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FIRST
SECTION
CASE
OF MERZHUYEVA AND OTHERS v. RUSSIA
(Applications
nos. 27315/06 and 27449/06)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
7 October
2010
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 Merzhuyeva and Others 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,
Giorgio
Malinverni,
George
Nicolaou,
judges,
and
Søren Nielsen, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 16 September 2010,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in two applications (nos. 27315/06 and 27449/06)
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 seven Russian nationals
listed below (“the applicants”), on 29 May and 21 May
2006.
- The
applicants were represented by Mr D. Itslayev, a lawyer practising in
Ingushetia, Russia. The Russian Government (“the Government”)
were represented by Mrs V. Milinchuk, the former Representative of
the Russian Federation at the European Court of Human Rights and
subsequently by their new representative, Mr G. Matyushkin.
- The
applicants alleged that their relatives had disappeared after their
detention by the security forces in Katyr-Yurt, Chechnya, in 2003 and
2002, respectively. They complained under Articles 2, 3, 5 and 13 of
the Convention.
- On
9 July 2008 the Court decided to apply Rule 41 of the Rules of
Court and to grant priority treatment to the applications, and to
give notice of the applications to the Government. It also decided to
examine the merits of the applications at the same time as their
admissibility (Article 29 § 3 of the Convention). The President
of the Chamber acceded to the Government’s request not to make
publicly accessible the documents from the criminal investigation
files deposited with the Registry in connection with the applications
(Rule 33 of the Rules of Court).
- The
Government objected to the joint examination of the admissibility and
merits of the applications.
Having considered the Government’s objection, the Court
dismissed it.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicants in application no. 27315/06 are:
Ms Aymani
Merzhuyeva, born in 1955,
Ms
Zarema Abdulkarimova, born in 1968,
Mr
Rizvan Merzhoyev, born in 1990,
Mr
Ruslan Merzhoyev, born in 1994,
Mr
Usman Merzhoyev, born in 1996,
Mr
Bekhan Merzhoyev, born in 1998.
The applicant in application no. 27449/06 is:
Ms
Zaa Gastamirova, born in 1957.
- All
applicants live in the Chechen Republic (Chechnya), Russia.
- The
facts of the case, as submitted by the parties, may be summarised as
follows.
A. The applicants’
relatives’ disappearance
- The
applicants belong to two families. Their two male relatives were
detained in two separate incidents in 2003 and 2002 in Lenina Street
in the village of Katyr-Yurt (also spelled as Katar-Yurt), in the
Achkhoy-Martan district of Chechnya, and subsequently disappeared.
The first six applicants were present during the abduction of their
relative. The seventh applicant was not an eyewitness to the events
and her account is based on testimonies collected by her in the
aftermath of the disappearance.
1. Apprehension of Khamzat Merzhoyev
- The
first applicant is a sister of Khamzat Merzhoyev, who was born in
1963. The second applicant is his wife. The third to sixth applicants
are the children of Khamzat Merzhoyev and the second applicant.
- At
the material time the first six applicants, Khamzat Merzhoyev and
other relatives lived in two houses at no. 129 Lenina Street (in the
documents submitted, the address is also stated as 167 Lenina Street
or 167 Kadyrova Street) in Katyr-Yurt. The settlement was under
curfew.
- On
the night of 23 November 2003 the first applicant, her mother and the
second, fourth, fifth and sixth applicants were sleeping in the first
house. The first applicant shared a room with her mother. The second
applicant and her children were in another room. The third applicant,
Khamzat Merzhoyev and his elderly father, Mr M.M., who subsequently
died, were sleeping in the second house.
- At
about 3 a.m. a group of armed men in camouflage uniforms arrived at
the applicants’ gate in several armoured personnel carriers
(APCs) and military UAZ cars. Four tall men wearing body armour
emerged from the vehicles and burst into the first house. They
entered the first applicant and her mother’s room and told them
to be quiet in unaccented Russian. The women thought that the
intruders were Russian servicemen. The men then took the second
applicant and her children to the first room. After a warning that a
bomb was hidden under the porch, they ordered the women to remain
seated and not to leave the house. Some two minutes later the men
walked out.
- In
the meantime, at around 2 a.m. in the second house the third
applicant had switched off the television before going to bed. He
went to Mr M.M.’s bedroom. Some five minutes later three
or four tall men in camouflage uniforms broke into the house. The
third applicant thought that they were servicemen. One of them put
his rifle barrel to the applicant’s neck. The men then pulled
Mr M.M. from his couch. While he was trying to get up, they flailed
him with a rifle butt. The applicant begged the men to leave Mr M.M.
alone. Instead, one of the men slapped the applicant on his neck and
shoulders three or four times. Another man tied up the applicant’s
hands, legs and mouth with adhesive tape. The same was done to Mr
M.M. The men ordered the applicant not to leave home and, after
spending about ten minutes there, went away.
- At
the same time the third applicant heard a noise coming from Khamzat
Merzhoyev’s room, as if there was a fight. The applicant
thought that the servicemen were trying to arrest his father. They
took Khamzat Merzhoyev outside, put him in one of the vehicles and
drove away in an unknown direction.
- As
soon as the men departed, the third applicant tore up the adhesive
tape and rushed to the suffocating Mr M.M. to help him out. When he
glimpsed inside his father’s bedroom, the latter was no longer
there. The third applicant looked out of the window to see one of the
intruders walking through the gate and heading for the street. He was
thickset.
- The
third applicant subsequently deposited his grandfather at the first
house, where the other five applicants were, and rushed to see
Khamzat Merzhoyev’s brother, Mr A.M., who lived in the
neighbourhood. Once in the street, he saw an APC that had pulled over
to Mr K.’s family’s gate, some 100 metres away from the
first house. A large number of servicemen were walking towards the
APC. Shortly afterwards they broke into Mr K.’s house. The
applicant heard the women crying inside. Suddenly the noises died
away. The applicant went inside Mr A.M.’s house and related the
events to him.
- In
the meantime, as soon as the first and second applicants had learnt
from Mr M.M. that Khamzat Merzhoyev had been apprehended and driven
away by the servicemen, they rushed down Lenina Street. They saw
several military vehicles, including three APCs and some UAZ cars,
about 100 metres from their first house. A number of servicemen were
sitting on top of the APCs, which were driving to the east end of the
village. The men were speaking Russian and Chechen. Those who were
speaking Chechen were masked. As they approached the local
administration office, the servicemen opened fire.
- Thereafter
the first and second applicants went to the second house. They saw
blood on the floor of Khamzat Merzhoyev’s room. They understood
that the servicemen had beaten him up.
- In
the morning of 23 November 2003 the first six applicants found out
that six other local men, Mr U.K., Mr S.-M.S., the brothers Mr A.Tul.
and Mr K.Tul. and two brothers named Taz. had been apprehended in
Katyr-Yurt on the same night by the same servicemen during a special
operation. Mr U.K., Mr S.-M.S., one of the Tul. brothers and one of
the Taz. brothers had been released that same morning on the
outskirts of the village of Shaami-Yurt in the Achkhoy-Martan
district. On 25 or 26 November 2003 the second Tul. brother and the
second Taz. brother had been released from detention on the premises
of the Achkhoy-Martan district department of the interior (“the
ROVD”). The first applicant spoke to them after their release.
They confirmed that they had been detained at the ROVD.
- The
first six applicants have had no news of Khamzat Merzhoyev since
23 November 2003.
- The
description of the events of the night of 23 November 2003 is based
on the first applicant’s account submitted with the
application. In addition, the applicants’ representative
provided the first and third applicants’ accounts given on 4
July 2008 and an account by witness Mr K.T. given on 5 July
2008.
- In
her account dated 4 July 2008, the first applicant submitted that
Khamzat Merzhoyev had participated in the first Chechen war between
1994 and 1996, challenging the authority of the Russian troops. He
had been wounded after three or four months of military action.
Thereafter he had no longer taken part in the hostilities, including
during the second war in Chechnya.
- The
Government did not challenge most of the facts as presented by the
applicants. They submitted that during the night of 23 November 2003
“armed unidentified persons wearing masks and camouflage
uniforms” had entered Khamzat Merzhoyev’s house at no.
129 Lenina Street and taken him away to an unknown destination. The
Government denied any involvement of State agents in Khamzat
Merzhoyev’s disappearance.
2. Apprehension of Ali Gastamirov
- The
seventh applicant is the mother of Ali Gastamirov, also referred to
as Ali Gastemirov, born in 1979.
- On
the night of 12 May 2002 the seventh applicant and her husband, Mr
A.-Kh.G., were staying with their relatives in a neighbouring
village. Their son Ali Gastamirov, his wife, Ms M.G., also referred
to as Ms M.T., his two sisters, including Ms Kh.G., and Ms E.Z., Mr
A.-Kh.G.’s sister, stayed at home, at no. 8 Lenina Street (in
the documents submitted, the address is also referred to as no. 2
Lenina Street) in Katyr-Yurt. The settlement was under curfew.
- At
the material time the seventh applicant’s house was composed of
two separate dwellings. That night Ali Gastamirov and Ms M.G. were
sharing a room in the first house, whereas Ms Kh.G. was sleeping in a
separate room there. Ms E.Z. and Ms Kh.G.’s sister were
sleeping in the second house.
- At
around 4 a.m. a group of armed men in camouflage uniforms parked
their cars, an APC and two UAZ vehicles, in the vicinity of the river
Shalazhi, some 300 metres away both from a Russian military unit and
from the seventh applicant’s house. They then headed for
Katyr-Yurt on foot.
- Between
3 and 4 a.m. a group of ten to sixteen armed men in camouflage
uniforms arrived at Lenina Street. Some of them were masked, others
were wearing helmets. Five or six of them burst into the house of the
seventh applicant’s neighbour, Mr A.D., whereas the others
remained waiting outside. After five or ten minutes the men walked
out of Mr A.D.’s house. Then they split up into two groups: the
first broke into the house of Mr M.Sh. and the second into the
seventh applicant’s house.
- Ms
Kh.G. was woken up by three armed men in camouflage uniforms. They
were tall and heavyset, and were speaking unaccented Russian. One of
them was unmasked and had Slavic features. The men conducted a quick
search of the room. They did not allow Ms Kh.G. to join her brother
in the neighbouring room. At some point the men ordered Ms M.G.
to open the second house to them. She obeyed.
- Ms
E.Z., who was sleeping in the second house, was woken up by six or
seven armed men in camouflage uniforms. One of them was unmasked and
had Slavic features. They started searching the house. Fear rendered
Ms E.Z. powerless and she fainted.
32.
In the meantime the servicemen burst into Ali Gastamirov’s
room. They asked him questions and checked his passport. They further
took him to the street on the pretext of showing them around the
backyard. Ali Gastamirov asked Ms Kh.G. to follow him. The men
objected. They hustled Ms Kh.G. and Ms M.G. into the house and closed
the front door with an axe from the outside. Ms Kh.G. and Ms M.G.
understood that the servicemen had taken Ali Gastamirov away.
- At
the same time the second group of servicemen walked out of Mr M.Sh.’s
house.
- Once
in the street, the two groups of servicemen got together in a tight
circle, as if they were trying to hide someone in the middle.
Thereafter they ran in the direction of a pasture field on the
outskirts of Katyr-Yurt, where regiment no. 47 of the Russian federal
forces was deployed.
- Some
five or ten minutes later Ms Kh.G. and Ms M.G. managed to open the
front door. They looked around but saw nobody in the backyard or in
the street. Suddenly they heard the roar of engines starting up,
coming from the river. Ms Kh.G. could distinguish the roar of an APC.
The women thought that the cars belonged to the abductors. Then they
heard the cars driving away.
