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FIRST
SECTION
CASE OF
MUSAYEV AND OTHERS v. RUSSIA
(Applications
nos. 57941/00, 58699/00 and 60403/00)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
26
July 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 Musayev and Others v. Russia,
The
European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Mr C.L. Rozakis, President,
Mr L.
Loucaides,
Mrs N. Vajić,
Mr A. Kovler,
Mrs E.
Steiner,
Mr K. Hajiyev,
Mr D. Spielmann, judges,
and
Mr S. Nielsen, Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 5 July 2007,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in three applications (nos. 57941/00, 58699/00 and
60403/00) against the Russian Federation lodged with the Court under
Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by five Russian
nationals (see full names in paragraph 7 below) (“the
applicants”), on 25 May 2000, 20 June 2000 and 29 June
2000 respectively.
- The
applicants were represented by lawyers of the Human Rights Centre
Memorial (Moscow) and the European Human Rights Advocacy Centre –
EHRAC (London). The Russian Government (“the Government”)
were represented by Mr P. Laptev, Representative of the Russian
Federation at the European Court of Human Rights.
- The
applicants alleged that their relatives had been unlawfully killed by
State agents in Grozny in February 2000. They relied on Articles 2, 3
and 13 of the Convention.
- The
Chamber decided to join the proceedings in the applications (Rule 42
§ 1).
- By
a decision of 13 December 2005 the Court declared the applications
admissible.
-
The Chamber having decided, after consulting the parties, that no
hearing on the merits was required (Rule 59 § 3 in fine),
the parties replied in writing to each other's observations.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicants are:
(1)
Yusup Said-Aliyevich Musayev, born in 1940;
(2)
Suleyman Anarbekovich Magomadov, born in 1957;
(3)
Tamara Saidovna Magomadova, born in 1953;
(4)
Malika Alviyevna Labazanova, born in 1955;
(5)
Khasan Magomedovich Abdulmazhidov, born in 1940.
They
are residents of Grozny, Chechnya.
- The
submissions of the parties on the facts concerning the circumstances
of the applicants' relatives' deaths and the ensuing investigations
are set out in Part A below. A description of the materials submitted
to the Court is contained in Parts B and C below.
A. Submissions of the parties
- The
applicant's families lived in a settlement referred to by local
residents as Novye Aldy, located administratively in the Oktyabrskiy
and Zavodskoy districts of Grozny.
- In
October 1999 hostilities resumed in Chechnya between the Russian
forces and the Chechen fighters. Grozny and its suburbs came under
heavy bombardment. From late December 1999 northern parts of the city
came under the control of the Russian forces. At the end of January
the central parts of the city were taken over by the Russian troops.
The first applicant submitted that from 23 January 2000 their
district in the south of the city was no longer shelled, because the
Russian troops had been stationed about 500 metres away, in
Okruzhnaya Street. According to the first applicant, there were no
Chechen fighters in Novye Aldy, because there were no large
administrative buildings which they could have used as defence
positions.
1. The first applicant's account of the events of 5
February 2000
- In
the winter of 1999 to 2000 the first applicant and several members of
his extended family remained in Grozny. The first applicant lived at
116 Voronezhskaya Street. Several of his relatives lived in the
neighbourhood. According to the applicant, most of the over 6,000
persons who had lived in Novye Aldy before the hostilities fled, and
only a few hundred remained, mostly elderly people.
- The
first applicant submitted that on 4 February 2000 the Russian forces
had entered Novye Aldy. Armoured personnel carriers (APCs) and other
military vehicles were stationed at crossroads, and the settlement
was surrounded and blocked from all sides. Large groups of military
servicemen went from one house to another, checking documents and
inspecting the cellars and lofts of the buildings. According to the
first applicant, they behaved in an orderly and polite fashion. In
the evening the soldiers left, having warned several inhabitants to
stay inside and to beware of a certain military unit which might come
the following day.
- Early
in the morning on 5 February 2000 the first applicant heard shots
from automatic guns in the neighbourhood. He was at his cousins'
house at 122 Voronezhskaya Street with his three cousins, Khasan
Musayev, Aindi Akhmadov and Umar Musayev.
- Another
of the applicant's cousins, Abdurakhman Musayev, rushed into the
courtyard and told them that early in the morning he had gone with
his two nephews, Suleyman Musayev and Yakub Musayev, to fetch some
water from a well. On their way back with a sledge loaded with
several water cans they were stopped by a group of Russian soldiers
who ordered them to approach. Abdurakhman Musayev, who had been
walking behind his nephews, managed to escape unseen. He was very
worried about their safety. Abdurakhman and Umar Musayev went outside
to look for them. This was the last time they had been seen alive.
- Soon
afterwards their neighbour Aba M., who was about 80 years old, came
into the courtyard with her 13-year-old grandson Suleyman and told
them that in their street, in front of house no. 112, there were two
bodies. The first applicant and his cousins were afraid that these
might be their cousins.
- Several
minutes later a group of servicemen entered the courtyard, shouting
and firing from automatic weapons. They ordered the men, including
the 13-year-old Suleyman, to lie down in the snow. They then searched
the house and the courtyard, having ordered Aba M. to walk in front
of them. After about half an hour, while the first applicant and
others were still lying on the ground, the servicemen “calmed
down” and the most senior among them, about 35-40 years old,
ordered them to leave. The first applicant, worried about his cousins
and nephews, asked for permission to go into the street and to look
at the two bodies. The servicemen ordered him to stay inside “unless
he wanted to be lying beside them”. They then proceeded into
Umar Musayev's house, next door on Voronezhskaya Street.
- For
the following few hours there was continued gunfire all around, and
the first applicant did not dare to go outside. After about 3 p.m. he
heard cries from women in the street and went out. He saw his cousin
Malika Ganayeva and her daughter Larisa, screaming. They had found
six bodies in the street, all of them shot dead. Four bodies were in
a pile on the corner of Voronezhskaya Street and Khoperskaya Street.
They were Alvi Ganayev, Malika Ganayeva's husband, and their two
sons, Aslanbek and Salambek. The fourth body was the first
applicant's cousin Abdurakhman Musayev. In front of the house at 112
Voronezhskaya Street were the bodies of Umar Musayev, another of the
first applicant's cousins, and Vakha Khakimov, a neighbour.
- The
first applicant, his relatives and neighbours started to take the
bodies inside the yards. A group of soldiers were still standing at
the intersection of Voronezhskaya Street and Khoperskaya Street, and
one of them fired a single shot which wounded Ramzan Elmurzayev, a
neighbour. He fell down, and other neighbours pulled him inside the
courtyard. He died of his wound in the early hours of the following
day.
- In
the late afternoon on the same day the first applicant noticed that
the house of his relative Yakub Musayev at 118 Voronezhskaya Street
was on fire. Together with some neighbours they tried to extinguish
the flames, but it was too late and the house burnt down entirely.
- At
about 8 p.m. the same day a relative came and said that they had
found the bodies of Suleyman Musayev and Yakub Musayev, the first
applicant's relatives who had been missing since the morning, when
they had gone to fetch water from a well. Their bodies were found in
front of the house at 22 Khoperskaya Street. The first applicant
submitted that they had been shot by an automatic gun and a
sub-machine gun, because Suleyman's shoulder was twisted. The first
applicant dragged the bodies into the courtyard of a neighbouring
house, and the next morning took them to the house at 116
Voronezhskaya Street, using a sledge.
- On
5 February 2000 the first applicant was thus a witness to nine
killings, seven of the deceased being his relatives. They were:
(1) Umar
Musayev, born in 1938;
(2) Yakub
Musayev, born in 1949;
(3) Abdurakhman
Musayev, born in 1949;
(4) Suleyman
Musayev, born in 1965;
(5) Alvi
Ganayev, born in 1938;
(6) Salambek
Ganayev, born in 1969;
(7) Aslanbek
Ganayev, born in 1965.
2. Subsequent events as described by the first
applicant
- The
first applicant put the bodies of his relatives in the courtyard of
the house at 112 Voronezhskaya Street. Contrary to local tradition,
the applicant and his relatives did not bury the bodies on the same
day because they were afraid to go to the cemetery, but also, as some
witnesses stated, because they were waiting for some form of
investigation into the killings.
- On
7 February 2000 a group of servicemen arrived at Novye Aldy. They
went around the settlement and checked documents. They asked why the
bodies had not yet been buried, and the first applicant replied that
they were afraid to go to the cemetery. The servicemen allegedly
advised him to hurry up with the burials and left.
- On
8 February 2000 a military Ural truck with soldiers came to the first
applicant's house at 116 Voronezhskaya Street. The applicant
submitted that some of the soldiers were the same ones who had been
involved in the killings of 5 February. The first applicant tried to
enter his courtyard, but the servicemen fired shots in the air and
told him not to approach. They took out anything of value from his
and his cousin's house, stacked it into the truck and left. The first
applicant watched their actions from a neighbour's house, but could
not distinguish the registration plates of the vehicle, which were
covered with mud.
- On
9 February 2000 a Russian human-rights activist, Viktor Popkov, was
in Novye Aldy and filmed the bodies of the first applicant's
relatives and interviews by the first applicant, by Malika Ganayeva
(the first applicant's cousin, whose husband and two sons had been
killed on 5 February 2000), and by other survivors of the
massacre. The first applicant submitted a copy of the videotape and a
transcript of the recording.
- On
10 February 2000 there came a group of men in uniform, who said they
had come from the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office. They inspected the
bodies still lying at house no. 112, filled in some papers and
collected evidence. The first applicant gave them two automatic-rifle
bullets extracted from the bodies of Suleyman Musayev and Yakub
Musayev, and cartridges and bullets collected at the execution sites.
The officers assured him that there would be an expert report on
them.
- On
12 February 2000 a new group of servicemen arrived. They said that
they were from the military prosecutor's office for the Northern
Caucasus. They too examined the bodies at 112 Voronezhskaya Street
and collected more bullets and cartridges.
