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FIRST
SECTION
CASE OF
RYABIKIN v. RUSSIA
(Application
no. 8320/04)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
19 June
2008
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 Ryabikin v. Russia,
The
European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Christos
Rozakis,
President,
Nina
Vajić,
Anatoly
Kovler,
Elisabeth
Steiner,
Khanlar
Hajiyev,
Dean
Spielmann,
Sverre
Erik Jebens,
judges,
and
Søren Nielsen, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 29 May 2008,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 8320/04) 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 a Turkmen national, Mr Aleksandr Ivanovich
Ryabikin (“the applicant”), on 5 March 2004.
- The
applicant, who had been granted legal aid, was represented by Ms O.
Tseytlina, a lawyer practising in St Petersburg. The Russian
Government (“the Government”) were initially represented
by Mr P. Laptev, former Representative of the Russian Federation at
the European Court of Human Rights, and subsequently by their
representative, Mrs V. Milinchuk.
- The
applicant alleged, in particular, that his extradition to
Turkmenistan would entail a violation of Article 3 of the Convention,
that his detention pending extradition had been unlawful and that no
judicial review had been available in respect of that detention, in
breach of the provisions of Article 5 §§ 1 (f)
and 4 of the Convention.
- On
9 March 2004 the President of the Chamber indicated to the respondent
Government that the applicant should not be extradited to
Turkmenistan until further notice (Rule 39 of the Rules of
Court). On 9 April 2004 the Court granted priority to the
application (Rule 41 of the Rules of Court). On 8 September 2005 the
Court decided that the interim measure should be lifted.
- By
a decision of 4 April 2007 the Court declared the application partly
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 applicant was born in 1953 and currently lives in
St Petersburg.
A. Proceedings in Turkmenistan
- The
applicant was born and lived in Ashkhabad, Turkmenistan. He is of
Russian ethnic origin and has family members in Russia. In
Turkmenistan he headed a limited liability company called Argamak,
which was engaged in the construction business and trade.
- According
to the applicant, between 1997 and 1999 Argamak performed works under
a government contract. The applicant submitted that certain officials
from the Ministry of Finance of Turkmenistan had refused to honour
their obligations under the contract and to pay for the work
performed unless the applicant paid a bribe in the amount of 10,000
United States dollars (USD). The applicant further submitted that in
May 2000 he had applied to the Ministry of the Interior’s
Department for Economic Crime and complained about two inspectors
from the Ministry of Finance, S. and D. Both inspectors, according to
the applicant, were of Turkmen ethnic origin. The Department for
Economic Crime allegedly supplied the applicant with specially marked
banknotes and S. was detained during the transfer of the money.
Following a criminal investigation, the case against S. and D. was
referred to a court, which after two days of hearings ordered an
additional investigation. It appears that the applicant participated
as a witness. The applicant, who submitted that he did not speak
Turkmen, was not provided with an interpreter, although the
proceedings were conducted in Turkmen. The applicant was not aware of
the outcome of the criminal case.
- After
May 2000 the applicant allegedly came under pressure from the
law-enforcement bodies. According to him, officers of those bodies
threatened him with revenge and demanded that he change his position
in the criminal case. The applicant submitted that in October and
November 2000 he had been called in for questioning at the transport
police department for organised crime about 25 times, that is, almost
every day. He also received threats from D. and the relatives of S.
Also in October and November 2000 the applicant was allegedly
questioned on several occasions by the Turkmenistan State Security
Committee about his economic activities and was asked to become an
informant. When the applicant refused he received further threats.
- As
a result, the applicant submitted that he feared for his life and for
the lives of his relatives. The applicant felt that he had become a
target, in particular because he belonged to the Russian minority,
and decided to leave Turkmenistan.
B. Proceedings relating to the applicant’s status in Russia
- On
1 December 2000 the applicant applied for Russian citizenship at the
Russian embassy in Ashkhabad. The applicant submitted that all the
required documents had been collected and registered at the embassy
and that he had received notification that his case file had been
registered as no. 22850.
- On
15 December 2000 the office of the Russian Federal Migration Service
at the embassy in Turkmenistan supplied the applicant with a document
entitled “Permission to Repatriate from Turkmenistan to Russia
and the Granting of Migrant Status”. The document was based on
the bilateral treaty on resettlement.
- On
28 December 2000 the applicant received an exit visa from
Turkmenistan valid for three months. On 21 January 2001 the applicant
travelled to the United Arab Emirates on a private invitation.
- On
13 May 2001 the applicant was issued with an entry visa by the
Russian embassy in the United Arab Emirates, with the purpose of
entry indicated as “permanent residence”.
- On
9 June 2001 the applicant went to Moscow by plane. On 17 June 2001 he
travelled to St Petersburg, where his brother lives, and from then on
resided at his brother’s address.
- The
applicant submitted that in June 2001 he had visited the office of
the Federal Migration Service in St Petersburg, where he was advised
that he should not apply for refugee status because he already had
migrant status, and that he should proceed with his application for
Russian citizenship.
- On
several occasions between 2001 and 2003 the applicant contacted the
Russian embassy in Turkmenistan, the Presidential Commission on
Citizenship Issues and the Ministry of the Interior, enquiring about
the progress of his application for citizenship. He submitted that he
had not received any relevant response.
- On
9 July 2003 the applicant again applied to the St Petersburg office
of the Federal Migration Service and asked in writing to be granted
refugee status. On 23 September 2003 the applicant was interviewed
and submitted that he feared persecution in Turkmenistan and that he
was the subject of a criminal investigation. The applicant submitted
all the necessary documents to the migration service, including his
national passport.
- On
24 October 2003 the St Petersburg office of the Federal Migration
Service rejected the applicant’s application for refugee
status, and on 27 October 2003 the applicant was notified of
this in writing. The letter of rejection stated that the applicant
had not met the criteria for refugee status, and that the real reason
for his arrival in Russia was most probably an attempt to escape the
criminal proceedings against him. The decision stated that in 2001
the applicant had obtained migrant status in the Russian embassy for
himself and for his family; however, his family had continued to
reside in Turkmenistan. The applicant had travelled first to the
United Arab Emirates on business, and had arrived in Russia only in
June 2001. Since his arrival the applicant had failed to obtain legal
status in Russia and had not applied for a residence permit or
registration at his place of residence. The decision further stated
that the St Petersburg Regional Department of the Interior had
confirmed that the applicant had been wanted by the Turkmen
authorities since April 2001 and in Russia, further to a request by
the Turkmen authorities, since December 2002. The letter also
informed the applicant that he could appeal to a district court
against the decision and that he should leave Russia if he had no
other legal grounds for remaining.
- On
24 November 2003 the applicant appealed to the Kuybyshevskiy district
court of St Petersburg against the refusal of his application. On the
same day the case was registered by the court and the first meeting
between the parties was scheduled for 15 December 2003. At the same
time, the judge requested the applicant’s file from the St
Petersburg office of the Federal Migration Service.
- On
15 December 2003 the hearing was scheduled for 2 February 2004. On 2
February 2004 the judge decided that a request should be sent to
Turkmenistan asking about the applicant’s participation as a
witness in the criminal case against S. and D. The next hearing was
first scheduled for 30 March 2004 and then postponed until 10
June 2004.
- At
the same time, the applicant again contacted various bodies in
relation to his application for citizenship. On 28 January 2004 the
Presidential Commission on Citizenship Issues informed the applicant
that his application for citizenship had been returned to the Russian
embassy in Turkmenistan for further processing.
- In
January 2004 the applicant wrote to the Ministry of the Interior. He
stated that he had applied for Russian citizenship in December 2000,
and that consideration of such applications should take between six
and twelve months. He had received no reply to his application. On 21
January 2004 the Passport and Visa Service of the Ministry of the
Interior informed the applicant that his application had been
forwarded to the St Petersburg Department of the Interior and that it
would inform him of the results.