- At
around 5 a.m. the neighbours got together at the seventh applicant’s
house. They saw clear footprints left by Ali Gastamirov and the
servicemen in the yard, which led to the pasture field where the
servicemen had parked their cars.
- At
around 9 a.m. the seventh applicant and her husband returned home.
The neighbours related Ali Gastamirov’s abduction to them.
- The
seventh applicant has had no news of Ali Gastamirov since 12 May
2002.
- The
description of the events of the night of 12 May 2002 is based on the
seventh applicant’s account submitted with the application. In
addition, the following accounts have been provided by the
applicant’s representative: the seventh applicant’s
account, given on 18 December 2008; an account by Ms Kh.G., given on
1 November 2008; an account by Ms E.Z. given on 14 November
2008; an account by Mr Z.A., given on 29 November 2008; an
account by witness Mr I.Sh., given on 14 December 2008; an account by
witness Mr Kh.B., given on 18 December 2008; and an extract from the
Achkhoy-Martan district newspaper Iman,
dated 8 July 2002.
- The
Government did not challenge most of the facts as submitted by the
seventh applicant. They stated that at about 4 a.m. on 12 May 2002
“armed unidentified persons wearing masks and camouflage
uniforms” had apprehended Ali Gastamirov in his house at no. 2
Lenina Street and then abducted him. The Government argued that there
were no grounds to suspect that State agents had been involved in Ali
Gastamirov’s disappearance.
B. The search for the applicants’
relatives and the investigation
- The
applicants and their relatives contacted, both in person and in
writing, various official bodies, such as the Russian President, the
Chechen administration, military commanders’ offices,
departments of the interior and prosecutors’ offices at
different levels, describing in detail the circumstances of their
relatives’ apprehension and asking for help in establishing
their whereabouts. The applicants kept copies of a number of those
letters and submitted them to the Court. An official investigation
was opened by the local prosecutor’s office in both cases. The
applicants received hardly any substantive information from the
official bodies about the investigation into the disappearances.
Their letters to the relevant authorities were mostly forwarded to
the district prosecutor’s office and the ROVD. The relevant
information is summarised below.
1. Search for Khamzat Merzhoyev
- On
23 November 2003 the first and second applicants, accompanied by
their relatives, went to the ROVD to enquire about Khamzat Merzhoyev.
Police officers told them that he was not being held there. The
applicants asked the police officers to pass warm clothes and shoes
on to Khamzat, as he had been detained without any. The officers took
the clothes and shoes from them.
- Later
on the same day the first and second applicants went to the
prosecutor’s office of the Achkhoy-Martan district (“the
district prosecutor’s office”) where they met Mr A.E.,
the head of the Katyr-Yurt administration. Mr A.E. told the
applicants that six persons out of the seven detained would be
released. He was unaware who would be retained by the police.
- Thereafter
the first and second applicants returned to the ROVD. On the evening
of 23 November 2003 the police officers gave them back the clothing
that the applicants had handed over in the morning. The police
officers told them that Khamzat had been provided with the necessary
clothing and that he did not need anything.
- Over
the next few days Khamzat Merzhoyev’s relatives regularly went
to the ROVD and the district prosecutor’s office. None of the
officials whom they met there was able to tell the applicants why
Khamzat had been detained and where he was being held.
- A
week after Khamzat Merzhoyev’s abduction Mr A.E. told
Mr S. M.M., Khamzat Merzhoyev’s brother, that the
head of the Achkhoy-Martan district administration had informed him
that Khamzat would not be released, for an unknown reason.
- Two
or three months after Khamzat Merzhoyev’s disappearance
Mr Sh.K., the head of the ROVD, informed the applicants and
their relatives that he had almost established Khamzat’s
whereabouts. Mr Sh.K. refused to provide any further assistance to
the applicants.
- On
30 November 2003 Mr M.M. requested the district prosecutor’s
office to open an investigation into Khamzat Merzhoyev’s
kidnapping.
- On
10 December 2003 the district
prosecutor’s office launched a criminal investigation (file no.
44090) into the
abduction of Khamzat Merzhoyev under
Article 126 § 2 of the Criminal Code (aggravated kidnapping).
- On
11 December 2003 the district
prosecutor’s office granted victim status to Mr
S.-M.M.
- Between
January 2004 and May 2005 the first applicant complained about her
brother’s abduction to a number of law-enforcement authorities,
including the Prosecutor General’s office. However, she did not
submit copies of those letters to the Court.
- On
10 April 2004 the district prosecutor’s
office stayed the investigation in case no. 44090
on account of the failure to identify the perpetrators.
- On
26 April 2004 the prosecutor’s office of the Chechen Republic
(“the Chechnya prosecutor’s office”) resumed the
investigation.
- On
1 June 2004 the district prosecutor’s
office stayed the investigation in case no. 44090
because the term of the preliminary investigation had expired and the
perpetrators had not been identified.
- On
an unspecified date the first applicant lodged an action with the
Achkhoy-Martan District Court (“the district court”),
seeking to have Khamzat Merzhoyev declared a missing person, in order
to receive a pension for the loss of the family breadwinner. On 14
February 2005 the district court allowed her action and declared
Khamzat Merzhoyev a missing person. The court noted that the criminal
investigation in case no. 44090 had been pending since 28
December 2004.
- On
21 June 2005 the first applicant wrote to the military prosecutor’s
office of the United Group Alignment (“the military
prosecutor’s office of the UGA”), requesting assistance
in the search for Khamzat Merzhoyev.
- On
27 June 2005 the Chechnya prosecutor’s office informed the
first applicant that it had examined her complaint about Khamzat
Merzhoyev’s abduction. According
to the letter, the authorities had been conducting operational-search
measures aimed at solving the crime.
- On
7 July 2005 the ROVD informed the first applicant that the
ROVD had opened operational-search file no. 91615 and had been
taking measures to establish Khamzat Merzhoyev’s whereabouts.
- On
12 July 2005 the ROVD informed the family that the operational-search
measures aimed at establishing Khamzat Merzhoyev’s whereabouts
had failed to produce any results.
- On
23 November 2005 a group of dwellers of the Achkhoy-Martan district
submitted to the Russian President a request for help in establishing
the whereabouts of their 140 relatives, including Khamzat Merzhoyev.
They submitted that their relatives had been abducted during
counter-terrorist operations, conducted by Russian federal servicemen
from 2000 to 2004 in that district.
- On
9 December 2005 the petitions department of the Office of the Russian
President (Управление
Президента
Российской
Федерации
по
работе
с
обращениями
граждан
– “the petitions department”) forwarded their
request to the Prosecutor’s General Office for examination.
- On
12 January 2006 the military prosecutor’s office of the UGA
forwarded the first applicant’s request for assistance in the
search for Khamzat Merzhoyev to the military prosecutor’s
office of military unit no. 20102 for examination.
- On
18 January 2006 the main department of the Russian Ministry of the
Interior in the Southern Federal Circuit informed the first applicant
that her complaint had been registered and forwarded to the Ministry
of the Interior of Chechnya (“the Chechnya MVD”) for
examination.
- On
30 January 2006 the department of military counter-intelligence of
the Federal Security Service (“the FSB”) informed the
first applicant that the examination of her complaint had failed to
establish Khamzat Merzhoyev’s whereabouts. The authorities had
been taking measures to identify the perpetrators of the crime and
witnesses to his abduction.
- On
2 February 2006 the criminal police of the Chechnya MVD wrote to the
first applicant that the operational-search measures aimed at
establishing her brother’s whereabouts had failed to produce
any results. The authority invited her to study the investigation
file on the premises of the district prosecutor’s office.
- On
7 February 2006 the military prosecutor’s office of military
unit no. 20102 informed the first applicant that the examination
of her complaint had failed to establish the involvement of any
servicemen in the abduction of her brother.
- On
17 February 2006 the Chechnya MVD informed the first applicant that
Khamzat Merzhoyev had not been included on the authorities’
wanted list.
- On
11 April 2006 the district prosecutor’s office informed the
first applicant that it had taken the following investigative
measures in criminal case no. 44090: examination of the crime scene;
drafting of an investigation plan; granting victim status to a close
relative of the disappeared; questioning of a number of persons
familiar with Khamzat Merzhoyev; forwarding of information requests
concerning his whereabouts to various law-enforcement authorities;
and some other operational-search measures. According to the
document, the supervising prosecutor had issued instructions aimed at
solving the crime. In addition, the document stated that the
investigation was considering a number of possible versions of
Khamzat Merzhoyev’s abduction, according to which the crime
could have been committed by servicemen of the law-enforcement
authorities and/or other “power structures” (силовые
структуры),
as well as by members of illegal armed groups or by other persons
seeking a ransom or vengeance as a result of a blood feud. According
to the letter, the authorities had no “discrediting
information” about Khamzat Merzhoyev. Lastly, the district
prosecutor’s office informed the first applicant that,
notwithstanding the decision of 1 June 2004 to stay the
investigation, operational-search measures were under way.
- On
10 July 2006 the first applicant submitted a new complaint to the
district prosecutor’s office. She stated in particular that she
had been granted victim status in criminal case no. 44090. However,
the prosecuting authorities had failed to inform her of the progress
of the investigation. Consequently, she had had no opportunity to
challenge their decisions. The applicant requested the district
prosecutor’s office to inform her of the progress of the
investigation, to grant her leave to study the investigation file and
make copies of it, and to resume the investigation into the
abduction, in the event that it had been suspended. The first
applicant did not enclose the decision to grant her victim status
with the application to the Court.
- On
17 and 25 May 2007 the criminal police of the Chechnya MVD wrote to
the first applicant that operational-search measures aiming to
establish Khamzat Merzhoyev’s whereabouts and to arrest the
abductors were under way. The authority invited the applicant to
study the investigation file on the premises of the district
prosecutor’s office.
- On
2 July 2007 military unit no. 14057 replied to the first applicant
that the Russian federal forces had not carried out any special
operation at no. 129 Lenina Street in November 2003. The
military unit had been pursuing search measures in order to establish
her brother’s whereabouts.
- On
26 July 2007 the Chechnya FSB department wrote to the first applicant
that it had no information either about Khamzat Merzhoyev’s
abduction on 23 November 2003 or about his current whereabouts. The
department informed her that the Chechnya prosecutor’s office
was the authority competent to deal with the investigation and
forwarded the applicant’s complaint to that office for
examination.
- On
16 August 2007 the military prosecutor’s office of military
unit no. 20102 informed the first applicant that no
evidence had been found to support the involvement of servicemen in
the abduction of her brother. The office promised to assist the
district prosecutor’s office in conducting further search
measures.
- With
reference to the first applicant’s complaint of 10 July 2006,
on 9 June 2008 the Achkhoy-Martan district investigations department
wrote to her that, in accordance with the Russian Code of Criminal
Procedure, the victim in a criminal case had the right to study the
records of investigative measures conducted in his or her presence,
to challenge them and to study the entire investigation file upon the
completion of the investigation. The department informed the
applicant that the preliminary investigation in case no. 44090
was pending.
- It
appears that the criminal investigation into Khamzat Merzhoyev’s
abduction has remained pending thereafter.
2. Search for Ali Gastamirov
(a) Criminal
proceedings
- On
the morning of 12 May 2002, as soon as the seventh applicant returned
home, she started the search for Ali Gastamirov.
- Accompanied
by her neighbours, she pursued the servicemen’s footprints,
which soon led her to their parking place close to the Shalazhi
river. They could identify tracks left by an APC and two UAZ
vehicles.
- Thereafter,
the applicant and her neighbours went to the nearby military unit and
asked the military commander to release Ali Gastamirov. The commander
told them that the military unit had never detained Ali Gastamirov
and that he was not being held there. The commander did not let them
enter the premises.
