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FIRST
SECTION
CASE OF
BATAYEV AND OTHERS v. RUSSIA
(Applications
nos. 11354/05 and 32952/06)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
17 June
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 Batayev 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,
Dean
Spielmann,
Sverre
Erik Jebens,
Giorgio
Malinverni,
George
Nicolaou,
judges,
and
Søren Nielsen, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 27 May 2010,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in two applications (nos. 11354/05 and 32952/06)
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 ten Russian nationals
listed below (“the applicants”), on 15 March 2005 and 12
July 2006 respectively.
- The
applicants were represented by Ms L. Khamzayeva and
Mr D. Itslayev, lawyers practising in Moscow and in Nazran
respectively. The applicants in application no. 11354/05 were
granted legal aid. 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 seven male relatives had disappeared
after their detention by the security forces in Grozny in 2000. They
invoked Articles 2, 3, 5 and 13 of the Convention, as well as Article
1 of Protocol No. 1.
- On
3 October 2007 and on 21 April 2009 respectively 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
Government objected to the joint examination of the admissibility and
merits of application no. 11354/05.
Having considered the Government’s objection, the Court
dismissed it.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicants in application no. 11354/05 are:
Mr Khuseyn Batayev,
Mr Vakha Batayev,
Ms Razet Sambiyeva,
Ms Layla Ibragimova,
born in 1950,
Ms Elisa Ibragimova,
born in 1977,
Ms Baret Ilyasova,
Ms Luiza
Temurkayeva, born in 1975,
Ms Zura Ismailova,
born in 1955, and
Ms Briliant
Musayeva, born in 1951.
The applicant in
application no. 32952/06 is:
Ms Zemfira Alayeva,
born in 1973.
7. All
applicants live in the Chechen Republic (Chechnya), Russia.
A. The applicants’ relatives’ disappearance
- The
applicants belong to six families. Their seven male relatives were
detained in two separate incidents in 2000 in Grozny or the Grozny
district and subsequently disappeared. None of the applicants had
witnessed the detention of their family members and their account is
based on the witnesses’ accounts. The first nine applicants
have been conducting the search for their relatives together.
1. Apprehension of Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov,
Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon
Musayev
- The
second and third applicants are the parents of the first applicant
and of Khasan Batayev, who was born in 1979. The fourth applicant is
the mother of Zaur Ibragimov, who was born in 1975. The fifth
applicant is his wife. The sixth applicant is the mother of Magomed
Temurkayev, who was born in 1974 and is married to the seventh
applicant. The eighth applicant is the mother of Rizvan Ismailov, who
was born in 1974. The ninth applicant is the mother of Sayd-Ali
Musayev, born in 1973, and Kharon Musayev, born in 1976.
- On
18 September 2000 Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan
Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev, Kharon Musayev and Khasan Batayev were at
Khasan Batayev’s home at 44 Vostochnaya Street, Grozny. Two
cars, a VAZ-21099 used by Magomed Temurkayev and a VAZ-2106 driven by
Zaur Ibragimov, were parked in the courtyard.
- At
about 4 p.m. two armoured personnel carriers (“APCs”) and
a UAZ vehicle with the registration number 480-20-RUS arrived at
44 Vostochnaya Street. A group of men wearing camouflage
uniforms and armed with machine guns got out of the vehicles and
burst inside. They seized Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed
Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev and
took them away. The armed men also took the two VAZ cars. The men
spoke unaccented Russian.
- The
applicants have had no news of Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov,
Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon
Musayev since 18 September 2000.
- The
Government in their observations did not dispute most of the facts as
presented by the applicants. They stated that on 18 September
2000 “unidentified persons wearing camouflage uniforms”
had entered the house at 44 Vostochnaya Street in Grozny and
taken away Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan
Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev, whose whereabouts
remained unknown. The Government denied that the stolen cars had
belonged to Magomed Temurkayev and Zaur Ibragimov. They also
challenged certain aspects of the applicants’ version of the
events with reference to the documents from the criminal
investigation file (see details below).
2. Apprehension of Usman Mavluyev
- The
tenth applicant is the wife of Usman Mavluyev, who was born in 1972.
- In
the autumn of 1999, during the counter-terrorist operation in
Chechnya, she lived with her husband and their two sons at 81
Zabolotnogo Street in Grozny.
- In
November 1999, fearing for her sons’ safety, the applicant went
with them to stay with her mother, who lived in the village of
Zakan-Yurt in the Achkhoy-Martan District. Her husband remained in
Grozny.
- On
7 January 2000 Ms Z.A., a friend and a remote relative of the
Mavluyevs who also lived in Grozny, heard from other residents that,
owing to the intensification of the military operations, on 8
January 2000 a “humanitarian corridor” would be
arranged for civilians so as to let them escape from the fighting in
Grozny. In the evening Ms Z.A. and Usman Mavluyev agreed to use that
corridor and to leave for Zakan-Yurt.
- At
approximately 10 a.m. on 8 January 2000 Usman Mavluyev, Ms Z.A.,
Ms S., Ms R.G. and Ms L.G. walked towards the southern exit from
Grozny through the village of Chernorechye. At a certain point they
were joined by Mr V. At the checkpoint in Chernorechye they were
stopped for a document inspection by servicemen of the Russian
interior troops. At that moment Usman Mavluyev and Mr V. were
the only men in the group of civilians trying to leave Grozny. They
presented their passports to the servicemen. After that the
servicemen tied their hands, put bags on their heads and dragged them
to an APC. The servicemen did not put any questions to them. Usman
Mavluyev did not want to go and obeyed the servicemen reluctantly.
Then they hit him with the butt of an assault rifle and forced him
and Mr V. into the APC. Usman Mavluyev has never been seen again.
- A
few minutes after the APCs had left, bombing began. In panic,
Ms Z.A., together with other residents, ran back to Grozny. On
12 January 2000 she managed to leave Grozny and arrive in Zakan-Yurt.
There she related to the tenth applicant the circumstances of her
husband’s detention. Ms Z.A.’s written account dated
5 September 2006 was enclosed with the application. In her further
submissions the tenth applicant also referred to Ms Z.A. as Ms A.A.
- The
tenth applicant has had no news of Usman Mavluyev since 8 January
2000.
- The
Government in their observations did not challenge most of the facts
as presented by the applicant. They stated that on 8 January 2000
Usman Mavluyev had been apprehended by “unidentified persons”
at the checkpoint in Chernorechye and taken away to an unknown
destination. The Government disputed the involvement of State agents
in Usman Mavluyev’s disappearance.
B. Search for the applicants’ relatives and the
investigation
- The
accounts in this subsection are mainly based on the information
provided by the applicants. It appears that all of them sent numerous
letters to the prosecutors and other authorities, describing the
circumstances in which their relatives had been detained and asking
for assistance and details of the investigation. The first nine
applicants submitted a significant number of replies from the
authorities forwarding their requests to different prosecution
services. They received hardly any substantive information from the
official bodies about the investigation into the disappearances. As
regards the tenth applicant, she received information on the
subsequent course of the investigation in 2008, after her request to
study the case file had been granted by the domestic courts (see
paragraphs 147-156 below). Below is a summary of the letters kept by
the applicants and the replies they received from the authorities,
and of other relevant developments.
- In
their observations the Government submitted some additional important
details on the progress of the investigation, which are summarised
separately in part C below.
1. Search for Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev,
Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev
- It
appears that shortly after the abduction of the six men their
relatives started complaining about it and the theft of the two cars
to various State officials.
- On
2 October 2000 criminal investigation file no. 12199 into Khasan
Batayev’s kidnapping was opened under Article 126 § 2
of the Russian Criminal Code (“aggravated kidnapping”) by
the Grozny town prosecutor’s office (“the town
prosecutor’s office”).
- On
11 November 2000 the town prosecutor’s office instituted an
investigation into Magomed Temurkayev’s kidnapping under
Article 126 § 2 of the Russian Criminal Code
(“aggravated kidnapping”). The case was assigned number
12256.
- On
16 November 2000 the town prosecutor’s office launched criminal
investigation file no. 12263 into Rizvan Ismailov’s
kidnapping.
- In
their observations the Government submitted that on 2 December
2000 the investigation in case no. 12199 had been suspended on
account of the failure to identify the perpetrators. The Government
submitted no relevant documents.
- On
8 January 2001 the town prosecutor’s office suspended the
proceedings in case no. 12263 for the same reason.
- On
9 January 2001 the town prosecutor’s office opened criminal
investigation file no. 11012 into Zaur Ibragimov’s kidnapping.
- On
1 February 2001 the prosecutor’s office of the Chechen Republic
(“the Chechnya prosecutor’s office”) forwarded the
sixth applicant’s complaint to the town prosecutor’s
office and commented that Magomed Temurkayev had been taken away by
“unidentified military servicemen in masks”.
- On
9 February 2001 the Chechnya prosecutor’s office forwarded to
the town prosecutor’s office the seventh applicant’s
complaint about the disappearance of her son, who had been
apprehended by “unidentified military servicemen”.
