tooth and an abdominal infection. He
also relied on his inability to pay and mentioned his second-degree
invalidity. The court refused to examine his appeal because the
applicant had not paid court fees of 45 Moldovan lei (MDL) (the
equivalent of 3 euros (EUR) at the time). He requested the court to
waive those fees because he had no sources of income and could not
afford to pay them. The court responded by a letter of 13 June 2005,
explaining that his appeal:
“does not correspond to the provisions of Articles
436, 437 of the Civil Procedure Code... According to Article 438 §
2 if the appeal does not correspond to the provisions of Article 437
or if the court fee has not been paid, the court returns it within 5
days under the signature of the president or the vice-president of
the court. For these reasons we return your appeal for elimination of
shortcomings. ...”
3. Access to court
- The
applicant's appeal in cassation lodged with the Supreme Court of
Justice in respect of his force-feeding was not examined by that
court for failure to pay the court fees (see paragraph 28 above).
- The
applicant had won court proceedings in 2003 and had received
MDL 1,800. By a judgment of 1 July 2005 he was awarded MDL
5,000. However, this decision was appealed and the applicant did not
receive any of that award in 2005. The applicant paid MDL 1,000 for
the assistance of a lawyer during his detention. He was also
compensated for lost mail by the postal authorities of France and the
United Kingdom (EUR 55).
- In
several letters to the domestic authorities he claimed that the court
fees and his other expenses had been paid by his relatives or
friends. In a letter of 25 September 2003 he asked the prison
administration to receive the compensation from the postal
authorities and to transfer it to his lawyer.
- The
applicant initiated court proceedings requesting a court order to
oblige the Government to provide him with the financial means for
initiating various court proceedings. On 18 June 2004 the Supreme
Court of Justice dismissed this complaint for failure to follow the
extra-judicial dispute settlement procedure before initiating the
proceedings.
4. Censorship of correspondence
- The
applicant further submitted copies of several letters, including from
the Parliament (e.g., letter of 10 October 2002), the Ministry of
Justice (11 October 2001), the Constitutional Court (18
September 2002), an Ombudsperson (23 August 2001), a psychiatric
hospital (16 April 2002) as well as from law-enforcement agencies
such as the prosecutor's office (11 July 2002) and
non-governmental organisations such as “Amnesty International”
(28 July 2003) and “Lawyers for Human Rights”
(10 February 2003). Most of these letters bear prison stamps
indicating the entry number and date. Occasionally, a handwritten
instruction is given: “to be handed [to the applicant]”
and/or by a note with his name and his cell number (including cell
nos. 11, 13, 15, 20 and 72). Other letters bear the stamp only on the
envelope. Some of the letters were addressed to the prison
administration and the applicant, but all of the letters mentioned
above were addressed to the applicant only.
5. Meetings with the applicant's relatives
- The
applicant submitted that except for a first visit by his family at
the beginning of his detention, he communicated with them through a
glass partition using an internal telephone. Such visits were limited
to about two hours a month and no privacy was possible since five
cabins for such visits were placed next to each other. All physical
contact was excluded. Convicted persons were allowed much longer
visiting times in separate meeting rooms without a glass partition.
The applicant did not have such privileges because, although
convicted of some offences, he was still on remand on other charges.
He further stated that he had been denied visits by his family for
long periods of time (up to a year).
- The
applicant requested better conditions for visits. On 21 August
2003 he asked for permission to have longer visits (see the preceding
paragraph) from his girlfriend and his sister and noted that his
conviction had become final on 28 May 2003. This request was refused
on the basis of the “Statute of the remand centre”.
- He
initiated court proceedings against the administration of the remand
centre requesting the right to have better visiting conditions,
notably to be able to meet his visitors in a separate room for a
longer time and without the glass partition. The administration
submitted that such visits were prohibited by the prison rules, which
aimed at protecting the safety and order of the remand centre. On 25
December 2003 the Court of Appeal rejected the applicant's claim.
- On
appeal he added a request for more regular visits and invoked the
fact that he was both a convict and a detainee on remand. He stressed
the long period of time during which he had not had any physical
contact with relatives and described how he missed such contact,
given also that he could not contact them by telephone. The applicant
insisted that he had obtained on numerous occasions the agreement of
the judge in charge of his case for meetings with relatives, but that
the prison administration allowed meetings only in the glass cabin.
He noted that occasionally the internal telephone in the glass cabin
had not worked and that he had had to shout to be heard by his
relatives, which was an embarrassment since four other families had
had to do the same. The applicant invoked Article 8 of the
Convention.
- The
Supreme Court of Justice, in its final judgment of 21 April 2004,
refused to examine the request for more regular visits as it had not
been lodged with the first-instance court. It also rejected the main
request for better visiting conditions, invoking the security of the
detainees as the justification for the glass partition.
B. Relevant non-Convention material
1. Relevant domestic law and
practice
- The
relevant provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure read as follows:
Article 85 Waiver of court fees
(1) The following are exempted from payment
of court fees in civil proceedings:
(a) Plaintiffs in actions:
...
(4) Depending on his or her financial
situation, the person may be exempted by the judge (the court) from
payment of court fees, either entirely or in part.
Article 437 Content of the
application to the court
...
(2) Proof of
payment of court fees is to be annexed to the application; the
provisions of Articles 85 (4) and 86 do not apply.”
- The
relevant provisions of the Law on pre-trial detention of 27 June
1997, in force until 9 October 2003, read as follows:
“Article 18 Correspondence - Lodging of
complaints, requests and sending of letters
... “(2) Complaints, requests and
letters from [persons detained awaiting trial] shall be subject to
censorship by the prison authorities. Complaints, requests and
letters addressed to the public prosecutor shall not be subjected to
any control and shall be despatched to the addressee within
twenty-four hours of their being filed.
Article 19 Authorisation of meetings
(1) The authorities of the remand centre
shall authorise meetings of detainees with their relatives or other
persons, with the written approval of the person or authority in
charge of the case. Usually one meeting per month shall be
authorised. The meeting may last from one to two hours.
...
(3) Authorised meetings shall take place
under the supervision of the remand centre authorities. In the event
of a violation of the rules, the meeting shall end.
Article 33 Manner of force-feeding
(1) A detainee who has refused to take food
shall be subjected to force-feeding on the basis of a written report
by the doctor in charge of that detainee.
(2) The following shall be force-fed:
(a) persons whose life is in danger as a
result of their persistent refusal to take food;
...