- On
the same day the seventh applicant and her husband went to the
Achkhoy-Martan ROVD and the prosecutor’s office to complain
about their son’s disappearance. Although they managed to have
private talks with some officials, they were not allowed to go
inside. The officials promised to find their son.
- On
13 May 2002 the district prosecutor’s office initiated an
investigation into the abduction of Ali Gastamirov under Article 127
§ 2 of the Criminal Code (unlawful deprivation of liberty). The
case file was assigned number 63013.
- On
13 May 2002 the district prosecutor’s office granted victim
status in case no. 63013 to the applicant’s husband, Mr
A.-Kh.G. The seventh applicant asserted that she had been granted
victim status on the same day. However, she did not append the
relevant decision.
- On
the same day the investigator Mr F.A. visited the applicant’s
house. He questioned the seventh applicant, Mr A.-Kh.G. and Ms M.G.,
who told him that the traces of the vehicles which the abductors had
used on the previous day were still visible. Mr F.A. took some
photographs in the applicant’s dwellings but did not examine
the traces. The applicant and her relatives also told the
investigator that some neighbours had been eyewitnesses to Ali
Gastamirov’s abduction, that the abductors had also broken into
some neighbouring houses and that the officers of the nearby military
unit could have seen the vehicles used by them. Mr F.A. did not
question any neighbour that day. The applicant, Mr A.-Kh.G. and Ms
M.G. lastly stated that the abductors were servicemen, that they
could have apprehended Ali Gastamirov and that they were keeping hold
of him.
- Thereafter,
the investigator accompanied the seventh applicant and her relatives
to the military unit. He entered the premises and soon reappeared.
Mr F.A. said that he had checked the premises but Ali Gastamirov
had not been there. Mr F.A. promised the relatives that he would find
Ali and drove away.
- On
14 May 2002 Ali Gastamirov’s relatives and neighbours picketed
in the centre of Katyr-Yurt in an attempt to draw the attention of
the authorities to the abduction. The picket lasted three days.
Servicemen from the nearest checkpoint at the east end of the village
dissuaded them from continuing to protest, promising that Ali
Gastamirov would soon be released. The applicant enclosed a video
record of the protest with her submissions.
- Over
the next several weeks the seventh applicant complained about her
son’s abduction, both in person and in writing, to different
official bodies.
- In
June 2002 an investigator of the district prosecutor’s office
questioned some of the applicant’s neighbours. The investigator
asked them whether Ali Gastamirov had participated in illegal armed
groups. The circumstances of Ali’s apprehension were of no
interest to him.
- On
7 February 2003 the district prosecutor’s office forwarded to
Mr A.-Kh.G. a request sent to the ROVD for assistance in the
search for his son with a view to organising the search.
- On
17 December 2003 the Chechnya MVD informed the seventh applicant that
the authorities had opened criminal case no. 63013 and that the
investigation into the abduction of Ali Gastamirov was under way.
- On
19 July 2004 the Prosecutor General’s Office replied to the
seventh applicant’s request for a personal meeting. The letter
stated that her complaint had failed to provide enough reasons for
the organisation of such a meeting with the Prosecutor General.
- On
20 September and 10 November 2004 the military prosecutor’s
office of military unit no. 20102 informed the applicant that the
examination of her complaint had not established any involvement of
Russian servicemen in the crime. The office forwarded her complaint
to the Chechnya prosecutor’s office.
- On
18 July 2005 the district military commander’s office informed
the applicant that neither its office nor any other district power
structures had conducted operational-search measures in Katyr-Yurt on
11 May 2002. The letter also stated that measures to establish her
son’s whereabouts were under way.
- On
25 July 2005 the district prosecutor’s office informed the
seventh applicant that the investigation in criminal case no. 63013
had carried out a number of investigative measures. It had forwarded
queries concerning Ali Gastamirov’s whereabouts to various
law-enforcement authorities and official bodies and pursued its
cooperation with a number of other State authorities. According to
the letter, the authorities had been taking operational-search
measures aimed at solving the crime.
- On
23 November 2005 a group of dwellers of the Achkhoy-Martan district
submitted to the Russian President a request for help in establishing
the whereabouts of their 140 relatives, including Ali Gastamirov.
They submitted that their relatives had been abducted during
counter-terrorist operations, conducted by servicemen from 2000 to
2004 in that district.
- On
17 September 2006 the investigation in case no. 63031 was suspended
on account of the failure to identify the perpetrators.
- It
appears that the investigation was subsequently resumed.
- In
July 2008 the investigation questioned some of the seventh
applicant’s neighbours who had witnessed her son’s
abduction.
- On
25 November 2008 the Chechnya prosecutor’s office informed Mr
A.-Kh.G. that the investigation in case no. 63031 had been suspended
on account of the failure to identify the perpetrators.
(b) Leave to study
the investigation file
- On
10 July 2006 and 24 January 2008 the seventh applicant applied to the
district prosecutor’s office, seeking leave to study the
investigation file and to make copies of it. In the first application
she indicated that at around 4 a.m. on 12 May 2002 “a large
group of up to 40 federal servicemen” had apprehended and taken
away Ali Gastamirov.
- On
1 February 2008 the district prosecutor’s office refused her
requests. The office replied that until the completion of the
investigation the applicant had only the right to study the records
of the investigative steps which had been conducted in her presence.
C. Information about the investigation submitted by the
Government
- Despite
specific requests by the Court the Government did not disclose most
of the contents of the criminal investigation files. Thus, they
submitted 160 pages from criminal investigation file no. 44090 and
47 pages from criminal investigation file no. 63031. They
produced several witness statements and decisions to grant victim
status in relation to both cases. The documents provided in relation
to criminal investigation file no. 44090 also included
correspondence between different State authorities on the progress of
the investigation. The documents provided in relation to criminal
investigation file no. 63031 included the decision to open the
investigation. No other documents, such as expert reports or letters
to the relatives informing them of the adjournment and reopening of
the proceedings, were produced by the Government.
- Relying
on the information obtained from the Prosecutor General’s
Office, the Government stated that the investigation was in progress
and that disclosure of the remaining documents would be in violation
of Article 161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, since the files
contained information of a military nature and personal data
concerning the witnesses or other participants in the criminal
proceedings.
- The
documents, as well as the Government’s submissions with regard
to the investigation in cases nos. 44090 and 63031, can be summarised
as follows.
1. Investigation into the kidnapping of Khamzat
Merzhoyev
- In
their observations the Government did not dispute most of the
information concerning the investigation of the abduction of Khamzat
Merzhoyev as submitted by the first six applicants. They referred to
a number of other procedural steps taken by the investigation which
had not been mentioned by the applicants. However, the Government did
not submit copies of most of the documents to which they referred
(see below).
- The
Government stated that on 28 November 2003, and not on 30 November
2003 as the applicants asserted, Mr M.M. had submitted a written
application to the district prosecutor’s office to open an
investigation into Khamzat Merzhoyev’s kidnapping. The
Government submitted that prior to 28 November 2003 a check had been
conducted by the ROVD.
105. On
10 December 2003 the district prosecutor’s office launched
a criminal investigation (file no. 44090) into the abduction of
Khamzat Merzhoyev from his house by “armed unidentified
persons wearing camouflage uniforms and masks”.
- On
11 December 2003 Mr S.-M.M. was granted victim status. The Government
did not specify whether any of the six applicants had also been
granted victim status.
- The
Government submitted that Mr S.-M.M. had been questioned. However,
they did not produce his account or specify the date of the
questioning. According to the Government, Mr S.-M.M. had learnt from
his relatives that at about 3 a.m. on 23 November 2003 two
unknown armed men wearing masks and camouflage uniforms had broken
into their house at no. 167 Lenina Street in Katyr-Yurt. The men had
hit Mr M.M. with a rifle butt, tied up his hands and legs with
adhesive tape and taken away Khamzat Merzhoyev. The applicants’
neighbours had seen APCs and a UAZ vehicle in the street that night.
- The
Government stated that between December 2002 and May 2004 the
investigation had questioned over fifty witnesses, including the
first and second applicants, most probably the third applicant –
the Government referred to the latter as Khamzat Merzhoyev’s
son – as well as Mr A.M., Mr M.M. and the applicants’
neighbours. The neighbours had not been eyewitnesses to the
abduction. The Government appended copies of thirty transcripts. They
failed to produce copies of the accounts given by the first three
applicants, Mr A.M., Mr M.M. and the other witnesses who had been
questioned by the investigation.
- The
applicants’ neighbours provided the following information.
- On
14 December 2003 Mr S.-A.I., who lived in the same street as the
first six applicants, testified that he personally knew Khamzat
Merzhoyev and his family. They had no enemies and had not been
involved in a blood feud. Mr S.-A.I. characterised Khamzat as a calm,
decent and easygoing person, who had been taking care of his parents
and had lived in their house. Khamzat had not participated in illegal
armed groups or any criminal activities and had no “discrediting
connections”. On the morning of 23 November 2003 Mr
S.-A.I. had learnt from his neighbours that a number of armed and
masked men wearing camouflage uniforms had burst into Khamzat’s
house and taken him away to an unknown destination. His whereabouts
had not been established. The relatives’ search for Khamzat had
not yielded any results. After the abduction, the investigating
authorities had visited the relatives in order to question them and
their neighbours, and had examined their house.
- On
27 March 2004 Mr B.G. reported that there had been about fifteen
armed men in the applicants’ house that night.
- On
18 May 2004 the investigation questioned Mr A.Ya., who added that the
intruders, who had spoken Russian, had not told the applicants which
bodies they were representing. They had acted quickly so as not to
let the applicants leave the backyard. None of the applicants had
been able to distinguish the hull numbers of the UAZ car used by the
intruders because of the dark.
- The
Government produced copies of another twenty accounts given by the
applicants’ neighbours between December 2003 and May 2004.
Sixteen neighbours gave a similar account of the events to that
given by Mr S.-A.I., Mr B.G. and Mr A.Ya. Two neighbours
questioned on 17 December 2003 added that the intruders had
battered Khamzat Merzhoyev upon his arrest. Eleven statements
collected in May 2004 literally reproduced Mr A.Ya.’s
testimonies. Three out of the twenty neighbours did not know Khamzat
Merzhoyev and his family and denied any knowledge of his abduction.
- On
12 May 2004 the investigation questioned Mr A.E., the head of the
Katyr-Yurt administration. Mr A.E. testified that at around 4 a.m. on
the night of 23 November 2003 he had been woken up by relatives of
Khamzat Merzhoyev, Mr S.A., Mr U.K., and relatives of the Tul. and
Taz. brothers. They had recounted their relatives’ abduction
and added that the latter had been subsequently released. On a later
date Mr A.E. had had a private talk with the abducted persons,
excluding Khamzat Merzhoyev. They had explained that the abductors
had not been violent and had only asked them about their involvement
in illegal armed groups. The abductors had released them after a
document check. None of the abducted persons had applied to the
police in connection with the kidnapping. None of them had seen
Khamzat Merzhoyev ever since. After the events all the
above-mentioned persons had left Chechnya, fearing for their safety.
Mr A.E. was unaware why those persons, including Khamzat Merzhoyev,
had been detained and whether they had participated in illegal armed
groups. Mr A.E. had no knowledge of Khamzat’s whereabouts.
- The
investigation also questioned other persons who had been abducted
during the night of 23 November 2003. The Government submitted copies
of the accounts given by Mr U.K., Mr S.-M.S., Mr S.A., Mr K.Tul. and
Mr A.Tul. The testimonies of the Taz. brothers were not enclosed with
the Government’s observations. It is unclear whether both of
them were questioned.