- On
2 April 2001 the town prosecutor’s office instituted a criminal
investigation into the kidnapping of the ninth applicant’s
sons, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev, under Article 126 § 2
of the Russian Criminal Code (“aggravated kidnapping”).
The case was assigned number 11107.
- On
26 April 2001 the investigation in criminal case no. 12199 was
resumed. On the same day cases nos. 12256, 12263 and 11012 were
joined to it.
- On
16 July 2002 the Chechnya prosecutor’s office informed the
applicants, including the ninth applicant, that the investigation in
case no. 12199 had been suspended and then resumed and that
the case file had been transferred to the town prosecutor’s
office.
- On
19 August 2002 the Chechen Department of the Ministry of the
Interior, pursuant to the rules on territorial jurisdiction,
forwarded the eighth applicant’s complaint about Rizvan
Ismailov’s apprehension “by military servicemen” to
the department of the interior of the Leninskiy District of Grozny.
- On
5 November 2002 the applicants’ counsel requested the Main
Department for the Execution of Sentences to inform him whether
Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov,
Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev had been in detention since
September 2000. On 29 November 2002 the Main Information Centre of
the Ministry of the Interior replied that it had no information
concerning the six missing men.
- On
25 November 2002 the town prosecutor’s office granted victim
status to the ninth applicant in case no. 11107 in relation to her
sons’ kidnapping.
- On
19 December 2002 the town prosecutor’s office suspended the
proceedings in case no. 11107 on account of the failure to identify
the perpetrators and ordered the police to pursue more actively the
search for Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev.
- On
15 October 2003 the prosecutor’s office of the Leninskiy
District of Grozny (“the district prosecutor’s office”)
granted victim status in case no. 12199 to the following five
applicants: the second, eighth and ninth applicants in relation to
their sons’ kidnapping; and the fourth and sixth applicants in
relation to their sons’ kidnapping and the theft of their cars.
The decision referred to the registration number of the car which had
belonged to Zaur Ibragimov, but only referred to the type of vehicle
– VAZ-21099 – used by Magomed Timurkayev. The first,
third, fifth and seventh applicants were not granted victim status.
- On
24 October 2003 the district prosecutor’s office suspended the
proceedings in case no. 12199 because the term of the preliminary
investigation had expired and ordered the police to pursue more
actively the search for the disappeared men. According to the
decision, the six men had been apprehended by “unidentified
persons” wearing camouflage uniforms and armed with machine
guns.
- In
their observations the Government submitted that on 7 April 2005
case no. 11107 had been joined to case no. 12199.
- On
14 December 2005 the district prosecutor’s office resumed the
investigation in case no. 12199.
- On
15 January 2006 the district prosecutor’s office stayed the
investigation in case no. 12199 on account of the failure to identify
the perpetrators and establish their whereabouts.
- On
12 November 2007 the district prosecutor’s office resumed the
investigation in case no. 12199.
- It
appears that the investigation in criminal case no. 12199 has
remained pending thereafter.
2. Search for Usman Mavluyev
(a) Criminal proceedings
- On
13 January 2000 the tenth applicant went to Gudermes, since all
administrative and law-enforcement agencies were located there during
the hostilities in Grozny. She submitted written applications
concerning her husband’s unlawful detention to the military
prosecutor, the department of the interior and the department of the
Federal Security Service (“the FSB”). She was promised
that necessary measures would be taken.
- The
tenth applicant has not enclosed copies of her applications. She
enclosed a certificate of 6 June 2000 issued by the Achkhoy-Martan
district department of the FSB stating that in January 2000 she had
applied to that department in connection with her husband’s
disappearance. The certificate also stated that, according to the
check that had been conducted, Usman Mavluyev had been a missing
person since 8 January 2000. The Government in their
observations disputed the authenticity of this document.
- According
to the tenth applicant, since January 2000 she went to Gudermes
approximately every three days to find out whether there was any news
about her husband. Several times she met the Deputy Prosecutor of the
Chechen Republic, who each time asked her to submit a written
application, which she did. He also took from the applicant her
husband’s photo and copies of their children’s birth
certificates.
- In
the end of March 2000 and in February 2001 the tenth applicant went
to prisons in Pyatigorsk and in Voronezh since she had heard that
detainees from Chechnya were held there. However, prison officials
told the applicant that her husband was not being held there.
- Since
the tenth applicant submitted numerous applications to State
authorities concerning her husband’s disappearance and then
regularly met with State officials in this connection, she believed
that an official investigation was under way. However, when in
January 2004 she applied in person to the prosecutor’s office
of the Zavodskoy District of Grozny – the district where her
husband’s detention had taken place – she found out that
no criminal investigation had been initiated. She then lodged a
request for the institution of criminal proceedings.
- On
16 April 2004 the Zavodskoy District Prosecutor’s Office (“the
district prosecutor’s office”) instituted criminal
investigation no. 31036 into Usman Mavluyev’s abduction under
Article 126 § 2 of the Russian Criminal Code (“aggravated
kidnapping”).
- On
18 April 2004 the tenth applicant was granted victim status in the
criminal proceedings.
- The
applicant received information on the subsequent course of the
investigation in 2008, after her request to study the case file had
eventually been granted by the domestic courts (see paragraphs 147-156
below).
- On
19 April 2004 Ms A.A., also referred to by the tenth applicant as Ms
Z.A., was questioned. She submitted that when she had been trying to
leave Grozny with other civilians on 8 January 2000, servicemen at
the checkpoint in Chernorechye had apprehended Usman Mavluyev and Mr
V.
- On
1 May 2004 the district prosecutor’s office requested the
military commander of the Urus-Martan district to provide information
about the military units deployed in Chernorechye in January 2000.
Similar requests were sent to other military commanders in the
Chechen Republic, the head of the Operational Search Bureau no. 2
(“the ORB-2”) and the head of the Chechnya FSB
Department.
- On
the same date the district prosecutor’s office requested the
head of the Achkhoy-Martan district department of the interior (ROVD)
to identify close relatives of Usman Mavluyev residing in Zakan-Yurt
and to check whether he had been a member of an illegal armed group.
At the same time the head of the Zavodskoy ROVD was requested to
establish which units of the federal forces had been deployed at the
checkpoint in Chernorechye, which officers had been on duty at the
checkpoint on 8 January 2000, to identify close relatives of
Usman Mavluyev and witnesses to his abduction and to summon them to
the district prosecutor’s office.
- On
8 May 2004 the district prosecutor’s office sent requests to
the heads of remand prisons in the Northern Caucasus for information
as to whether Usman Mavluyev was detained in any of their detention
facilities.
- In
May and June 2004 the military commanders of the Zavodskoy and
Urus-Martan districts and the Chechnya FSB department replied that
their offices had no information about Usman Mavluyev’s
involvement in an illegal armed group. They also had no information
about his abduction by federal servicemen or about the deployment of
the federal forces in Chernorechye on 8 January 2000.
- On
25 May 2004 Ms R.G. and Ms L.G. were questioned. Their statements
corroborated that of Ms A.A.
- On
1 June 2004 Ms S. was questioned. Her statement corroborated those of
other witnesses.
- On
16 June 2004 the district prosecutor’s office suspended the
investigation on account of the failure to identify the perpetrators.
- On
22 June 2004 the head of the ORB-2 replied that officers of the ORB-2
had not detained Usman Mavluyev.
- On
10 August 2004 the assistant to the head of the United Group
Alignment (“the UGA”) replied that he had no information
about Usman Mavluyev’s detention and whereabouts and that
documents concerning the UGA’s activities in 2000 were stored
in the archives of the Ministry of Defence.
- In
September 2004 the applicant went to the FSB headquarters in Moscow.
She left a written application addressed to the head of the FSB in
which she set out the circumstances of her husband’s detention.
She received no reply.
- On
26 April 2006 the Achkhoy-Martan District Court declared Usman
Mavluyev a missing person as from 9 January 2000. It noted that a
criminal investigation into his abduction had been pending since
April 2004.
- On
20 November 2006 the district prosecutor’s office resumed the
proceedings and ordered certain investigative measures. The decision
stated, in particular:
“In the course of the preliminary investigation it
has been established that on 8 January 2000 [Mr] Usman Mavluyev,
born in 1972, was apprehended at the checkpoint of the federal forces
at the exit from the village of Chernorechye and taken to an unknown
destination...”
- On
30 November 2006 the district prosecutor’s office requested the
FSB department in the Southern Federal Circuit to conduct a search
for Usman Mavluyev. Requests for information as to Usman Mavluyev’s
whereabouts were also sent to the district military commanders in
Grozny and the FSB departments in Grozny and in the Chechen Republic.
- On
the same date the district prosecutor’s office requested the
penitentiary service departments in the Southern Federal Circuit to
provide information as to whether Usman Mavluyev had ever been
admitted to custodial facilities in these regions. The heads of
remand prisons in the region were also requested to provide
information as to whether Usman Mavluyev had been held in any such
facilities at any time after January 2000. The requests specified
that he had been detained at the checkpoint of the federal forces.
- Also
on 30 November 2006 the district prosecutor’s office requested
the Zavodskoy ROVD to identify witnesses to Usman Mavluyev’s
abduction and to establish which units of the federal forces had been
deployed at the checkpoint in Chernorechye on 8 January 2000.