(4) A person who refuses to take food shall
be force-fed by medical personnel in the presence of at least two
guards or other representatives of the authorities of the detention
facility. Should it be necessary, such a person shall be restrained
with handcuffs and held in the correct position by the guards.
(5) The duration of the procedure of
force-feeding of the detainee, the calorific value of the food and
the name and function of the person who fed the detainee shall be
indicated in the latter's medical record.
(6) Should the health of a person refusing to
take food improve, the force-feeding shall end. A detailed medical
report shall be drawn up on the subject and the relevant entries made
in the medical records. ...”
- According
to the Instruction regarding the detention in prisons of persons
refusing to take food and the manner of their force-feeding,
adopted in 1996 by the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Justice
on 15 August 1996 and coordinated with the Prosecutor General's
Office, an “ill-founded” refusal to take food shall be
considered a breach of the detention regime. A person found to be in
breach shall be transferred, within 24 hours from the date of the
actual refusal to take food, to a solitary confinement cell. A doctor
shall determine the need to force-feed a detainee refusing to take
food and the regime to be followed, in accordance with the detainee's
somatic condition of the organism, and shall explain, before each
feeding, the dangers associated with the refusal to eat. Should a
detainee resist his force-feeding, he shall be handcuffed and held in
the required position by two guards or other prison representatives
who must always be present, and a mouth-widener shall be applied.
Each instance of force-feeding shall be registered in the detainee's
medical file, indicating the date, the composition of the food and
its quantity. Should a detainee's condition improve, the
force-feeding shall end and the reasons shall be given in the medical
file.
- On
24 October 2003 the Parliament adopted decision no. 415-XV,
regarding the National Plan of Action in the Sphere of Human Rights
for 2004-2008. The Plan includes a number of objectives for 2004-2008
aimed, inter alia, at improving the conditions of detention,
including the reduction of overcrowding, improvement of medical
treatment, involvement in work and reintegration of detainees, as
well as the training of personnel. Regular reports are to be drawn up
on the implementation of the Plan. On 31 December 2003 the
Government adopted a decision on the Concept of reorganisation of the
penitentiaries' system and the Plan of Action for 2004-2013 for the
implementation of the Concept of reorganisation of the
penitentiaries' system, both having the aim, inter alia, of
improving the conditions of detention in penitentiaries. In addition,
on 21 April 2004 the Government approved the creation of a Centre for
technical and material assistance to the penitentiaries' system.
- On
an unspecified date the Ministry of Justice adopted its “Report
on the implementing by the Ministry of Justice of Chapter 14 of the
National Plan of Action in the sphere of human rights for 2004-2008,
approved by the Parliament Decision no. 415-XV of 24 October 2003”.
On 25 November 2005 the Parliamentary Commission for Human
Rights adopted a report on the implementation of the National Plan of
Action. Both those reports confirmed the insufficient funding of the
prison system and the resulting failure to implement fully the action
plan in respect of the remand centres in Moldova, including prison
no. 3 in Chişinău, in particular concerning the provision
of sufficient space, food and bedding. The first of these reports
mentioned, inter alia, that “as long as the aims and
actions in [the National Plan of Action] do not have the necessary
financial support ... it will remain only a good attempt by the State
to observe human rights, described in Parliament Decision no. 415-XV
of 24 October 2003, the fate of which is non-implementation, or
partial implementation.” On 28 December 2005 the Parliament
adopted a decision no. 370-XVI “Concerning the results of the
verification by the special parliamentary commission regarding the
situation of persons detained pending trial in remand centre no. 13
of the Penitentiaries' Department whose cases are pending before the
courts”. The decision found, inter alia, that “the
activity of the Ministry of Justice in ensuring conditions of
detention does not correspond to the requirements of the legislation
in force.”
- The
relevant provisions of domestic law concerning the remedies available
for complaints under Article 3 of the Convention have been set out in
Ostrovar v. Moldova ((dec.), no. 35207/03, 22 March 2005) and
Boicenco v. Moldova (no. 41088/05, §§ 68-71, 11 July
2006).
- The
relevant provisions of domestic law concerning detainees'
correspondence, in addition to those mentioned in paragraph 40 above,
have been set out in Meriakri v. Moldova ((striking out), no.
53487/99, §§ 17-24, 1 March 2005).
In
addition, Article 301 of the new Code of Criminal Procedure reads as
follows:
“(1) Operational-investigative measures
involving limitations to the right of inviolability of person, home
or correspondence, telephone and telegraph conversations and other
forms of communication, as well as other measures provided for by law
shall be carried out with the authorisation of the investigating
judge. ...”
2. Reports of the Committee for the Prevention of
Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT)
- In
its Report on its visit to Moldova on 10-21 June 2001, the CPT found
(unofficial translation):
“61. The delegation drew attention to the issue of
contacts with the outside world for persons deprived of their
liberty. A considerable number of persons complained of the ban on
corresponding with their relatives and receiving visits. It appeared
that contact by detainees with the outside world was left to the
total discretion of the police officers and/or persons in charge of
the institutions, with a very restrictive attitude being taken in
this respect.
Concerning the suspects of crimes the CPT accepts that,
in the interest of the investigation, some restrictions on visits may
indeed be imposed for certain persons. However, these restrictions
should be strictly limited to the specific needs of the case and
should be applied for as short a time as possible. In no
circumstances may visits to a detainee by his family and friends be
prohibited for long periods of time. If there is considered to be an
ongoing risk of collusion, it is preferable to authorise visits under
strict supervision; this approach should also cover correspondence
with family and close friends.
...
The CPT recommends that the Moldovan authorities
review the legal regulations and existing practice in this field, in
the light of the observations formulated above.”
- In
its report on the visit to Moldova on 20-30 September 2004, the CPT
found (unofficial translation):
“50. The CPT delegation again heard
repeated complaints from persons charged with and convicted of
administrative offences concerning the refusal of permission for them
to receive visits or have contact with the outside world in EDPs.
The CPT reiterates (see paragraph 61 of the report on
the 2001 visit) that, where persons awaiting trial are concerned, if
it is necessary in the interests of the investigation to place
restrictions on visits for some of them, the restrictions should be
strictly limited in time and applied for the shortest period
possible. In no circumstances should visits to a detained person by
family and friends be prohibited for a prolonged period. If there is
thought to be an ongoing risk of collusion, it is better to allow
visits under strict supervision. ...
55. The situation in the majority of
penitentiaries visited, in view of the economic situation in the
country, remained difficult and the delegation encountered a number
of problems already identified during its visits in 1998 and 2001 in
terms of physical conditions and detention regimes.