- The
first applicant submitted that among the evidence collected by the
investigators there was an identification card apparently dropped by
a serviceman in Khoperskaya Street and a note written by one group of
soldiers to his neighbours on 5 February 2000 in order to “protect”
them. The first applicant has submitted a copy of that note.
- On
12 February 2000 the first applicant and his relatives buried the
dead.
- He
submitted that until the end of February 2000 groups of officials
continued to come to Novye Aldy, asking the residents about the
events.
- On
23 May 2000 the Civil Registration Office of the Zavodskoy district
of Grozny issued death certificates for Alvi Ganayev, Aslanbek
Ganayev, Salambek Ganayev and Suleyman Musayev.
- The
first applicant submitted a hand-drawn plan of Novye Aldy with
indications of the places to which he referred. He also submitted
statements by Aba M., by the parents of Suleyman Musayev and by a
neighbour, Markha T., who was a witness to the killings in
Voronezhskaya Street.
- The
first applicant submitted that the events of February 2000 had
affected him deeply. He had undergone several courses of treatment in
Chechnya and in Moscow, but despite that he could not sleep, and
suffered from headaches and depression.
3. Killing of Salman Magomadov and Abdula Magomadov
- The
second and third applicants submitted that in the winter of 1999 to
2000 they had stayed in Ingushetia because of the fighting in Grozny.
Their relatives had remained in Grozny to look after the family
property. They were Salman Magomadov (born in 1940), the husband of
the third applicant and the second applicant's brother, and Abdula
Magomadov (born in 1947), the second applicant's other brother. They
stayed in their house at 158 Mazayeva Street. The third applicant and
Salman Magomadov had been married since 1981 and had five daughters,
born in 1973, 1979, 1980, 1985 and 1990.
- On
5 February 2000 Russian forces conducted an operation in Novye Aldy,
as a result of which numerous houses were burnt and civilians killed.
The neighbours later told the applicants that the soldiers had
started at 176 Mazayeva Street and had gone into the houses,
killed the inhabitants and set fire to the houses one by one.
- On
10 February 2000 their three neighbours Z., S. and Ya. examined the
burnt-out house at 158 Mazayeva Street, and discovered the remains of
Salman and Abdula Magomadov in the cellar. They dug them out from the
debris and buried them in the courtyard. The applicants learnt of
this while in Ingushetia.
- Several
days later the second applicant came to Grozny, alerted by the
neighbours. In the cellar of the house he discovered some personal
belongings of his brothers – a wristwatch, keys from a flat, a
key from a garage and parts of clothes. He also found several bullets
from a 5.45-mm calibre automatic rifle and machine-gun cartridges. At
the end of March the remains of the second applicant's brothers were
buried at the local cemetery.
- On
19 May 2000 the Civil Registration Office of the Zavodskoy district
of Grozny issued death certificates for Salman Anarbekovich
Magomadov, aged 59, and Abdula Anarbekovich Magomadov, aged 52. The
deaths had occurred on 5 February 2000 in Grozny as a result of
numerous bullet wounds to the head and body.
4. Killing of Zina Abdulmezhidova and Khuseyn
Abdulmezhidov
- The
fourth and the fifth applicants are wife and husband. During the
winter of 1999 to 2000 they remained in Grozny in their house at no.
20, 3rd Tsimlyanskiy Lane. Within the same courtyard in a separate
house there lived the fifth applicant's sister and brother, Zina
Abdulmezhidova (born in 1940) and Khuseyn Abdulmezhidov (born in
1953).
- On
4 February 2000 in the afternoon Russian troops entered the
settlement of Novye Aldy. The residents, who had been hiding in
cellars during the months of shelling, went into the streets. The
soldiers instructed them to remain at their homes in accordance with
the registration of their places of residence, because on the
following day there would be a “mopping-up” operation
(зачистка).
The fourth applicant submitted that they had eagerly awaited the end
of fighting and the entry of the Russian troops and did not worry
about the checking of passports.
- On
5 February 2000 at about 11 a.m. four servicemen came into the
applicants' house. They were aged about 25-30. They greeted the
applicants, checked the passports and left. The fourth applicant then
decided to visit her husband's relatives, the Abdulkhanovs, who lived
at 135 Mazayeva Street, to see if the “mopping-up” had
finished there. Through backyards she arrived at the Abdulkhanovs'
house.
- When
she reached their house she met Akhmed Abdulkhanov, aged 70, sitting
in the courtyard. He told her that they had been visited three times
and that there were dead bodies everywhere in the street. The fourth
applicant opened the gates and saw four bodies of their neighbours,
an 80-year-old man, two women and a 50-year-old man, each one at the
gates of their houses. The fourth applicant suggested that Akhmed
take the bodies inside, but he said that the soldiers might return.
- The
fourth applicant returned to her house and told her husband, the
fifth applicant, and his relatives about what she had seen. She also
suggested that they should all go into the cellar and hide because
even women and old men had been killed, but they refused. Zina
Abdulmezhidova told her that they had been checked already and had
nothing to fear. The fifth applicant went to a neighbour's house.
- At
about 3 p.m. the fourth applicant heard some loud noise and swearing
in the courtyard and opened the door. Zina Abdulmezhidova and Khuseyn
Abdulmezhidov also came out and stood in the doorway of their house.
In the courtyard there were several soldiers. One of them, tall and
dressed in white camouflage, asked the fourth applicant what she was
doing there, and she replied that she lived there.
- They
brought Akhmed Abdulkhanov from Mazayeva Street with them. He was
pale and his lips were blue. He asked the fourth applicant to get
some money. She said that they had no money, and had they had any,
they would have left as everyone else had. Then the soldiers started
to fire in the air and said that they would kill them all, as they
had been ordered.
- The
fourth applicant ran to her neighbours and managed to obtain 300
roubles. She gave the money to the soldier in white camouflage, but
he laughed at her and said it was not enough. The fourth applicant
gave him her golden earrings. The servicemen were shouting that they
had an order to kill them all and ordered one of the soldiers to take
the fourth applicant into the house and to “shake her”
there.
- The
fourth applicant let the soldier inside the house, ran behind his
back and hid behind the heater. The soldier walked up to her and
pointed the automatic gun at her head. She fell on her knees and
pleaded for her life. The soldier told her that he would be killed if
he did not kill her. Then they heard shooting in the courtyard and a
male voice shouting. The soldier in the room shot at the ceiling and
at the walls, and the fourth applicant realised that he had spared
her life. She started to cry and thank him, but he told her to keep
quiet and walked out.
- The
fourth applicant heard Khuseyn Abdulmezhidov shouting to his sister
to bring his documents, and then more shots were fired. She later
realised that the soldiers had first shot Akhmed Abulkhanov in the
courtyard, and when her husband's sister and brother saw this, they
had run into their house. Khuseyn Abdulmezhidov had been registered
as disabled and the applicant guessed that he had wanted to produce
the relevant papers. Khuseyn Abdulmezhidov and Zina Abdulmezhidova
were shot inside the house.
- In
the meantime the fourth applicant heard her husband, the fifth
applicant, calling her from the backyard. She understood that he had
heard the noise and shooting in the house and returned. The fourth
applicant approached the door and cried in Chechen “Go away”,
and her husband escaped unseen by soldiers.
- Before
leaving, the soldiers set the Abdulmezhidovs' house on fire. Their
house and barn, with sheep and cows inside, burnt down.
- Later
the fourth and the fifth applicant buried the remains of the fifth
applicant's relatives in the courtyard.
- On
16 May 2000 the Civil Registration Office of the Zavodskoy district
of Grozny issued death certificates for Zina Magomedovna
Abdulmezhidova, aged 59, and for Khuseyn Magomedovich Abdulmezhidov,
aged 46. In both certificates it was recorded that the deaths had
occurred on 5 February 2000 in Grozny, as result of numerous bullet
wounds to the head and body.
- The
fourth applicant submitted that she had been deeply affected by the
events of 5 February 2000, and that her health had deteriorated
significantly. She suffered from hypertension and nightmares.
5. Investigation into the events of 5 February 2000
- Soon
after the events the first applicant and other relatives of the
victims set up a group called the Aldy Civic Committee, in order to
coordinate their efforts in the aftermath of the massacre. The fourth
applicant was elected as the head of this group.
- The
applicants submitted that on 5 February 2000 at least 60 civilians
had been killed in the neighbouring settlements of Novye Aldy and
Chernorechye in the southern suburbs of Grozny. They referred to the
Human Rights Watch report of June 2000 entitled “February 5: A
Day of Slaughter in Novye Aldy”, which put the blame for the
extrajudicial executions on the Russian special police forces (OMON)
and the military. The document reported the deaths of the applicants'
relatives, on the basis of interviews with the applicants and their
neighbours. They also referred to the Memorial Human Rights Centre
report entitled “'Mopping-Up'. Settlement of Novye Aldy,
5 February 2000 – Deliberate Crimes against Civilians”
(«Зачистка».
Поселок Новые
Алды, 5 февраля
2000 – преднамеренные
преступления
против мирного
населения),
which listed the applicants' relatives and neighbours among 56
civilians murdered on that day (see Part B below).
- The applicants also submitted a number of press
reports relating to the massacre in Novye Aldy and the subsequent
investigation.
- It
appears that the applicants did not seek any direct contact with
law-enforcement bodies or with doctors immediately after the killings
or when they buried the remains of their relatives. Nevertheless, the
events in Novye Aldy became known to the relevant authorities shortly
after 5 February 2000 as a result of NGO and media reports.
- On
5 March 2000 the Grozny Town Prosecutor's Office opened a criminal
investigation into the murder of several inhabitants of the Novye
Aldy settlement in Grozny by “unidentified men armed with
guns”, and into the looting of property. The investigation was
opened under Article 105, paragraph 2, of the Criminal Code (murder
of two or more persons with aggravating circumstances).
- On
25 March 2000 Memorial wrote a letter to the Chief Military
Prosecutor about the investigation into the massacre in Novye Aldy.