Requests were also sent to all district and town prosecutors’
offices to check whether criminal proceedings had been instituted
into the discovery of an unidentified body resembling Usman Mavluyev.
At the same time the heads of the district departments of the
interior in Chechnya were requested to check whether any unidentified
bodies resembling Usman Mavluyev had been found within their
departments’ jurisdiction after 8 January 2000.
- On
the same date the district prosecutor’s office requested the
ORB 2 to take steps to establish the perpetrators of Usman
Mavluyev’s abduction. The Leninskiy ROVD in Grozny was
requested to take measures to establish Usman Mavluyev’s
whereabouts and to check whether any unidentified bodies that
resembled him had been discovered.
- On
20 December 2006 the district prosecutor’s office again
suspended the investigation on account of the failure to identify the
perpetrators.
- In
January and February 2007 the Gudermes and Kurchaloy district
law-enforcement authorities replied to the district prosecutor’s
office that they had no information concerning Usman Mavluyev and
that no criminal proceedings had been instituted in connection with
the discovery of unidentified bodies resembling him.
- On
15 January 2007 the head of the Federal Penitentiary Service
department in Kalmykiya replied that registers of custodial
facilities in the republic contained no information about Usman
Mavluyev’s detention after 8 January 2000.
- On
24 July 2009 Special Investigation Unit No. 2 (Отдел
по расследованию
особо
важных
дел №
2) of the Chechnya Prosecutor’s Office (“the SIU-2”)
was entrusted with the investigation in case no. 31036. On the same
day the SIU-2 reopened the investigation.
- On
28 July 2009 the SIU-2 amended the surname of the tenth applicant’s
husband for investigation purposes and indicated his correct surname
to the Chechnya prosecutor’s office (his name was spelled
“Movluyev” in some of the documents).
- On
24 November 2009 the SIU-2 suspended the investigation because the
term of the preliminary investigation had expired and ordered the
district prosecutor’s office to pursue the search for the
perpetrators.
(b) Leave to study the investigation file, request
for legal aid and the grant of the status of a civil claimant
- On 14 September 2006 the tenth applicant applied to
the district prosecutor’s office, seeking leave to study the
investigation file and to make copies of it.
- On
26 September 2006 she applied to the same prosecutor’s office
with a request for legal aid.
- On
3 November 2006 the tenth applicant again applied to the district
prosecutor’s office, this time seeking leave to be granted the
status of a civil claimant.
- On
30 November 2006 the district prosecutor’s office granted the
tenth applicant the status of a civil claimant in case no. 31036
but refused her leave to study the case file until the completion of
the investigation.
- On
1 December 2006 the district prosecutor’s office issued a
formal decision to grant the tenth applicant the status of a civil
claimant.
- On
8 December 2006 the applicant requested a copy of the decision of
1 December 2006.
- On
14 December 2006 the applicant asked the district prosecutor’s
office about the outcome of the examination of her request for legal
aid.
- On
28 December 2006 the district prosecutor’s office informed her
that the reply had been sent to her on 28 September 2006. It appeared
that the request had been refused.
C. Information about the investigation submitted by the Government
1. Investigation into the kidnapping of Khasan Batayev,
Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev
and Kharon Musayev
- Despite
specific requests by the Court the Government did not disclose most
of the contents of the criminal investigation files. Thus, they
submitted 50 pages from criminal investigation files nos. 11012,
11107, 12199, 12256 and 12263. The documents submitted included
decisions to open, suspend and resume the investigations and to grant
victim status, as well as letters to the relatives informing them of
the adjournment and reopening of the proceedings. No other documents,
such as witness statements or expert reports, 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 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, can be summarised as follows.
- The
Government did not dispute the information provided by the applicants
as regards most of the starting dates of the investigation into the
applicants’ relatives’ abduction by “unidentified
men in camouflage uniforms” on 18 September 2000. The
Government submitted that the investigation had started with the
opening of case no. 12199 in respect of Khasan Batayev on 2 October
2000; of case no. 12256 in respect of Magomed Temurkayev on 11
November 2000; and of case no. 12263 in respect of Rizvan Ismailov on
16 November 2000.
- At
the same time, the Government stated that the criminal investigation
in case no. 11012 in respect of Zaur Ibragimov had been opened on
9 November 2000 and not on 9 January 2001 as the applicants
asserted. It also follows from the documents produced by the
Government, in particular from the town prosecutor’s reply to
the fourth applicant dated 27 April 2001, that criminal
investigation no. 11012 was instituted on 9 November 2000 in
respect of both Rizvan Ismailov and Zaur Ibragimov. The Chechnya
prosecutor’s reply to the eighth applicant dated 20 November
2001 states that investigation no. 12263 had been launched on
8 November 2000.
- The
Government further submitted that on 2 April 2001 the town
prosecutor’s office had opened criminal investigation no. 11107
into the kidnapping of Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev. On 26
April 2001 cases no. 11012, 12256 and 12263 had been joined to case
no. 12199. On 7 April 2005 case no. 11107 was joined to case no.
12199.
- On
15 October 2003 the second, eighth and ninth applicants were granted
victim status in relation to their sons’ kidnapping. On the
same day the fourth and sixth applicants were granted victim status
in relation to their sons’ kidnapping and the theft of the
cars. The first, third, fifth and seventh applicants were not granted
victim status. The Government submitted that after October 2003 only
the applicants who had victim status had been duly informed of all
decisions taken during the investigation.
- The
Government stated that after October 2003 the applicants and a number
of witnesses were questioned by the investigation. The Government
provided a brief outline of their accounts, without appending copies
of the transcripts or specifying the dates of the questioning. Their
submissions can be summarised as follows.
- The
second applicant was questioned as a victim. He testified that his
son, Khasan Batayev, had not participated in illegal armed groups. He
had been involved in oil-extraction activities. On 18 September
2000 Khasan had gone to the Oktyabrskiy District of Grozny, in order
to search for oil. The second applicant had not seen him thereafter.
On 19 September 2000 an unknown boy had come to the applicant’s
house and said that on the previous day a group of armed men had
seized seven or eight persons, including his son, at 44 Vostochnaya
Street in Grozny and had driven them away. Some time later the
applicant learnt that a certain Ms Mosha had let the house to young
police officers. The applicant did not know his son’s friends.
He was unaware of why his son had gone to their home.
- The
eighth applicant gave a similar account of the events.
- It
appears that the ninth applicant was questioned at least twice, once
as a witness and once as a victim. As a witness, she testified that
her sons, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev, had left the family
residence in September 2000. She had not seen them thereafter. On 19
September 2000 the special police force unit (ОМОN)
had informed her that on the previous day her sons had been
apprehended by masked men wearing camouflage uniforms at 44
Vostochnaya Street in Grozny. She also found out that a certain Ms
Mosha had let the house to the police officers, who, together with
her son, had been apprehended and taken away that day.
- The
sixth applicant’s statements corroborated those of the ninth
applicant.
- Further
questioned as a victim, the ninth applicant mentioned that her sons
had worked as law-enforcement officers and rented the house at
44 Vostochnaya Street in Grozny, close to their workplace. On
18 September 2000 two or three APCs and a UAZ vehicle had
arrived at their place of residence. A group of armed men had got out
of the cars and burst into the house. The men had seized her sons and
some other persons, put them in one of the APCs and driven them away.
- The
fourth applicant testified that on 18 September 2000 her son, Zaur
Ibragimov, had been at Sayd-Ali Musayev’s home at 44
Vostochnaya Street, together with Magomed Temurkayev, Kharon Musayev,
Rizvan Ismailov and Khasan Batayev. An APC and three other vehicles
(a VAZ, a grey UAZ and a white Zhiguli – all without
registration numbers) arrived at the house. A group of masked men
wearing military uniforms got out of the cars, entered the house and
seized the above-mentioned persons, forcing them out blindfolded with
their hands tied.
- The
investigation also questioned Ms Ma. (also referred to as “Ms Mosha”
by the applicants) as a witness. She testified that house no. 44 in
Vostochnaya Street belonged to her brother, who had lived abroad. In
the summer of 2000 she had let the house to a young man called
“Kharon”. He had settled in together with his family. On
18 September 2000 neighbours had told her that some young men had
been apprehended at the house by a group of armed persons in two APCs
and several UAZ vehicles. The armed persons had then driven them to
an unknown destination. A car had also been taken away.
- The
Government also referred to the testimony of Ms Mu., a neighbour
residing at 39 Vostochnaya Street. Ms Mu. stated that in the middle
of September 2000 she had seen servicemen arrive and encircle houses
nos. 44 and 46 in Vostochnaya Street. They had ordered the persons
outside to return to their houses. Some time later she had looked
down the street and seen persons being forced out from house no. 44
and into an APC and a UAZ vehicle.
- According
to the Government, the investigation also questioned another ten
relatives and neighbours of the disappeared persons, including the
fifth applicant and Rizvan Ismailov’s cousin. None of them had
witnessed the abduction and they had learnt about the events several
days later. Rizvan Ismailov’s cousin submitted that in 2000
Rizvan had worked as a security agent for the mayor of Grozny. The
Government submitted that the criminal investigation file contained
Rizvan Ismailov’s record of employment, according to which he
had served as a security agent of the Deputy Envoy of the President
of the Russian Federation in the Southern Federal Circuit.