Added to this is the problem of overcrowding, which
remains serious. In fact, even though the penitentiaries visited were
not operating at their full capacity – as is the case of prison
no. 3 in which the number of detainees was appreciably smaller than
during the last visit of the Committee – they continued to be
extremely congested. In fact, the receiving capacity was still based
on a very unsatisfactory 2 m2 per detainee; in practice,
this was often even less.
73. Facilities for contact with the outside
world left much to be desired. Although there was no restriction on
parcels and letters, inmates were entitled only to brief visits
totalling three hours every three months, which were in practice
often reduced to one hour. What is more, visits took place under
oppressive conditions in a room where prisoners were separated from
visitors by a thick wire grille, with a guard stationed nearby at all
times.
79. The follow-up visit to prison no.3 in
Chişinău revealed an unsatisfactory situation. The progress
noted was in fact minimal, limited to some running repairs. The
ventilation system had been repaired primarily thanks to the
financial support of civil society (especially NGOs), and the
creation of places for daily recreation had been made possible only
as a result of contributions by the detainees and their families.
The repair, renovation and maintenance of cells are
entirely the responsibility of detainees themselves and of their
families, who also pay for the necessary materials. They must also
obtain their own sheets and blankets, the institution being able to
give them only used mattresses.
In sum, the conditions in the great majority of cells in
Blocks I-II and the transit cells continue to be very poor indeed.
...
Finally, despite the drastic reduction in overcrowding,
the rate of occupancy of cells is still very high, not to say
intolerable.
83. Except in the Lipcani Re-education Colony
for Minors, where the efforts made in this respect are to be
highlighted, the quantity and quality of detainees' food everywhere
is a source of grave concern. The delegation was inundated with
complaints regarding the absence of meat and dairy products. The
findings of the delegation, regarding both the stocks of food and the
menus, confirm the credibility of these complaints. Its findings also
confirmed that in certain places (in Prison no. 3, ...), the food
served was repulsive and virtually inedible (for instance, insects
and vermin were present). This is not surprising given the general
state of the kitchens and their modest equipment.
The Moldovan authorities have always claimed financial
difficulties in ensuring the adequate feeding of detainees. However,
the Committee insists that this is a fundamental requirement of life
which must be ensured by the State to persons in its charge and that
nothing can exonerate it from such responsibility. ...”
3. European Prison Rules
- Recommendation
Rec(2006)2 of the Committee of Ministers to member states on the
European Prison Rules (adopted by the Committee of Ministers on 11
January 2006 at the 952nd meeting of the Ministers' Deputies),
insofar as relevant, reads as follows:
“Contact with the outside world
24.1 Prisoners shall be allowed to communicate as often
as possible by letter, telephone or other forms of communication with
their families, other persons and representatives of outside
organisations and to receive visits from these persons.
24.2 Communication and visits may be subject to
restrictions and monitoring necessary for the requirements of
continuing criminal investigations, maintenance of good order, safety
and security, prevention of criminal offences and protection of
victims of crime, but such restrictions, including specific
restrictions ordered by a judicial authority, shall nevertheless
allow an acceptable minimum level of contact.
24.3 National law shall specify national and
international bodies and officials with whom communication by
prisoners shall not be restricted.
24.4 The arrangements for visits shall be such as to
allow prisoners to maintain and develop family relationships in as
normal a manner as possible.
24.5 Prison authorities shall assist prisoners in
maintaining adequate contact with the outside world and provide them
with the appropriate welfare support to do so.
...”
THE LAW
1. Complaints
- The
applicant complained of violations of his right guaranteed by
Article 3 of the Convention. Article 3 reads as follows:
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
- He
also complained about a violation of his rights guaranteed by
Article 6 of the Convention as a result of the courts' refusal
to examine his complaint about force-feeding due to his failure to
pay court fees. The relevant part of Article 6 reads as follows:
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by
[a] ... tribunal...”
- The
applicant complained of violations of his rights guaranteed by
Article 8 of the Convention as a result of the censorship of his
correspondence and the refusal to provide him with acceptable
conditions for meeting with his visitors. Article 8 reads as follows:
“1. Everyone has the right to respect
for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public
authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in
accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in
the interests of national security, public safety or the economic
well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others.”
- The
applicant finally complained under Article 10 of the Convention about
the lack of access to the internal prison regulation. Article 10
reads as follows:
“1. Everyone has the right to freedom
of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and
to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by
public authority and regardless of frontiers. This Article shall not
prevent States from requiring the licensing of broadcasting,
television or cinema enterprises.
2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it
carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such
formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed
by law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of
national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the
prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or
morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for
preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or
for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”
2. Scope of the case
- The
Court notes that in the operative part of its partial inadmissibility
decision of 11 October 2005 regarding the present application it
adjourned the examination of the applicant's complaints referred to
above and of two additional complaints, namely regarding the fairness
of the 2001 revision proceedings and the right to appear in person
before civil courts. In fact, the Court found, in paragraph 5 of the
decision, that those two complaints were inadmissible. They were not,
accordingly, communicated to the Government. The Court observes that,
notwithstanding the operative part of its decision of 11 October
2005, these two complaints were dealt with in that decision and that
there is no further need to examine them here.
I. ADMISSIBILITY OF THE COMPLAINTS
- The
applicant complained that the conditions of his detention in prison
no. 3 amounted to inhuman and degrading treatment contrary to
Article 3 of the Convention (see paragraphs 9-12 above).
- The
Government disagreed and relied on evidence to the contrary (see
paragraph 13 above). They argued that the applicant had not exhausted
available domestic remedies in respect of the complaints under
Article 3 of the Convention. They relied, in particular, on the case
of Drugalev v. The Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Ministry
of Finance case (referred to in Boicenco, cited above, §
68).
- The
Court recalls that an individual is not required to try more than one
avenue of redress when there are several available (see, for example,
Airey v. Ireland, judgment of 9 October 1979, Series A no. 32,
p. 12, § 23).
- In
so far as the remedy of a civil action to request an immediate end to
the alleged violation is concerned, the Court has already found that
the Drugalev case relied on by the Government did not
constitute sufficient evidence that such a remedy was effective
(Holomiov v. Moldova, no. 30649/05, § 106, 7
November 2006). The applicant's own complaint made to the courts
regarding his force-feeding, relying expressly on Article 3 of
the Convention, was examined over a period of almost 4 years (see
paragraphs 19-28 above), which confirms once more the lack of any
timely impact of civil actions in trying to obtain an immediate
cessation of an alleged violation of Article 3 of the Convention.