- On
3 May 2004 Mr U.K. testified that on the night of 23 November 2003 he
had been sleeping in his house at no. 161 Lenina Street in
Katyr-Yurt. He had shared his bedroom with Mr S.-M.S., a relative. Mr
U.K.’s mother, sister, wife and children were sleeping in two
other rooms. At about 3 a.m. Mr U.K. had woken up because his wife
was crying. He had gone to her bedroom and seen four or five armed
persons wearing masks and camouflage uniforms. They had ordered him
and Mr S.-M.S. to lie on the floor. They had obeyed. The intruders
had not used violence or threats against them. Thereafter the men had
taken Mr U.K. and Mr S.-M.S. out of the house, pulled their T-shirts
over their heads and hustled them into a grey UAZ vehicle. Some other
unknown armed men had been in the vehicle. The men had driven Mr U.K.
and Mr S.-M.S. out of the village, checked their identity documents
and asked whether they had participated in illegal armed groups. Mr
U.K. and Mr S.-M.S. had replied in the negative and the men had let
them go. Mr U.K. and Mr S.-M.S. had spent some 20 minutes in the
vehicle. Mr U.K. was unaware whether other persons had been arrested
that night. Soon after the accident Mr U.K. and Mr S.-M.S. had left
Chechnya for work-related matters. They had returned in May 2004.
- Mr
S.-M.S., questioned on 4 May 2004, corroborated Mr U.K.’s
statements. He considered that they had been apprehended for an
ordinary document check and, therefore, had persuaded the relatives
not to submit an application to the prosecutor’s office. Mr
U.K. and Mr S.-M.S. had been involved in some construction business
in Ingushetia. They occasionally returned to Chechnya in order to
give money to their relatives.
- On
6 May 2004 the investigation questioned Mr S.A. He stated that on the
night of 23 November 2003 he had been sleeping in his house at no. 47
Ordzhonikidze Street in Katyr-Yurt. At about 3 a.m. between five and
ten unknown armed men wearing masks and camouflage uniforms had
broken into his house. One of them had ordered Mr S.A. to get dressed
and take his passport. He had obeyed. Afterwards the men had taken Mr
S.A. to their UAZ car. Except for Mr S.A. and the men, there was no
one else inside. The men had not used violence or threats against
him. They had driven him out of the village and asked whether he had
participated in illegal armed groups. Mr S.A. had replied in the
negative and added that he had no information about any members of
such groups. Then the men had let him go. On the following day,
fearing for his safety, Mr S.A. had gone to Ingushetia to his
relatives. He had returned to Katyr-Yurt in May 2004.
- On
8 and 10 May 2004 respectively the investigation questioned Mr K.Tul.
and Mr A.Tul., his elder brother. They testified that on the night of
23 November 2003 they had been sleeping in their house at
no. 6 Shosseynyy Lane in Katyr-Yurt. At about 3 a.m.
unknown armed men wearing masks and camouflage uniforms had broken
into the house. Five or six men had woken them up. There had been a
large number of unknown armed men outside. The intruders had ordered
Mr K.Tul. and Mr A.Tul. to get dressed and had pulled jackets over
their heads. Afterwards the men had taken them to the backyard, put
them in the back of a Ural truck and driven them out of the village.
The men had asked the brothers whether they had participated in
illegal armed groups. The brothers had replied in the negative. Then
the men had let them go. The men had not used violence against them.
The brothers had not requested the prosecuting authorities to open an
investigation into their abduction. On the following day Mr K.Tul.,
his brother and the latter’s family had gone to their relatives
in the Samara Region, fearing for their safety. They had been living
there since then.
- According
to the Government, one of the Taz. brothers, Mr Ya.Taz.,
testified on an unspecified date that unknown persons had driven him
out of the village and asked about his involvement in illegal armed
groups. Afterwards they had let him go home. On the following day Mr
Ya.Taz. had left Chechnya with his relatives.
- On
5 July 2008 the investigation questioned Mr M.Ch., an investigator at
the ROVD. He stated that he was aware that on 23 November 2003 a
group of about fifteen armed men in APCs had abducted Khamzat
Merzhoyev from his house. After the resumption of the investigation
in case no. 44090, the ROVD had taken a number of measures
to establish Khamzat Merzhoyev’s whereabouts, such as
questioning eyewitnesses and neighbours and visiting the Operational
Search Bureau (“the ORB”), the FSB and the Department for
Organised Crime of the Chechnya MVD. However, those measures had not
yielded any results. Operational-search measures had been under way.
- In
December 2003 the investigator had inspected three checkpoints
situated at the exit from Achkhoy-Martan to the Rostov-Baku road, the
exit from Achkhoy-Martan towards Katyr-Yurt, and the exit from
Katyr-Yurt towards Urus-Martan. Having examined the registration logs
at the checkpoints, the investigator found no record of vehicles that
had transited the checkpoints between 22 and 24 November 2003. The
investigation also noted that the pages had not been numbered or
bound and that they contained corrections of the registrations of
vehicles that had passed through them at night.
- The
Government stated that the investigating authorities had sent queries
to various State bodies, asking them to provide information
concerning Khamzat Merzhoyev’s apprehension and detention, any
requests for medical assistance or any “discrediting”
information about him, as well as information on special operations
which could have been conducted in Katyr-Yurt on the night of 23
November 2003. In their letters different district departments of the
interior stated that “on the night of 23 November 2003 Khamzat
Merzhoyev was abducted from a private house in Katyr-Yurt”. The
Government produced copies of the replies to such requests, which can
be summarised as follows.
- In
February 2004 the ORB-2 and the Chechnya FSB department informed the
investigation that they had no information about Khamzat Merzhoyev.
On 22 April 2004 the Ingushetia FSB department stated that no special
operations had been conducted in Katyr-Yurt by the FSB forces and
also denied having any information about Khamzat Merzhoyev.
- In
December 2003, February, March and April 2004 the FSB departments in
the Southern Federal Circuit and the local bodies of the Ministry of
the Interior notified the investigation that they neither had any
“discrediting” information about Khamzat Merzhoyev nor
any information about his apprehension and abduction or the
abductors’ whereabouts. In May 2004 the ORB-2 and the criminal
police of the Chechnya MVD replied that a number of measures had been
taken to establish the abductors’ whereabouts. The ORB-2 had
been verifying whether any persons who had been delivered to its
premises could have committed the crime.
- The
investigating authorities were unable to establish the whereabouts of
Khamzat Merzhoyev. In December 2003 and January, February and April
2004 local bodies of the Ministry of the Interior, FSB departments
and remand centres in the Southern Federal Circuit had replied that
they had never detained Khamzat Merzhoyev on criminal or
administrative charges and had not carried out any criminal
investigation in respect of him. On 27 December 2003 the Urus-Martan
ROVD reported that it had conducted a number of operational-search
measures in connection with Khamzat Merzhoyev’s abduction,
which had revealed the following. Khamzat Merzhoyev had not been
arrested or detained by the district law-enforcement authorities. He
had not applied for help to the Urus-Martan ROVD or medical
facilities. The internal databases had no information concerning the
discovery of a body or the identification of a person without
identification documents resembling him. The ROVD had disseminated
search briefings (розыскные
ориентировки)
concerning Khamzat Merzhoyev across the district. In December 2003
and January 2004 other district departments of the interior, FSB
departments and prosecutor’s offices in the Southern Federal
Circuit produced similar replies. They had informed their staff,
subordinates and the public about Khamzat Merzhoyev’s
abduction. On 24 June 2004 the criminal police department of the
Achkhoy-Martan ROVD informed the investigator that it had opened an
operational-search file in connection with Khamzat Merzhoyev’s
abduction. The department had checked whether any persons registered
in its database could have committed the crime.
- The
Government acknowledged that the investigation in case no. 44090
had been adjourned on several occasions but it had subsequently been
resumed and had remained pending thereafter. The Prosecutor General’s
Office was supervising the progress of the investigation. The
Government further submitted that the investigating authorities had
considered different possible versions of Khamzat Merzhoyev’s
kidnapping, including the involvement of servicemen. However, the
investigation had so far failed to identify who was guilty.
2. Investigation into the kidnapping of Ali Gastamirov
- The
Government did not dispute most of the information provided by the
seventh applicant relating to the investigation of her son’s
abduction.
- The
Government submitted that on 13 May 2002 the district prosecutor’s
office had launched criminal investigation file no. 63031 into
the abduction of Ali Gastamirov from his house by “unidentified
armed men wearing masks and camouflage uniforms” on the night
of 12 May 2002. The investigation had been initiated at Mr A.-Kh.G.’s
request.
- On
13 May 2002 Mr A.-Kh.G. was granted victim status in case no. 63031.
The Government disputed that victim status had been granted to the
seventh applicant.
- On
the same day the investigation questioned Mr A.-Kh.G. as a victim,
and the seventh applicant and Ms M.G. as witnesses. The Government
provided copies of the transcripts.
- Mr
A.-Kh.G. testified that on the night of 12 May 2002 he had been
sleeping at home. At around 4 a.m. a group of unknown armed men
wearing masks and camouflage uniforms had broken into his house from
the backyard. Five or six men had entered the house through the front
door, while the others had remained waiting outside. The men had
headed for Ali’s and Ms M.G.’s room. On their way
they had locked Mr A.-Kh.G., the applicant and their children in
their room. The men had checked Ali’s passport, asked him to
get dressed and dragged him, barefoot, to the backyard. The men had
ordered Mr A.-Kh.G. and the applicant to stay in the house and had
threatened to open fire. All in all, the intruders had spent five
minutes in the house. Ms A.M., a neighbour, had seen that there had
been some fifteen or sixteen men in the backyard. One of them, a
tall, heavyset and blond-haired man, had been unmasked. Ms A.M. would
be able to identify him. The men had taken Ali Gastamirov and headed
for a military unit, which was located across the Shalazhi river and
some 700 or 800 metres from Mr A.-Kh.G.’s house. Some military
forces had been deployed there since 2 May 2002. Ms A.M. had then
heard the roar of a starting engine, which could have been an APC,
some 300 metres from the house. After his son’s abduction, Mr
A.-Kh.G. had seen the tracks left by the APC, leading to the
above-mentioned military unit. The servicemen deployed there had been
living in tents. Mr A.-Kh.G. was unaware which unit it was. He said
that Ali Gastamirov had not been involved in any illegal armed
groups. He further provided a detailed physical description of his
son and of the clothes that he had been wearing on the night of his
abduction.
- The
seventh applicant and Ms M.G. corroborated Mr A.-Kh.G.’s
statements. The seventh applicant added that the men had burst all
the light bulbs in the backyard so that nobody could see what they
were doing. She also recalled that the men had gone in the direction
of the deployment of regiment no. 47 and other military forces.
Ms M.G. clarified that the seventh applicant and her husband had not
witnessed the abduction as the intruders had locked them in their
room. Ms M.G. was an eyewitness to the events. She added that
the intruders had spoken unaccented Russian and that she would be
able to identify the unmasked man.
- On
18 May 2002 the investigation again questioned the seventh applicant
and her husband. As appears from their transcripts enclosed with the
Government’s submissions, they both changed their initial
statements, without clarifying the reason for the change. In
particular, they admitted to having stayed in Grozny with their
relatives on the night of 12 May 2002. In the morning, upon their
return to Katyr-Yurt, the seventh applicant and her husband had
learnt that Ali had been taken away by unknown armed men in masks and
camouflage uniforms. They had had no news of him thereafter. They had
immediately contacted the ROVD and the district military commander’s
office, which had denied having detained Ali Gastamirov. On 13 May
2002 they had submitted a request to the district prosecutor’s
office to open an investigation in connection with his abduction.
- As
appears from the Government’s submissions, they also referred
to another statement by Ms M.G., in which she had acknowledged that
Ali Gastamirov’s parents had spent the night of 12 May 2002 in
Grozny. The Government submitted that after Ali’s abduction, Ms
M.G. and his two sisters had been locked in the house. Therefore, Ms
M.G. had not been able to see in which direction the intruders had
departed. Ms A.M. had told her that there had been fifteen or sixteen
men, who had headed for the river. The Government did not produce a
copy of the transcript.