- The
investigation also questioned some officials. Officer D., who at the
time had worked at the OMON, testified that on 18 September
2000 an unknown woman at a checkpoint had told him that she had heard
machine-gun firing in Vostochnaya Street. A group of police officers
went there. Upon arrival, they had learnt about the six men’s
disappearance. Zaur Ibragimov and Sayd-Ali Musayev had been trainee
police officers at the special police force unit. They had been
dismissed during probation for unsatisfactory performance.
- The
Government submitted that the investigation had taken steps to
establish the whereabouts of Mr B., the former head of the FSB in the
Chechen Republic, and Mr D., his deputy, in order to question them
about the circumstances surrounding the kidnapping.
- The
Government also stated that on an unspecified date an investigator
had inspected the scene of the crime. No relevant record was produced
by the Government.
- The
Government submitted that a number of queries had been sent to
various State bodies by those investigating the six men’s
disappearance. No copies thereof were provided by the Government.
- The
Government referred to information provided by the “ORB-2”,
according to which there was no information about any special
operations having taken place in Grozny on 18 September 2000. This
document was not included in the case file.
- The
Government also submitted that the law-enforcement authorities of
Chechnya had not arrested or detained Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov,
Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon
Musayev on 18 September 2000, and that their whereabouts remained
unknown. With reference to documents provided by the Chechnya FSB
department and the ORB-2, the Government stated that there was no
“discrediting information” about the six men. Copies of
these documents were not produced by the Government.
- According
to the Government, the head of the Road Safety Department in the
Chechen Republic failed to establish the provenance of the UAZ
vehicle with the registration number “480-20”, since the
department archives collected before 2000 had been destroyed during
the counter-terrorist operation.
- The
documents and additional information provided by the Government
indicate that between October 2000 and November 2007 the
investigation was adjourned on several occasions, and that it has so
far failed to identify who was guilty.
2. Investigation into the kidnapping of Usman Mavluyev
- Further
to the Court’s request, the Government provided about 300 pages
of documents from criminal investigation file no. 31036,
including copies of the decisions to open, suspend and resume the
investigation and to grant victim status to the tenth applicant;
letters informing her of the course of the proceedings; witness
statements; and copies of requests for information sent by the
investigating authorities to various State bodies. The Government
also submitted documents from the court proceedings relating to the
decision to grant her access to the case file and legal aid (see
paragraphs 147-156 below). These documents and the Government’s
observations can be summarised as follows.
- The
Government contested that prior to April 2004 the tenth applicant had
submitted any applications concerning her husband’s
disappearance. They in particular denied that in January 2000
she had lodged written applications with the prosecutor and the
department of the interior, or with the FSB departments in the
Gudermes and Achkhoy-Martan districts. The Government insisted that
no copies of those documents had been produced by the tenth
applicant. They referred to information provided by the Ministry of
the Interior on 15 April 2004, according to which from 2000 to 2003
no applications in connection with Usman Mavluyev’s
disappearance had been registered. They also appended a letter from
the Achkhoy-Martan district FSB department dated 11 August 2009,
which stated that it was unable to establish whether the applicant
had lodged such an application in 2000 because the relevant archives
had been destroyed following the expiry of their storage limit.
- The
Government also challenged the authenticity of the certificate issued
by the Chechnya FSB department on 6 June 2000, which stated that in
January 2000 the tenth applicant had applied to the FSB district
department in Achkhoy-Martan in connection with her husband’s
disappearance. The Government pointed out that the certificate was
written on plain paper and did not contain information as to the name
and surname of the issuing officer. If the tenth applicant had really
submitted such an application, it would have been transferred to the
competent authorities for a check.
- The
Government thus submitted that the tenth applicant had first filed a
written request for the institution of criminal proceedings on 16
April 2004. On the same day the Zavodskoy ROVD of Grozny forwarded
her application to the Zavodskoy district prosecutor’s office.
Thereafter the district prosecutor’s office instituted criminal
investigation no. 31036 into Usman Mavluyev’s abduction
under Article 126 § 2 of the Russian Criminal Code
(“aggravated kidnapping”).
- On
16 April 2004 the tenth applicant and Ms A.A., also referred to by
the applicant as Ms Z.A., submitted written statements as witnesses.
The Government provided copies of the transcripts.
- The
tenth applicant testified that in autumn 1999, during the
counter-terrorist operation in Chechnya, she had lived with her
husband at 81 Zabolotnogo Street in Grozny. On 20 October 1999, when
heavy bombing had started, they had moved to her parents to the
Achkhoy-Martan district. On 4 January 2000 Usman Mavluyev had gone to
Grozny in order to check their dwellings. On 10 January 2000 Ms
Z.A. had visited the tenth applicant’s family in Zakan-Yurt.
She had told the applicant that on 8 January 2000 Usman Mavluyev
and herself had left Grozny for Zakan Yurt on foot. Servicemen
had stopped them at the Chernorechye checkpoint for a document check.
Once the check had been completed, they had let Ms Z.A. go but
retained the tenth applicant’s husband.
- Ms
A.A. submitted that she had been the Mavluyevs’ neighbour in
the Voykovo settlement in Grozny before the military operations had
started in Chechnya. On 8 January 2000 she had walked through the
humanitarian corridor from Grozny together with Usman Mavluyev. At
the checkpoint in Chernorechye they had been stopped for a document
check by servicemen. Ms A.A. had shown her passport. Usman had been
arrested. She and the other women had waited for Usman. Some time
later a serviceman had told the women to return to Grozny and
threatened to open fire if they did not. In panic, Ms A.A. and the
other women had left the place.
- On
18 April 2004 the tenth applicant was granted victim status in the
criminal proceedings. Questioned as a victim on 18 April 2004 and on
1 December 2006, she provided the same description of the events
as in her submissions given on 16 April 2004.
- The
tenth applicant was further questioned on 28 July 2009. She clarified
that Ms A.A. had informed her of her husband’s abduction. She
submitted that a twenty-year-old man called “Arbi” had
been detained together with her husband. Both of them had had bags
put on their heads, and, flailed with a rifle butt, had been forced
into an APC and taken away. The tenth applicant emphasised that she
had started complaining to the authorities about her husband’s
abduction at the end of January 2000, when she had lodged
applications with different authorities located in Gudermes,
including the prosecutor’s office, the FSB department and the
Department of the Interior.
- On
19 April 2004 Ms A.A. had been questioned as a witness. She submitted
that on 8 January 2000 she had left Grozny together with Usman
Mavluyev, Ms R.G., Ms L.G., a woman called “Khadizhat”
and a young man. At 9 a.m. they had been stopped by servicemen at the
Chernorechye checkpoint for a document inspection. Once the check had
been completed, they had been told that a bus from the Ministry of
Emergency Situations would soon bring them to Zakan-Yurt. Usman and
the young man had been ordered to stay for a computerised identity
check. The women had asked the servicemen to let the two men go; they
had offered money to them. The women had been waiting for the bus for
the next six hours but it had not come. The women had then gone to
the Voykovo settlement. On the following day they had returned to the
checkpoint and asked the servicemen to release the two men. A
serviceman called “Igor” had told them that the men had
been released the day before. He was wearing a chevron embroidered
“VV MVD RF” (the abbreviation for Internal Troops of the
Ministry of the Interior of the Russian Federation). Ms A.A. recalled
that “Igor” had been among the servicemen who had stopped
them for a document inspection on 8 January 2000. On 11 January 2000
Ms A.A. had gone to Zakan-Yurt, where she had related the events to
the tenth applicant. Ms A.A. also provided a detailed physical
description of “Igor” and the tenth applicant’s
husband, as well as of the clothes they had been wearing that day.
- With
reference to Ms Z.A.’s written statements of 5 September 2006
appended to the tenth applicant’s application to the Court, the
Government submitted that it bore the signature of Ms Z.A., and not
that of A.A. They also questioned the credibility and veracity of Ms
Z.A.’s written statements since they contrasted with the
statements given by Ms A.A. as a witness on 16 and 19 April 2004. Ms
Z.A. in particular testified that once apprehended, Usman Mavluyev
and the young man had had their hands tied by the servicemen, who had
then put bags on their heads and dragged them to an APC. As Usman
Mavluyev had been reluctant to go, the servicemen had hit him with
the butt of an assault rifle and forced the two men into the APC.
- On
21 October 2009 Ms A.A. was questioned again. Contrary to her
previous submissions, she stated that on 8 January 2000 she had not
noticed any details of the servicemen’s clothes or any specific
names they had used between themselves. Neither had she recalled
whether the servicemen had put something on Usman Mavluyev’s
and the young man’s heads or whether the servicemen had used
violence against them, including while getting them into the APC. Ms
A.A. finally communicated “Khadizhat”‘s address to
the investigator.
- On
15 May and 25 May 2004 respectively the investigation questioned
witnesses Ms L.G. and Ms R.G. Their statements corroborated those of
Ms A.A. given on 16 and 19 April 2004.