- Moreover,
the applicant had expressly complained about his conditions of
detention to the Penitentiaries' Department and the administration of
the remand centre (see paragraph 11 above). The Government have not
submitted that these were not effective remedies which the applicant
was not required to exhaust.
In
such circumstances, this complaint cannot be rejected for failure to
exhaust available domestic remedies.
- The
Court considers that the applicants' complaints under Articles 3, 6,
8 and 10 of the Convention raise questions of fact and law which are
sufficiently serious that their determination should depend on an
examination of their merits. No grounds for declaring them
inadmissible have been established. The Court therefore declares
these complaints admissible. In accordance with its decision to apply
Article 29 § 3 of the Convention (see paragraph 4 above), the
Court will immediately consider the merits of the complaints.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
A. Conditions of detention
- The
applicant complained that the conditions of his detention in prison
no. 3 amounted to inhuman and degrading treatment contrary to
Article 3 of the Convention (see paragraphs 9-12 above).
- The
Government considered that the applicant had been detained in
acceptable conditions (see paragraph 13 above). Any suffering which
he may have sustained did not exceed the level normally associated
with detention.
- The
Court recalls that Article 3 of the Convention enshrines one of the
most fundamental values of democratic society. It prohibits in
absolute terms torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment, irrespective of the circumstances and the victim's
behaviour (see, for example, Labita v. Italy [GC], no
26772/95, § 119, ECHR 2000-IV). It has also found that the
distinction between “torture” and “inhuman or
degrading treatment” was intended to “attach a special
stigma to deliberate inhuman treatment causing very serious and cruel
suffering” (Ireland v. the United Kingdom, judgment of
18 January 1978, Series A no. 25, § 167).
The
Court refers to further principles established in its case-law in
respect of conditions of detention (see Sarban, cited above,
§§ 75-77, 4 October 2005) and of force-feeding
(see Nevmerzhitsky v. Ukraine, no. 54825/00, §§ 79-81,
ECHR 2005 II (extracts)).
- To
fall within the scope of Article 3, ill-treatment must attain a
minimum level of severity. The assessment of this minimum is
relative; it depends on all the circumstances of the case, such as
the duration of the treatment, its physical and mental effects and,
in some cases, the sex, age and state of health of the victim (see,
for example, Ireland v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 18
January 1978, Series A no. 25, p. 65, § 162).
- The
State must ensure that a person is detained in conditions which are
compatible with respect for his human dignity, that the manner and
method of the execution of the measure do not subject him to distress
or hardship of an intensity exceeding the unavoidable level of
suffering inherent in detention and that, given the practical demands
of imprisonment, his health and well-being are adequately secured by,
among other things, providing him with the requisite medical
assistance (see, Kudła v. Poland [GC], no. 30210/96,
§ 94, ECHR 2000 XI). When assessing conditions of
detention, account has to be taken of the cumulative effects of those
conditions and the duration of the detention (see Ostrovar v.
Moldova, no. 35207/03, § 80, 13 September 2005).
- In
the present case the parties disagreed as to the number of persons
detained in the cell together with the applicant, the amount of
personal space left to the applicant and even the cell numbers in
which he had been detained. The Court notes that the parties agreed
that the applicant had been detained in cell no. 17a (see paragraphs
9 and 13 above). According to the applicant, he had been detained
there with ten other persons. This was not disputed by the
Government, which merely noted that that cell measured 12m2
but gave no details as to the number of detainees kept in it. The
Court concludes that each detainee in that cell had just over 1m2
of space, which is manifestly below an acceptable minimum.
- While
the Government disputed that the applicant had been detained in cell
no. 11, the Court notes that some of the letters addressed to him
were directed by the prison authorities to the applicant in cell no.
11 (see paragraph 33 above). The applicant also noted his transfer to
cell no. 11 in his “hunger-strike diary” (see paragraph 12
above). The Court finds that the materials in the file provide
sufficient indication that the applicant was detained in cell no. 11.
The Government have not given any details regarding the size of that
cell or the number of detainees which it could accommodate. The Court
will, accordingly, assume that the applicant's account is correct and
that there were more detainees than beds in cell no. 11 on 2 August
2001 when he was transferred there following the start of his
hunger-strike.
- The
Court notes that the above findings correspond to those made by the
CPT in its report on its visit to Moldova in 2004: despite a drastic
reduction of the number of detainees in prison no. 3, each detainee
still had less than 2m2 of space (see paragraph 47 above).
It further notes that the domestic authorities also conceded that
that prison had occasionally been overpopulated (see paragraph 11
above). The Court doubts that the applicant could have had 5m2
of space as suggested by the Government throughout his five-year
period of detention while other detainees had less than half that
space. It notes that even the video submitted by the Government shows
a capacity of four places in the cell in which the applicant was
being detained at the moment of filming (see paragraph 13 above). The
Court has already found that overpopulation in itself raises an issue
under Article 3 of the Convention (see Kalashnikov v. Russia,
no. 47095/99, § 97, ECHR 2002-VI and Ostrovar v.
Moldova, no. 35207/03, § 84, 13 September 2005),
especially when it lasts for long periods as in the case of the
applicant, who was detained on remand for over five years in prison
no. 3.
- The
Court also notes that the Penitentiaries' Department confirmed, in
its letter of 29 December 2003, the presence of parasitic insects in
prison no. 3 (see paragraph 11 above). The Government have not
commented on this, nor on the applicant's complaint made in his
letters of 17 February and 26 May 2002 regarding the presence of
damp, the lack of beds, the presence of rodents and the lack of
access to either daylight or electricity for up to 18 hours a day
during the applicant's solitary detention for 10 days (see paragraph
12 above). The general statement that all cells had windows and
ventilation does not suffice to rebut the specific allegations
mentioned above.
- The
applicant's complaint regarding the quantity and quality of food
served is consonant with the findings of the domestic authorities and
the CPT (see paragraphs 43 and 47 above). In Ostrovar v. Moldova
(cited above, § 88), the Court made a similar finding in respect
of an applicant detained in the same prison partly during the same
period as the present applicant. While noting the video film and
other evidence of improvements in the present-day detention
conditions, which are encouraging, the Court observes that the
complaint refers to the period 2001 onwards.