It referred to the conclusions of the military prosecutors that “no
federal servicemen took part in the operation which entailed
civilians' deaths”. Referring to the witnesses' statements,
Memorial argued that there were valid reasons to conduct a more
detailed investigation into the identity of the perpetrators.
Memorial appended to its letter several witness statements it had
obtained in March 2000 in Novye Aldy and a list of 67 names of
persons apparently killed on that day.
- On
27 March 2000 the fifth applicant was granted victim status in the
proceedings in case no. 12011-2000 in relation to the murder of his
brother Khuseyn Abdulmezhidov “by detachments of the Ministry
of the Interior of the Russian Federation”. That decision was
not countersigned by the fifth applicant.
- On
6 April 2000 the Chief Military Prosecutor replied to Memorial that
its letter of 25 March 2000 had been forwarded to the military
prosecutor's office for the Northern Caucasus for investigation.
- On
21 April 2000 the Military Prosecutor of the Northern Caucasus
Military Circuit replied to Memorial and stated that a military
prosecutor had conducted a verification of its submissions and on 3
March 2000 had refused to open a criminal investigation owing to the
absence of corpus delicti in the servicemen's actions. The
letter further explained that no servicemen of the Ministry of the
Interior or the Ministry of Defence, who fell under the supervision
of the military prosecutor, had taken part in the operation in Novye
Aldy on that date. The so-called “mopping-up” operation
on 5-10 February 2000 in Novye Aldy had been conducted by servicemen
of the special police forces (OMON) from St Petersburg and the Ryazan
Region, and the investigation should be carried out by the Grozny
Town Prosecutor. All further complaints and letters should be
addressed to that office.
- On
11 May 2000 the Chief Military Prosecutor replied to a member of the
State Duma, Mr Kovalev, about the investigation into the Aldy
killings. The prosecutor informed him that a criminal investigation
was pending and that the investigation had been slowed down by the
difficult security situation in the region and by the need to
identify witnesses to the crimes.
- On
9 June 2000 the military prosecutor of military unit no. 20102
(located in Khankala, the main Russian military base in Chechnya)
informed the NGO Memorial, in response to its requests for
information about a number of alleged crimes committed by the
military against civilians, that all material pertaining to the
murders in Novye Aldy had been forwarded to the Northern Caucasus
Department of the Prosecutor General's Office.
- On
10 September 2000 the Aldy Committee issued a public statement in
which it deplored the murders of 5 February 2000, the absence of an
effective investigation and the lack of any assistance to the
victims.
- On
1 December 2000 the Aldy Committee sent a letter to the President of
the Russian Federation, the speakers of the State Duma and the
Council of the Federation, the Prime Minister and other public
figures. The letter described the events of 5 February 2000 and asked
for an efficient investigation, and also for any kind of urgent
assistance to the survivors whose houses had been burnt down or
plundered.
- On
1 December 2000 the fourth applicant, on behalf of the Aldy
Committee, wrote to the Prosecutor General. The letter stated that
the relatives of those killed had no information about the progress
of the investigation, despite the fact that they had agreed to the
exhumation of their relatives' bodies, in breach of their religious
beliefs. They asked him to take urgent measures to carry out a proper
investigation, to question the witnesses and to inform them about its
progress.
- On
an unspecified date in 2000 an investigator from the Northern
Caucasus Department of the Prosecutor General's Office issued
certificates to the relatives of those killed in Novye Aldy. They
contained identical printed text, with only the names of the deceased
entered by hand. They read as follows: “On 5 February 2000 in
the morning in the settlement of Novye Aldy of the Zavodskoy district
of Grozny, Chechen Republic, the forces of the Ministry of Defence
and of the Ministry of the Interior during a passport check committed
mass murders of civilians of the above settlement, including ____.
This event is being investigated by the Northern Caucasus Department
of the Prosecutor General's Office”. The first applicant
submitted such certificates issued in respect of Suleyman Musayev,
Aslanbek Ganayev, Salambek Ganayev and Alvi Ganayev. Similar
certificates were issued in respect of the other applicants'
relatives.
- On
10 January 2002 Memorial requested the Chechnya Prosecutor to provide
it with an update on the investigation into the Aldy killings.
- On
19 June 2002 the Chechnya Prosecutor forwarded Memorial's request to
the Northern Caucasus Department of the Prosecutor General's Office
and stated that the file in case no. 12011 had been referred to
that office in March 2000.
- On
18 July 2002 the Chechnya Prosecutor informed Memorial that criminal
investigation no. 12011, “opened on 5 March 2000 in
relation to the killings committed in Grozny on 10 January 2000”,
had been transferred to the Northern Caucasus Department of the
Prosecutor General's Office. All further requests should be addressed
to that office.
- On
22 August 2002 the Prosecutor General's Department for the Southern
Federal Circuit forwarded Memorial's letter to the Chechnya
Prosecutor with a request for information about the investigation in
criminal case no. 12011, concerning “a murder in Grozny on
10 January 2000”.
- On
14 January 2003 Memorial again requested information from the
Prosecutor General about the investigation. No reply was received to
that request.
- On
19 November 2003 and on 14 January 2004 Memorial again sought an
update on the investigation from the Prosecutor General. At the same
time it sought an explanation as to why no answers had been given to
its previous requests. The first letter requested the prosecutor to
provide a list of those killed, to list the persons who had been
granted victim status in the proceedings and questioned as witnesses,
to specify whether there had been a decision to adjourn or reopen the
investigation and to grant access to the case file.
- On
17 April 2004 the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office replied to Memorial
that the file in criminal case no. 12011 was under investigation
and that no results could be made public before the conclusion of the
investigation. It further stated that no explanation could be
provided for the failures to reply, because persons who had earlier
been responsible for the case file no longer worked in that office.
- On
unspecified dates more than 50 persons from Novye Aldy signed
applications to the President of Russia and the speaker of the State
Duma. They called for an investigation into their relatives' deaths
and for the identification of the servicemen who had committed the
murders.
- The
applicants submitted that they had not been properly questioned by
the investigators. They were not aware which prosecutor's office was
responsible for the investigation and had not been informed about its
progress and therefore could not appeal against the investigator's
actions.
- In
September 2004 the applications to the Court in the present case were
communicated to the Russian Government, who were requested at that
time to submit a copy of the file on the investigation in case
no. 12011, opened in relation to the killings in Novye Aldy. The
Government refused to do so, because the file contained information
of a military nature and personal data relating to the witnesses.
They referred to Article 161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. At
the same time, the Government suggested that a Court delegation could
have access to the file at the place of the preliminary
investigation, with the exception of “the documents [disclosing
military information and personal data of the witnesses], and without
the right to make copies of the case file and transmit it to others”.
- In
December 2005 the Court declared the applications admissible and
reiterated its request for the file. In April 2006 the Government
submitted a copy of the file as summarised below, as well as updated
information concerning the progress of the investigation. In their
memorials the Government stated that the investigation had
established that on 5 February 2000 a group of armed persons
wearing camouflage uniforms had killed more than 50 inhabitants of
the Novye Aldy settlement. It had also established that on 5 February
2000 a special operation had been carried out in Novye Aldy by
servicemen of the special police forces (OMON) from St Petersburg.
The investigation was pending and no final conclusions as to the
identity of the perpetrators had been reached. At some point the
investigation had been transferred from the Grozny Prosecutor's
Office to the Northern Caucasus Department of the Prosecutor
General's Office and then to the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office. During
the investigation 33 bodies had been exhumed and subjected to a
forensic examination, which had confirmed burns and gunshot wounds. A
number of other investigative steps had been taken, such as an
examination of the sites and ballistics reports (see Part B below for
a description of the documents in the investigation file).
- It
appears from the information submitted by the Government and some of
the documents in the case file that the applicants and other
relatives of the victims were questioned. However, the case file
submitted by the Government does not contain full copies of any of
the witness statements, except for one transcript of the third
applicant's questioning in May 2004. These transcripts are also not
mentioned in the list of documents contained in the investigation
file. At the same time, the Government submitted that the
investigation body had questioned 143 persons and granted victim
status to 44 persons.
- In
their memorials the Government revealed additional information about
the proceedings, which is not contained in the documents submitted by
them. As appears from these submissions, only the first, third and
fifth applicants had been granted victim status in the proceedings.
The second and the fourth had not been granted victim status and
apparently had not sought it.
- The
Government stated that in March and April 2004 over 50 persons had
been invited to participate in the investigative measures. However,
the first, second and fifth applicants had not appeared when
summoned. The Government did not specify the nature of these
measures. In June 2005 a photo identification had taken place with
one of the victims (there is no information about the results of this
measure). In April 2004 the investigators in charge of the criminal
case had attempted to identify, through the relevant archives the
units of the army (Ministry of Defence), or of the Ministry of the
Interior that had possibly been involved in the special operations in
Grozny from 4 to 10 February 2000. According to the Government, no
meaningful results had been obtained.
- As
it appears, the investigation did not identify the detachments which
had been involved in the security operation in Novye Aldy and no one
was charged with any crime. The investigation was adjourned on
several occasions owing to the failure to identify the culprits, and
was then resumed. The most recent decision to resume the
investigation was issued by the Chechnya Deputy Prosecutor on 7
February 2006.
B. Documents from the criminal investigation file
- The
Government submitted a copy of the investigation file in criminal
case no. 12011, which comprised four volumes (over 800 pages)
and a list of the documents contained in the file. The most important
of these documents can be summarised as follows.
1. Decision to open a criminal investigation
- On
5 March 2000 the Grozny Town Prosecutor's Office opened a criminal
investigation into the killing of inhabitants of the settlement of
Novye Aldy in the Zavodskoy district of Grozny and the looting of
property. The decision referred to Article 105, paragraph 2, of the
Criminal Code. On 18 March 2000 an investigative group was set up,
composed of the officers of the Northern Caucasus Department of the
Prosecutor General's Office, the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office and the
Grozny Town Prosecutor's Office.