- On
1 June 2004 the investigation questioned Ms S., who had been trying
to leave Grozny on 8 January 2000 together with Usman Mavluyev, the
young man, Ms A.A., Ms L.G. and Ms R.G. She noted that at the
Chernorechye checkpoint they had met an elderly woman called
“Galina”, who had arrived there before them. At around
3 p.m. four servicemen had asked Usman Mavluyev and the young
man to show their passports. The servicemen had promised to release
the two men as soon as they checked the computer database. Shortly
afterwards the four women had gone home, whereas “Galina”
had remained there together with the two men. Ms S. had met “Galina”
a week after the events. “Galina” had told her that after
the four women had left, the servicemen had driven her, Usman
Mavluyev and the young man in the direction of Urus-Martan. “Galina”
had submitted that the two men had bags on their heads. She had
unsuccessfully pleaded with the servicemen to release them. The
servicemen had dropped “Galina” off at the Alkhan-Kala
settlement and taken the two men to an unknown destination. Ms S.
submitted that she knew where “Galina” lived and could
identify her.
- On
29 July 2009 witness “Galina” was questioned. She related
that on 8 January 2000 she had left Grozny together with Mr Ta. and
Mr E. They had arrived at the Chernorechye checkpoint at about 9 a.m.
There had been a large number of civilians. By the end of the day,
many of them had gone. “Galina” recalled that only Mr
Ta., Mr E., two other men and a woman had remained waiting. Between 5
and 7 p. m. she had noticed an APC arrive. She had not seen the
number plate. Four masked servicemen wearing camouflage uniforms had
got out of the APC. One of them had checked “Galina”‘s,
Mr Ta.’s, Mr E.’s and the other woman’s
passports and after ten or fifteen minutes had handed them back.
Thereafter another two servicemen had put bags on the heads of the
two men and put them into the APC. The servicemen had pointed guns in
their direction, without using violence against them. The servicemen
had offered “Galina”, Mr Ta., Mr E. and the other woman a
lift in the same APC. They had dropped the four of them off on the
Rostov-Baku road in the vicinity of the village of Goyty, promising
to release the two men after an identity check. Thereafter the
servicemen had driven in the direction of the village of Mesker-Yurt.
- Mr
Ta., questioned on 4 August 2009, confirmed the statements given by
the witness “Galina”. He added that Ms U. had also
accompanied them from Grozny to the village of Goyty. He did not
remember whether the woman whom they had met in Chernorechye had been
with them in the APC.
- Mr
E., questioned on 28 August 2009, corroborated “Galina”‘s
and Mr Ta.’s statements. He submitted that Ms U., who had
accompanied them from Grozny to Goyty, had died some two years
before. He also stated that, apart from him, the APS had transported
“Galina”, Ms U., Mr Ta. and the two men. No other women
had been present.
- On
8 June 2004 the investigation had questioned Mr M., Usman Mavluyev’s
brother. He gave a similar account of the events to that given by the
tenth applicant on 16 and 18 April 2004. He added that Usman Mavluyev
had not been involved in military action in Chechnya and had no
enemies.
- On
28 July 2009 Mr M. was questioned again. He gave some new details
concerning his brother’s disappearance. He submitted in
particular that on 8 January 2000 the 15th regiment of the internal
troops of the Russian Ministry of the Interior had been on duty at
the Chernorechye checkpoint. In the spring of 2001 Mr M. had found
out that between April and July 2000 his brother had been detained in
cell no. 161 of the remand prison at 56 Zhelyabova Street in
Voronezh. His inmate, Mr To., had told Mr M. that Usman Mavluyev had
previously been detained in Pyatigorsk, in the Stavropol Region. Mr
M. provided the investigator with Mr To.’s contact details and
those of the family of the second disappeared person, whom he had
referred to as Mr Sh. and not Mr V. as submitted by the tenth
applicant. Mr M. lastly specified that the Mavluyevs’ family
had submitted requests for information to the detention facilities of
Pyatigorsk and Voronezh but this had not yielded tangible results.
- On
29 May and on 16 September 2009 the investigation questioned Mr Sh.’s
sister. She had heard about Mr Sh.’s disappearance from
eyewitnesses whose names she did not recall. Mr Sh.’s family
had never requested the prosecuting authorities to investigate his
disappearance.
- In
November 2009 the investigation questioned Mr To.’s sister and
a local police officer at Mr To.’s former place of residence in
the Voronezh Region. They stated that Mr To. had moved to Voronezh
some three or five years before. They had had no news of him
thereafter.
- The
Government also submitted three testimonies by the Mavluyevs’
neighbours in Grozny, collected in December 2006. Two of them denied
having had any information about Usman Mavluyev’s abduction.
The third neighbour confirmed having heard about his disappearance
from residents of the Voykovo settlement.
- On
20 and 21 November 2009 the investigator asked Ms A.A., Mr Ta.
and Mr E. to identify Mr Sh. on a photograph. Neither of the
witnesses identified Mr Sh.
- The
investigation was unable to establish the whereabouts of other
witnesses.
- On
20 April 2004 an investigator had inspected the scene of the crime,
namely a section of the Rostov-Baku road between the exit from Grozny
and the entry to the village of Chernorechye.
- In
June 2004 Usman Mavluyev was described by the Zakan-Yurt police as a
law-abiding person who had not taken part in illegal armed groups and
had no “discrediting connections”.
- The
Government stated that the investigating authorities had sent queries
to various State bodies, asking them to provide information
concerning Usman Mavluyev’s apprehension, detention, any
requests for medical assistance or any “discrediting”
information about him, as well as information on the deployment of
federal forces in Chernorechye on 8 January 2000. In their
letters the prosecutor’s office stated that “it has been
established that on 8 January 2000 Usman Mavluyev was apprehended at
the federal checkpoint in Chernorechye and then taken away”.
The Government produced copies of these requests and the replies to
them, which can be summarised as follows.
- In
2004 and in 2007 the military commanders of the Zavodskoy and
Staropromyslovskiy districts of Grozny and of the Urus-Martan
district stated that they had neither any “discrediting”
information about Usman Mavluyev, including his alleged involvement
in illegal armed groups, nor any information on the deployment of
federal forces in Chernorechye in January 2000. Similar replies were
received from the Special Unit on Counter-terrorist Operations in the
Northern Caucasus.
- In
June and July 2004, January 2007 and August 2009 the Chechnya FSB
department stated that that it had no information about Usman
Mavluyev’s whereabouts and his alleged involvement in illegal
armed groups. The office also submitted that no special operation had
been carried out in Chernorechye on 8 January 2000 and that it had
been unable to establish which federal units had been deployed there.
In September, October and November 2009 the Ministry of the Interior,
the Ministry of Defence, the FSB Headquarters and the Federal
Penitentiary Service replied that a search of their archives had
revealed no information about the deployment of military units in
Chernorechye in January 2000, any special operation conducted by
“power structures” (силовые
структуры)
in the Zavodskoy District of Grozny or any servicemen who could have
participated in Usman Mavluyev’s abduction.
- The
investigating authorities were unable to establish the whereabouts of
Usman Mavluyev. In June and July 2004, January 2007 and August 2009
the Chechnya FSB department had informed the investigators that it
had no information relevant to the case. FSB departments in the
Southern Federal Circuit produced similar replies. The local bodies
of the Ministry of the Interior and the prosecutor’s offices
had never detained Usman Mavluyev on criminal or administrative
charges and had not carried out any criminal investigation in respect
of him. A number of operational-search measures had been taken to
establish his whereabouts. Thus, in January 2007 house-to-house
enquiries were conducted in Voykovo and Chernorechye, and several
persons were summoned for questioning in connection with Usman
Mavluyev’s disappearance. In September 2009 internal databases
were checked for information concerning his prospects of leaving the
Chechen Republic and the Russian Federation by any means of
transport. The prosecutor’s offices had not instituted any
criminal proceedings in connection with the discovery of any
unidentified bodies resembling Usman Mavluyev. Finally, in May and
June 2004 as well as in January 2007 the remand centres in the
Southern Federal Circuit and local departments of the Federal
Penitentiary Service informed the investigation that Usman Mavluyev
had never been detained there. In May 2004 and in January 2007
several hospitals in the Southern Federal Circuit submitted that he
had never been admitted for treatment.
- The
Government further submitted that the tenth applicant had been duly
informed of the decisions taken during the investigation.
- According
to the documents submitted by the Government, between April 2004 and
November 2009 the investigation was suspended on three occasions and
reopened twice upon the orders of the supervising prosecutors on
account of the “incomplete nature of the investigative
measures”. As appears from the SIU-2 investigation plan dated
28 July 2009, the investigators considered three possible versions of
Usman Mavluyev’s abduction. According to the first version, the
crime had been committed by servicemen deployed in the Chernorechye
settlement. According to the second version, it had been committed by
members of special units deployed there. Thirdly, the crime could
have been committed by members of an illegal armed group.
- The
investigation in case no. 31036, last adjourned on 24 November
2009, has so far failed to identify who was guilty.