- In
light of the above, the Court does not consider it necessary to deal
with the other allegations made by the applicant since it finds that
the conditions of his detention had been inhuman, in particular as a
result of extreme overcrowding, unsanitary conditions and the low
quantity and quality of food, as well as the prolonged period during
which the applicant had been detained in such conditions.
- There
has, accordingly, been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention on
account of the applicant's conditions of detention.
B. Force-feeding
1. Arguments of the parties
- The
applicant complained that he was force-fed in the absence of any
medical necessity for this, and about the manner in which the
force-feeding had been carried out. He submitted that the
force-feeding had had a punitive character and had been primarily
aimed at obliging him to stop his hunger-strike protest by subjecting
him to severe pain and degrading treatment (see paragraphs 14-18
above). Moreover, the manner in which it had been carried out caused
him unnecessary pain and humiliation and did not offer sufficient
protection to his health. As a result, he had suffered a broken tooth
and had contracted an abdominal infection.
- The
Government disagreed. According to them, the applicant's
force-feeding was based on a clearly established medical need, was
ordered and carried out by qualified medical personnel and was
authorised by law. The applicant's refusal to eat for 24 days had
exposed his life to a real risk and it was the duty of the doctors to
protect him. According to the Government, a healthy person's life was
in danger after 30 days of starvation, while more vulnerable persons
such as the applicant would be exposed to risk in a much shorter
period.
- In
respect of the manner of feeding the applicant by force, in
particular the use of handcuffs and other equipment, the Government
noted that it had been made strictly necessary by the applicant's
resistance and had been in accordance with the law in force at the
relevant time and with various recommendations of international
organisations. Moreover, the applicant's suicidal behaviour and his
being diagnosed with “mosaic schizophrenia” (see
paragraph 7 above) were additional factors making the restraints
necessary. Finally, the applicant's abdominal infection had nothing
to do with the force-feeding.
- The
applicant relied on the statement made in court by the prison
psychiatrist who had examined him shortly after the incident of
14 August 2001 (see paragraph 16 above) and who had found him to
be of sound mind.
2. The Court's assessment
- The
Court notes that in its previous case-law the Commission held that
the “forced-feeding of a person does involve degrading elements
which in certain circumstances may be regarded as prohibited by
Article 3 of the Convention. When, however, ..., a detained person
maintains a hunger-strike this may inevitably lead to a conflict
between an individual's right to physical integrity and the High
Contracting Party's positive obligation under Article 2 of the
Convention – a conflict which is not solved by the Convention
itself” (see X v. Germany (1984) 7 EHRR 152).
- The
Court reiterates that a measure which is of therapeutic necessity
from the point of view of established principles of medicine cannot
in principle be regarded as inhuman and degrading (see Jalloh
v. Germany [GC], no. 54810/00, § 69, ECHR 2006 ...).
The same can be said about force-feeding that is aimed at saving the
life of a particular detainee who consciously refuses to take food.
The Convention organs must nevertheless satisfy themselves that the
medical necessity has been convincingly shown to exist (see
Herczegfalvy v. Austria, judgment of 24 September 1992,
Series A no. 244, p. 26, § 83). Furthermore, the Court must
ascertain that the procedural guarantees for the decision to
force-feed are complied with. Moreover, the manner in which the
applicant is subjected to force-feeding during the hunger-strike must
not trespass the threshold of the minimum level of severity envisaged
by the Court's case law under Article 3 of the Convention
(Nevmerzhitsky, cited above, § 94).
(a) As to the existence of a medical
necessity to force-feed the applicant
- The
Court notes that the applicant went on hunger-strike on many
occasions, including during the second part of 1995, when he had been
on hunger-strike at least once a month (see paragraph 21 above). It
was not submitted that on any of the previous hunger-strikes he had
been force-fed, nor that his life and health had been in danger.
Moreover, the two 10-day isolation ward periods applied to him on 24
November and 4 December 1995 (when he was also detained in
prison no. 3) reflect the administration's position that not only was
the applicant's life not in danger as a result of his hunger-strike
but that he had to be held in harsher than normal conditions for a
total of 20 days as a sanction (see paragraph 21 above).
- The
sanctions applied to the applicant in 1994-1995 confirm that the
hunger-strikes were considered by the prison authorities to be
violations of the rules and acts of disobedience towards the prison
administration which required a serious response, including the
solitary confinement of the applicant. The domestic courts also
appear to have taken a similar view of the applicant's case (see
paragraph 23 above) and the instruction on the basis of which the
applicant had been force-fed had express provisions to that effect
(see paragraph 41 above). Such an attitude is consonant with the
applicant's claim that his force-feeding was not aimed at protecting
his life but rather at discouraging him from continuing his protest.
- The
Court finds it strange that the applicant's condition was considered
so serious as to require force-feeding on 3, 5, 6, 7 and 10 September
2001 while at the same time he was considered sufficiently fit to
attend court hearings on 4 and 13 September 2001 (see paragraph 18
above). It also observes that, despite his alleged weakness as a
result of his prolonged refusal to take food for 24 days, interrupted
by seven force-feedings, and despite his abdominal infection, the
applicant's condition was considered to be good enough for him to be
allowed to continue his hunger-strike for another 24 days without any
apparent need for force-feeding (see paragraph 17 above).
- The
Court notes the domestic courts' finding that there was sufficient
evidence of a medical necessity to force-feed the applicant in order
to save his life (see paragraphs 26 and 27 above). However, having
examined the materials submitted by the Government at the Court's
request, the Court does not see any evidence of a medical test or
other investigation on the basis of which the duty doctor had decided
to initiate the force-feeding (see paragraph 18 above). On the other
hand, extensive tests were carried out after the end of the
force-feeding. Indeed, the only reference attesting to the start of
the force-feeding was a simple note of 24 August 2001 indicating
that force feeding had taken place and the type and quantity of food
that had been administered. No reasons were given for the decision to
start the force-feeding procedure. Moreover, the applicant's health
was each time assessed as “relatively satisfactory” or
even “satisfactory” by the duty doctor (see paragraph 18
above), which is hardly compatible with a life-threatening condition
requiring force-feeding.
- The
Court further observes that in accordance with Article 33(1) of the
Law on pre-trial detention (see paragraph 40 above), as well as the
instruction in accordance with which the applicant had been force-fed
(see paragraph 41 above), a doctor should give reasons for
force-feeding. No such reasons were given in the applicant's case. It
follows that this basic procedural safeguard was not respected in the
applicant's case.