2. Information from the applicants and other relatives
of the victims
- On
22 March 2000 a number of relatives of the victims submitted
similarly worded requests to the Grozny Town Prosecutor's Office.
They stated that on 5 February 2000 their relatives had been shot by
unknown persons wearing camouflage, and asked for an investigation to
be carried out. One application was submitted by Valid M., the second
applicant's brother, who had complained about the killing of his
brothers Salman and Abdula Magomadov.
- In
March and April 2000 the investigation requested the Zavodskoy
Temporary Department of the Interior (VOVD) to find and question a
number of local residents in Novye Aldy about the killings of 5
February 2000 and to collect additional information about those who
had been killed. These requests were later repeated.
- Between
March and May 2000 the investigation body questioned and granted
victim status to 17 relatives of the deceased. In many cases the
degree of kinship was not indicated. The case file examined by the
Court does not include any of the witness statements presumably made
by the relatives.
- In
April 2003 the Zavodskoy District Department of the Interior (ROVD)
informed the prosecutor that it had not been able to identify any
witnesses to the crimes in the district. Many relatives of the
victims had left and it was impossible to locate them.
- In
March 2004 a lawyer practising in Moscow requested the investigation
to allow him to participate in the proceedings. He submitted powers
of attorney from 32 members of the families of the victims. In April
2004 he was granted leave to take part in the proceedings. He was
also informed that the persons who had victim status in the
proceedings would be questioned again and informed of the possibility
of submitting claims for damages. On 13 June 2004 the lawyer died in
Moscow, and it does not appear that another representative was
subsequently appointed.
- On
12 May 2004 the third applicant was questioned. She described the
known circumstances of the deaths of her husband and his brother. She
also explained that Valid M., who had been granted victim status in
the proceedings, had died in January 2004; she also requested to be
granted victim status.
- Between
2004 and 2005 the investigation questioned and granted victim status
to 12 other persons, including at least one eyewitness to the events
who had been forced to give her earrings to the soldiers.
3. Descriptions of the sites of the crimes
- On
31 March 2000 the investigators examined the area at the intersection
of Voronezhskaya Street and Khoperskaya Street in Novye Aldy and the
courtyard of the house at 112 Voronezhskaya Street. The local
residents stated that on 5 February 2000 six persons had been killed
in front of that house. The investigation noted about 20 bullet holes
in the gates of the house. No bullets or cartridges were found.
- On
23 March 2000 the investigation examined the location and exhumed the
bodies of the first applicant's three relatives, Alvi Ganayev,
Salambek Ganayev and Aslanbek Ganayev, as well their neighbour Ramzan
Elmurzayev, who had been buried in the courtyard of the house at 102
Bryanskaya Street.
- On
4 April 2000 the investigation examined the site at 160 Matasha
Mazayeva Street and exhumed the burnt remains of the second
applicant's two brothers, Salman and Abdula Magomadov.
- In
addition to that, between 23 March and 4 April 2000 the investigators
examined several other locations in Novye Aldy and Chernorechye,
indicated by the local residents. They exhumed and described the
remains of several persons who had been buried by their relatives in
the courtyards of the houses, as well as numerous bullets and
cartridges.
- The
reports were accompanied by photographs of the sites and sketches of
the area. After the exhumations and the drawing up of the reports,
the bodies were buried at the local cemetery.
4. Forensic expert reports
- It
appears that in April 2000 several relatives of the victims,
including the fifth applicant, refused to allow the exhumation and
forensic analysis of their relatives' bodies, referring to religious
traditions and the decision of the local council of elders. However,
later their agreement was obtained and the exhumations and forensic
reports were carried out.
- In
April and May 2000 the investigation exhumed in the courtyards and at
the cemetery 32 bodies of persons who had been killed on 5 February
2000, including the applicants' relatives. The exhumations took place
in the presence of the relatives and forensic experts, and the
results were documented on video and in photographs.
- The
forensic experts were asked to resolve questions relating to the
cause and date of the victims' deaths. In late April 2000 a forensic
expert reported numerous lethal fire wounds. The expert reported that
the bodies of the second applicant's two brothers, Salman and Abdula
Magomadov, had been incinerated, as a result of which no proper
conclusions about the circumstances of the deaths could be reached.
- In
May and June 2000 the investigation ordered 30 new forensic reports,
seeking further details relating to the dates and circumstances of
the deaths. In June and July 2000 forensic experts in Stavropol
issued additional reports based on the previous descriptions of the
bodies. The reports concluded that the date of the deaths could have
been 5 February 2000 and described in greater detail the numerous
bullet wounds caused to the bodies, many of them to the head.
5. Ballistics expert reports
- On
4 and 5 May 2000 an investigator from the Grozny Town Prosecutor's
Office ordered ballistics reports on the cartridges and bullets
collected at the site.
- In
May and June 2000 the ballistics experts concluded that the
cartridges and bullets had been used by several Kalashnikov
sub-machine guns or modified versions, of 7.62 mm and 5.45 mm
calibre. Several rifle bullets were also found. Some of the bullets
were found to be suitable for identifying the particular guns used.
The experts also reported that some of the bullets and cartridges
bore serial numbers, which could allow the year and place of their
production to be traced. All the bullets and cartridges were sent for
further checks through the Ministry of the Interior's federal
database of bullets and cartridges (containing data about firearms
involved in crimes or lost service firearms).
- In
April 2004 the investigation authority informed the head of the
St Petersburg and Leningrad Region Department of the Interior
that it had been established that on 5 February 2000 the special
operation in the settlement of Novye Aldy had been carried out by
servicemen of the OMON for that region. The investigation body
requested him to assist in identifying the firearms that could have
been involved in the crime by submitting examples of shots from over
400 different firearms. This request was again sent in June 2004 to
an investigator at the St Petersburg Prosecutor's Office. It is not
clear if these analyses were carried out.
6. Documents found at the site of the killings
- In
March 2000 the investigation collected from the local residents a
passport found at the place of the shooting. They also collected a
handwritten note issued by a group of servicemen to the residents.
- The
owner of the passport was located in the Krasnodar Region and
questioned. He stated that from 1995 to 1996 he had worked in Grozny
as a construction worker. His passport had been stolen there in 1996,
and he had later obtained a new one. In January 1999 he had had an
accident in Krasnodar, as a result of which he had become severely
disabled. He had not been to Chechnya since 1996. His statements were
corroborated by a number of other testimonies and documentary
evidence.
- The
handwritten note was examined on 2 April 2000. It said: “Guys!
We were here, regiment no. 245. [These are] normal people, not
fighters. Have mercy on them. Commander of MSR [motorised rifle
company] no. 6 Snr Lt of the grd [Senior Lieutenant of the Guard]”
and contained an unclear signature. It does not appear that any
further action was taken in the light of that note, including the
identification of the military unit in question.
7. Attempts to identify the servicemen
- It
follows from the relevant prosecutors' orders that at some time in
2004 the investigation collected a complete list of servicemen of the
OMON from St Petersburg and the Leningrad Region who had been
stationed in Chechnya in early February 2000, as well as their
photographs, with a view to carrying out an identification. It is
unclear whether the identification took place.
8. Statements by the servicemen
- The
case file submitted by the Government contains extracts of more than
20 testimonies collected in October and November 2000 from the
servicemen of the special police forces (OMON) from St Petersburg,
but no full copies of any of these statements. From the extracts
contained in the file it appears that they all submitted, almost word
for word, that in early February 2000 they had participated in an
operation in Novye Aldy and that their detachment had not used any
vehicles. They stated that they were not aware of the killing of
civilians in Novye Aldy.
9. The conduct of the proceedings
- The
investigation was carried out by the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office. It
appears that between 5 March 2000 and 7 February 2006 the case was
adjourned and reopened ten times. The most recent document in the
case file, dated 7 February 2006, informed the victims about the
resumption of the investigation.
C. Documents submitted by the applicants
- In
2004, and subsequently with their memorials, the applicants submitted
numerous items of documentary evidence in support of their
allegations. The most important documents can be summarised as
follows.
1. Eyewitness statements
- In
addition to their own statements of the facts, the applicants
submitted 13 statements by eyewitnesses to the events of 5 February
2000 and by other relatives of those who had been killed. One witness
was not identified by name.
- Z.
and Ya., the neighbours of the second applicant, stated that Salman
and Abdula Magomadov had been killed on 5 February 2000 in the cellar
of their home in Mazayeva Street. The witnesses, together with the
third neighbour, had dug out the remains, scarcely more than a few
bones, from under the debris in the burnt-out cellar on the following
day and put them into a large pot, which they buried it in the
courtyard of the same house.
- Aset
Ch., a resident of Novye Aldy and a nurse by profession, submitted a
detailed account of the events of 5 February 2000. She submitted that
the men who had conducted the operation on that day had called
themselves “police”, had been wearing camouflage
uniforms, had used radio to communicate between themselves and had
driven around in military Ural trucks and APCs with obscured number
plates.
- Other
witnesses described the perpetrators of the killings as being 35 to
40 years old, wearing camouflage uniforms without insignia. They
confirmed the applicants' statements about the circumstances of the
killing of their relatives and others. Some witnesses submitted that
the servicemen had been drunk.
2. NGO reports
- In
June 2000 Human Rights Watch issued a 45-page report entitled
“February 5: A Day of Slaughter in Novye Aldy”, which put
the blame for the extrajudicial executions on the units of the OMON
and the military. The document reported the deaths of the applicants'
relatives, based on interviews with the applicants and their
neighbours. It contained a detailed description of the events,
including a plan of the district, a list of 60 names of those killed
and information about an additional 19 “unconfirmed”
killings.
- In
2000 the Human Rights Centre Memorial issued a 70-page report
entitled “'Mopping-Up'. Settlement of Novye Aldy, 5 February
2000 – Deliberate Crimes against Civilians”
(«Зачистка».
Поселок Новые
Алды, 5 февраля
2000 – преднамеренные
преступления
против мирного
населения),
which listed the applicants' relatives and neighbours among 56
civilians murdered on that day. The report contained numerous
statements by the witnesses and victims, photographs of the dead and
a plan of the neighbourhood with indications of the places where
people had been killed.