D. Proceedings against law-enforcement officials
1. Court proceedings instituted by the first nine applicants
- On
an unspecified date the first nine applicants filed a claim against
the Russian Ministry of Finance, seeking compensation for the
non-pecuniary damage caused by their relatives’ abduction by
Russian servicemen. The claim contained no mention of the fourth and
sixth applicants’ property claims.
- On
30 March 2004 the Basmannyy District Court of Moscow dismissed the
claims on the ground that “the evidence in the case file [had]
not proved that there [had been] a causal link between [the
applicants’] loss of their sons and any unlawful acts of the
State agencies of Russia”.
- On
8 December 2004 the Moscow City Court upheld the first-instance
judgment, reproducing its reasoning verbatim.
2. Court proceedings instituted by the tenth applicant
- On 8 February 2007 the tenth applicant appealed to
the Zavodskoy District Court of Grozny against the refusals of her
requests for legal aid and access to the case file (see paragraphs 78-
85 above).
- On
5 March 2007 the Zavodskoy District Court dismissed the complaint.
According to the applicant, she had not been notified of the hearing
and, therefore, was not present in the courtroom. Furthermore, the
court’s decision was not sent to her either.
- Since
the applicant was not aware of the hearing of 5 March 2007, on
14 June 2007 she complained to the Supreme Court of the Chechen
Republic about the failure to examine her complaint of
8 February 2007.
- On
1 October 2007 the applicant was provided with a copy of the
Zavodskoy District Court’s decision of 5 March 2007.
- On
2 October 2007 the applicant appealed against the decision of 5 March
2007 and requested that the time-limits for appeal be restored.
- On
6 February 2008 the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic quashed the
decision of 5 March 2007 on the ground that the applicant had
not been summoned to the hearing.
- On
21 February 2008 the Zavodskoy District Court re-examined the
complaint. The applicant was not present at the hearing, but she was
represented by her counsel. The court again dismissed the complaint.
The applicant appealed.
- On
26 March 2008 the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic quashed the
decision of 21 February 2008 and remitted the complaint for a fresh
examination. It found that the applicant had the right to study the
case file, whereas her request for legal aid was unsubstantiated.
- On
8 April 2008 the Zavodskoy District Court upheld the applicant’s
complaint in the part relating to the refusal to grant her access to
the case file, but dismissed it in the part relating to the refusal
to grant her legal aid.
- On
16 September 2008 the applicant’s counsel studied the
investigation file and made copies of the material in the case file,
which have been provided to the Court.
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 decided to join the applications, given
their similar factual and legal background.
II. THE GOVERNMENT’S OBJECTION REGARDING
NON EXHAUSTION OF DOMESTIC REMEDIES
A. The parties’ submissions
- The
Government contended that the complaints should be declared
inadmissible for non-exhaustion of domestic remedies. They submitted
that the investigation into the disappearance of Khasan Batayev, Zaur
Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev,
Kharon Musayev and Usman Mavluyev had not yet been completed. They
further argued that it had been open to the applicants to lodge court
complaints about the allegedly unlawful detention of their relatives
or to challenge in court any acts or omissions of the investigating
or other law enforcement authorities, but that the applicants
had not availed themselves of that remedy.
- The
applicants contested that objection. They stated that the criminal
investigations had proved to be ineffective and that their complaints
to that effect had been futile. Any other remedies in such a
situation would be ineffective. The first nine applicants referred to
the decision of the Basmannyy District Court of Moscow of 2004, as
confirmed on appeal, by which their civil claim against the State had
been dismissed as manifestly ill-founded, in the absence of any
conclusions from the criminal investigation.
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).
- The
Court first notes, having regard to the Government’s objection
concerning the applicants’ failure to complain about the
detention of their relatives, that the authorities denied
responsibility for the missing persons. In such circumstances, and in
particular in the absence of any proof to confirm the very fact of
the detention, even assuming that the remedy referred to by the
Government was accessible to the applicants, it is more than
questionable whether a court complaint would have had any prospects
of success. Moreover, the Government have not demonstrated that the
remedy indicated by them would have been capable of providing redress
in the applicants’ situation, namely that it would have led to
the release of Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev,
Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev, Kharon Musayev and Usman Mavluyev
and the identification and punishment of those responsible (see
Musayeva and Others v. Russia, no. 74239/01, § 69, 26
July 2007). Accordingly, the Government’s objection in the part
concerning non-exhaustion of domestic remedies must be 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 dispute 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 Khasan Batayev,
Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev
and Kharon Musayev
(a) The applicants’ account
- The
applicants maintained that it was beyond reasonable doubt that the
men who had taken away Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed
Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev had
been State agents. In support of their complaint they referred to the
following facts. The men who had abducted their relatives had arrived
in military vehicles – APCs – which could not have been
available to anyone except State servicemen. They had acted in a
manner similar to that of special forces carrying out identity
checks. They had been wearing camouflage uniforms and had been armed
with automatic weapons. All the information disclosed from the
criminal investigation file supported their assertion as to the
involvement of State agents in the abduction. Since their relatives
had been missing for a very lengthy period, they could be presumed
dead. That presumption was further supported by the circumstances in
which they had been arrested, which should be recognised as
life-threatening.
(b) The Government’s account
- The
Government submitted that unidentified armed men had kidnapped Khasan
Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov,
Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev. They further contended that the
investigation of the incident was 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 further argued that there was no
convincing evidence that the applicants’ relatives were dead.
- The
Government raised a number of objections to the applicants’
presentation of the facts. Relying on the testimonies given to the
domestic criminal investigation, of which no copies have been
submitted to the Court, they argued that the statements made by the
applicants and other witnesses were contradictory and inconsistent.
The applicants had not been eyewitnesses to the abduction. They had
failed to indicate the exact number of abductors and to explain the
reason for their relatives gathering together at 44 Vostochnaya
Street on 18 September 2000. The Government further argued that the
testimonies as to the number of the cars seen parked at the house in
question differed to some extent.
- The
Government questioned the weight of the statements by Ms Mu.,
who had witnessed the abduction of the six men. She had failed to
specify the names of those abducted and the exact date of their
abduction. She had not indicated why she thought that the APCs and
the UAZ vehicles had been driven by servicemen. Finally, she had not
recalled that the abductors had spoken Russian, whereas the
applicants had insisted on that point.
- The
Government further contended that various weapons, camouflage
uniforms without insignia and even military vehicles had been stolen
or unlawfully obtained by members of illegal paramilitary structures
in the Northern Caucasus in the 1990s and should therefore not be
taken as proof that these were State servicemen.
- The
Government concluded that the applicants’ allegations that the
abductors had belonged to State agencies could not be confirmed. The
applicants had not recalled any details of the clothes, weapons or
markings on the abductors’ uniforms. With reference to Zaur
Ibragimov’s and Sayd Ali Musayev’s service at the
OMON prior to 18 September 2000, the Government asserted that they
could have been aware of the abduction if it had indeed been
organised by State agencies. The Government lastly argued that the
applicants’ relatives could have been abducted by illegal armed
groups. Alternatively, they could have staged the kidnapping
themselves.
2. In respect of the disappearance of Usman Mavluyev
- The
tenth applicant insisted that the State was responsible for the
disappearance and death of her husband, Usman Mavluyev. She pointed
out that all the witness testimonies clearly stated that he had been
detained by servicemen who had manned the checkpoint in Chernorechye
on 8 January 2000 and placed inside an APC. The servicemen had been
wearing camouflage uniforms and insignia of the Russian military
forces and had been armed with automatic weapons. Since her husband
had been missing for a very lengthy period, he could be presumed
dead. That presumption was further supported by the circumstances in
which he had been arrested, which should be recognised as
life-threatening.
- The
Government disputed the State’s responsibility for Usman
Mavluyev’s abduction and the fact that he was dead, since none
of this had been established in the domestic proceedings. The
reference by the investigators in some documents to the fact that
Usman Mavluyev had been detained by servicemen was attributed by the
Government to the officials’ negligence, since it had only been
established that he had been abducted by unidentified armed persons.
The Government drew the Court’s attention to the discrepancies
in the submissions made by the witness A.A. (Z.A.) and argued that
the Court should not rely on her testimony dated 5 September 2006
which was attached to the tenth applicant’s application form.
B. The Court’s evaluation of the facts
1. In respect of the disappearance of Khasan Batayev,
Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev
and Kharon Musayev
- The
Court observes that in its extensive jurisprudence it has developed a
number of general principles relating to the establishment of facts
in dispute, in particular when faced with allegations of
disappearances 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 file on the
investigation into the abduction of Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov,
Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon
Musayev, the Government produced hardly any 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 (extracts)).
- 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.
- The
applicants alleged that the persons who had taken Khasan Batayev,
Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd Ali
Musayev and Kharon Musayev away on 18 September 2000 and then
killed them had been State agents.
- The
Government suggested in their submissions that the abductors of
Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov,
Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev might have been members of
paramilitary groups. However, this allegation was not specific and
the Government did not submit any material to support it. The
Court takes note of the Government’s allegation that the
military vehicles, firearms and camouflage uniforms had probably been
stolen by insurgents from Russian arsenals in the 1990s.