- In
view of the lack of medical evidence that the applicant's life or
health were in serious danger, it cannot be said that the authorities
acted in the applicant's best interests in subjecting him to
force-feeding, which of itself raises an issue under Article 3 of the
Convention (see Nevmerzhitsky, cited above, § 96).
Moreover, in the light of the prison authorities' view that
hunger-strikes were violations of prison order (see paragraphs 78 and
79 above), the Court finds that there are sufficient grounds to
accept the applicant's claim that his force-feeding was in fact aimed
at discouraging him from continuing his protest.
(b) As to the manner of force-feeding the
applicant
- The
applicant complained, moreover, about the excessively painful manner
of his force-feeding, aimed at discouraging him from continuing his
protest and at serving as a warning to others about the harsh
treatment they could expect should they follow his example.
- The
Court is struck by the manner of the force-feeding in the present
case (see paragraphs 19-21 above), including the unchallenged facts
of his mandatory handcuffing regardless of any resistance, the
causing of severe pain in order to force him to open his mouth and
the pulling of his tongue outside of his mouth with metal tongs. The
Court will assume that statement to be true, given also the
unchallenged statement in court made by V.B. (see paragraph 21 above)
about seeing blood on the applicant's clothes after his
force-feeding.
- In
addition, a number of procedural guarantees prescribed by domestic
law (see paragraphs 40 and 41 above) such as clarifying the reasons
for starting and ending the force-feeding or noting the composition
and quantity of food administered were not observed or only partly
observed (see paragraph 18 above).
- The
Court finally notes that the applicant had requested to be given
intra-venous drips instead of being force-fed and that he offered his
family's assistance in bringing him the necessary drips (see
paragraph 21 above). He appears not to have received a reply to this
request and neither the domestic courts nor the Government commented
on this. It follows that there was a less intrusive alternative to
force-feeding which was not even considered, despite the applicant's
express request.
- Even
assuming that neither his broken tooth nor his abdominal infection
had anything to do with the applicant's force-feeding, the Court
concludes that the manner in which it was carried out had been
unnecessarily painful and humiliating.
(c) Conclusion
- In
light of the above, the Court concludes that the applicant's repeated
force-feeding, not prompted by valid medical reasons but rather with
the aim of forcing the applicant to stop his protest, and performed
in a manner which unnecessarily exposed him to great physical pain
and humiliation, can only be considered as torture (see
Nevmerzhitsky, cited above, § 98).
There
has, accordingly, been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 § 1 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that the refusal of the Supreme Court of Justice
to examine his complaint regarding the force-feeding amounted to a
violation of his right of access to court, guaranteed by Article 6 §
1 of the Convention.
- The
Government disagreed. They noted that the applicant had to pay MDL 45
(approximately EUR 3) in court fees. The applicant had sufficient
resources to pay his lawyer MDL 1,000 and he had won a number of
court actions, receiving over MDL 6,000 in damages (see paragraph 30
above). In addition, the applicant was allowed to work and to obtain
revenue. Any money belonging to a prisoner was deposited on his
personal account in the prison.
- The
applicant argued that he had spent all the money received on
medication of a type that was not available in prison and on the
litigation costs of his numerous court actions. He had not received
the award made in 2005 (MDL 5,000) since the decision had been
appealed and the case was still pending when his complaint regarding
the force-feeding was before the Supreme Court of Justice. He was a
second-degree invalid who spent a lot of time on treatment and could
thus not hope to find work in prison. His invalidity pension was
suspended during his detention and he had no revenue during his
five-year period of detention.
- The
Court refers to the general principles established in its case-law
concerning access to a tribunal within the meaning of Article 6 §
1 of the Convention and, more specifically, the requirement to pay
court fees (see, among many authorities, Kreuz v. Poland, no.
28249/95, §§ 52-57, ECHR 2001 VI and the further
references therein).
- The
Court notes that the relevant proceedings concerned the applicant's
claim for damages. Accordingly, Article 6 § 1 applies under its
civil head (see Kreuz, cited above, § 35).
- In
the present case, the Court notes that the applicant's complaint
concerned the alleged damage to his health caused by the actions of
the authorities. In accordance with Article 85 (1) of the Code of
Civil Procedure (“the CCP”, see paragraph 39 above), he
should have been exempted from paying court fees due to the nature of
his claim, regardless of his ability to pay. The Court notes that the
applicant did not expressly rely on this ground for exempting him
from the payment of court fees. However, it also notes that the text
of Article 85 (1) of the CCP does not subject its application to a
requirement of a formal request by the interested party. The Court
considers that the domestic court should have examined his request
for a court fee waiver also in the light of the nature of his
complaint (as did the Chişinău Regional Court, see
paragraph 22 above), given its express reference to Article 437 of
the Code of Civil Procedure (which, in turn, refers to Article 85)
in refusing to examine his case and given the seriousness of
complaints made, referring as they did to alleged torture.
- In
view of the above, the Court considers that the applicant was denied
access to a tribunal. There has, accordingly, been a violation of
Article 6 § 1 of the Convention.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION
A. Alleged censorship of correspondence
- The
applicant complained under Article 8 of the Convention about the
alleged censorship of his correspondence.
- The
Government submitted that no censorship of the applicant's
correspondence had taken place since this was against the law. When
the law exceptionally allowed censorship, it required the prior
authorisation of a court (see paragraph 45 above). Only letters
addressed to the applicant and the prison administration were
opened and read by the administration. None of the 580 letters
addressed personally to the applicant was read. In support of this
submission the Government submitted a copy of several pages of the
incoming mail register according to which a number of letters
addressed to the applicant had been marked “sealed”. In
addition, the applicant twice signed forms confirming that on those
two occasions he had received the letters in sealed envelopes. In
addition, the Government suggested that some of the letters submitted
by the applicant bearing a stamp and inscriptions could be fakes.
- Under
its case-law, the Court is required to verify whether there has been
an interference with the applicant's rights under Article 8, whether
such interference was “prescribed by law”, pursued a
legitimate aim under the second paragraph of that Article and was
“necessary in a democratic society” (see, among many
authorities, Messina v. Italy (no. 2), no. 25498/94,
§ 63, ECHR 2000 X; Ostrovar v. Moldova, cited
above, § 97). It will deal with each of these criteria in
turn.
1. Whether there was an interference with the
applicant's right to respect for his correspondence
- The
Court notes that a number of letters sent to the applicant in
2001-2003 from law-enforcement agencies, human rights organisations
and even a psychiatric hospital bear either a prison stamp or other
inscription (see paragraph 33 above). It also notes that all the
letters mentioned above were addressed to the applicant alone. As for
the alleged falsification of the letters, the Court notes that the
Government did not identify which letters they suspected had been
falsified and did not submit any evidence in this respect. There is
therefore no reason for the Court to doubt the authenticity of the
letters.