- The
Government submitted that the investigation had questioned over
thirty witnesses, including Ms A.M., Ms Kh.G., personnel of the ROVD
and the Katyr-Yurt administration, as well as a number of neighbours.
The Government produced copies of six accounts given by the
neighbours and a brief outline of some other witness statements,
without specifying the dates of the questioning. These submissions
can be summarised as follows.
- As
appears from the transcripts enclosed, the six neighbours were
questioned on 18 and 22 July 2006 and on 15 July 2008. They had
learnt about Ali Gastamirov’s abduction from their neighbours
on 12 May 2002. They personally knew Ali and characterised him as a
shy, outgoing and hard-working person. Between 4 and 5 a.m. that
night some fifteen or sixteen unknown armed men had burst into his
house and taken him away to an unknown destination. The intruders had
not introduced themselves, nor had they said why and where they were
taking Ali. When Ali’s relatives had attempted to help him
escape, the men had threatened them with guns. The six neighbours had
no information that Ali Gastamirov had been involved in illegal armed
groups or blood feuds. They were not cognisant of his whereabouts and
did not know who could have abducted him.
- The
Government submitted that the investigation had questioned forty
other neighbours, who had given a similar account of the events.
- The
Government cited testimony given by another neighbour, Ms A.M.,
on an unspecified date. On the night of 12 May 2002 she had been
woken up by the noise coming from neighbouring houses. She had seen
some fifteen or sixteen masked armed men in camouflage uniforms enter
the seventh applicant’s backyard, burst all the light bulbs
there and break down the front door of the house. Some five or seven
minutes later, the intruders had taken Ali Gastamirov away. One of
them had been unmasked and she would be able to identify him. Then Ms
A.M. had heard the roar of an engine. She thought that it had been an
APC.
- According
to the Government, on an unspecified date Ms Kh.G. related that on
the night of 12 May 2002 a group of armed men in masks and camouflage
uniforms had burst into the house. One of them had been unmasked. The
men had checked Ali Gastamirov’s passport and then taken him
away. Ms M.G., Ms Kh.G. and her younger sister had attempted to stop
the intruders but the latter had locked them in a room and left.
- The
Government referred to a statement by Mr L.A., an employee of the
Katyr-Yurt administration, who on an unspecified date had described
Ali Gastamirov as a decent person who had not taken part in illegal
armed groups. On 12 May 2002 Mr A.-Kh.G. had contacted him in person
and recounted his son’s abduction.
- In
a statement cited in the Government’s observations, Mr R.Z., a
police officer at the ROVD, had testified on an unknown date that
Katyr-Yurt dwellers had informed him of Ali Gastamirov’s
abduction by unknown armed persons on 12 May 2002. The ROVD had on a
number of occasions conducted house-to-house enquiries in order to
establish the circumstances of the abduction and find out any
information about the abductors. However, those measures had proved
to be unsuccessful, since the crime had taken place at night and
nobody could have seen anything.
- The
Government submitted that on 13 May 2005 the investigating
authorities had sent a number of queries to various State bodies in
the Southern Federal Circuit in order to establish the whereabouts of
Ali Gastamirov and his abductors. Without producing copies of their
replies, the Government stated that law-enforcement authorities had
not arrested or detained Ali Gastamirov on criminal or administrative
charges, that he had never been held in remand centres and that no
unidentified body resembling him had been discovered. The Government
also stated that a number of operational-search measures had been
taken to establish Ali Gastamirov’s whereabouts but they did
not specify what those measures had been.
- On
10 July 2006 the seventh applicant submitted a written complaint to
the district prosecutor’s office, in which she stated that her
son had been detained on 12 May 2002 by a large group of armed
servicemen using APCs and a UAZ vehicle. She stated that on 13 May
2002 she had been granted the status of a victim in the criminal
investigation opened into the abduction. She complained that the
investigation had lasted for four years without any visible progress
and that she had lost confidence in its effectiveness. Accordingly,
she asked to be allowed access to the material relating to the
investigation and to be informed about the progress of the
investigation and of its current status.
- Without
referring to any specific document, the Government further stated in
their observations that the “special branches of the power
structures” (специальные
подразделения
силовых структур)
had not carried out any special operation in Katyr-Yurt during the
period relevant to the investigation.
- The
Government argued that notwithstanding the fact that the seventh
applicant had not been granted victim status, she had been kept
informed of all relevant decisions taken during the investigation.
- The
Government submitted that the investigation in case no. 63031 had
been suspended and resumed on several occasions, and had so far
failed to identify who was guilty. The Government further specified
that the investigation was in progress and had been considering
different possible versions of Ali Gastamirov’s abduction,
including the involvement of Russian federal servicemen.
- In
her observations submitted in reply to those of the Government, the
seventh applicant questioned the relevance and accuracy of some of
the witness statements collected by the investigation and submitted
or cited by the Government. She relied on the statements made by her
relatives and neighbours to the Court (see paragraph 39 above).
- As
regards the difference in her and her husband’s statements of
13 and 18 May 2002, she explained that they had at first been
frightened and disoriented by the events and had not wanted to put
the lives of other witnesses, including their family members and
neighbours, in danger. Thus, at first they had decided to tell the
investigator that they had witnessed their son’s detention. The
applicant also alleged that she had had no legal assistance at the
time and could not fully grasp the meaning of the procedures.
- For
their part, the Government questioned the evidential value of the
testimonies collected by the seventh applicant, which did not comply
with the guarantees of criminal procedural law.
D. Proceedings against
law-enforcement officials instituted by the seventh applicant
- On
27 February 2008 the seventh applicant applied to the Achkhoy-Martan
District Court, complaining about the refusal of her request for
access to the case file (see paragraphs 69 and 74 above).
- On
10 March 2008 the district court partly allowed the applicant’s
complaint. The court declared that the district prosecutor’s
refusal of her request for access to the case file was unlawful. At
the same time the court stated that the applicant did not have the
right to study the entire investigation file until the completion of
the investigation. The court thus ordered that the applicant be
allowed to access and make copies of the following documents:
decisions to conduct investigative steps and procedural records of
such steps which had been conducted in her presence; decisions to
carry out forensic examinations, regardless of the nature of the
experts’ actions and conclusions; decisions to open an
investigation in criminal cases; decisions to grant or refuse victim
status to the applicant; decisions to stay or close the
investigation; decisions to make an accusation against a specific
person; complaints submitted in connection with the criminal case if
such complaints affected the victim’s rights and legal
interests; and decisions to establish an investigating group.
- On
30 April 2008 the Chechnya Supreme Court upheld the decision of 10
March 2008 on appeal.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
- For
a summary of the relevant domestic law see Akhmadova
and Sadulayeva v. Russia (no.
40464/02, §§ 67-69, 10 May 2007).
THE LAW
I. JOINDER OF THE APPLICATIONS
- In accordance with Rule
42 § 1
of the Rules of Court, the Court has decided to join the
applications, given their similar factual and legal background.
II. THE GOVERNMENT’S
PRELIMINARY OBJECTION
A. Arguments of the parties
- The
Government contended that the complaints should be declared
inadmissible for non-exhaustion of domestic remedies. They submitted
that the investigations into the disappearance of Khamzat Merzhoyev
and Ali Gastamirov had not yet been completed. They further
argued that it had been open to the applicants to challenge in court
any actions or omissions of the investigating or other
law-enforcement authorities, but that the applicants had not availed
themselves of any such remedy. They also argued that it was open to
the applicants to pursue civil complaints, which they had failed to
do.
- The
applicants contested that objection. With reference to the Court’s
practice, they argued that they had not been obliged to apply to the
civil courts in order to exhaust domestic remedies. They stated that
the criminal investigation had proved to be ineffective and that
their complaints to that effect had been futile.
B. The Court’s assessment
- The
Court will examine the arguments of the parties in the light of the
provisions of the Convention and its relevant practice (for a
relevant summary, see Estamirov and
Others v. Russia, no. 60272/00, §§
73-74, 12 October 2006).
- 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 (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 provided
for by the Russian legal system, the
Court observes that criminal investigations were opened upon the
applicants’ complaints and are currently pending. The parties
disagreed as to the effectiveness of those investigations.
- The
Court considers that the Government’s objection raises issues
concerning the effectiveness of the investigation which are closely
linked to the merits of the applicants’ complaints. Thus, it
decides to join this objection to the merits of the case and
considers that the issue falls to be examined below.
III. THE COURT’S ASSESSMENT OF
THE EVIDENCE AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE FACTS
A. The parties’ arguments
1. In respect of the disappearance of Khamzat Merzhoyev
(a) The applicants
- The
applicants maintained that it was beyond reasonable doubt that the
men who had intruded into their home and taken away Khamzat Merzhoyev
had been State agents. In support of their complaint they referred to
the following evidence that was not challenged by the Government.
First, they pointed out that Khamzat Merzhoyev had been detained by a
large group of armed men, wearing camouflage uniforms, who had spoken
Russian without any accent. During the same night seven other men
from the village had been detained in identical circumstances and
taken to the outskirts of the village in military vehicles; these men
had had their identity documents checked and had been asked questions
about their alleged involvement with illegal armed groups. The
applicants stressed that the authorities had taken no steps
whatsoever to identify the persons who had carried out the arrests
and questioning. Moreover, the intruders had arrived late at night,
which indicated that they had been able to circulate freely during
the curfew and to pass through military roadblocks. The applicants
further referred to the witness statements collected by them and by
the investigation to the effect that on that night they had seen
vehicles such as UAZs, Urals and (some of them) APCs.
- As
to the facts in dispute, the applicants argued that the absence of
notes in the registration logs for the roadblocks showed that no such
notes had been made between 22 and 24 November 2003, and not that no
vehicles had passed through. The applicants questioned the evidential
value of the testimonies of twenty-one residents of Katyr-Yurt
submitted by the Government, since these persons had lived too far
from their house and could not have witnessed the abduction. They
also pointed out that the transcripts revealed the very superficial
nature of the questioning and raised doubts as to their authenticity,
since ten witnesses had signed the same printed statement reproduced
verbatim. On the basis of the above, the applicants concluded that
their relative had been detained during a secret special operation
carried out by law-enforcement personnel.
- They
further argued, referring to the circumstances of the abduction and
the absence of any news about Khamzat Merzhoyev for several years,
that he must be presumed dead.
(b) The Government
- The
Government submitted that on 23 November 2003 “unidentified
masked men in camouflage uniforms armed with machine guns” had
abducted Khamzat Merzhoyev. They further contended that the
investigation into the incident was still pending, that there was no
evidence that the men had been State agents and that there were
therefore no grounds for holding the State liable for the alleged
violations of the applicants’ rights. They relied on several
points. First, even though the applicants submitted that Mr Merzhoyev
had taken part in the hostilities against the federal authorities in
1994-1995 and thus could have been targeted by the Russian
law-enforcement agencies, no such information had been obtained by
the investigation, either from the State authorities or from his
neighbours. Second, the Government disputed the applicants’
reference to witness statements about the involvement of military
vehicles such as APCs in the abduction. They argued that the noise of
APCs was very specific and would have been heard by many people,
especially at night and in a rural area. However, none of the
witnesses had stated that they had heard the noise of APCs’
engines. Third, the head of the village administration, Mr A.E.,
had not stated that he had heard either the noise of military
vehicles or the shots allegedly fired by the abductors near the
office of the local administration on the night in question. He had
only learnt of the events from the relatives of the detained men.