Nevertheless, it considers it very unlikely that several military
vehicles, such as APCs and UAZ vehicles, unlawfully in the possession
of members of illegal armed groups could have moved freely through
Russian military checkpoints in Grozny without being noticed. In the
absence of any information about the investigation of such an event,
the Court is unable to attribute this occurrence to unlawful
paramilitaries. The Court would further stress in this
connection that the evaluation of the evidence and the establishment
of the facts is a matter for the Court, and it is incumbent on it to
decide on the evidentiary value of the documents submitted to it (see
Çelikbilek v. Turkey, no. 27693/95, § 71,
31 May 2005).
- The
Court notes that little evidence has been submitted by the
applicants, which is quite understandable in the light of the
investigators’ reluctance to provide the relatives of the
missing men with copies of important documents from the
investigation. Nevertheless, it observes that the applicants’
allegation is supported by all the available evidence. It 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 in broad daylight and apprehended several persons at their
home strongly supports the applicants’ allegation that these
were State servicemen conducting a security operation. In their
applications to the authorities the applicants consistently
maintained that Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev,
Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev 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 questioned the credibility of the applicants’
statements in view of certain discrepancies relating to the exact
circumstances of the arrest. The Court notes in
this connection that no essential elements underlying the applicants’
submissions as to the facts have been disputed by the Government. In
any event, the Government did not provide to
the Court the witness statements to which they referred in their
submissions.
- The
Court observes that where the applicants make out a prima facie
case and the Court is prevented from reaching factual conclusions
owing to a 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 relatives
were apprehended by State servicemen. The Government’s
statement that the investigators had not found any evidence to
support the involvement of the special forces in the kidnapping or
their general reference to the possibility of illegal insurgents’
involvement in the crime 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 Khasan
Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov,
Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev were arrested on 18 September
2000 by State servicemen during an unacknowledged security operation.
- There
has been no reliable news of Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed
Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev
since the date of the kidnapping. Their names have not been found in
any official detention facility records. Finally, the Government have
not submitted any explanation as to what happened to them after their
arrest.
- Having
regard to the 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
(extracts); 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 Khasan
Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov,
Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev or of any news of them for many
years supports this assumption.
- Accordingly,
the Court finds that the evidence available permits it to establish
that Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan
Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev must be presumed dead
following their unacknowledged detention by State servicemen.
2. In respect of the disappearance of Usman Mavluyev
- The
applicants alleged that Usman Mavluyev had been arrested by the
servicemen at the checkpoint in Chernorechye on 8 January 2000 and
then killed. The Government did not dispute any of the factual
elements underlying the applications and did not provide any other
explanation of the events.
- It
clearly follows from the evidence submitted by the parties and
uncontested by them that on 8 January 2000 Usman Mavluyev was
detained by armed men at the checkpoint in Chernorechnye in Grozny,
placed inside an APC and driven away (see, for example, paragraphs
21, 55, 60, 61, 67, 120 and 125-127 above). The domestic
investigation also accepted factual assumptions as presented by the
tenth applicant and took steps to check whether law-enforcement
agencies had been involved in the kidnapping. He has not been seen
since that day and his family have had no news of him. In such
circumstances the Government’s reference to the absence of
final conclusions from the criminal investigation is insufficient to
absolve the Government from their responsibility to account for the
fate of detainees last seen alive in their hands (see Akkum and
Others, cited above, § 211).
- The
Government questioned the credibility of certain testimonies in view
of discrepancies relating to the exact circumstances of the arrest.
The Court notes in this connection that no
other elements underlying the applicant’s submissions as to the
facts have been disputed by the Government. In the Court’s
view, the fact that over a period of several years the witnesses’
recollection of an event differed in rather insignificant details
does not in itself suffice to cast doubt on the overall veracity of
their statements.
- The
Court observes that the situation in which Usman Mavluyev was
arrested should be regarded as life-threatening (see paragraph 183
above). The absence of Usman Mavluyev or of any news of him for ten
years supports this assumption. The Court also remarks that, as
follows from the documents contained in the file, the fate of another
man who had been detained together with the tenth applicant’s
husband was investigated and remains unknown (see paragraph 130
above). This sequence of events strongly suggests that the two men
were treated together.
- Accordingly,
the Court finds that the evidence available permits it to establish
that Usman Mavluyev 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 been deprived of their lives 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. The parties’ submissions
1. In respect of the disappearance of Khasan Batayev,
Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev
and Kharon Musayev
- The
Government contended that the domestic investigation had obtained no
evidence to the effect that Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed
Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev were
dead or that any servicemen of the federal law-enforcement agencies
had been involved in their kidnapping or alleged killing. The
Government claimed that the investigation into the kidnapping of the
applicants’ relatives met the Convention requirement of
effectiveness, as all measures available under national law were
being taken to identify those responsible.
- The
applicants argued that Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed
Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev had
been detained by State servicemen and should be presumed dead in the
absence of any reliable news of them for several years. The
applicants also argued that the investigation had not met the
effectiveness and adequacy requirements laid down by the Court’s
case-law. They also 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.
2. In respect of the disappearance of Usman Mavluyev
- The
Government referred to the absence of conclusions from the domestic
investigation as to the fate and whereabouts of Usman Mavluyev. They
further contested that prior to April 2004 the tenth applicant had
filed any applications concerning her husband’s disappearance.
They in particular denied that in January 2000 she had lodged
written applications with the Gudermes military prosecutor and the
department of the interior, or with the FSB departments in the
Gudermes and Achkhoy-Martan districts. The Government insisted that
no copies of those documents had been produced by the tenth
applicant. The Government also challenged the authenticity of the
certificate issued by the Chechnya FSB department on 6 June 2000 (see
paragraph 113 above).
- The
tenth applicant reiterated her claims. She insisted that she had
travelled to Gudermes and submitted her complaints in person by the
end of January 2000. She also maintained that the document issued to
her by the Achkhoy-Martan district FSB department on 6 June 2000 had
been valid proof of this, despite the Government’s challenge to
its validity. She pointed out that it had borne the stamp of the
district department and the signature of the deputy head of that
department. It had been included in the criminal investigation file.
In any event, she argued that the investigation had been ineffective
and that after April 2004 it had failed to take the steps necessary
to identify the perpetrators of the crime and to establish the
whereabouts of her husband.
B. The Court’s assessment
1. 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.
2. Merits
(a) Alleged violation of the right to life
of Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan
Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev, Kharon Musayev and Usman Mavluyev
- The
Court has already found 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 Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed
Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd Ali Musayev, Kharon Musayev
and Usman Mavluyev.
(b) Alleged inadequacy of the
investigation of the kidnapping
(i) As regards Khasan Batayev, Zaur
Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and
Kharon Musayev
- 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 Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov,
Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon
Musayev 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.
- The
Court notes that the authorities were immediately made aware of the
abduction through the applicants’ submissions. The
investigation in case no. 12199 concerning Khasan Batayev was
initiated on 2 October 2000, that is, two weeks after the abduction.
It then took between one and six months to open criminal
investigations into the disappearance of the other five men. Such a
postponement per se was liable to affect the investigation of
a kidnapping in life-threatening circumstances, where crucial action
has to be taken in the first days after the event. It appears that
after that a number of essential steps were seriously delayed. The
files concerning one criminal act were not joined until April 2001 in
respect of the first four files, and in April 2005 in respect of the
criminal investigation into the abduction of Said-Ali and Kharon
Musayev. While it is unclear when the applicants and other witnesses
were questioned, the granting of victim status took place only on 25
November 2002 and 15 October 2003. It is obvious that these
investigative 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. Such 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 tried to find out whether any special
operations had been carried out at 44 Vostochnaya Street, Grozny, on
the day in question, or identified and questioned any of the
servicemen who had carried them out.
- The
Court also notes that even though the applicants were eventually
granted victim status in the investigation concerning the abduction
of their relatives, they 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.
- 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 notes 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 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 investigative measures were taken to identify
those responsible for the kidnapping. Nor were the applicants
properly informed of the progress of the proceedings. In such
circumstances, the Court considers that the applicants could not be
required to challenge in court every single decision 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 Khasan Batayev, Zaur
Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and
Kharon Musayev, in breach of Article 2 in its procedural aspect.
(ii) As regards Usman Mavluyev
- Firstly,
the Court notes that the parties disagreed as to when the crime had
been brought to the authorities’ attention. Having regard to
the material in its possession, the Court is satisfied that the tenth
applicant immediately brought the information about her husband’s
arrest and disappearance to the attention of the State authorities.
The Court notes the tenth applicant’s consistent statements to
that effect, including those made to the domestic investigation
authorities (see paragraph 119 above). The Court further notes that
the document of 6 June 2000 bears the stamp of the FSB department for
the Achkhoy-Martan district and the signature of an official of that
department, that it has not been subjected to any expert examination
which has found it invalid and that it has been included as part of
the criminal investigation file; therefore it is unable to support
the Government’s challenge to its authenticity.