- The
Court concludes that, contrary to the Government's submissions, there
is clear evidence in the file that at least some of the applicant's
correspondence had been opened by the prison administration. There
has, accordingly, been an interference with the applicant's right to
respect for his correspondence.
2. Whether the interference was “prescribed by
law”
- The
Court recalls that the expression “in accordance with the law”
not only necessitates compliance with domestic law, but also relates
to the quality of that law (Halford v. the United Kingdom
judgment of 25 June 1997, Reports of Judgments and Decisions
1997-III, p. 1017, § 49). Domestic law must indicate with
reasonable clarity the scope and manner of exercise of the relevant
discretion conferred on the public authorities so as to ensure to
individuals the minimum degree of protection to which they are
entitled under the rule of law in a democratic society (Domenichini
v. Italy judgment of 15 November 1996, Reports
1996-V, p. 1800, § 33).
- The
Court notes that the applicant was not given access to the prison
rules governing, inter alia, the manner of processing the
applicant's correspondence until December 2003 (see paragraph 17
above). While both the old and the new legislation provided for the
possibility to open detainees' correspondence under certain
conditions, the Court observes that the procedure established by law
had not been followed in the applicant's case. In particular, the
Government have not submitted any evidence that a court had
authorised the opening of any of the letters referred to above, which
was an essential condition for the opening of correspondence (see
paragraphs 45 and 98 above).
- It
follows that the opening of the applicant's correspondence without
the authorisation of a court was in breach of domestic law and was
therefore not “prescribed by law” within the meaning of
Article 8 of the Convention. In view of this finding, the Court does
not consider it necessary to verify whether the interference was
“necessary in a democratic society”.
There
has, accordingly, been a violation of Article 8 of the Convention in
respect of the censorship of the applicant's correspondence.
B. The alleged failure to ensure acceptable conditions
for meeting with the applicant's family
- The
applicant also complained that his right to meet his relatives and
girlfriend had been severely restricted. In particular, he was not
allowed to have any physical contact with them except on a few
occasions and had to communicate with them through a glass partition.
The fact that he had to sit in one of five glass cabins situated next
to each other meant that privacy was impossible.
- The
Government submitted that the applicant did not have any family
relationship with his wife and child since in 2002 he had applied for
a divorce and custody of his son. All his requests to meet with his
girlfriend and her child had been allowed, including meetings with
them in a separate room and for long periods of time, as proved by
the approvals of such meetings for various dates in 2004. In
addition, the glass partition in the glass cabins designed for “short
visits” was necessary for security reasons and did not prevent
free communication between them.
- The
Court reiterates that any detention which is lawful for the purposes
of Article 5 of the Convention entails by its nature a limitation on
private and family life and that some measure of control over
prisoners' contacts with the outside world is called for and is not
in itself incompatible with the Convention (see Van der Ven v. the
Netherlands, no. 50901/99, § 68, ECHR 2003 II).
However, prisoners “continue to enjoy all the fundamental
rights and freedoms guaranteed under the Convention save for the
right to liberty” (Hirst v. the United Kingdom (no. 2)
[GC], no. 74025/01, § 69, ECHR 2005 ...). It is,
moreover, an essential part of a prisoner's right to respect for
family life that the prison authorities assist him in maintaining
contact with his close family (see Messina v. Italy (no. 2),
cited above, § 61). Subject to necessary security measures,
detainees should be allowed to meet not only their relatives but also
other persons wishing to visit them (see paragraph 48 above). The
Court finally reiterates that it is “an essential part of both
private life and the rehabilitation of prisoners that their contact
with the outside world be maintained as far as practicable, in order
to facilitate their reintegration in society on release, and this is
effected, for example, by providing visiting facilities for the
prisoners' friends and by allowing correspondence with them and
others” (X. v. the United Kingdom, no. 9054/80, D.R. 30
p. 113). It follows that the visits by the applicant's girlfriend and
her daughter, as well as his sister, fell within the protection of
Article 8 of the Convention.
-
The Court will verify compliance of the measures taken in respect of
the applicant on the basis of its usual test (see paragraph 99
above).
1. Whether there was an interference with the
applicant's rights under Article 8 of the Convention
- While
the Government have not submitted any evidence of their claim that
meetings in a separate room had been allowed in 2003, the applicant
for his part submitted one example as proof that a meeting with his
girlfriend and his sister had been denied without reasons (see
paragraph 35 above).
- Moreover,
during the proceedings which the applicant initiated before the
domestic courts, none of the authorities involved submitted that the
applicant had been allowed to meet with his visitors in a separate
room. Rather, they contended that such meetings were not allowed
under the prison rules and that the glass partition was necessary for
security reasons, an argument accepted by the courts (see paragraph 36
above).
- The
Court concludes that, at least during 2003, the applicant was denied
meetings with his sister and girlfriend in a separate room and they
had to meet in one of the glass cabins and he was separated from his
visitors by a glass partition. There was, accordingly, an
interference with the applicant's right to meet his visitors in
conditions of privacy.
2. Whether the interference was “prescribed by
law”
- The
Court notes that the Government have not referred to any legal act as
the basis for installing a glass partition in the cabin for meetings
between detainees and their visitors. The wording which could be
considered as authorising such a measure, found in Article 19 (3) of
the Law on detention on remand (see paragraph 40 above), reads:
“[a]uthorised meetings shall take place under the control of
the remand centre administration”. The Court considers that
that wording is very general and no further precision is provided by
the prison rules, which simply repeat that wording.
- No
other official act appears to contain details of the meaning of the
phrase, which would suggest that the administration of each remand
centre was given a very wide discretion as to the specific manner of
implementing the control over meetings. In rejecting the applicant's
complaints, the prison administration relied on paragraph 53 (4) of
the Statute of prison no. 13, a document which has not been submitted
to the Court and was never mentioned by the domestic courts. In view
of the above and given that the prison rules had not been published
(see paragraph 17 above), there is cause to consider that the Statute
of prison no. 13 (on the understanding that it is not the same
document as the prison rules) was also not a publicly available
document.
- While
the facts above strongly suggest that the interference with the
applicant's rights had not been “provided by law” within
the meaning of Article 8 § 2 of the Convention, the Court
considers that it does not have to take a definitive view on this
issue in view of its findings below.