Next, the Government argued that the registration logs of the
roadblocks situated at the exit of Katyr-Yurt had not noted any
movement of military or law-enforcement vehicles between 22 and 24
November 2003. Furthermore, the Government argued that the other men
who had been detained by unknown persons in Katyr-Yurt on the same
night and later released had stated in their testimonies that they
had been transported inside UAZ or Ural vehicles where there were no
other detainees. None of them had seen Khamzat Merzhoyev. Therefore,
there were no grounds to suggest that he had been detained by the
same persons as the other villagers. Finally, the Government insisted
that, according to their submissions to the investigation, neither
the head of the administration nor the serviceman of the ROVD, Mr
M.Ch., had been aware of the whereabouts of Khamzat Merzhoyev after
the latter’s abduction, contrary to the applicants’
statements.
- The
Government further argued that there was no convincing evidence that
the applicants’ relative was dead, given that his whereabouts
had not been established and his body had not been found.
2. In respect of the disappearance of Ali Gastamirov
(a) The applicants
- The
seventh applicant maintained that it was beyond reasonable doubt that
the men who had taken away her son had been State agents. In support
of that assertion, she referred to the following evidence that was
not challenged by the Government. First, she pointed out that Ali
Gastamirov had been detained by a large group of armed men, wearing
camouflage uniforms, who had spoken Russian without any accent. At
least one of the intruders who had not been masked had had Slavic
features. Moreover, the men had arrived late at night, which
indicated that they had been able to circulate freely during the
curfew and to pass through military roadblocks. The applicants
further referred to the witness statements collected by them and by
the investigation to the effect that on the night of the incident
they had seen and heard military vehicles such as APCs.
- The
applicant also reported a number of inaccuracies and unresolved
contradictions arising out of the statements of the witnesses
produced by and cited by the Government (see paragraphs 39 and 148
above). Thus, she noted that Ms G.Kh. had only been questioned in
September 2008 and that her testimony had not been disclosed by the
Government. Relying on the latter’s statement of November 2008
to the Court, the seventh applicant stressed that Ms G.Kh. had stated
that she had heard the noise of an APC on the night of her brother’s
abduction. The seventh applicant also relied on the statement of her
sister-in-law E.Z., who had been an eyewitness to the kidnapping and
who had not been questioned by the domestic investigation. In her
statement to the Court Mrs E.Z. had also mentioned the sound of
military engines. Two other neighbours, Mr A.Z. and Mr I.Sh.,
who had not been questioned by the investigation, had seen the group
who had detained the applicant’s son. Mr I.Sh. had been in the
house opposite the applicant’s house. He had observed the
events from his window and heard the sound of military vehicles,
including the APC. He also testified that the group of armed men had
first entered the houses of two other villagers, Mr A.D. and M.Sh.,
and broken down their front doors. These two men had not been
questioned by the domestic investigation. Mr A.Z. lived at the end of
the village, near the river. On the night of 12 May 2002 he had
clearly heard the noise of an APC engine which he could recognise and
which had come from the river bed, from the side where the Russian
military unit was located. This witness stated that neither he nor
his son, who had been at home on the night in question, had been
interviewed in relation to Ali Gastamirov’s detention.
- Furthermore,
the seventh applicant noted that three out of the six witnesses whose
statements the Government had disclosed to the Court had lived too
far from her house to see or hear anything. Another of those six, Mr
Kh.B., had produced a written statement that he had not been in
Katyr Yurt at the time of the events, that he had said so to the
investigator and that he had learnt of the applicant’s son’s
abduction from his neighbours. The seventh applicant alleged that Mrs
Z.O., whose testimony was provided by the Government, had not lived
at the indicated address. The seventh applicant knew the family who
had lived at that address and had talked to them; however, no woman
with such a name had been known to them or had lived at their home at
any point in time.
- She
further argued, referring to the circumstances of the abduction and
the absence of any news about Ali Gastamirov for many years, that he
must be presumed dead.
(b) The Government
- The
Government submitted that, according to the applicant’s and her
husband’s statements, on 12 May 2002 unidentified armed and
masked men in camouflage uniforms had abducted Ali Gastamirov. They
further contended that the investigation into the incident was still
pending, that there was no evidence that the men had been State
agents and that there were therefore no grounds for holding the State
liable for the alleged violations of the applicant’s rights.
There was no information about the conduct of a special operation in
the village on the night in question. No law-enforcement authority
had ever detained Ali Gastamirov. Finally, there were no data to
support the applicant’s allegation about her son’s death.
- The
Government drew the Court’s attention to the fact that most of
the witnesses had not heard anything on the night of Ali Gastamirov’s
arrest. Since the noise of APCs was very specific it would have been
heard by the residents, especially at night and in a rural area.
Thus, they questioned the reliability of the applicant’s
allegations and the value of the reference to the APCs by one
witness, Mrs A.M. (see paragraph 139 above). The Government also
concluded from the statements of Mrs A.M. that the behaviour of the
intruders who had burst the light bulbs before entering the
applicant’s house was more likely to be that of criminals than
of the security forces. Furthermore, they challenged the overall
reliability of the statements by the applicant and her husband, given
that they had altered their statements between 13 and 18 May 2002 on
the issue of whether they had witnessed Ali Gastamirov’s
detention. This also applied to the statement of Mrs M.G. (see
paragraphs 132-135).
B. The Court’s evaluation
of the facts
- The
Court observes that it has developed a number of general principles
relating to the establishment of facts in dispute, in particular when
faced with allegations of disappearance under Article 2 of the
Convention (for a summary of these, see Bazorkina
v. Russia, no. 69481/01, §§ 103 109,
27 July 2006). The Court also notes that
the conduct of the parties when evidence is being obtained has to be
taken into account (see Ireland
v. the United Kingdom, 18
January 1978, § 161, Series A no.
25).
- The
Court notes that despite its requests for a copy of the entire files
of the investigation into the abduction of Khamzat Merzhoyev and Ali
Gastamirov, the Government withheld a substantial number of documents
from the case file. The Government referred to Article 161 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure. The Court observes that in previous cases
it has found this explanation insufficient to justify the withholding
of key information requested by it (see Imakayeva
v. Russia, no. 7615/02, § 123,
ECHR 2006 XIII).
- In
view of this, and bearing in mind the principles referred to above,
the Court finds that it can draw inferences from the Government’s
conduct in respect of the well-foundedness of the applicants’
allegations. The
Court will thus proceed to examine crucial elements in the present
case that should be taken into account when deciding whether the
applicants’ relatives can be presumed dead and whether their
deaths can be attributed to the authorities.
1. In respect of the disappearance of Khamzat Merzhoyev
- The
applicants alleged that the persons who had taken Khamzat Merzhoyev
away on 23 November 2003 and then killed him had been State
agents. The Government did not dispute any of the major factual
elements underlying the application and did not provide another
explanation of the events.
- In
so far as the Government questioned the credibility of certain
applicants’ statements on issues such as whether or not an APC
was involved in the kidnapping, the Court notes
that no other essential elements underlying the applicants’
submissions as to the facts have been disputed by the Government. It
observes that the Government’s objection does not cast
doubt on the overall presentation of the facts in question as
summarised above.
- The
Court reiterates that where applicants make out a prima facie case
and the Court is prevented from reaching factual conclusions owing to
the lack of relevant 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).
- Taking
into account the above elements, the Court is satisfied that the
applicants have made a prima facie case that their relative was
apprehended by State servicemen. In particular, the Court finds that
the fact that a large group of armed men in uniform, equipped with
military vehicles, was able to move freely through military
roadblocks during the curfew hours and apprehended several persons at
their homes strongly supports the applicants’ allegation that
these were State servicemen conducting a security operation. The
transcripts of the questioning of the men who were released indicate
that they were subjected to identity checks, questioned about their
possible involvement in illegal armed groups and placed in military
vehicles, such as grey UAZ all-terrain vehicles and a Ural truck. The
applicants and their neighbours indicated that Khamzat Merzhoyev
had also been detained by a group of armed men using UAZ vehicles. In
their applications to the authorities the applicants consistently
maintained that Khamzat Merzhoyev had
been detained by unknown servicemen and requested the investigation
to look into that possibility. The domestic investigation also
accepted factual assumptions as presented by the applicants and took
steps to check whether law enforcement agencies had been
involved in the kidnapping. The investigation was unable to establish
which precise military or security units had carried out the
operation, but it does not appear that any serious steps were taken
to that end.
- The
Government’s statement that the investigators had not found any
evidence to support the involvement of the special forces in the
kidnapping is insufficient to discharge them from the above-mentioned
burden of proof. Having examined the documents submitted by the
parties, and drawing inferences from the Government’s failure
to submit the remaining documents which were in their exclusive
possession or to provide another plausible explanation for the events
in question, the Court finds that Khamzat
Merzhoyev was arrested on 23 November 2003 by State servicemen
during an unacknowledged security operation.
- There
has been no reliable news of Khamzat Merzhoyev
since the date of the kidnapping. His name has not been found
in any official detention facility records. Finally, the Government
have not submitted any explanation as to what happened to him after
the arrest.
- Having
regard to previous cases concerning disappearances in Chechnya which
have come before it (see, among other authorities, Bazorkina,
cited above; Imakayeva, cited above; Luluyev and Others
v. Russia, no. 69480/01, ECHR 2006 XIII; Baysayeva
v. Russia, no. 74237/01, 5 April 2007; Akhmadova and
Sadulayeva, cited above; and Alikhadzhiyeva v. Russia, no.
68007/01, 5 July 2007), the Court finds that when a person is
detained by unidentified servicemen without any subsequent
acknowledgment of the detention, this can be regarded as
life-threatening. The absence of Khamzat
Merzhoyev or of any news of him for six and a half years
supports this assumption.
- Accordingly,
the Court finds that the evidence available permits it to establish
that Khamzat Merzhoyev must be presumed
dead following his unacknowledged detention by State servicemen.
2. In respect of the disappearance of Ali Gastamirov
- The
seventh applicant alleged that Ali Gastamirov had been arrested by
servicemen at his home in Katyr-Yurt on 12 May 2002 and then killed.
The Government did not dispute any of the major factual elements
underlying the application and did not provide any other explanation
of the events.
- The
Government questioned the credibility of certain testimonies in view
of discrepancies relating to the exact circumstances of the arrest.
In particular, the first testimonies of the seventh applicant and her
husband given on 13 May 2002 wrongly indicated that they had been at
home during their son’s detention, while from their later
submissions it was clear that they had been in Grozny (see paragraphs
132-135 above). However, no questions were put
to them to explain the difference in their statements; it is
therefore impossible to explain how it came about and what
consequences should be attached to it. The Court also notes the
seventh applicant’s statement to it on this subject, which it
finds convincing (see paragraph 149 above). In any event, the Court
notes that no other elements underlying the applicant’s
submissions as to the fact of her son’s detention and
subsequent disappearance have been disputed by the Government. The
circumstances of the event are sufficiently established through the
eyewitness statements collected by the domestic investigation and by
the applicant.
- The
Court finds that the seventh applicant has made a prima facie case
that her son was apprehended by State servicemen. In particular, the
Court finds that Ali Gastamirov was detained at his home by a group
of several persons, wearing camouflage uniforms and armed with
automatic weapons, who used military vehicles, such as APCs. They
moved freely during curfew hours in the vicinity of the Russian
military unit. In their applications to the authorities the
applicants consistently maintained that Ali
Gastamirov had been detained by unknown servicemen and
requested the investigation to look into that possibility. The
domestic investigation also accepted factual assumptions as presented
by the applicants and took steps to check whether law-enforcement
agencies had been involved in the kidnapping. The investigation was
unable to establish which precise military or security units had
carried out the operation, but it does not appear that any serious
steps were taken to that end. Finally, the Court notes the striking
similarity between the two disappearances forming the subject of the
present judgment, both of which occurred on the same street in the
same village, although separated by eighteen months. The Court finds
that this similarity not only must have come to the attention of the
investigation into the two events, but also has a bearing on the
credibility of the seventh applicant’s allegation that her son
had been detained by unknown servicemen during an unacknowledged
security operation.