C. Request for extradition to Turkmenistan and the applicant’s
detention
- The
applicant’s family – his wife, daughter, son and two
grandchildren – remained in Turkmenistan. After the applicant
had arrived in Russia, his wife informed him that she had been
summoned to the State Security Committee on several occasions and
questioned about her husband’s whereabouts. She also told him
that a criminal case against him had been opened and that part of his
property had been confiscated.
- On
12 February 2004 the applicant was summoned to the Passport and Visa
Service of the St Petersburg Department of the Interior to discuss
“issues relating to the granting of Russian citizenship”.
- On
25 February 2004 the applicant went to the Department’s
premises, where he was arrested. He was told that his detention
related to a criminal case in Turkmenistan.
- On
26 February 2004 the prosecutor of the Central District of
St Petersburg issued an order for the applicant’s arrest
on the basis of international search warrant no. 1207, issued by
Turkmenistan in 2001. The order listed details of the charges brought
against the applicant, which included the embezzlement of about USD
139,000 in 2000 and 2001, when the applicant had been the director of
a Turkmen-US joint venture. He was charged with offences under
Article 228, part 4, of the Turkmen Criminal Code. On 4 April 2001 he
had been declared a wanted person in Turkmenistan, and on 26 April
2001 a prosecutor in Turkmenistan had issued an arrest warrant. The
Prosecutor General of Russia had been informed of the applicant’s
detention. The prosecutor requested the Kuybyshevskiy district court
of St Petersburg to authorise the applicant’s detention.
- On
27 February 2004 the applicant was brought before the Kuybyshevskiy
district court. He was represented by a lawyer. The prosecutor
requested the court to detain the applicant and stated that he had
been wanted in Turkmenistan since April 2001 for an offence under
Article 228, part 4, of the Turkmen Criminal Code. The
Prosecutor General’s Office had been informed of the
applicant’s arrest. The court ordered the applicant’s
detention pending his extradition to Turkmenistan. The court did not
specify the term of his detention.
- The
applicant’s lawyer appealed to the St Petersburg City Court.
The motion stated that the applicant’s appeal concerning his
refugee status was pending before the same court. It referred to his
pending application for Russian citizenship. It further stated that
the applicant had been detained unlawfully, as there had been no
decision by the competent prosecutor to detain him with a view to his
deportation.
- On
3 March 2004 the head of the Ashkhabad criminal police requested the
Kuybyshevskiy district court to authorise the applicant’s
detention on charges of embezzlement on a large scale, an offence
punishable under the Turkmen Criminal Code by eight to fifteen years’
imprisonment. The letter stated that the question of extradition
would be immediately resolved through the prosecutor generals’
offices of the two countries.
- On
3 March 2004 the applicant asked Ms Tseytlina to represent him. The
applicant submitted that Ms Tseytlina had been denied access to the
documents that had served as a ground for his detention, including
information about the criminal proceedings in Turkmenistan and the
decision of the Prosecutor General to detain him with a view to his
extradition. On 9 March 2004 the lawyer submitted a written complaint
to the President of the Kuybyshevskiy district court. On 11 March
2004 the lawyer was informed that she could have access to the
documents in question if she submitted a written request to the
judge. In reply to her written request the President of the
Kuybyshevskiy district court postponed the hearing from 11 until
12 March 2004.
- On
9 March 2004 the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) in Moscow issued a letter stating that the
applicant’s appeal concerning his refugee status was pending
before the Kuybyshevskiy district court and that his extradition to
Turkmenistan prior to determination of his appeal might be in
violation of section 10 of the Refugees Act and Article 33 of the
1951 UN Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, to which
Russia was a party.
- On
9 March 2004 the European Court, under Rule 39 of the Rules of Court,
requested the Russian authorities not to extradite the applicant to
Turkmenistan until further notice.
- On
12 March 2004 the St Petersburg City Court, in the presence of the
applicant’s lawyer, upheld the decision of 27 February 2004.
The City Court noted that the applicant was on the international
wanted list and that on 26 February 2004 [this should read 2001]
the deputy prosecutor of Ashkhabad had ordered his arrest. In the
absence of a decision by a foreign court to detain the applicant the
Russian court was competent to do so at the prosecutor’s
request. The decision of the City Court did not specify a term for
the applicant’s detention.
- On
17 March 2004 the Prosecutor General’s Office received a
request from Turkmenistan for the applicant’s extradition. The
Russian Government referred to this document but no copy was
submitted to the Court. The applicant and his lawyer submitted that
they had not seen the document.
- On
24 March 2004 the Russian Government informed the Court that the
applicant had been detained in accordance with Article 466 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure (CCP) and that no decision to extradite
him had been taken. The Government further submitted that all
proceedings in Russia would be suspended until further notice from
the Court.
- On
25 May 2004 the Prosecutor General of Turkmenistan addressed the
following letter to the Deputy Prosecutor General of Russia:
“The General Prosecutor’s Office of
Turkmenistan presents its compliments to the Prosecutor General’s
Office of the Russian Federation and issues a guarantee that
Aleksandr Ivanovich Ryabikin will face criminal prosecution only in
respect of the crimes committed by him (embezzlement on a large
scale) and [that he] will not be subjected to, and has never been
subjected to, persecution on political, religious or ethnic grounds.”
- On
27 August 2004 the Kuybyshevskiy district court dismissed the
applicant’s complaint concerning his refugee status on the
ground that the applicant had failed to substantiate the allegations
regarding his fear of ethnic or religious-based persecution in
Turkmenistan.
- On
4 November 2004 the St Petersburg City Court upheld the decision of
27 August 2004. Both courts noted that the applicant had not
submitted any specific information about his alleged persecution on
ethnic or religious grounds. They concluded that his fear of being
returned to Turkmenistan was based mainly on the criminal proceedings
initiated against him and that he had used the refugee status
procedure as a means of evading those proceedings.
- In the meantime, on 8 September 2004, the Deputy
Prosecutor General had submitted a request for supervisory review
(надзорное
представление)
to the Presidium of the St Petersburg City Court. In it he challenged
the procedural fairness of the decision of 12 March 2004 on the
ground that the applicant’s presence had not been secured.
- On
29 September 2004 the Presidium of the City Court quashed the
decision of 12 March 2004 in the supervisory review proceedings and
referred it back for re-examination. On 12 October 2004 the City
Court again upheld the decision of 27 February 2004 to detain the
applicant. The applicant participated by video link.
D. Further proceedings to challenge the lawfulness of the
applicant’s detention
- After
March 2004 the applicant appealed against his detention on several
occasions. Since he had been arrested in the Central Administrative
District of St Petersburg, he complained to the three courts
operating in the district, namely the Kuybyshevskiy, Smolninskiy and
Dzerzhinskiy district courts. He also submitted appeals to the
Kalininskiy district court, which has jurisdiction in respect of
pre-trial detention centre IZ-47/4, where he had been detained.
- Before
the domestic courts the applicant submitted that in accordance with
the Code of Criminal Procedure his detention could be authorised only
for two months, and that after 27 April 2004 it had became unlawful.
- In
addition, the applicant applied on numerous occasions to various
prosecutors’ offices in relation to the issue of the lawfulness
of his detention.
- A
summary of these proceedings is set out below.
1. Proceedings before the Kuybyshevskiy district court
- On
3 May 2004 the applicant, and on 19 May 2004 his lawyer, submitted
complaints to the Kuybyshevskiy district court, alleging that the
authorisation for his detention which that court had given on 27
February 2004 had expired on 27 April 2004 and had not been extended.
- On
26 May 2004 the Kuybyshevskiy district court informed the applicant’s
lawyer that the complaints had been transferred to the St Petersburg
prosecutor’s office.
- The
applicant’s lawyer appealed against the court’s actions
to the St Petersburg City Court on 3 June 2004, both directly
and via the district court. On the same day the Kuybyshevskiy
district court informed the applicant that his complaint had been
forwarded to the city prosecutor’s office.
- On
14 June 2004 the applicant’s lawyer again complained to the
St Petersburg City Court, challenging the Kuybyshevskiy district
court’s refusal to consider the complaints.