3. Whether the interference pursued a legitimate aim
- The
Court considers that the limitations on the manner of maintaining
contacts with the outside world, including the installation of
physical barriers such as a glass partition, may pursue the
legitimate aim of protecting public safety and preventing disorder
and crime, within the meaning of the second paragraph of Article 8 of
the Convention.
4. Whether the interference was “necessary in a
democratic society”
- The
Court notes that the Government relied on security reasons as
justification for the need to separate the applicant from his
visitors by means of a glass partition. This was also the reason for
the domestic courts' rejection of the applicant's complaint.
- The
Court observes that the domestic courts did not make any attempt to
ascertain the nature of the security issues specifically in the
applicant's case. The courts confined themselves to a perceived
general need to preserve the safety of detainees and visitors. The
Court notes that the applicant was accused of fraud (see paragraph 7
above). In the absence of any risk of collusion, re-offending or
escaping, it can reasonably be considered that allowing the applicant
to meet with his visitors would not have created a security risk.
This conclusion is reinforced by the fact that the applicant was
allowed such visits on a number of occasions in 2004 (see paragraph 106
above) and it has not been claimed that the applicant's personality
or other relevant circumstances obtaining in 2003 had drastically
changed in 2004.
- While
there may well be cases where restrictions on a detainee's contacts
with the outside world could be necessary, this was not so in the
present case. The authorities did not adduce evidence of any threat
posed by the applicant and subsequently confirmed that there was no
such threat by allowing him to meet with his visitors in private in
2004. The fact that the courts permitted such meetings (see paragraph
37 above) also confirms this conclusion. On the other hand, the
effect of the long period of time (at least one year in 2003) during
which the applicant had not been able to have any physical contact
with his visitors, the fact that he could only maintain a
relationship with them by correspondence and by meeting with them in
prison (see paragraph 37 above) and the physical barriers to free
discussion created by the glass cabin cannot be ignored (see the
findings of the CPT, paragraph 47 above, and the applicant's
unchallenged claims regarding the lack of privacy in the five cabins
situated next to each other, referred to in paragraph 105 above). In
the absence of any demonstrated need for such far-reaching
restrictions on the applicant's rights, the domestic authorities
failed to strike a fair balance between the aims relied on and the
applicant's rights under Article 8.
- There
has, accordingly, been a violation of Article 8 of the Convention in
this respect also.
V. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 10 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained about the failure of the prison administration
to give him access to the prison rules, a document which had not been
published even though it concerned a number of his rights.
- The
Government disagreed and argued that Article 10 was not applicable.
In any event, the applicant was sent a copy of the prison rules in
December 2003 and was thus not a victim of a violation of his rights.
- The
Court considers that in the present case it does not have to decide
on whether Article 10 could be interpreted as requiring the
authorities to ensure the applicant's access to information such as
the prison rules. To the extent that such information was vital for
protecting the applicant's rights such as those guaranteed by
Articles 3 and 8 of the Convention, the authorities' failure to give
the applicant a copy of the prison rules has been taken into account
when dealing with his complaints under those Articles.
Accordingly,
the Court does not consider it necessary to examine this complaint
separately.
VI. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Damage
- The
applicant claimed EUR 81,800 for non-pecuniary damage as a result of
the alleged violations of his rights, including EUR 50,000 for the
violation of Article 3, EUR 24,800 for the violation of Article 6 and
EUR 7,000 for the violation of Article 8 of the Convention. He
relied on the Court's case-law on the above-mentioned Articles.
- The
Government disagreed and argued that the applicant had failed to
prove a violation of any Article of the Convention and to submit any
evidence of non-pecuniary damage. They considered irrelevant the
case-law relied on by the applicant since those cases had dealt with
different situations and the awards made by the Court in those cases
reflected the finding of a violation of a number of Articles of the
Convention.
- The
Court recalls that it has found serious violations of Articles 3, 6
and 8 of the Convention in the present case, most importantly
torture. Deciding on an equitable basis, the Court awards the
applicant EUR 20,000 in compensation for non-pecuniary damage
(see Nevmerzhitsky, cited above, § 145; Holomiov,
cited above, § 155).
B. Costs and expenses
- The
applicant claimed EUR 3,136 for costs and expenses, which sum
comprised EUR 3,000 for legal representation. In support of his
claims he submitted a contract with his representative and an
itemised list of hours worked on the case, confirming that the
representative had worked 50 hours at a rate of EUR 60 per hour.
- The
Government contested the need to spend 50 hours on the case and noted
that the applicant had been represented only after communication of
the application to the Government. In addition, the amounts requested
were unreasonably high and there was no evidence that the applicant
had in fact paid them to his representative. Moreover, the
representative was a member of a not-for-profit non-governmental
organisation and should have worked for free.
- The
Court recalls that in order for costs and expenses to be included in
an award under Article 41, it must be established that they were
actually and necessarily incurred and were reasonable as to quantum
(see, for example, Ostrovar v. Moldova, cited above, §
121).
- In
the present case, regard being had to the itemised list submitted by
the applicant, the above criteria, the complexity of the case and the
work done by the applicant's lawyer, who represented the applicant
only after the present case had been communicated, the Court awards
EUR 2,000 for costs and expenses, less EUR 850 received by way of
legal aid from the Council of Europe, together with any value-added
tax that may be chargeable (see Nevmerzhitsky, cited above, §
149).
C. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be
based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to
which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Declares the application admissible;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
3 of the Convention in respect of the applicant's conditions of
detention;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
3 of the Convention in respect of the applicant's force-feeding and
the manner thereof;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
6 of the Convention in respect of the refusal to examine the
applicant's appeal in cassation due to his failure to pay court fees;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
8 of the Convention as a result of the censorship of his
correspondence;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
8 of the Convention in respect of the conditions in which the
applicant had to meet with his visitors in prison;
- Holds that there is no need to examine
separately the complaint under Article 10 of the Convention;
- Holds
(a) that the respondent State is to pay the applicant,
within three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final
in accordance with Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the
following amounts, to be converted into the national currency of the
respondent State at the rate applicable at the date of settlement:
(i) EUR
20,000 (twenty thousand euros) in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(ii) EUR
1,150 (one thousand one hundred and fifty euros) in respect of costs
and expenses;
(iii) any
tax that may be chargeable on the above amounts;
(b) that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement
simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal
to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the
default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses the remainder of the applicant's claim
for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 19 June 2007, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Fatoş
Aracı Nicolas Bratza
Deputy Registrar President