- The
Court observes that the situation in which Ali Gastamirov was
arrested should be regarded as life-threatening (see paragraph 181
above). The absence of Ali Gastamirov or of any news of him for over
eight years supports this assumption.
- Accordingly,
the Court finds that the evidence available permits it to establish
that Ali Gastamirov must be presumed dead following his
unacknowledged detention by State servicemen.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 2
OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained under Article 2 of the Convention that their
relatives had
disappeared after having been detained by Russian servicemen and that
the domestic authorities had failed to carry out an effective
investigation of the matter. Article 2 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. Admissibility
- The
Court considers, in the light of the parties’ submissions, that
the complaints raise serious issues of fact and law under the
Convention, the determination of which requires an examination of the
merits. Further, the Court has already found that the Government’s
objection concerning the alleged non-exhaustion of domestic remedies
should be joined to the merits of the complaint. The complaints under
Article 2 of the Convention must therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
1. Alleged violation of the right to life of Khamzat
Merzhoyev and Ali Gastamirov
- The
Court has already found it established that the applicants’
relatives must
be presumed dead following their unacknowledged detention by State
servicemen and that the deaths can
be attributed to the State. In the absence of any justification in
respect of the use of lethal force by State agents, the Court finds
that there has been a violation of Article 2 in respect of Khamzat
Merzhoyev and Ali Gastamirov.
2. Alleged inadequacy of the investigation of the
abduction
(a) In respect of the disappearance of
Khamzat Merzhoyev
- The
applicants argued that the investigation had not been effective and
adequate, as required by the Court’s case-law on Article 2.
They noted that the investigation had been opened belatedly, that it
had been adjourned and reopened a number of times and thus the taking
of the most basic steps had been protracted, and that the applicants
had not been informed properly of the most important investigative
steps. They argued that the fact that the investigation had been
pending for such a long period of time without producing any known
results had been a further proof of its ineffectiveness. The
applicants invited the Court to draw conclusions from the
Government’s unjustified failure to submit the documents from
the case file to them or to the Court.
- The
Government claimed that the investigation of the disappearance of the
applicants’ relatives met
the Convention requirement of effectiveness, as all measures
envisaged in national law were being taken to identify the
perpetrators. They argued that the applicants had been granted victim
status and had had every opportunity to participate effectively in
the proceedings. The prosecutor’s office which had carried out
the investigation had been independent and acted in strict accordance
with the national legislation. The Government stressed that the
investigation had sent numerous requests to various law-enforcement
bodies, questioned over fifty witnesses, including the eyewitnesses
and officials of the local administration and the ROVD. The
investigation continued to look into all possibilities regarding Mr
Merzhoyev’s disappearance, including the possibility of his
arrest by unidentified servicemen; however, no conclusions had been
reached.
- 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 summary of these principles see Bazorkina,
cited above, §§ 117-119).
- In
the present case, the kidnapping of Khamzat Merzhoyev was
investigated. The Court must assess whether that investigation met
the requirements of Article 2 of the Convention.
- The
Court notes at the outset that most of the documents from the
investigation were not disclosed by the Government. It therefore has
to assess the effectiveness of the investigation on the basis of the
few documents produced by the parties and the information about its
progress submitted by the Government.
- Turning
to the facts of the case, the Court notes that the authorities were
immediately aware of the crime through the applicants’
submissions. The investigation was opened on 10 December 2003,
eighteen days after the detention occurred. It does not appear that
any investigative measures were taken prior to that decision. This
delay in itself was liable to affect the investigation of a crime
such as abduction in life-threatening circumstances, where crucial
action has to be taken in the first few days after the event. It also
appears that within the following days some of the applicants’
neighbours were questioned and the scene of the crime inspected. The
first applicant’s brother was granted victim status on 11
December 2003. However, it appears that after that a number of
crucial steps were delayed. In particular, the Court notes that the
testimonies of other men who had been detained, questioned and
released in Katyr-Yurt on the same night were collected in May 2004.
The head of the local administration was also questioned in May 2004.
It is obvious that these measures, if they were to produce any
meaningful results, should have been taken immediately after the
crime was reported to the authorities, and as soon as the
investigation commenced. These delays, for which there has been no
explanation in the instant case, not only demonstrate the
authorities’ failure to act of their own motion but also
constitute a breach of the obligation to exercise exemplary diligence
and promptness in dealing with such a serious crime (see Öneryıldız
v. Turkey [GC], no. 48939/99, § 94, ECHR 2004 XII).
- A
number of essential steps were never taken. Most notably, it does not
appear that the investigation took steps to elucidate the
circumstances of the detention and questioning of seven other men,
even though the pattern had been identical to the detention of
Khamzat Merzhoyev. The investigation also failed to identify and
question the servicemen who had manned the roadblocks to which the
witnesses referred, in addition to checking the loosely kept
logbooks, which contained no entries for the two days in question
(see paragraph 122 above), or to find and question the servicemen who
could have been involved in the arrest of Khamzat Merzhoyev or his
fellow detainees.
- The
Court also remarks that even though the first applicant’s
brother had been granted victim status, he and the applicants were
hardly informed of any significant developments. It does not appear
that, apart from the letter from the district prosecutor’s
office of 11 April 2006 (see paragraph 68 above), the family members
of the missing man received any meaningful update of the steps taken
to find Khamzat Merzhoyev. Accordingly, the investigators failed to
ensure that the investigation received the required level of public
scrutiny, or to safeguard the interests of the next of kin in the
proceedings.
- Lastly,
the Court notes that the investigation was adjourned and resumed on
several occasions and that there were lengthy periods of inactivity
on the part of the district prosecutor’s office when no
proceedings were pending.
- Having
regard to the limb of the Government’s preliminary objection
that was joined to the merits of the complaint, the Court finds that
the investigation, having being repeatedly suspended and resumed and
plagued by inexplicable delays, has been pending for many years
without producing any tangible results. The Government argued that
the first six applicants could have sought judicial review of the
decisions of the investigating authorities in the context of the
exhaustion of domestic remedies. However, the
Court notes that the effectiveness of the investigation had
already been undermined in its early stages by the authorities’
failure to take necessary and urgent investigative measures. The
investigation was repeatedly suspended and resumed, but it appears
that no significant measures were taken to identify those responsible
for the kidnapping. Nor were the applicants properly informed of the
progress of the proceedings. Furthermore, the
investigation has been resumed by the prosecuting authorities
themselves a number of times owing to the need to take additional
investigative steps. However, they still failed to investigate
the applicants’ allegations
properly. In such circumstances, the Court considers that the
applicants could not be required to challenge in court similar
decisions of the district prosecutor’s office. Accordingly, the
Court finds that the remedy cited by the Government was ineffective
in the circumstances and dismisses their preliminary objection as
regards the applicants’ failure to exhaust domestic remedies
within the context of the criminal investigation.
- In
the light of the foregoing, the Court holds that the authorities
failed to carry out an effective criminal investigation into the
circumstances surrounding the disappearance of
Khamzat Merzhoyev, in breach of Article 2 in its procedural
aspect.
(b) In respect of the disappearance of Ali
Gastamirov
- The
seventh applicant argued that the investigation had not been
effective and adequate, as required by the Court’s case-law on
Article 2. In particular, even though a criminal investigation had
been started immediately after the abduction, only three witnesses
had been questioned at that time. It did not appear that anyone else
had been questioned before 2006. The investigators had not taken any
other urgent steps, such as collecting fingerprints, following the
footsteps of the intruders and noting the tracks left by the military
vehicles. The investigation had not identified the military units in
the district which could have had access to APCs and UAZ vehicles and
had not questioned anyone responsible for driving and registering
them. The seventh applicant noted that as followed from the documents
submitted by the Government, the investigation had considered only
one version of the events, namely that her son had been detained by
the authorities; however, no one from the military commander’s
office or from the military unit located near the village had been
questioned about the events. As to the statements submitted by the
Government, the applicant stressed that out of the six witnesses,
three lived too far from her house to have been able to witness the
events, one had been away from Katyr-Yurt at the material time and
one witness had not lived at the indicated address (see paragraph 169
above). She argued that the fact that the investigation had been
pending for such a long period of time without producing any known
results had been further proof of its ineffectiveness. She invited
the Court to draw conclusions from the Government’s unjustified
failure to disclose the documents from the case file.
- The
Government claimed that the investigation of the disappearance of the
applicant’s son met
the Convention requirement of effectiveness, as all measures
envisaged in national law were being taken to identify the
perpetrators. They argued that the proceedings had been opened on the
day of the notification of the crime; that the applicant and other
key witnesses had been questioned without delay; and that the
applicant’s husband had been immediately granted victim status.
Over thirty witnesses had been questioned in the course of the
investigation, including eyewitnesses and one serviceman of the ROVD;
and numerous requests for information had been sent to various
law-enforcement authorities. The investigation had looked into all
possible versions of the disappearance, including the one advanced by
the applicant. The seventh applicant had had every opportunity to
participate effectively in the proceedings. The Government stressed,
in particular, that even though she had no procedural status in the
criminal investigation, she had been kept informed of the relevant
developments and in March 2008 she had been allowed access to the
case file by the court (see paragraph 152 above).
- The
Court notes, again, that most of the documents from the investigation
were not disclosed by the Government. It therefore has to assess the
effectiveness of the investigation on the basis of the documents
submitted by the parties and the information about its progress
presented by the Government.
- Drawing
on the principles referred to above in paragraph 194, the Court notes
the following shortcomings of the investigation. First, there were
delays in taking important investigation steps. While the applicant,
her husband and their daughter-in-law testified in May 2002, other
witnesses, it appears, were not questioned until 2006 and 2008. It
also does not appear that any requests for information about Ali
Gastamirov’s possible whereabouts were sent prior to 2005.
Second, the investigation did not take the most basic procedural
steps in order to secure the available evidence, such as drawing up a
report at the site of the crime, collecting fingerprints, and noting
footprints and tracks left by vehicles, despite the clear reference
in the statements collected by the investigation on 13 May 2002 (see
paragraphs 132-133 above). It appears that some of the eyewitnesses
to the detention, such as Mrs E.Z. and the applicant’s
immediate neighbours, were never questioned. The Court also
notes that even though the applicant’s husband had been granted
victim status in the investigation, he and the applicant were only
informed of the suspension and resumption of the proceedings, and not
of any other significant developments. Accordingly, the investigators
failed to ensure that the investigation received the required level
of public scrutiny, or to safeguard the interests of the next of kin
in the proceedings.
- The
Court also notes several decisions to adjourn and resume the
investigation, resulting in periods of inactivity when no proceedings
were pending. For the same reasons as above (see paragraph 201), the
Court finds that the Government’s objection as to
non-exhaustion of domestic remedies in the context of the criminal
investigation should be dismissed.
- In
the light of the foregoing, the Court holds that the authorities
failed to carry out an effective criminal investigation into the
circumstances surrounding Ali Gastamirov’s disappearance, in
breach of Article 2 in its procedural aspect.
V. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
first six applicants relied on Article 3 of the Convention,
submitting that as a result of their relatives’ disappearance
and the State’s failure to investigate those events properly,
they had endured mental suffering in breach of Article 3 of the
Convention. Article 3 reads:
“No one shall be subjected
to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
- The
Government disagreed with these allegations and argued that the
investigation had not established that the applicants had
been subjected to inhuman or degrading treatment prohibited by
Article 3 of the Convention.