- In
reply, on 23 June 2004 the St Petersburg City Court forwarded
the applicant’s complaint to the city prosecutor’s
office.
- On
29 June 2004 the Kuybyshevskiy district court replied to the
applicant that his complaints to the City Court had been forwarded to
the St Petersburg prosecutor’s office, which he should
contact in the future if he wished to apply to have the measure of
restraint imposed on him changed.
- On
13 July 2004 the President of the Kuybyshevskiy district court
informed the applicant’s lawyer that no decision had been taken
by that court, and that therefore no appeals were possible.
2. Proceedings before the Smolninskiy district court
- On
4 June 2004 the applicant complained to the Smolninskiy district
court of the unlawfulness of his detention. On 15 June 2004 the
authorities in the detention facility returned the complaint to the
applicant, with a letter from a judge of that court stating that it
had no jurisdiction to consider it.
- On
24 June 2004 the applicant, and on 25 June his lawyer, wrote to the
Smolninskiy district court, complaining of the applicant’s
unlawful detention and requesting it to adopt a formal decision on
his complaint. On 25 June the applicant’s lawyer also
complained to the St Petersburg City Court.
- On
9 July 2004 the St Petersburg City Court returned to the applicant’s
lawyer her complaints concerning the actions of the Kuybyshevskiy and
Smolninskiy district courts without examining them, and stated that
she could appeal against the Kuybyshevskiy district court’s
decision of 27 February 2004 by means of supervisory review.
- On
12 July 2004 the Smolninskiy district court returned the complaints
to the applicant and stated that he could not appeal against a
forwarding letter and that no decision had been taken on his
complaint for lack of jurisdiction. All questions relating to
extradition fell within the competence of the Prosecutor General’s
Office, to which he should apply.
3. Proceedings before the Dzerzhinskiy district court
- On
2 June 2004 the applicant complained of his unlawful detention to the
Dzerzhinskiy district court. On an unspecified date that court
returned his complaint without examining it and stated that since no
investigation was pending in respect of the applicant in the Central
Administrative District of St Petersburg, it had no jurisdiction with
regard to his detention. The court informed him that he should
challenge the lawfulness of his detention before the Kalininskiy
district court, which was responsible for the detention centre where
he had been detained.
- On
15 July 2005 the applicant appealed against that decision to the City
Court through the district court. On an unspecified date the court
returned the applicant’s complaint and stated that since no
investigation was pending in respect of him in the Central
Administrative District, he should appeal against his detention to
the authority responsible for his extradition.
- On
19 July 2004 the applicant’s lawyer again contacted the
Dzerzhinskiy district court, requesting it to review the substance of
the complaint. On 13 August 2004 the court ordered an oral
hearing in the applicant’s case and requested the city
prosecutor’s office to send it all the documents relating to
his extradition and detention.
- On
18 August 2004 the Dzerzhinskiy district court held an oral hearing
in the presence of the applicant and his lawyer and refused to
consider the complaint on the merits for lack of territorial
jurisdiction. The court stated the following:
“The applicant’s reference to Article 109 of
the CCP is unfounded because Chapter 54 of the CCP, which regulates
extradition on criminal charges, does not provide for a procedure for
extending a person’s detention. Persons arrested under Article
466 of the CCP may remain in detention until extradited to the
foreign State. The law on criminal procedure links the term of
detention only to the pre-established date set by the parties for
transfer of the detainee (Article 467 § 1 CCP). The law contains
no reference to application of Article 109 by analogy; therefore, the
obligation on the investigators to seek an extension of the detention
does not apply to this category of persons. Neither the European
Convention on Extradition (13 July 1957) nor the Minsk Convention of
22 January 1993 on Legal Assistance and Legal Relations in Civil,
Family and Criminal Matters, as amended on 28 March 1997
(Article 62), contains any provision corresponding in meaning to
Article 109 of the CCP.
The court does not question the fact that Mr Ryabikin,
who is being kept in detention, has the right to judicial protection
as guaranteed by the Constitution of Russia. However, the court
considers that he and his lawyer can exercise this right by
challenging the actions of the officials concerned through civil
proceedings, by submitting a complaint to a competent court at the
location of the St Petersburg prosecutor’s office or the
Prosecutor General’s Office, which is the body on which Russian
criminal procedural law confers responsibility for issues relating to
extradition.”
- The
applicant’s lawyer appealed against this decision on 25 August
2004. She argued that the provisions of Article 109 of the CCP should
apply in the applicant’s case and that the courts should be
competent to review the lawfulness of his detention. She stated that
Russian law provided that all issues relating to application of the
provisions of criminal and criminal procedural law should be resolved
in the manner provided for by the CCP and not through civil
proceedings.
- On
25 November 2004 the St Petersburg City Court dismissed the appeal
and upheld the decision of 18 August 2004. In addition to the
conclusions of the district court, it stated that the applicant could
appeal to a court against the prosecutor’s actions under
Article 125 of the CCP.
4. Proceedings before the Kalininskiy district court
- On
30 April 2004 the applicant complained to the Kalininskiy district
court, through the authorities in the detention facility, of the
unlawfulness of his detention. On 5 May 2004 the head of the
detention facility returned the complaint to the applicant, noting
that the Kalininskiy district court had no jurisdiction to deal with
it and that the applicant should apply to the St Petersburg City
Court instead.
- On
18 May 2004 the applicant’s lawyer wrote to the head of the
detention facility and stated that the latter had exceeded his powers
in refusing to forward the applicant’s complaint to the court.
She also noted that the applicant’s continued detention was
unlawful and requested his release.
- On
19 May 2004 the applicant’s lawyer submitted a complaint
concerning the applicant’s detention to the Kalininskiy
district court. On 25 May the court refused to consider the
complaint in substance because no investigation was pending in
respect of the applicant in Russia, and the provisions of the CCP did
not therefore apply to him.
- On
3 June 2004 the applicant’s lawyer appealed against that
decision to the City Court, which on 2 September quashed the order of
25 May 2004 and remitted the case to the district court.
- On
27 October 2004 the Kalininskiy district court held a hearing in the
case and requested the St Petersburg prosecutor’s office to
submit documents justifying the applicant’s detention. Pending
receipt of the documents, it adjourned consideration of the case
until 23 December, and subsequently until 29 December 2004. On 29
December the hearing was adjourned until 13 January 2005, and
subsequently until 16 February 2005.
- On
16 February 2005 the Kalininskiy district court, at a public hearing
in the presence of the applicant and his lawyer, reviewed the
complaint concerning the unlawfulness of his detention. The court
dismissed the complaint and ruled that the case should be transferred
to the Kuybyshevskiy district court.
5. Appeals to the prosecutors’ offices
- The
applicant and his lawyer applied on numerous occasions to prosecutors
at various levels, seeking to obtain his release.
- On
14 April 2004 the St Petersburg prosecutor’s office informed
the applicant, in reply to his request to be released, that the
Prosecutor General’s Office was considering the request for his
extradition, that he would be informed of the outcome and that there
were no reasons to release him from detention.
- On
25 May 2004 the Prosecutor General’s Office of Russia wrote as
follows to the applicant’s lawyer:
“[The applicant] was detained in St Petersburg in
accordance with Article 61 of the [Minsk] Convention on Legal
Assistance, as a person in respect of whom an international search
warrant had been issued by the Turkmen law-enforcement bodies.
Within 40 days the Prosecutor General of Turkmenistan
submitted a request for the extradition of Mr Ryabikin. On that
basis, on an application by the St Petersburg prosecutor’s
office, the Kuybyshevskiy district court applied the preventive
measure of detention under Article 446 § 1 of the CCP.
The question of extending the detention of a person
detained under Article 446 § 1 of the CCP is not dealt with by
Russian legislation.
According to the information provided by the
Representative of the Russian Federation at the European Court of
Human Rights, the decision of the President of the Chamber of the
European Court to apply Rule 39 of the Rules of Court concerned only
the expulsion/extradition/deportation, or any other forcible
transfer, of Mr Ryabikin to Turkmenistan, and no decision to release
him has been taken.”