- On
9 February 2001 Human Rights Watch issued a memorandum on the state
of the national investigation into human rights and international
humanitarian law violations in Chechnya. The report stated that the
investigation into the mass murder of civilians in Novye Aldy had
been “pushed around” between three prosecutors' offices
and then adjourned. Exhumations and forensic reports had been carried
out in respect of more than 30 bodies. The officers and servicemen of
the detachments of the military and police allegedly implicated in
the murders had not been questioned.
3. Press reports
- On
22 February 2000 the New York Times reported the events in
Novye Aldy in the article “Chechens Tell of Murderous Rampage
by Russians”. The publication referred to interviews with
internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Ingushetia.
- On
23 February 2000 The Guardian published an article entitled
“82 Feared Dead in Chechen Massacre”, which was based on
information from human-rights groups and survivors. The newspaper
mentioned that access to Grozny was severely restricted and that
there was no way of independently verifying the testimony of the
witnesses interviewed in the IDP camps in Ingushetia.
- On
22 March 2000 the Novye Izvestia ran an article entitled
“Chechen Civilians Shot by OMON from Dagestan?” The
article referred to information from the Chief Military Prosecutor's
Office, according to which servicemen from the Ministry of Defence
had not been involved in the killings of 67 civilians in Aldy on 5
February 2000. The newspaper stated that more than a hundred armed
men who had killed the civilians and looted and set fire to property
reportedly belonged to a detachment of the Ministry of the Interior,
and that there were reasons to believe that they belonged to the OMON
units from Dagestan.
- On
27 March 2000 the Novaya Gazeta published an article entitled
“Freedom or Death. The Aldy Nightmare.” It reported the
deaths of the applicants' relatives and contained interviews with the
survivors and the relatives of those killed.
- On
2 June 2000 the Washington Post published an article entitled
“Chechnya's Bloodiest Massacre”, which contained the
fourth applicant's story and interviews with other residents of Novye
Aldy.
- On
28 June 2000 the Chechnya newspaper Svet Rodiny published a
letter received in response to the publications about the murders in
Aldy from the Chief of Staff of the Ministry of Defence, which stated
that the Chief Military Prosecutor's Office was conducting a
verification of the facts contained in the article and of the
possible involvement of the military servicemen in the events.
- In
February 2004 the Novaya Gazeta reported on the lack of
progress in the investigation of the Aldy massacre in an article
entitled “Receipt for Murders”. The article contained an
interview with the fourth applicant and stated that the victims of
the events of 5 February 2000 had received no assistance from the
authorities in the form of either an effective investigation of the
events and prosecution of the perpetrators, or compensation for the
lost and looted property.
- The
applicants also submitted an extract from a book by Andrew Meier,
“Black Earth. A Journey through Russia After the Fall”
(New York, 2003), with an account of the author's visit to the Novye
Aldy settlement in the aftermath of the massacre and interviews with
the survivors and the relatives of those who had been killed.
4. Videotape and transcript
- The
applicants submitted a videotape made by a Russian human-rights
activist, Viktor Popkov, in Novye Aldy on 9 February 2000. They also
submitted a transcript of the videotape and a translation of the
transcript into English. The footage depicted bodies of the victims
in the houses and at the local cemetery. The bodies were shown to
have firearm wounds, many of them to the head. The inhabitants of the
settlement spoke of the events of 5 February 2000, stressing
that the servicemen who had committed the crimes had behaved as if
they had had an order to kill, because they had not asked for the
residents' identity documents and had not spared anyone, including
old men and women. They also spoke of looted and burned houses and of
the extortion of money and valuables, including gold teeth. Some
people said that the soldiers had been drunk, and described the
mocking to which they had been subjected.
5. Information about military units
- The
applicants submitted a letter issued by the Chief of Staff of the
United Group Alignment (UGA) to the military prosecutor of military
unit no. 20102 concerning operations in Grozny in the winter of
1999 to 2000. The letter was issued on 8 May 2000 in connection with
another criminal case investigated by the military prosecutor.
According to the letter, “combat operations to free Grozny of
illegal armed groups took place between 10 December 1999 and 10
February 2000. The troop alignment 'Special District Grozny' was in
charge of the liberation of the town.” The letter listed
several dozen military units of the Ministry of the Interior,
Ministry of Defence, the FSB and the Ministry of Justice, which had
formed the “Special District Grozny” alignment. Among
these units was listed the “245th MSP” (motorised rifle
regiment) of the Leningrad military circuit.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
- Until
1 July 2002 criminal-law matters were governed by the 1960 Code of
Criminal Procedure of the Russian Soviet Federalist Socialist
Republic. From 1 July 2002 the old Code was replaced by the Code of
Criminal Procedure of the Russian Federation (CCP).
- Article
161 of the new CCP establishes the rule of impermissibility of
disclosing data from the preliminary investigation. Under paragraph 3
of the Article, information from the investigation file may be
divulged only with the permission of a prosecutor or investigator and
only so far as it does not infringe the rights and lawful interests
of the participants in the criminal proceedings and does not
prejudice the investigation. Divulging information about the private
life of participants in criminal proceedings without their permission
is prohibited.
THE LAW
I. THE GOVERNMENT'S PRELIMINARY OBJECTION
1. Arguments of the parties
- The
Government requested the Court to declare the case inadmissible as
the applicants had failed to exhaust domestic remedies. They
submitted that the investigation into the killings was continuing in
accordance with the domestic legislation. The applicants had not
applied to a court with a complaint against the actions of the
investigating authorities. The Government also referred to the
Constitution and other legal instruments which permitted individuals
to appeal to the courts against actions of the administrative bodies
which infringed citizens' rights. The applicants had not applied to a
court in Chechnya or further afield in the Northern Caucasus with any
complaints, and had therefore failed to use the domestic remedies
available.
- The
applicants disagreed with the Government's objection. They argued
that they had sought criminal prosecution through the prosecutors'
offices, but that avenue had proved ineffective. They submitted that
the investigation was not effective, and in particular that the
investigating authorities had failed to take timely steps to collect
evidence, to establish the involvement of the federal servicemen in
the killings and to inform the applicants about its progress. They
further argued that the civil remedies referred to by the Government
would not be able to establish the perpetrators of the crime in the
absence of conclusions from the criminal investigation. They asked
the Court to dismiss the Government's preliminary objection.
2. The Court's assessment
- In
the present case, the Court took no decision about the exhaustion of
domestic remedies at the admissibility stage, having found that this
question was too closely linked to the merits. It will now proceed to
examine the arguments of the parties in the light of the provisions
of the Convention and its relevant practice (for a recent summary,
see Estamirov and Others v. Russia, no. 60272/00, § 73-74,
12 October 2006).
- The
Court notes that the Russian legal system provides, in principle, two
avenues of recourse for the victims of illegal and criminal acts
attributable to the State or its agents, namely civil and criminal
remedies.
- As
regards a civil action to obtain redress for damage sustained through
the alleged illegal acts or unlawful conduct of State agents, the
Court has already found in a number of similar cases that this
procedure alone cannot be regarded as an effective remedy in the
context of claims brought under Article 2 of the Convention. A civil
court is unable to pursue any independent investigation and is
incapable, without the benefit of the conclusions of a criminal
investigation, of making any meaningful findings regarding the
identity of the perpetrators of fatal assaults, still less to
establish their responsibility (see Khashiyev and Akayeva
v. Russia, nos. 57942/00 and 57945/00, §§ 119-121,
24 February 2005, and Estamirov and Others, cited above,
§ 77). In the light of the above, the Court confirms that
the applicants were not obliged to pursue civil remedies. The
preliminary objection in this regard is thus dismissed.
- As
regards criminal-law remedies, the Court observes that an
investigation into the killings has been pending since March 2000.
The applicants and the Government disagreed as to its effectiveness.
- The
Court considers that this limb of the Government's preliminary
objection raises issues concerning the effectiveness of the criminal
investigation which are closely linked to the merits of the
applicants' complaints. Thus, it considers that these matters fall to
be examined below under the substantive provisions of the Convention.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 2 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants alleged that their relatives had been unlawfully killed by
agents of the State. They also submitted that the authorities had
failed to carry out an adequate investigation into the circumstances
of their deaths. They relied on Article 2 of the Convention,
which reads:
“1. Everyone's right to life shall be
protected by law. No one shall be deprived of his life intentionally
save in the execution of a sentence of a court following his
conviction of a crime for which this penalty is provided by law.
2. Deprivation of life shall not be regarded
as inflicted in contravention of this article when it results from
the use of force which is no more than absolutely necessary:
(a) in defence of any person from unlawful
violence;
(b) in order to effect a lawful arrest or to
prevent the escape of a person lawfully detained;
(c) in action lawfully taken for the purpose
of quelling a riot or insurrection.”
A. Alleged violation of the right to life of the
applicants' relatives
1. Arguments of the parties
- The
applicants submitted that there was overwhelming evidence to conclude
that their relatives had been intentionally deprived of their lives
in circumstances that violated Article 2 of the Convention.
Basing themselves on the Government's admission that on 5 February
2000 a special operation had been carried out in the neighbourhood by
the federal forces, they asked the Court to conclude that the
“unidentified men in military uniforms armed with automatic
weapons” must have been the same members of the federal forces
who had conducted the operation. They referred to the eyewitnesses'
accounts, to the press and NGO reports, to the videotape filmed on
9 February 2000, and to the official documents, which all
pointed towards the servicemen of the federal forces as the
perpetrators of the killings. They argued that the Government had not
suggested any other version of the events. They submitted that the
failure to identify the servicemen responsible lay with the deficient
investigation and did not exempt the State from responsibility under
the substantive limb of Article 2 of the Convention.