A. Admissibility
- The
Court notes that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded within
the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the Convention. It further
notes that it is not inadmissible on any other grounds. It must
therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
- The Court has found on many occasions that in a
situation of enforced disappearance close relatives of the victim may
themselves be victims of treatment in violation of Article 3. The
essence of such a violation does not mainly lie in the fact of the
“disappearance” of the family member but rather concerns
the authorities’ reactions and attitudes to the situation when
it is brought to their attention (see Orhan v. Turkey,
no. 25656/94, § 358, 18 June 2002, and Imakayeva,
cited above, § 164).
- In
the present case the Court notes that the first six applicants are
close relatives of Khamzat Merzhoyev. For many years they have not
had any news of the missing man. During this period the applicants
have made enquiries of various official bodies, both in writing and
in person, about their missing relative. Despite their attempts, the
applicants have never received any plausible explanation or
information about what became of him following his detention. The
responses they received mostly denied State responsibility for their
relative’s arrest or simply informed them that the
investigation was ongoing. The Court’s findings under the
procedural aspect of Article 2 are also of direct relevance here.
- The
Court therefore concludes that there has been a violation of Article
3 of the Convention in respect of the first six applicants.
VI. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5
OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants further stated that Khamzat Merzhoyev and Ali Gastamirov
had been detained in violation of the guarantees of Article 5 of the
Convention, which reads, in so far as relevant:
“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:..
(c) the lawful arrest or detention of a
person effected for the purpose of bringing him before the competent
legal authority on reasonable suspicion of having committed an
offence or when it is reasonably considered necessary to prevent his
committing an offence or fleeing after having done so;
...
2. Everyone who is arrested shall be informed
promptly, in a language which he understands, of the reasons for his
arrest and of any charge against him.
3. Everyone arrested or detained in
accordance with the provisions of paragraph 1 (c) of this
Article shall be brought promptly before a judge or other officer
authorised by law to exercise judicial power and shall be entitled to
trial within a reasonable time or to release pending trial. Release
may be conditioned by guarantees to appear for trial.
4. 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.
5. Everyone who has been the victim of arrest
or detention in contravention of the provisions of this Article shall
have an enforceable right to compensation.”
- The
Government asserted that no evidence had been obtained by the
investigators to confirm that Khamzat Merzhoyev
and Ali Gastamirov had been deprived of their liberty. They
were not listed among the persons held in detention centres and none
of the regional law-enforcement agencies had any information about
their detention.
A. Admissibility
- The
Court notes that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded within
the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the Convention. It further
notes that the complaint is not inadmissible on any other grounds and
must therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
- The
Court has previously noted the fundamental importance of the
guarantees contained in Article 5 to secure the right of individuals
in a democracy to be free from arbitrary detention. It has also
stated that unacknowledged detention is a complete negation of these
guarantees and discloses a very grave violation of Article 5 (see
Çiçek v. Turkey, no. 25704/94, § 164,
27 February 2001, and Luluyev and Others, cited above, §
122).
- The Court has found that Khamzat
Merzhoyev and Ali Gastamirov were
apprehended by State servicemen on 23 November 2003 and on 12 May
2002, respectively, and that they have not been seen since these
dates. Their detention was not acknowledged and was not logged in any
custody records, and there exists no official trace of their
subsequent whereabouts or fate. In accordance with the Court’s
practice, this fact in itself must be considered a most serious
failing, since it enables those responsible for an act of deprivation
of liberty to conceal their involvement in a crime, to cover their
tracks and to escape accountability for the fate of a detainee.
Furthermore, the absence of detention records, noting such matters as
the date, time and location of detention and the name of the detainee
as well as the reasons for the detention and the name of the person
effecting it, must be seen as incompatible with the very purpose of
Article 5 of the Convention (see Orhan, cited above, §
371).
- The
Court further considers that the authorities should have been more
alert to the need for a thorough and prompt investigation of the
applicants’ complaints that their relatives had been detained
and taken away in life-threatening circumstances. However, the
Court’s findings above in relation to Article 2 and, in
particular, the conduct of the investigation leave no doubt that the
authorities failed to take prompt and effective measures to safeguard
them against the risk of disappearance.
- In
view of the foregoing, the Court finds that Khamzat
Merzhoyev and Ali Gastamirov were
held in unacknowledged detention without any of the safeguards
contained in Article 5. This constitutes a particularly grave
violation of the right to liberty and security enshrined in Article 5
of the Convention.
VII. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 13
OF THE CONVENTION
- The
first six applicants complained that they had been deprived of
effective remedies in respect of the violation of Article 2, contrary
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 contended that the applicants had had effective remedies
at their disposal as required by Article 13 of the Convention and
that the authorities had not prevented them from using them. The
applicants had had an opportunity to challenge the acts or omissions
of the investigating authorities in court. They added that
participants in criminal proceedings could also claim damages in
civil proceedings and referred to cases where victims in criminal
proceedings had been awarded damages from State bodies and, in one
instance, the prosecutor’s office. In sum, the Government
submitted that there had been no violation of Article 13.
A. Admissibility
- The
Court notes that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded within
the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the Convention. It further
notes that it is not inadmissible on any other grounds. It must
therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
- The
Court reiterates that in circumstances where, as here, a criminal
investigation into a disappearance has been ineffective and the
effectiveness of any other remedy that might have existed, including
civil remedies suggested by the Government, has consequently been
undermined, the State has failed in its obligation under Article 13
of the Convention (see Khashiyev and Akayeva, cited above,
§ 183).
- Consequently,
there has been a violation of Article 13 in conjunction with Article
2 of the Convention.
VIII. 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. Pecuniary damage
- The
second to sixth applicants claimed damages in respect of the lost
wages of their husband and father following his arrest and subsequent
disappearance.
- They
submitted that Khamzat Merzhoyev had been employed as a security
guard in 2003 and that they had been financially dependant on him.
They claimed that they were unable to obtain salary statements
for him, and that in such cases the calculation should be made on the
basis of the subsistence level established by national law. They
calculated their earnings for the period. The applicants assumed that
each of the four children of the second applicant and Khamzat
Merzhoyev could have counted on 16.6% of their father’s income
until reaching the age of majority, and that the second applicant
could have counted on the same share of his earnings until their
youngest son, the sixth applicant, reached the age of fourteen. By
these calculations they claimed a total of 359,122 Russian roubles
(RUB) (8,976 euros (EUR)).
- The
Government regarded these claims as based on suppositions and
unfounded. They also pointed to the existence of domestic
statutory machinery for the provision of a pension for the loss of
the family breadwinner, which the applicants had failed to use.
- The
Court reiterates that there must be a clear causal connection between
the damage claimed by the applicants and the violation of the
Convention. Furthermore, under Rule 60 of the Rules of Court, any
claim for just satisfaction must be itemised
and submitted in writing together with the relevant supporting
documents or vouchers, “failing which the Chamber may reject
the claim in whole or in part”.
- The
Court further reiterates that the damage claimed may, in an
appropriate case, include compensation in respect of loss of
earnings. Having regard to its above conclusions, it finds that there
is a direct causal link between the violation of Article 2 in
respect of the applicants’ husband and father and the loss by
the second to sixth applicants of the financial support which he
could have provided. The Court agrees that it is reasonable to assume
that Khamzat Merzhoyev would eventually have had some earnings from
which the applicants would have benefited (see, among other
authorities, Imakayeva,
cited above, § 213).
Having regard to the applicants’ submissions, the Court awards
the second to sixth applicants jointly the amount of EUR 8,976 as
claimed, in respect of pecuniary damage, plus any tax that may be
chargeable on that amount.
B. Non-pecuniary damage
- The
applicants asked the Court to award them compensation in respect of
non-pecuniary damage for the suffering they had endured as a result
of the loss of their family members, the indifference shown by the
authorities towards them and the failure to provide any information
about the fate of their close relatives. They left the amount to the
determination of the Court.
- The
Government disputed that any damage had been caused to the
applicants; or, in the alternative, argued that the finding of a
violation had constituted sufficient compensation.
- The
Court has found a violation of Articles 2 and 5 of the Convention on
account of the unacknowledged detention and disappearance of the
applicants’ relatives. In addition, Khamzat Merzhoyev’s
disappearance constituted a breach of Article 13 of the Convention.
The first six applicants themselves have been found to have been
victims of a violation of Article 3 of the Convention. The Court thus
accepts that they have suffered non-pecuniary damage which cannot be
compensated for solely by the findings of violations. It awards the
applicants the following amounts, plus any tax that may be chargeable
thereon:
(i) EUR
12,000 to the first applicant;
(ii) EUR
48,000 to the second to sixth applicants jointly;
(iii) EUR
60,000 to the seventh applicant.
C. Costs and expenses
- The
first six applicants claimed EUR 9,868 jointly for the costs and
expenses incurred before the Court. They submitted that the lawyer
had charged EUR 150 per hour of legal work. They presented a detailed
breakdown of the time spent by their representative, which included
61.25 hours of legal work. They claimed reimbursement of postal and
administrative costs in the amount of EUR 145 and of translation
costs in the amount of EUR 536, as certified by an invoice. They also
submitted a copy of the legal representation agreement of 7 July
2008.
- The
seventh applicant claimed EUR 5,951 under this heading. This included
35 hours of legal work, also at a rate of EUR 150 per hour. In
addition, she claimed reimbursement of postal and administrative
costs in the amount of EUR 85 and of translation costs in the amount
of EUR 616, as certified by an invoice. She also submitted a copy of
the legal representation agreement of 1 February 2008.
- The
applicants requested the Court to order the payment of the fees
awarded under this heading directly into the representative’s
account in Chechnya, Russia.
- The
Government did not contest those claims.
- The Court may make an award in respect of costs and
expenses in so far that they were actually and necessarily incurred
and were reasonable as to quantum (see Bottazzi v. Italy [GC],
no. 34884/97, § 30, ECHR 1999 V, and Sawicka
v. Poland, no. 37645/97, § 54, 1 October 2002).
Making its own estimate based on the information available, the Court
awards the first six applicants jointly the total sum of EUR 4,000,
and the seventh applicant the sum of EUR 3,500, together with
any value-added tax that may be chargeable to the applicants. The
awards made under this heading are to be paid into the
representative’s bank account in Russia, as identified by the
applicants.
D. 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
- Decides to join the applications;
- Decides to join to the merits the Government’s
objection as to non-exhaustion of criminal domestic remedies and
dismisses it;
- Declares the complaints under Articles 2, 3, 5
and 13 of the Convention admissible;
- Holds
that there has been a violation of Article 2 of the Convention in
respect of Khamzat Merzhoyev and Ali Gastamirov;
- 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 Khamzat
Merzhoyev and Ali Gastamirov disappeared;
6. Holds
that there has been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention
in respect of the first six applicants;
- Holds
that there has been a violation of Article 5 of the Convention in
respect of Khamzat Merzhoyev and Ali Gastamirov;
8. Holds
that there has been a violation of Article 13 in conjunction with
Article 2 of
the Convention in respect of Khamzat
Merzhoyev;
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay, 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 date of settlement:
(i)
EUR 8,976 (eight thousand nine hundred and
seventy-six euros) jointly to the second to sixth applicants in
respect of pecuniary damage;
(ii) in
respect of non-pecuniary damage:
α.
EUR 12,000 (twelve thousand euros) to the first applicant;
β. EUR
48,000 (forty-eight thousand euros) to the second to sixth applicants
jointly;
γ. EUR
60,000 (sixty thousand euros) to the seventh applicant;
(iii) EUR
4,000 (four thousand euros) to the first six applicants jointly and
EUR 3,500 (three thousand five hundred euros) to the seventh
applicant, plus any tax that may be chargeable to the applicants, in
respect of costs and expenses; the awards made under this heading are
to be paid into the representative’s bank account in Russia, as
identified by the applicants;
(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 7
October 2010, pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules
of Court.
Søren
Nielsen Christos Rozakis
Registrar President