- On
8 and 21 June 2004 the St Petersburg city prosecutor’s office
informed the applicant’s lawyer that her complaints of 12, 25
and 28 May and 7 July 2004 concerning the applicant’s release
were unsubstantiated, because Article 466 of the CCP did not provide
for the possibility of extending the detention of persons being held
with a view to extradition.
- On
8 July 2004 the Prosecutor General’s Office informed the
applicant that his extradition to Turkmenistan had been stayed in
view of the Court’s application of Rule 39 of the Rules of
Court. His allegations concerning persecution in Turkmenistan on
political and ethnic grounds were under consideration. The letter
concluded that there were no reasons to change the preventive measure
applied to him.
- On
26 August 2004 the Prosecutor General’s Office replied to the
applicant’s request to release him by a letter similar to that
of 25 May 2004.
- On
31 December 2004 the Prosecutor General’s Office replied to the
applicant’s lawyer, stating that the applicant’s
detention was lawful and that on 12 October 2004 the St Petersburg
City Court had upheld the lawfulness of the decision of 27 February
2004. It further stated that the applicant’s complaint
concerning the lawfulness of his detention had been accepted for
review by the Kalininskiy district court.
6. Complaints to the head of the detention facility
- The
applicant and his lawyer also appealed directly to the head of
detention facility IZ-47/4, requesting the applicant’s release
and stating that his detention since 27 April 2004 had been unlawful.
- On
1 June 2004 the applicant’s lawyer was informed that his
continued detention was based on the court’s decision of 27
February 2004, taken in accordance with Article 446 of the CCP.
- The
applicant again complained to the head of detention facility IZ 47/4
on 2 and 28 September 2004.
- The
applicant submitted that his medical condition had deteriorated while
he was in detention.
- On
17 February 2005 the head of the facility replied to the applicant’s
lawyer that the applicant had been diagnosed with coronary heart
disease and arrhythmia, but that he had received medical treatment
and did not require hospitalisation.
E. The applicant’s release
- On
9 March 2005 the Kuybyshevskiy district court accepted for review the
applicant’s complaint concerning the unlawfulness of his
continued detention, in which he had also referred to the
deterioration of his health.
- On
14 March 2005 the Prosecutor General’s Office, in response to
the request by the Kuybyshevskiy district court, stated that no
decision concerning the applicant’s extradition to Turkmenistan
had been taken and that his continued detention was lawful.
- On
14 March 2005 the Kuybyshevskiy district court held a public hearing
in the presence of the applicant and his lawyer and decided to
release him. The court noted that no decision on extradition had been
taken by the Prosecutor General’s Office, in view of the
application of Rule 39 of the Rules of Court. It further noted that
the CCP did not provide for the extension or alteration of a
preventive measure in respect of a person arrested further to an
extradition request. The district court directly applied Article 17
of the Constitution of Russia, which guarantees rights and freedoms
in accordance with internationally recognised principles and norms of
international law, and Article 5 of the European Convention on Human
Rights, and concluded that the applicant should be released.
- The
Prosecutor General’s Office appealed against that decision, but
on 14 April 2005 the St Petersburg City Court upheld it.
F. Subsequent developments
- In
their latest observations submitted in July 2007, the Government
stated that on 22 April 2005 the Prosecutor General’s Office of
Turkmenistan had provided guarantees to its Russian counterpart to
the effect that the applicant would not be subjected to torture,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment in that country. The
same letter also stated that the applicant would not be send to a
third state without the consent of the Russian authorities; once the
judicial proceedings were over and the applicant had served his
sentence, he would be allowed to leave Turkmenistan without any
hindrance. The Russian Government did not submit a copy of this
letter to the Court.
- In
September 2005 the Court lifted the interim measure applied
previously in respect of the applicant’s extradition. At the
same time it requested the Government to inform it of any new
developments regarding the extradition proceedings pending against
the applicant.
- The
applicant submitted that he continued to be under threat of arrest
and extradition to Turkmenistan. According to him, on 5 December
2005 two plainclothes policemen had visited his brother’s house
in St Petersburg, looking for him. They did not produce any documents
and said that the applicant should go to the City Department of the
Interior.
- On
7 December 2005 the applicant’s lawyer and his brother went to
the Department’s offices and were informed that the interim
measure had been lifted and that the applicant should report to the
Department of the Interior. No documents were produced in respect of
any proceedings. The officers also refused to clarify whether there
had been a decision to extradite the applicant to Turkmenistan. On 8
December 2005 the applicant called the Department but again received
no explanations as to the status of his extradition. He did not go
there in person, fearing that he would again be arrested.
- In
January 2006 the Government informed the Court that “the
Prosecutor General’s Office reverted to the examination of the
question of the applicant’s possible extradition. Since the
applicant’s whereabouts are not established, the …
Ministry of the Interior, acting on instructions of the Prosecutor
General’s Office, is taking actions in order to apprehend the
applicant.” In reply, the Court reminded the Government that
they had been requested to submit updated information concerning the
applicant’s extradition. No such information has been
forthcoming.
G. Conditions in Turkmenistan
- The
applicant submitted a number of reports on the situation in
Turkmenistan, including documents issued by the OSCE, the European
Parliament, the UN Commission on Human Rights, the US State
Department, Amnesty International, Memorial, Human Rights Watch and
the International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights. These
documents speak of serious and continuing human rights violations
occurring in Turkmenistan. In particular, they refer to persecution
of ethnic minorities including Russians, violations of the principle
of a fair trial, widespread use of torture, intolerable conditions of
detention and lack of access to detainees by independent bodies,
lawyers and relatives.
- In
particular, the OSCE Moscow Mechanism Rapporteur’s Report on
Turkmenistan, issued by Prof. Emmanuel Decaux on 12 March 2003,
stated:
“Large-scale violations of all the principles of
due process of law, like arbitrary detentions or show trials took
place. Not only torture has been used to extract confessions, but the
forced use of drugs was a means of criminalising the detainees,
entailing lethal risks for them. A multiform collective repression
fell on the ‘enemies of the people’, whereas forced
displacement is announced in arid regions of the country, especially
against people targeted on the ground of their ethnic origin. Even if
the death penalty has been legally abolished, in practice, the
survival expectancy of political detainees and displaced persons
seems very low.”
The
Report recommended, inter alia:
“Third States, and particularly the States parties
to the European Convention on Human Rights, should refuse to
extradite or to hand over Turkmen nationals who, in the current
circumstances, are in danger of being subjected to torture or inhuman
and degrading treatments. They should envisage the possibility of
granting refugee status to all persons having a well-founded fear of
persecution and co-operate with the UNHCR to this end.”
- On
23 October 2003 the European Parliament adopted a resolution on
Turkmenistan, which stated that “the
already appalling human rights situation in Turkmenistan has
deteriorated dramatically recently, and there is evidence that this
Central Asian state has acquired one of the worst totalitarian
systems in the world”. It called on the Turkmen government,
among other things, to conduct impartial and thorough investigations
into all allegations of torture and ill-treatment of persons held in
custody, to allow the International Committee of the Red Cross access
to prisoners and to ensure that independent observers were granted
access to criminal trials.
- Resolution
2003/11 of the Commission on Human Rights on the situation of human
rights in Turkmenistan deplored “[t]he conduct of the Turkmen
authorities with regard to the lack of fair trials of the accused,
the reliance on confessional evidence which may have been extracted
by torture or the threat of torture, the closed court proceedings,
contrary to Article 105 of the Constitution of Turkmenistan…
and the refusal to allow diplomatic missions or international
observers in Ashkhabad access to the trials as observers”.