- The
Government did not dispute the fact that the applicants' relatives
had died. They argued that the investigation “had not obtained
data to show that the killings of [the first applicant's relatives]
had occurred with the knowledge or on the orders of the
representatives of the federal power structures of the Russian
Federation”. In respect of the relatives of the other
applicants, the Government stated that their deaths had occurred as a
result of the violent actions of unidentified persons. Until the
investigation had established the culprits, it could not be said that
their right to life had been infringed by the actions of military
servicemen or other State agents.
2. The Court's assessment
(a) General principles
- The
Court reiterates that Article 2, which safeguards the right to life
and sets out those circumstances in which deprivation of life may be
justified, ranks as one of the most fundamental provisions in the
Convention, to which no derogation is permitted. Together with
Article 3, it also enshrines one of the basic values of the
democratic societies making up the Council of Europe. The
circumstances in which deprivation of life may be justified must
therefore be strictly construed. The object and purpose of the
Convention as an instrument for the protection of individual human
beings also requires that Article 2 be interpreted and applied
so as to make its safeguards practical and effective (see McCann
and Others v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 27 September
1995, Series A no. 324, §§ 146-147).
- In
the light of the importance of the protection afforded by Article 2,
the Court must subject deprivations of life to the most careful
scrutiny, taking into consideration not only the actions of State
agents but also all the surrounding circumstances (see, among other
authorities, Avşar v. Turkey, no. 25657/94, §
391, ECHR 2001-VII).
- In assessing evidence, the Court has adopted the
standard of proof “beyond reasonable doubt”. According to
its established case-law, proof may follow from the coexistence of
sufficiently strong, clear and concordant inferences or of similar
unrebutted presumptions of fact. Moreover, the level of persuasion
necessary for reaching a particular conclusion and, in this
connection, the distribution of the burden of proof are intrinsically
linked to the specificity of the facts, the nature of the allegation
made and the Convention right at stake. In this context, the conduct
of the parties when evidence is being obtained has to be taken into
account. The Court is also attentive to the seriousness that attaches
to a ruling that a Contracting State has violated fundamental rights
(see, among others, the following judgments: Ireland v. the
United Kingdom, judgment of 18 January 1978, Series A
no. 25, p. 65, § 161; Ribitsch v. Austria,
judgment of 4 December 1995, Series A no. 336, p. 24, § 32;
Akdivar and Others v. Turkey, judgment of 16 September
1996, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-IV, p. 1211,
§ 68; Tanlı v. Turkey, no. 26129/95, §
111, ECHR 2001-III; and Ilaşcu and Others v. Moldova and
Russia [GC], no. 48787/99, § 26, ECHR 2004-VII).
- The
Court has also noted the difficulties for applicants to obtain the
necessary evidence in support of allegations in cases where the
respondent Government are in possession of the relevant documentation
and fail to submit it. Where the applicant makes out a prima facie
case and the Court is prevented from reaching factual conclusions
owing to the lack of such documents, it is for the Government to
argue conclusively why the documents in question cannot serve to
corroborate the allegations made by the applicants, or to provide a
satisfactory and convincing explanation of how the events in question
occurred. The burden of proof is thus shifted to the Government and
if they fail in their arguments, issues will arise under Article 2
and/or Article 3 (see Toğcu v. Turkey, no. 27601/95,
§ 95, 31 May 2005, and Akkum and Others v. Turkey,
no. 21894/93, § 211, ECHR 2005 II).
- Finally,
the Court is sensitive to the subsidiary nature of its role and
recognises that it must be cautious in taking on the role of a
first-instance tribunal of fact, where this is not rendered
unavoidable by the circumstances of a particular case (see, for
example, McKerr v. the United Kingdom (dec.), no. 28883/95, 4
April 2000). Nonetheless, where allegations are made under Articles 2
and 3 of the Convention the Court must apply a particularly thorough
scrutiny even if certain domestic proceedings and investigations have
already taken place (see Ribitsch, cited above, § 32, and
Avşar, cited above, § 283).
(b) Application in the present case
- In
order to be able to assess the merits of the applicants' complaints
and in view of the nature of the allegations, the Court requested the
Government to submit a copy of the complete criminal investigation
file in the present case. After the case had been declared
admissible, it appears that the Government submitted most of the
file. No explanation was provided for the failure to produce the
remaining documents, and their amount and contents were not
specified.
- The
Court reiterates in this connection that it is of the utmost
importance for the effective operation of the system of individual
petition instituted under Article 34 of the Convention that
States should furnish all necessary facilities to make possible a
proper and effective examination of applications (see Tanrıkulu
v. Turkey [GC], no. 23763/94, § 70, ECHR 1999-IV). It is
inherent in proceedings related to cases of this nature, where an
individual applicant accuses State agents of violating his rights
under the Convention, that in certain instances solely the respondent
Government have access to information capable of corroborating or
refuting these allegations. A failure on the Government's part to
submit such information which is in their hands without a
satisfactory explanation may give rise to the drawing of inferences
as to the well-foundedness of the applicants' allegations. It may
also reflect negatively on the level of compliance by a respondent
State with its obligations under Article 38 § 1 (a)
of the Convention (see Timurtaş v. Turkey,
no. 23531/94, §§ 66 and 70, ECHR 2000 VI).
- The
Court stresses that where an application contains a complaint that
there has not been an effective investigation, and where, as in the
instant case, a copy of the file is requested from the Government, it
is incumbent on the respondent State to furnish all necessary
documentation pertaining to that investigation. The question of
whether or not certain documents are relevant cannot be unilaterally
decided by the respondent Government. Moreover, the Court notes that
the Government referred in their observations to documents of which
copies were not submitted to the Court.
- Accordingly,
the Court finds that it can draw inferences from the Government's
conduct in this respect. It will examine the issue of compliance with
Article 38 below.
- As
to the merits of the complaint, it is undisputed that the applicants'
relatives died in circumstances falling outside the exceptions set
out in the second paragraph of Article 2. The Government did not
suggest in their observations that the exceptions set out in the
second paragraph of Article 2 could be applicable in the present
case. The domestic authorities indicated on a number of occasions
that the deaths had been unlawful. The criminal investigation in case
no. 12011 was an investigation into aggravated murder and
looting of property. The question remains whether the Government may
be held responsible for the deaths.
- Although
the investigation was never completed and individuals were not
identified and indicted, it clearly follows from the case file that
the only version of the events considered by the prosecution was that
put forward by the applicants. The documents examined by the Court
repeatedly refer to the killings as having been committed by
servicemen (see paragraphs 60, 62 and 68 above). Even though the
Government did not submit any witness statements collected by the
investigation, the testimonies by the applicants and other
eyewitnesses submitted to the Court refer to federal servicemen as
the perpetrators of the killings. Interviews of local residents by
NGOs and the media systematically pointed to servicemen as the
perpetrators of the killings. Similar statements were also recorded
on the video made on 9 February 2000 in Novye Aldy (see paragraphs
112-128 above).
- The
Court has also had regard to the reports by human-rights groups and
documents by international organisations which have been submitted,
and which support the version of events presented by the applicants.
- It
appears that certain steps were undertaken – or ordered by the
prosecutors – to identify the detachment that had been involved
in the operation. Moreover, it appears that by 3 March 2000 the
military prosecutor of the Northern Caucasus Military Circuit already
had information to conclude with certainty that the killings had been
committed by servicemen of a particular unit: the OMON from St
Petersburg. However, it does not seem that the investigation sought
to establish, in a timely and coherent manner, the degree of their
involvement in the events, their commanders and their operational
plans. The Court finds that this failure on the part of the
investigation cannot absolve the Government from their burden of
proof in relation to the applicants' well-founded allegation of a
violation of Article 2.
- In
addition, the Court observes that the Government admitted in their
memorials that on 5 February 2000 a special operation had been
conducted in Novye Aldy by servicemen of the OMON from St Petersburg.
On the same day, more than 50 persons had been killed there by
unidentified armed persons wearing camouflage uniforms (see paragraph
79 above). The Court finds it reasonable to conclude that the persons
who had committed the killings were the same persons who conducted
the special operation. The Government did not submit any other
explanation as to the possible identity of the perpetrators.
- On
the basis of the material in its possession, the Court finds it
established that the applicants' relatives were killed by servicemen
and that their deaths can thus be attributed to the State. It
observes that no explanation has been forthcoming from the Russian
Government as to the circumstances of the deaths, nor has any ground
of justification been relied on by them in respect of the use of
lethal force by their agents. It is thus irrelevant in this respect
whether the killings had occurred “with the knowledge or on the
orders” of the federal authorities (see paragraph 140 above).
Liability for the applicants' relatives' deaths is therefore
attributable to the respondent State and there has been a violation
of Article 2 in respect of the applicants' eleven relatives killed on
5 February 2000.
B. Alleged inadequacy of the investigation
1. Arguments of the parties
- The
applicants alleged that the authorities had failed to conduct an
effective investigation into the killings of their relatives, in
violation of their procedural obligations under Article 2 of the
Convention. They argued that the investigation had fallen short of
the standards set down in the Convention and national legislation.
They contended that the investigation had not been prompt because of
the delay in opening it and in taking important steps. The
authorities had systematically failed to inform them of the
proceedings and they had no information about important procedural
steps. They argued that the Government's failure to submit in full
the documents from the investigation file had seriously hampered
their ability to make detailed submissions about the alleged
violation and that the Court could draw inferences as to the
well-foundedness of their allegations.
- The
Government retorted that the investigation was being carried out in
accordance with the domestic legislation and Convention standards.
They argued that some of the applicants had been granted victim
status and had had every opportunity to participate effectively in
the proceedings.
2. The Court's assessment
- The
Court has on many occasions stated that the obligation to protect the
right to life under Article 2 of the Convention also requires by
implication that there should be some form of effective official
investigation when individuals have been killed as a result of the
use of force. It has developed a number of guiding principles to be
followed for an investigation to comply with the Convention's
requirements (for a recent summary, see Bazorkina v. Russia,
no. 69481/01, §§ 117-119, 27 July 2006).