- Resolution
2004/12 of the Commission on Human Rights on the situation of human
rights in Turkmenistan expressed its grave concern “at the
continuing failure of the Government of Turkmenistan to respond to
the criticisms identified in the report of the Rapporteur of the
Moscow Mechanism of the OSCE as regards the investigation, trial and
detention procedures following the reported assassination attempt
against President Niyazov in November 2002, as well as the failure of
the Turkmen authorities to allow appropriate independent bodies,
family members and lawyers access to those convicted, or to provide
any kind of evidence to dispel rumours that some of the latter have
now died in detention”. The Commission also called on
Turkmenistan “[t]o grant immediate access by appropriate
independent bodies, including the International Committee of the Red
Cross, as well as lawyers and relatives, to detained persons,
especially to persons detained following the events of 25 November
2002”.
- The
report of the UN Secretary-General on the situation of human rights
in Turkmenistan of 3 October 2006 (A/61/489) concluded that “gross
and systematic violations of human rights continued in the country”.
Among the main areas of concerns identified were the repression of
political dissent, the situation of minorities (including ethnic
non-Turkmen), the use of torture and the absence of an independent
judiciary.
- Citing
human rights concerns, the European Parliament in October 2006
adopted a resolution to stop further consideration of an interim
trade agreement with Turkmenistan. The International Trade Committee
resolution stated that the European Union would approve an interim
trade agreement with Turkmenistan only if “clear, tangible, and
sustained progress on the human rights situation is achieved.”
It called on the Turkmen Government to release all political
prisoners, allow the registration and free functioning of
non-governmental organisations, permit the International Committee of
the Red Cross to work freely in the country and grant United Nations
human rights monitors “timely” access to Turkmenistan to
monitor the situation.
- The
organisation Human Rights Watch in its 2007 World Report described
Turkmenistan as “one of the world’s most repressive and
closed countries,” where the authorities severely suppressed
all forms of dissent and isolated the population from the outside
world. Its human rights record in 2006 was described as “disastrous”.
In particular, the report mentioned discrimination against ethnic and
religious minorities in many important areas of social life, resort
to torture and poor prison conditions. It also noted that “the
government persisted in its refusal to grant international
organizations access to prisons”.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
A. The 2002 Code of Criminal Procedure (CCP)
- Articles
108 and 109 of the CCP contain provisions relating to pre-trial
detention. They provide that detention can be imposed by a judge on a
reasoned request by the prosecutor, or an investigator duly
authorised by the prosecutor, if no other measure of restraint can be
applied. The decision of the court to impose detention can be
appealed against within three days to a higher court, which must
consider it within three days from the day of receipt of the appeal.
Article 109 lays down the following terms of pre-trial detention. The
initial term of detention cannot exceed two months. If the
investigation continues, it can be extended to a maximum of six
months by the court on an application by the prosecutor. After that,
on an application by the regional prosecutor, it can be extended up
to a maximum of 12 months. In exceptional circumstances, on an
application by the Prosecutor General or his deputy, pre-trial
detention can be extended up to a maximum of 18 months.
- Article
125 of the CCP provides for judicial review of decisions by
investigators that are liable to infringe the constitutional rights
of the participants in the proceedings or prevent a person’s
access to court.
- Chapter
54 of the CCP regulates extradition on criminal charges. Articles 462
and 463 state that the decision to extradite a person further to a
request from another country is taken by the Prosecutor General or
his deputy. Such decision is subject to appeal to a regional court
within 10 days from the date of notification of the decision to the
person concerned. The complaint is reviewed at a public hearing, in
the presence of the person in question, his representative and the
prosecutor. The decision of the regional court can be appealed
against to the Supreme Court.
- Article
464 provides that extradition cannot take place if the person whose
extradition is sought is a Russian national or if he has refugee
status.
- Article
466 contains provisions relating to the detention of a person whose
extradition is sought. Detention can be authorised by the Prosecutor
General or his deputy upon receipt of an extradition request. If a
foreign court has authorised the person’s arrest, the decision
of the prosecutor does not need to be confirmed by a Russian court.
The period of detention cannot exceed the normal terms of detention
pending investigation laid down by the Code of Criminal Procedure for
similar crimes.
B. The 1993 Minsk Convention
- Article
5 of the CIS Convention on Legal Assistance and Legal Relations in
Civil, Family and Criminal Matters (the 1993 Minsk Convention), to
which both Russia and Turkmenistan are parties, provides that the
Parties communicate through their central, regional and other bodies.
Its other relevant provisions are as follows:
Article 61: Arrest or detention before the receipt of
a request for extradition
“1. The person whose extradition is
sought may also be arrested before receipt of a request for
extradition, if there is a related petition (ходатайство).
The petition shall contain a reference to a detention order
... and shall indicate that a request for extradition will follow. A
petition for arrest ... may be sent by post, wire, telex or
fax.
2. The person may also be detained without
the petition referred to in point 1 above if there are legal
grounds to suspect that he has committed, in the territory of the
other Contracting Party, an offence entailing extradition.
3. In case of [the person’s] arrest or
detention before receipt of the request for extradition, the
other Contracting Party shall be informed immediately.”
Article 61-1: Search for a person before receipt of
the request for extradition
“1. The Contracting Parties shall ...
search for the person before receipt of the request for
extradition if there are reasons to believe that this person may be
in the territory of the requested Contracting Party ...
2. A request for the search ... shall contain
... a request for the person’s arrest and a promise to submit a
request for his extradition.
3. A request for the search shall be
accompanied by a certified copy of ... the detention order ...
4. The requesting Contracting Party shall be
immediately informed about the person’s arrest or about other
results of the search.”
Article 62: Release of the person arrested or
detained
“1. A person arrested pursuant to
Article 61 § 1 and Article 61-1 shall be released ... if no
request for extradition is received by the requested
Contracting Party within 40 days of the arrest.
2. A person arrested pursuant to Article 61 §
2 shall be released if no petition issued pursuant to Article
61 § 1 arrives within the time established by the law concerning
arrest.”
C. Case-law of the Constitutional Court
- On
4 April 2006 the Constitutional Court examined an application by
Mr Nasrulloyev, who claimed that since the detention of a person
pending extradition was not limited in time, the resulting legal
situation was incompatible with the constitutional guarantee against
arbitrary detention. The Constitutional Court declared the
application inadmissible. It found that there was no ambiguity in the
contested provisions because the general provisions governing
measures of restraint were applicable to all forms and stages of
criminal proceedings, including proceedings concerning extradition.
The Constitutional Court reiterated its settled case-law to the
effect that excessive or arbitrary detention, unlimited in time and
without judicial review, was not compatible with the Constitution. On
11 July 2006 the Constitutional Court refused to issue a
clarification of that decision, noting that it was not competent to
indicate specific legal provisions regulating the procedure and
time-limits for application of a custodial measure in extradition
proceedings, that being within the competence of the courts of
general jurisdiction.
D. Case-law of the Supreme Court
- The
Government referred in their submissions to two decisions by the
Supreme Court. According to the Government, on 12 October 2005 the
Presidium of the Supreme Court had stated in a case concerning
extradition of an Azeri citizen that the provisions of Article 109 of
the CCP were not applicable to the situation of detention pending
extradition. Similarly, in the case of Mr A. concerning the latter’s
detention with a view to extradition to Armenia, the Criminal
Division of the Supreme Court held as follows (case no. 72-005-19, 8
June 2005):
“The term of detention of a person who is to be
extradited to the place of commission of an offence... is not
governed by Article 109 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. In
accordance with the requirements of [the 1993 Minsk Convention], a
person arrested at the request of a foreign state may be held in
custody for forty days until a request for extradition has been
received. Subsequent detention of the person is governed by the
criminal law of the requesting party (Armenia in the instant case).”
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant submitted that by taking a decision to extradite him to
Turkmenistan Russia would be in breach of Article 3 of the
Convention, which provides:
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
1. Submissions of the parties
- The
applicant claimed that his extradition to Turkmenistan would be
incompatible with Article 3. He stated that the authorities had
failed to take into account information which indicated that there
existed a real risk of torture and ethnically motivated persecution.
He referred to numerous data showing that torture and ill-treatment
were widespread among detainees in Turkmenistan, and that as a member
of an ethnic minority he would be in a particularly vulnerable
situation.
- The
Government insisted that there was no reason to expect treatment
contrary to Article 3 if the applicant were to be sent to
Turkmenistan. They noted, in particular, the reasoned decision of the
St. Petersburg office of the Federal Migration Service of 24 October
2003, confirmed by the decisions of the competent courts, by which
the applicant’s application for refugee status had been
declared ill-founded. The Government stressed that the applicant had
been charged with a criminal offence of an economic nature
(embezzlement) which was unrelated to any political or ethnic issues.
He had initially participated in the investigative actions and had
left Turkmenistan in 2001 without encountering any hindrance from the
Turkmen authorities. Furthermore, the Government noted that his
family continued to reside in Turkmenistan and that there were no
grounds to believe that they had been subjected to improper treatment
or discrimination. Finally, the Government referred to two letters
containing assurances from the Prosecutor General’s Office of
Turkmenistan to the effect that the applicant would not be exposed to
persecution or discrimination and would not be subjected to inhuman
or cruel treatment and punishment (see paragraphs 38 and 86 above).
The Government stated that they had no reason to look into the
conditions of detention of the applicant in Turkmenistan, because he
had not been detained there.
2. General principles
- It is the settled case-law of the Court that
extradition by a Contracting State may give rise to an issue under
Article 3, and hence engage the responsibility of that State under
the Convention, where substantial grounds have been shown for
believing that the person in question would, if extradited, face a
real risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 in
the receiving country. The establishment of such responsibility
inevitably involves an assessment of conditions in the requesting
country against the standards of Article 3 of the Convention.
Nonetheless, there is no question of adjudicating on or establishing
the responsibility of the receiving country, whether under general
international law, under the Convention or otherwise. In so far as
any liability under the Convention is or may be incurred, it is
liability incurred by the extraditing Contracting State by reason of
its having taken action which has as a direct consequence the
exposure of an individual to proscribed ill-treatment (see Soering
v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 7 July 1989, Series A no. 161,
pp. 35-36, §§ 89-91; Vilvarajah and Others
v. the United Kingdom, 30 October 1991, Series A no. 215,
p. 36, § 107; and H.L.R. v. France, judgment of
29 April 1997, Reports of Judgments and Decisions
1997-III, p. 758, § 37).
- In
determining whether it has been shown that the applicant runs a real
risk, if expelled, of suffering treatment proscribed by Article 3,
the Court will assess the issue in the light of all the material
placed before it, or, if necessary, material obtained proprio
motu. The Court must be satisfied that the assessment made by the
authorities of the Contracting State is adequate and sufficiently
supported by domestic materials as well as by materials originating
from other, reliable and objective sources. The existence of the risk
must be assessed primarily with reference to those facts which were
known or ought to have been known to the Contracting State at the
time of the expulsion (see Vilvarajah and Others, cited above,
p. 36, § 107). Where the applicant has not yet been
expelled, the material point in time is that of the Court’s
consideration of the case (see Chahal v. the United Kingdom,
judgment of 15 November 1996, pp. 1856 and 1859, §§ 86
and 97, Reports 1996-V; H.L.R. v. France, cited aboveI,
p. 758, § 37; and Mamatkulov and Askarov v. Turkey [GC],
nos. 46827/99 and 46951/99, § 69, ECHR 2005 I).
- In
order to determine whether there is a risk of ill-treatment, the
Court must examine the foreseeable consequences of sending the
applicant to the receiving country, bearing in mind the general
situation there and his personal circumstances (see Vilvarajah and
Others, cited above, § 108 in fine). It is in
principle for the applicant to adduce evidence capable of proving
that there are substantial grounds for believing that, if the measure
complained of were to be implemented, he would be exposed to a real
risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 (see N.
v. Finland, no. 38885/02, § 167, 26 July 2005).
Where such evidence is adduced, it is for the Government to dispel
any doubts about it.
- To
that end, as regards the general situation in a particular country,
the Court has often attached importance to the information contained
in recent reports from independent international
human-rights-protection associations such as Amnesty International,
or governmental sources, including the US State Department (see, for
example, Chahal, cited above, §§ 99-100;
Müslim v. Turkey, no. 53566/99, § 67, 26 April
2005; Said v. the Netherlands, no. 2345/02, § 54, 5 July
2005; and Al-Moayad v. Germany (dec.), no. 35865/03, §§
65-66, 20 February 2007). At the same time, it has held that the
mere possibility of ill-treatment on account of an unsettled
situation in the receiving country does not in itself give rise to a
breach of Article 3 (see Vilvarajah and Others, cited above,
§ 111, and Fatgan Katani and Others v. Germany
(dec.), no. 67679/01, 31 May 2001) and that, where the sources
available to it describe a general situation, an applicant’s
specific allegations in a particular case require corroboration by
other evidence (see Mamatkulov and Askarov, cited above, §
73).
- In
cases where an applicant alleges that he or she is a member of a
group systematically exposed to a practice of ill-treatment, the
Court considers that the protection of Article 3 of the Convention
enters into play when the applicant establishes, where necessary on
the basis of the sources mentioned in the previous paragraph, that
there are serious reasons to believe in the existence of the practice
in question and his or her membership of the group concerned (see,
mutatis mutandis, Salah Sheekh v. the Netherlands,
no. 1948/04, §§ 138-149, ECHR 2007 …
(extracts), and Saadi v. Italy [GC], no. 37201/06, § 132,
28 February 2008).
3. Application in the present case
- Turning
to the circumstances of the present case, the Court observes that to
date no decision has been taken concerning the applicant’s
extradition to Turkmenistan. Nevertheless, the parties do not dispute
that the applicant remains under a threat of such extradition. The
applicant has not disclosed his whereabouts to the authorities
because he fears that a decision to extradite him to Turkmenistan
could be taken and carried out at any moment. In such circumstances,
the Court finds that the issue under Article 3 persists. The Court
will also, in the light of the case-law cited above, take into
account the present conditions in the country of destination.
- The
Court notes that the evidence from a range of objective sources
summarised above demonstrates that extremely poor conditions of
detention, as well as ill-treatment and torture, remain a great
concern for all observers of the situation in Turkmenistan. It also
notes that accurate information about the human rights situation in
Turkmenistan, and in particular about places of detention, is scarce
and difficult to verify, in view of the exceptionally restrictive
nature of the prevailing political regime, described as “one of
the world’s most repressive and closed countries” and the
systematic refusal of the Turkmen authorities to allow any monitoring
of places of detention by international or simply non-governmental
observers. Hence, the fate of even the most prominent prisoners often
remains unknown even to their families (see paragraphs 91-98 above).
- However,
as the Court has noted in previous cases, the findings above attest
to the general situation in the country of destination. They should
be supported by specific allegations and require collaboration by
other evidence (see Mamatkulov and Askarov, cited above,
§ 73). In the same context, the Court should examine
whether the authorities assessed the risks of ill-treatment prior to
taking the decision on extradition (ibid., §§ 67-69).
- The
Government referred to the fact that the applicant’s request
for refugee status had been rejected by the Russian migration
authorities and then by the courts. This had been done mainly on the
following grounds: the applicant had been allowed to leave
Turkmenistan legally and without any hindrance; his family continued
to reside safely in Turkmenistan; on arrival in Russia the applicant
had not immediately applied for asylum; and the criminal proceedings
in Turkmenistan were not in any way linked to his political,
religious or ethnic background, but stemmed from commercial
activities in which he had been engaged. The authorities had found no
grounds to support the assertion that the applicant had been
subjected to racially motivated persecution, and had therefore
decided that he was not a refugee within the meaning of the relevant
legislation. The Court does not see any basis to question these
conclusions. However, it has already found on several occasions that
the protection afforded by Article 3 is wider than that provided by
Article 33 of the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees,
on which the relevant Russian legislation is based (see, mutatis
mutandis, Ahmed v. Austria, judgment of 17 December 1996,
Reports 1996 VI, § 41).