- In
the present case, an investigation was carried out into the murders
of the applicants' relatives. The Court must assess whether that
investigation met the requirements of Article 2 of the Convention.
- The
investigation was opened one month after the killings, which in
itself is an unacceptable delay when dealing with dozens of
civilians' deaths. The Court is struck by a series of serious and
unexplained delays and failures to act once the investigation had
commenced. Most notably, it notes that the staff of the “OMON
unit from St Petersburg”, referred to extensively in various
documents, were only questioned in October and November 2000. The
Government did not reveal their statements apart from stating that
they did not corroborate their involvement in the killings, but it
does not appear that any additional steps were taken by the
investigation body to resolve the apparent discrepancy between the
statements by the servicemen and other information pointing to them
as the possible perpetrators of the murders. The identification of
individuals by photo and of the guns used was only ordered in 2004,
and the Court is not aware of the results of these actions, if any.
It does not appear that the investigation questioned the commanders
of that unit at all or established the degree of their involvement in
the operation by other means, for example by obtaining operational
plans, reports or other documents.
- Further,
the Court would note that the investigation failed to obtain a
general plan of the military operations conducted in the Oktyabrskiy
and Zavodskoy districts of Grozny at the material time, despite
strong evidence that such an operation took place. Such a plan could
have constituted vital evidence in respect of the circumstances of
the crimes in question.
- A
further element of the investigation which calls for comment is the
failure to promptly identify other victims and possible witnesses to
the crimes and to take statements from them. For example, the fourth
applicant, who was an eyewitness to the events and survived an
attempt on her life, was not accorded the status of a victim in the
proceedings. It appears that she was never questioned either. There
is no indication that the investigators attempted to create a
comprehensive picture of the circumstances of the killings. For
example, the case file examined by the Court does not contain a
single list of those who were killed or of the persons granted victim
status in the proceedings, there is no map or plan of the district
which might show the locations of the bodies and important evidence,
and no attempt seems to have been made to draw up a list of the local
residents who remained in the district in the winter of 1999 to 2000.
It is unclear if the investigation used the information contained in
the videotape made at Novye Aldy several days after the killings,
depicting the bodies and interviews with the survivors (see paragraph
128 above).
- The
applicants, notwithstanding their procedural status, were not duly
informed of the progress of the investigation, and the only
information occasionally communicated to them concerned the
adjournment and reopening of the proceedings. Some of these defects
were obvious to the supervising prosecutors, who on several occasions
criticised the investigation and ordered that certain steps be taken.
However, it appears that these orders were either ignored or were
followed after unacceptable delays.
- The
Court considers that in the present case the investigation body faced
a task that could by no means be considered impossible. The killings
were committed in broad daylight and a large number of witnesses,
including some of the applicants, saw the perpetrators face to face.
Their detailed accounts of the events were made public by various
sources. The relatives of the victims demonstrated their willingness
to cooperate with the authorities by allowing the exhumation and
forensic analysis of the bodies and by forming an action group to
coordinate their efforts. The injuries and the circumstances of the
victims' deaths were established with a sufficient degree of
certainty. Numerous bullets and cartridges were collected, some of
them being suitable for identifying individual guns and even bearing
serial numbers that allowed the origin of their production to be
traced. Information about the alleged involvement of particular
military units was available to the prosecuting authorities no later
than one month after the incident. Despite all that, and
notwithstanding the domestic and international public outcry caused
by the cold-blooded execution of more than 50 civilians, almost six
years after the tragic events in Novye Aldy no meaningful result
whatsoever has been achieved in the task of identifying and
prosecuting the individuals who had committed the crimes. In the
Court's view, the astonishing ineffectiveness of the prosecuting
authorities in this case can only be qualified as acquiescence in the
events.
- In
the light of the foregoing, the Court finds that the authorities
failed to carry out an effective criminal investigation into the
murders of the applicants' eleven relatives. It accordingly dismisses
the Government's preliminary objection as regards the applicants'
failure to exhaust domestic remedies within the context of the
criminal investigation, and holds that there has been a violation of
Article 2 on this account also.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
first applicant submitted that he had been subjected to treatment
contrary to Article 3, which provides:
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
- The
Government disagreed that the first applicant had been subjected to
treatment proscribed under that Article.
- The
Court would refer to its practice by which the application of Article
3 is usually not extended to the relatives of persons who have been
killed by the authorities in violation of Article 2 (see Yasin
Ateş v. Turkey, no. 30949/96, § 135, 31 May 2005)
or to cases of unjustified use of lethal force by State agents (see
Isayeva and Others v. Russia, nos. 57947/00, 57948/00 and
57949/00, § 229, 24 February 2005), as opposed to the
relatives of the victims of enforced disappearances.
- However,
the Court finds that the situation of the first applicant goes beyond
that of a relative of victims of a violation of Article 2. On
5 February 2000 the first applicant was a witness to the
extrajudicial execution of several of his relatives and neighbours.
He was subjected to threats from the perpetrators and forced at
gunpoint to lie on the ground, fearing for his own life. The Court
has no doubt that the shock he experienced on that day, coupled with
the authorities' wholly inadequate and inefficient response in the
aftermath of the events, caused the first applicant suffering
attaining the threshold of inhuman and degrading treatment proscribed
by Article 3.
- Consequently,
the Court concludes that there has been a violation of Article 3 of
the Convention in respect of the first applicant.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 13 OF THE CONVENTION READ
IN CONJUNCTION WITH ARTICLE 2
- The
applicants complained that they had had no effective remedy in
respect of the violations alleged under Article 2 of the Convention.
They referred to Article 13 of the Convention, which provides:
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth
in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy
before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has
been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”
- The
Government stated that the applicants had had access to effective
domestic remedies and could have appealed to a court against the
results of the investigation. They had been granted victim status and
had had every opportunity to participate effectively in the
proceedings.
- The
Court reiterates that Article 13 of the Convention guarantees the
availability at the national level of a remedy to enforce the
substance of the Convention rights and freedoms in whatever form they
might happen to be secured in the domestic legal order. Given the
fundamental importance of the right to protection of life, Article 13
requires, in addition to the payment of compensation where
appropriate, a thorough and effective investigation capable of
leading to the identification and punishment of those responsible for
the deprivation of life and infliction of treatment contrary to
Article 3, including effective access for the complainant to the
investigation procedure leading to the identification and punishment
of those responsible (see Anguelova v. Bulgaria, no. 38361/97,
§§ 161-162, ECHR 2002-IV; Assenov and Others v.
Bulgaria, judgment of 28 October 1998, Reports 1998-VIII,
p. 3293, § 117; and Süheyla Aydın v. Turkey,
no. 25660/94, § 208, 24 May 2005). The Court further
reiterates that the requirements of Article 13 are broader than
a Contracting State's obligation under Article 2 to conduct an
effective investigation (see Orhan v. Turkey,
no. 25656/94, § 384, 18 June 2002, and Khashiyev
and Akayeva, cited above, § 183).
- In
view of the Court's above findings with regard to Article 2,
these complaints are clearly “arguable” for the purposes
of Article 13 (see Boyle and Rice v. the United Kingdom,
judgment of 27 April 1988, Series A no. 131, § 52).
The applicants should accordingly have been able to avail themselves
of effective and practical remedies capable of leading to the
identification and punishment of those responsible and to an award of
compensation, for the purposes of Article 13.
- It
follows that in circumstances where, as here, the criminal
investigation into the deaths was ineffective and the effectiveness
of any other remedy that may have existed, including the civil
remedies suggested by the Government, was consequently undermined,
the State has failed in its obligation under Article 13 of the
Convention.
V. OBSERVANCE OF Article 34 and ARTICLE 38 § 1 (a)
of the convention
- The
applicants argued that the Government's failure to submit the
documents requested by the Court at the communication stage disclosed
a failure to comply with their obligations under Article 34 and
Article 38 § 1 (a) of the Convention. The
relevant parts of those Articles provide:
Article 34
“The Court may receive applications from any
person, non-governmental organisation or group of individuals
claiming to be the victim of a violation by one of the High
Contracting Parties of the rights set forth in the Convention or the
Protocols thereto. The High Contracting Parties undertake not to
hinder in any way the effective exercise of this right.”
Article 38
“1. If the Court declares the
application admissible, it shall
(a) pursue the examination of the case,
together with the representatives of the parties, and if need be,
undertake an investigation, for the effective conduct of which the
States concerned shall furnish all necessary facilities;
...”
- The
applicants invited the Court to conclude that the Government had
failed in their obligations under Article 38 on account of their
refusal to submit the documents from the investigation file in
response to the Court's requests at the communication stage. In their
view, through their handling of the Court's request for documents,
the Government had additionally failed to comply with their
obligations under Article 34.
- The
Government submitted most of the investigation file after the case
had been declared admissible.
- The
Court reiterates that it is of the utmost importance for the
effective operation of the system of individual petition instituted
under Article 34 of the Convention that States should furnish all
necessary facilities to make possible a proper and effective
examination of applications (see Tanrıkulu,
cited above, § 70). This
obligation requires the Contracting States to furnish all necessary
facilities to the Court, whether it is conducting a fact-finding
investigation or performing its general duties as regards the
examination of applications. Failure on a Government's part to submit
such information which is in their hands, without a satisfactory
explanation, may not only give rise to the drawing of inferences as
to the well-foundedness of the applicant's allegations, but may also
reflect negatively on the level of compliance by a respondent State
with its obligations under Article 38 § 1 (a)
of the Convention (see Timurtaş, cited above, § 66).
The same applies to delays by the State in submitting information,
which prejudice the establishment of facts in a case, both before and
after the decision on admissibility (see Bazorkina, cited
above, § 171).
- In
accordance with the principles set forth in its case-law, the Court
agrees that in certain cases delays in submitting information which
is crucial to the establishment of facts may give rise to a separate
finding under Article 38 of the Convention. In a case where the
application raises issues of grave unlawful actions by State agents,
as well as where the adequacy of the investigation is in question,
the documents from the criminal investigation are fundamental to the
establishment of the facts and their absence may prejudice the
Court's proper examination of the complaint at both the admissibility
and the merits stage.