- The
Court notes that the Government invoked assurances from the
Prosecutor General of Turkmenistan to the effect that the applicant
would not be subjected to ill-treatment there. However, no copy of
that letter has been submitted to the Court. In any event, even
accepting that such assurances were given, the Court notes that the
reports cited above noted that the authorities of Turkmenistan
systematically refused access by international observers to the
country, and in particular to places of detention. In such
circumstances the Court is bound to question the value of the
assurances that the applicant would not be subjected to torture,
given that there appears to be no objective means of monitoring their
fulfilment. The Court also recalls its previous practice whereby it
has found that diplomatic assurances are not in themselves sufficient
to ensure adequate protection against the risk of ill-treatment where
reliable sources have reported practices resorted to or tolerated by
the authorities which are manifestly contrary to the principles of
the Convention (see Saadi, cited above, §§ 147-148).
- The
Court further notes that it does not appear that the Russian
authorities have otherwise addressed the applicant’s concerns
relevant to Article 3, since the proceedings for refugee status were
limited to the question whether he could claim to be a victim of
persecution on one of the grounds listed in the relevant provisions
of domestic and international law. In their observations the
Government stated that they had no reasons to look into the
conditions of detention of the applicant in Turkmenistan, because he
had not been detained there. However, in view of the absolute
character of Article 3, such assessment should take place prior to
the decision on extradition and should take into account the relevant
factors in order to prevent the ill-treatment from occurring (see,
for a recent case, Garabayev v. Russia, no. 38411/02,
§ 79, 7 June 2007, ECHR 2007 …
(extracts)).
- The
main argument raised by the applicant under Article 3 is the
danger of ill-treatment in detention in Turkmenistan, exacerbated by
his ethnic background. The Court observes that in Turkmenistan the
applicant was charged with a serious crime (embezzlement),
potentially entailing a heavy prison sentence of eight to fifteen
years (see paragraph 31 above), and that in 2001 a warrant was issued
for his arrest. If extradited to Turkmenistan, the applicant would
almost certainly be detained and runs a very real risk of spending
years in prison. In view of the information cited above about the
conditions of detention, incommunicado detention and the vulnerable
situation of minorities, the Court finds that there are sufficient
grounds for believing that he would face a real risk of being
subjected to treatment in violation of Article 3 of the Convention.
- Thus,
in the particular circumstances of the present case, the Court finds
that the applicant's extradition to Turkmenistan would be in breach
of Article 3 of the Convention.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 1 (f)
OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained under Article 5 § 1 of the Convention that
he had been unlawfully held in custody pending extradition. The
relevant parts of Article 5 § 1 read as follows:
“1. Everyone has the right to liberty
and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save
in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed
by law:
...
(f) the lawful arrest or detention of ... a
person against whom action is being taken with a view to ...
extradition.”
1. Submissions of the parties
- The
applicant argued that his detention had been unlawful because the
procedure prescribed by the domestic and international legislation
was not complied with. He also stressed that the proceedings had not
been conducted with the requisite diligence and that his detention
was therefore arbitrary.
- In
the Government’s submission, the applicant’s detention
was duly authorised in April 2001 by a prosecutor in Turkmenistan. In
Russia it was authorised by the Kuybyshevskiy district court on 27
February 2004, as confirmed on appeal by the St. Petersburg City
Court. The Government noted that on 4 April 2006 the Constitutional
Court had issued a decision on a complaint similar to that of the
applicant. Subsequently, on 11 July 2006, the Constitutional Court
refused to issue a clarification of that decision, noting that it was
not competent to indicate specific legal provisions regulating the
procedure and time-limits for application of a custodial measure in
extradition proceedings, that being within the competence of the
courts of general jurisdiction (see paragraph 105 above). Referring
to the Supreme Court’s position in the case of Mr A. and in
another case, for which no copy of the decision was provided, the
Government insisted that Article 109 of the CCP laying down limits
for pre-trial detention was not applicable to extension of the period
of detention of persons held in custody with a view to extradition
(see paragraph 106 above).
- They
also submitted that the applicant himself had contributed to the
prolongation of his detention by lodging “unfounded
applications” for refugee status in Russia and subsequently
contesting the refusals before the Russian courts. Furthermore,
between March 2004 and September 2005 the applicant could not be
extradited, in accordance with the interim measure indicated by the
Court.
2. The Court’s assessment
- The
Court has previously noted that where deprivation of liberty is
concerned, it is particularly important that the general principle of
legal certainty be satisfied. The requirement of “quality of
law” in relation to Article 5 § 1 implies that
where a national law authorises a deprivation of liberty it must be
sufficiently assessable, precise and foreseeable in application, in
order to avoid all risk of arbitrariness (see Baranowski
v. Poland, no. 28358/95, § 50-52, ECHR
2000 III, and Khudoyorov v. Russia, no. 6847/02,
§ 125, ECHR 2005 … (extracts)).
- In
so far as the question concerns the quality of national law governing
detention pending extradition, the Court recalls that it has already
faced a similar issue in the case of Nasrulloyev v. Russia
(no. 656/06, § 77, 11 October 2007). In their
arguments in the present case the Government referred to the domestic
legal provisions and practice governing such detention, which the
Court has already found to be inconsistent, mutually exclusive and
not circumscribed by adequate safeguards against arbitrariness. In
the Nasrulloyev judgment, the provisions of Russian law
governing detention of persons with a view to extradition were found
to be neither precise nor foreseeable in their application and to
fall short of the “quality of law” standard required
under the Convention.
- The
Court remarks that the inconsistency of the domestic law has come
into the spotlight again in the present case. Throughout the
applicant’s detention, the Russian law-enforcement system was
unable to identify the competent body responsible for authorisation
of his detention, to point to the applicable legal provisions and to
determine the time-limits of such detention. For example, on 26 May
and 3 June 2004 the Kuybyshevskiy district court forwarded the
applicant’s complaint about his illegal detention to the St.
Petersburg prosecutor’s office. On 25 May 2004 the Prosecutor
General’s Office admitted in a letter to the applicant’s
lawyer that the “question of extending the detention of a
person detained [for the purposes of extradition] is not dealt with
by the Russian legislation”. On 12 July 2004 the Smolninskiy
district court informed the applicant that he should contact the
Prosecutor General’s Office for all matters concerning his
detention pending extradition. On 18 August 2004 the Dzerzhinskiy
district court expressed the view that the provisions of the CCP were
inapplicable in the applicant’s case, and advised him to appeal
the actions of the officials concerned in civil proceedings (see
paragraphs 47-61 above). On 16 February 2005 the Kalininskiy
district court ruled that the case should be transferred to the
Kuybyshevskiy district court. Finally, on 14 March 2005 the
Kuybyshevskiy district court found that no provisions existed in the
Russian legislation governing the extension of detention of persons
in the applicant’s situation. He was released with direct
reference to Article 5 of the Convention (see paragraph 84 above).
- In
such circumstances the Court does not find any reasons to deviate
from the conclusions reached in the Nasrulloyev judgment and
confirms that the relevant domestic legislation failed to protect the
applicant from arbitrariness. His detention cannot therefore be
considered “lawful” within the meaning of Article 5 §
1 (f).
- Furthermore, it should be recalled that any
deprivation of liberty is justified under Article 5 § 1 (f)
only for as long as deportation proceedings are in progress. If the
proceedings are not executed with due diligence, the detention will
cease to be permissible under that provision (see Chahal,
cited above, § 113; Quinn v. France, judgment of
22 March 1995, Series A no. 311, p. 19, § 48; and also
Kolompar
v. Belgium, judgment of 24 September 1992, Series A no.
235-C, p. 55, § 36).
- The
Court notes that in the present case the applicant remained in
detention between 25 February 2004 and 14 March 2005, that is, for
twelve months and eighteen days. As the Government admitted in their
observations and as has been stated on several occasions by the
domestic authorities, the proceedings relating to his extradition
were “suspended” for most of that period. While the
Government referred to the interim measure indicated by the Court
under Rule 39 of the Rules of Court, this argument cannot be employed
as a justification for the indefinite detention of persons without
resolving their legal status. In the present case it does not appear
that the applicant’s detention was in fact justified by the
pending extradition proceedings, in the absence of any such decision
taken to date. This finding is exacerbated by the Court’s
conclusion above in relation to Article 3 that no proper evaluation
of the applicant’s allegations under Article 3 has taken place
in the meantime (see, a contrario, Chahal, cited above,
§ 117). The Court therefore finds that the proceedings
concerning the applicant’s detention were not carried out with
the requisite diligence.
- There
has therefore been a violation of Article 5 § 1 (f) of the
Convention on account of the unlawful nature of the applicant’s
detention and the absence of the requisite diligence in the conduct
of the proceedings.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 4 OF
THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that he had not been able to obtain effective
judicial review of his detention under Article 5 § 4, which
reads as follows:
“Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest
or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which the
lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court and
his release ordered if the detention is not lawful.”
1. Submissions of the parties
- The
applicant questioned the availability of judicial review in respect
of his detention pending extradition. He submitted that the Russian
legislation had no mechanisms for such review, as the courts had
refused for over one year to consider his complaints, alleging that
they had no jurisdiction to do so. He had finally been released with
direct reference to Article 5 of the Convention, but not to any
provisions of domestic law.
- The
Government stressed that the applicant’s detention had been
subject to review by the courts and that on 14 March 2005 the
Kuybyshevskiy district court of St. Petersburg had ordered his
release, referring directly to the European Convention. The court
noted the absence of legal grounds in the domestic legislation which
could allow the extension or alteration of measures of restraint in
relation to persons detained with a view to extradition. The
Government therefore argued that there had been no breach of the
applicant’s right to judicial review of the lawfulness of his
detention.
2. The Court’s assessment
- The Court reiterates that the purpose of Article 5 §
4 is to assure to persons who are arrested and detained the right to
judicial supervision of the lawfulness of the measure to which they
are thereby subjected (see, mutatis mutandis, De Wilde,
Ooms and Versyp v. Belgium, judgment of 18 June 1971, Series A
no. 12, § 76). A remedy must be made available during a person’s
detention to allow that person to obtain speedy judicial review of
the lawfulness of the detention, capable of leading, where
appropriate, to his or her release. The existence of the remedy
required by Article 5 § 4 must be sufficiently certain, not only
in theory but also in practice, failing which it will lack the
accessibility and effectiveness required for the purposes of that
provision (see, mutatis mutandis, Stoichkov v.
Bulgaria, no. 9808/02, § 66 in fine, 24
March 2005, and Vachev v. Bulgaria, no. 42987/98, § 71,
ECHR 2004-VIII (extracts)).
- Turning
to the present case, the Court observes that the protracted refusal
of the domestic courts to review the complaint on the merits and
their eventual reliance on the Convention but not on any domestic
instrument suggest that the remedy referred to by the Government was
not available. That approach undermined the applicant’s ability
to seek judicial review of the lawfulness of his detention, as
demonstrated by the applicant’s futile attempts to obtain such
review between March 2004 and March 2005. It is further to be noted
that the applicant’s detention was finally found to be unlawful
in March 2005 by the same Kuybyshevskiy district court, which in 2004
had informed the applicant on several occasions that it was not
competent to review the complaint in question. Such a situation
clearly cannot be considered consistent with the standards of a
certain, accessible and effective judicial remedy listed above.
- The
Court also notes that the applicant’s situation with regard to
judicial review is similar to that of the applicant in the case of
Nasrulloyev (see Nasrulloyev, cited above, §§ 88-89),
where it was established that the applicant had no formal status
under national criminal law because there was no criminal case
against him in Russia and he could not therefore have the lawfulness
of his detention reviewed by a court.
- It
follows that there has been a violation of Article 5 § 4 of the
Convention on account of the unavailability of a judicial remedy by
which to review the lawfulness of the applicant’s detention.
- The
applicant also alleged certain procedural irregularities in the court
proceedings relating to the review of his detention; however, in view
of its conclusions above the Court does not find it necessary to
examine these complaints made under Article 5 § 4.
IV. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Damage
- The
applicant did not claim pecuniary damage. As to non-pecuniary damage,
he submitted that the danger of being submitted to torture in
detention in Turkmenistan, his unlawful detention and the prolonged
inability to have the lawfulness of his detention examined had caused
him feelings of anguish, distress and anxiety for which the sole
finding of a violation would not be sufficient compensation. He left
the determination of the exact amount of compensation to the Court’s
discretion.
- The
Government considered that, should the Court find a violation of the
Convention, the amount awarded should not exceed the sums awarded in
other similar cases. They referred to the case of Kalashnikov v.
Russia, where the non-pecuniary award constituted 5,000 euros
(EUR) (see Kalashnikov v. Russia, no. 47095/99, § 143,
ECHR 2002 VI).
- Making
its assessment on an equitable basis, the Court awards the applicant
EUR 15,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage, plus any tax that
may be chargeable on that amount.
B. Costs and expenses
- The
applicant claimed reimbursement of EUR 11,750 and 2,441 pounds
sterling (GBP) for costs and expenses incurred in the proceedings
before domestic authorities and before this Court. He stated that he
had been represented by the lawyer O. Tseytlina, who had been
assisted by lawyers from the Human Rights Centre Memorial, based in
Moscow and in London.
- In
support of his claims the applicant submitted a copy of his agreement
with Ms Tseytlina dated 31 March 2004, as well as a copy of an
additional agreement on legal aid dated 28 December 2004 naming Ms
Tseytlina and three lawyers from Memorial, one of them based in
Moscow and two in London. The latter agreement set the costs of
representation at EUR 100 per hour for Ms Tseytlina’s
work, EUR 50 per hour for the Memorial lawyer based in Moscow
and GBP 100 per hour for the two lawyers based in London. The
applicant thus claimed EUR 8,000 for 80 hours’ work by
Mrs. Tseytlina, EUR 3,750 for 75 hours’ work by the
Moscow-based lawyer and GBP 700 for seven hours’ work by
the two London-based lawyers. In addition, the applicant claimed GBP
1,581 in translation costs, as certified by invoices, and GBP 70
for office and stationery costs.
- The
Government questioned the reasonableness and justification of the
expenses claimed.
- The
Court recalls that in order for costs and expenses to be included in
an award under Article 41, it must be established that they were
actually and necessarily incurred in order to prevent or obtain
redress for the matter found to constitute a violation of the
Convention and were reasonable as to quantum (see, for example,
Nielsen and Johnson v. Norway [GC], no. 23118/93, § 43,
ECHR 1999-VIII). It is apparent from the material submitted that the
applicant incurred legal costs and expenses in connection with the
proceedings relating to determination of his refugee status and while
trying to obtain judicial review of his detention pending
extradition. The Court also notes that the case was relatively
complex; however, it doubts that it required legal work in the amount
claimed by the applicant, especially in view of the applicant’s
limited submissions after the case had been declared admissible.
Having regard to the materials in its possession, the Court awards
the applicant EUR 9,000 in costs and expenses, less the EUR 701
received by way of legal aid from the Council of Europe.
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
- Holds that the applicant’s extradition to
Turkmenistan would be in violation of Article 3 of the
Convention;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 5§ 1 (f) of the Convention;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 5§ 4 of the Convention on account of the
absence of judicial review of the applicant’s detention;
- Holds that there is no need to examine the
applicant’s other complaints under Article 5§ 4;
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay the applicant, within three months
from the date on which the judgment becomes final in accordance with
Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the following
amounts, to be converted into Russian roubles at the rate applicable
at the date of settlement:
(i) EUR
15,000 (fifteen thousand euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable,
in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(iii) EUR
8,299 (eight thousand two hundred and ninety-nine euros), plus any
tax that may be chargeable to the applicant, in respect of costs and
expenses;
(b) that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement
simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal
to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the
default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses the remainder of the applicant’s
claim for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 19 June 2008, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis
Registrar President