- In
the present case, the Government refused to submit the documents from
the criminal investigation file in response to the communication of
the complaints. In December 2005 the Court declared the application
admissible and reiterated its request. In April 2006 the Government
submitted documents from the file (see paragraph 79 above).
- The
Court would first remark that it has already found in a number of
previous cases that the provisions of Article 161 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, to which the Government initially referred, do
not preclude disclosure of the documents from a pending investigation
file, but rather set out a procedure for and limits to such
disclosure (see, for similar conclusions, Mikheyev v. Russia,
no. 77617/01, § 104, 26 January 2006).
- As
to Article 38§ 1 (a), the Court reiterates that it is
applicable to cases which have been declared admissible. The Court
cannot find that the non-submission of the information requested
prior to the admissibility decision prejudiced the establishment of
facts or otherwise prevented the proper examination of the present
case. The Court recalls, however, that even after the case was
declared admissible, the Government did not submit the entire file
(see paragraphs 80-82 above). Nevertheless, in view of the
appropriate inferences drawn by the Court from the missing documents
and the circumstances of the present case, the Court does not find it
necessary to draw separate conclusions under Article 38 § 1 (a)
of the Convention.
- As
to Article 34 of the Convention, its main objective is to ensure the
effective operation of the right of individual petition. There is no
indication in the present case that there has been any hindrance of
the applicants' right of individual petition, either through
interference with their communications with the Court or
representation before the Convention institutions or through the
exertion of undue pressure on them. The Court is of the opinion that
no separate issues arise here under Article 34.
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
1. Pecuniary damage
- The first applicant claimed, on behalf of his brother
Ibragim Musayev (born in 1938), compensation for the loss of earnings
of the latter's breadwinner, Suleyman Musayev. Suleyman Musayev was
the first applicant's nephew and Ibragim Musayev's son, who was
killed on 5 February 2000. He claimed 10,452.22 pounds sterling
(GBP) under this head. The claim as to his loss of future earnings
was based on the Ogden actuarial tables and on the assumption that
Ibragim Musayev would have continued to draw benefit from his son's
salary for 17 more years.
- The
third applicant claimed a total of GBP 8,662 in respect of
non-pecuniary damage. This included compensation for the lost wages
of her husband, Salman Magomadov, who had worked at an oil-refining
plant in Grozny until July 1999 with a monthly salary of 2,438
roubles. The third applicant claimed this compensation in respect of
herself and in respect of her two youngest daughters, Petimat
Magomadova (born in 1985) and Satsita Magomadova (born in 1990), who
had still been studying at the time of their father's death. She also
based the claim as to his loss of future earnings on the Ogden
actuarial tables and on the assumption that her two youngest
daughters and herself would have continued to draw benefit from her
late husband's salary for 18 more years.
- The
Government regarded these claims as based on suppositions and
unfounded. They disputed the relevance of the Ogden actuarial tables
to the situation in Russia.
- The
Court reiterates that there must be a clear causal connection between
the damage claimed by the applicant and the violation of the
Convention, and that this may, in an appropriate case, include
compensation in respect of loss of earnings (see, among other
authorities, Çakıcı v. Turkey [GC],
no. 23657/94, ECHR 1999 IV). As to the claim brought by the
first applicant on behalf of his brother in respect of his deceased
nephew's loss of future earnings, it is not claimed that the first
applicant was in any way dependent on such earnings. In this
connection, the Court notes that the first applicant has not proved
that he suffered the pecuniary loss he alleged. The Court does not
find it appropriate in the circumstances of this case to make any
award to the first applicant under this head.
- As
to the claim brought by the third applicant, the Court finds that
there is a direct causal link between the violation of Article 2
in respect of the third applicant's husband and the loss by her of
the financial support which he could have provided. The Court further
finds that this loss of earnings also applies to their dependent
children and that it is reasonable to assume that Salman Magomadov
would eventually have had some earnings from which the applicant and
their two young daughters would have benefited. Having regard to the
applicants' submissions and the fact that Salman Magomadov was not
employed at the time of his death, the Court awards 8,000 euros (EUR)
to the third applicant in respect of pecuniary damage, plus any tax
that may be chargeable on that amount.
2. Non-pecuniary damage
- The
applicants claimed EUR 100,000 each in respect of non-pecuniary
damage for the suffering they had endured as a result of the loss of
their relatives, the failure to carry out an effective investigation
into the killings and the indifference shown by the authorities
towards their grief. In addition, the third applicant claimed a
similar sum of EUR 100,000 for each of her five daughters who
had suffered as a result of their father's killing.
- The
Government found the amounts claimed exaggerated.
- The
Court has found a violation of Articles 2 and 13 of the Convention on
account of the killings of the applicant's relatives and the
deficient domestic investigation. The first applicant, in addition,
has been found to be the victim of a violation of Article 3 in
relation to the stress and anguish he endured. The Court considers
that an award should be made in respect of non-pecuniary damage,
bearing in mind the family ties between the applicants and the
victims of the killings and the seriousness of the damage sustained,
which cannot be compensated for solely by the findings of violations.
Acting on an equitable basis, the Court awards the following amounts
by way of compensation for non-pecuniary damage, all sums to be
converted into Russian roubles at the rate applicable at the date of
payment:
(a) EUR 30,000
to the first applicant in respect of the violations found under
Articles 2 and 13;
(b) EUR 5,000
to the first applicant for the violation of Article 3 found in
respect of him;
(с) EUR 30,000
to the second applicant in respect of the violations found under
Articles 2 and 13;
(d) EUR 40,000
to the third applicant, also in respect of Salman Magomadov's five
heirs, in respect of the violations found under Articles 2 and 13;
(e) EUR 30,000
to the fourth and fifth applicants jointly in respect of the
violations found under Articles 2 and 13.
B. Costs and expenses
- The
applicants were represented by lawyers from the NGO EHRAC/Memorial
Human Rights Centre. They submitted that the representatives had
incurred the following costs:
(a) EUR
4,450 for 178 hours of research in Chechnya and Ingushetia at a rate
of EUR 25 per hour;
(b) EUR
500 in travel expenses for the field workers;
(c) EUR
9,100 for 182 hours of drafting legal documents submitted to the
Court and the domestic authorities at a rate of EUR 50 per hour by
the lawyers in Moscow;
(d) GBP 2,266
for 22 hours and 40 minutes of legal work by two United Kingdom-based
lawyers at a rate of GBP 100 per hour;
(e) GBP 500
for the professional fees of a barrister in London consulted as to
the evidence and the merits;
(f) GBP 240
for administrative costs borne by the London office;
(g) GBP 1,574.42
in connection with the translation of documents, as attested by
appropriate invoices.
- The
Government disputed the reasonableness and the justification of the
amounts claimed under this heading. They also objected to the
representatives' request for the award for legal representation to be
transferred directly to their account.
- The
Court has to establish, first, whether the costs and expenses
indicated by the applicant were actually incurred and, second,
whether they were necessary (see McCann and Others, cited
above, p. 63, § 220).
- The
Court notes that from the outset of the proceedings before it the
applicants were represented by the lawyers of EHRAC/Memorial. It is
satisfied that the rates set out above were reasonable and reflect
the expenses actually incurred by the applicant's representatives.
- Further, it has to be established whether the costs
and expenses incurred by the applicant for legal representation were
necessary. The Court notes that the case was rather complex, involved
perusing a large quantity of factual and documentary evidence,
including the criminal investigation file, and required a fair amount
of research and preparation. The Court also notes that it is its
standard practice to rule that awards in relation of costs and
expenses are to be paid directly to the applicant's representative's
accounts (see, for example, Toğcu, cited above, § 158;
Nachova and Others v. Bulgaria [GC], nos. 43577/98
and 43579/98, § 175, ECHR 2005 VII; and
Imakayeva v. Russia, no. 7615/02, ECHR 2006 ...).
- In these circumstances, and having regard to the
details of the claims submitted by the applicant, the Court awards
the following sums claimed under this heading: EUR 14,050 and
GBP 4,580, exclusive of any value-added tax that may be
chargeable, the net award to be paid in pounds sterling into the
representatives' bank account in the United Kingdom, as identified by
the applicants.
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
- Dismisses the Government's preliminary
objection;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 2 of the Convention in respect of the deaths of the
applicants' eleven relatives on 5 February 2000;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 2 of the Convention in respect of the failure to conduct
an effective investigation into the circumstances in which the
applicants' relatives died;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 3 of the Convention in respect of the first applicant;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 13 in respect of the alleged violation of Article 2 of
the Convention;
- Holds that there is no need to examine
separately the applicants' complaints under Article 34 and Article
38 § 1 (a) of the Convention;
- Holds
(a) that the respondent State is to pay the applicants,
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 Russian
roubles at the rate applicable at the date of settlement:
(i)
EUR 8,000 (eight thousand euros) to the third applicant in
respect of pecuniary damage;
(ii)
EUR 30,000 (thirty thousand euros) to the first applicant in respect
of the violations found under Articles 2 and 13;
(iii)
EUR 5,000 to the first applicant in respect of the violation of
Article 3;
(iv)
EUR 30,000 (thirty thousand euros) to the second applicant in respect
of the violations found under Articles 2 and 13;
(v)
EUR 40,000 (forty thousand euros), to the third applicant and also in
respect of Salman Magomadov's five heirs, in respect of the
violations found under Articles 2 and 13;
(vi)
EUR 30,000 (thirty thousand euros) to the fourth and fifth applicants
jointly in respect of the violations found under Articles 2 and 13;
(vii)
EUR 14,050 (fourteen thousand and fifty euros) and GBP 4,580
(four thousand five hundred and eighty pounds sterling) in respect of
costs and expenses, the net award to be converted into pounds
sterling at the rate applicable at the date of settlement and paid
into the representatives' bank account in the United Kingdom;
(viii) 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 applicants' claim
for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 26 July 2007, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis
Registrar President