- In
view of this, the Court finds that the investigation into Usman
Mavluyev’s abduction was opened after a delay of over four
years since the relevant information had been submitted to the
competent authorities. The Court reiterates its above conclusions
about the significance of delays in the investigation of a crime as
serious as the present one (see paragraph 200 above).
- The
Court further notes that despite the delay in opening the
investigation, the investigative authorities collected a sizeable
body of evidence attesting to the involvement of servicemen in the
crime. However, the district prosecutor’s office failed to take
steps to identify the military units that had been deployed at the
checkpoint in question, such as, for example, contacting the archives
of the Ministry of Defence (see paragraph 64 above), or taking other
relevant actions to pursue this lead, such as identifying and
questioning senior military or security officers who had been in
charge of the operation in Grozny on the day in question.
- The
Court also notes the numerous 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 204), 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 Usman Mavluyev’s disappearance, in
breach of Article 2 in its procedural aspect.
V. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants relied on Article 3 of the Convention, submitting that as
a result of their relatives’ disappearance and the State’s
failure to investigate it 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.”
A. The parties’ submissions
- 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.
- The
applicants maintained their submissions.
B. The Court’s assessment
1. 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.
2. 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 applicants are close
relatives of the disappeared persons. For ten years they have not had
any news of the missing men. During this period the applicants have
made enquiries of various official bodies, both in writing and in
person, about their missing relatives. Despite their attempts, the
applicants have never received any plausible explanation or
information about what became of them following their detention. The
responses they received mostly denied State responsibility for their
relatives’ 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 applicants.
VI. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants further stated that Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov,
Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev, Kharon Musayev
and Usman Mavlueyav had been detained in violation of the guarantees
contained in 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.”
A. The parties’ submissions
- The
Government asserted that no evidence had been obtained by the
investigators to confirm that Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed
Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev, Kharon Musayev and
Usman Mavluyev 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.
- The
applicants reiterated the complaint.
B. The Court’s assessment
1. 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.
2. 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 Khasan Batayev, Zaur
Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and
Kharon Musayev were apprehended by State servicemen on 18 September
and Usman Mavluyev on 8 January 2000 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 Khasan Batayev, Zaur
Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev,
Kharon Musayev and Usman Mavluyev 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
applicants complained that they had been deprived of effective
remedies in respect of the aforementioned violations, 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.”
A. The parties’ submissions
- 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.
- The
applicants reiterated the complaint.
B. The Court’s assessment
1. 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.
2. Merits
- The
Court reiterates that in circumstances where, as here, a criminal
investigation into the 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 v. Russia, nos.
57942/00 and 57945/00, § 183, 24 February 2005).
- Consequently,
there has been a violation of Article 13 in conjunction with Article
2 of the Convention.
- As
regards the applicants’ reference to Articles 3 and 5 of the
Convention, the Court considers that, in the circumstances, no
separate issue arises in respect of Article 13, read in conjunction
with those two Articles (see Kukayev v. Russia, no. 29361/02,
§ 119, 15 November 2007, and Aziyevy v. Russia,
no. 77626/01, § 118, 20 March 2008).
VIII. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL No. 1
TO THE CONVENTION
- The
fourth and sixth applicants contended that their disappeared family
members had been deprived of their property, in violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. This provision reads, in the
relevant part:
“1. Every natural or legal person is entitled
to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be
deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject
to the conditions provided for by law and by the general principles
of international law. ...”
- The
fourth and sixth applicants argued that on 18 September 2000 the
armed men who had taken away their sons, Zaur Ibragimov and Magomed
Temurkayev, had also taken away two VAZ cars which had belonged to
them.
- The
Government argued that the applicants had failed to submit any proof
of their relatives’ ownership of the cars in question. They
further disputed that the alleged wrongdoing had been committed by
State agents.
- The
Court notes that even though the fourth and sixth applicants
complained about the loss of two vehicles, they failed to produce any
documents or other evidence supporting their claim of ownership. The
sixth applicant could not even indicate the registration number of
the car which had been used by her son on the day of his abduction
(see paragraph 39 above). At the same time, the Court notes that,
since all vehicles are subject to registration in the relevant State
authorities, it should have been relatively simple to obtain such
evidence. The applicants failed to indicate whether such proof
existed or to furnish an explanation as to why it was unavailable to
them. The Court further notes that in the civil proceedings brought
by the applicants in relation to the disappearance of their relatives
they had not claimed any damages in connection with the vehicles
allegedly stolen on that day (see paragraph 144 above). In such
circumstances, the Court is unable to find that the applicants had
any property rights over the two cars in question.
- It
follows that this complaint is manifestly ill-founded and must be
rejected in accordance with Article 35 §§ 3 and 4 of the
Convention.
IX. 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
1. The parties’ submissions
- All
the applicants, except for the first applicant, claimed damages in
respect of loss of earnings by their relatives after their arrest and
subsequent disappearance.
- The
second to ninth applicants claimed that Khasan Batayev, Zaur
Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and
Kharon Musayev would have supported them and their other dependants.
They submitted that Zaur Ibragimov and Magomed Temurkayev each had
three minor children. They claimed that their relatives had been
unemployed at the time of their arrest, or that they were unable to
obtain salary statements for them, 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. Taking the average life expectancy in Russia to be 70 years,
the applicants assumed that they could have been financially
dependent on Khasan Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev,
Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev and Kharon Musayev for periods
ranging between ten and forty-seven years. The applicants assumed
that the parents could have counted on 10% of that sum and the wives
with dependent children on 80%. Based on these calculations, they
claimed sums ranging from 745 to 30,000 euros (EUR).
- In
addition, the fourth applicant claimed EUR 4,000 and the sixth
applicant EUR 1,000 in compensation for the two cars stolen on
18 September 2000.
- The
tenth applicant claimed that in 2000 Usman Mavluyev had been employed
as a driver and that the monthly wage of a driver in Chechnya
amounted to 15,000 Russian roubles (RUB). She had two sons with him,
born in 1993 and 1995. She estimated that she, until reaching the age
of retirement, and her children, until they reached the age of
majority, could have received a substantial part of his earnings. She
claimed a total of EUR 55,289 under this heading.
- 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 tenth applicant had applied for and obtained.
2. The Court’s assessment
- The
Court reiterates that there must be a clear causal connection between
the damage claimed by the applicants and the violation of the
Convention, and that this may, in an appropriate case, include
compensation in respect of loss of earnings. The Court further finds
that the loss of earnings also applies to dependent children and, in
some instances, to elderly parents and that it is reasonable to
assume that their missing relatives would eventually have had some
earnings from which the applicants would have benefited (see, among
other authorities, Imakayeva, cited above, § 213).
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’ sons and husbands and the loss by the
applicants of the financial support which they could have provided.
Having regard to the parties’ submissions and the absence of
any conclusive evidence as to the applicants’ missing
relatives’ earnings, Court awards the following sums to the
applicants in respect of pecuniary damage, plus any tax that may be
chargeable on these amounts:
(i)
EUR 745 to the second and third applicants jointly;
(ii)
EUR 1,490 to the fourth applicant;
(iii)
EUR 12,000 to the fifth applicant;
(iv)
EUR 745 to the sixth applicant;
(v)
EUR 12,000 to the seventh applicant;
(vi)
EUR 1,865 to the eighth applicant;
(vii)
EUR 3,130 to the ninth applicant;
(viii)
EUR 11,000 to the tenth applicant.
- In
so far as the fourth and sixth applicants sought compensation for the
two cars, the Court observes that it has concluded that this
complaint is manifestly ill-founded, in the absence of any proof of
the applicants’ property rights. This part of the claim is
therefore dismissed.
B. Non-pecuniary damage
- The
applicants (except for the first applicant) claimed amounts ranging
from EUR 100,000 to EUR 500,000, depending on the closeness
of their family ties with the missing men, 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.
- The
Government found the amounts claimed exaggerated.
- The
Court has found a violation of Articles 2, 5 and 13 of the Convention
on account of the unacknowledged detention and disappearance of the
applicants’ relatives. The 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 following amounts to the
applicants, plus any tax that may be chargeable thereon:
(i)
EUR 60,000 to the second and third applicants, jointly;
(ii)
EUR 60,000 to the fourth and fifth applicants jointly;
(iii)
EUR 60,000 to the sixth and seventh applicants jointly;
(iv)
EUR 60,000 to the eight applicant;
(v)
EUR 120,000 to the ninth applicant; and
(vi)
EUR 60,000 to the tenth applicant.
C. Costs and expenses
- The
first nine applicants claimed EUR 7,800 jointly for the costs
and expenses incurred before the domestic authorities and the Court.
They submitted that the lawyer had charged EUR 150 per hour of
legal work. Her fees included EUR 3,900 for the time spent on
the preparation of legal submissions for the Court and EUR 3,900
for the criminal and civil proceedings conducted in Russia.
- The
tenth applicant claimed under this heading EUR 9,037 for 60.25
hours of legal work, also at a rate of EUR 150 per hour. She
submitted a detailed breakdown of the time spent by her
representative. In addition, she claimed reimbursement of postal and
administrative costs in the amount of EUR 155 and of translation
costs in the amount of EUR 440, as certified by an invoice. She
also submitted a copy of the legal representation agreement of 1
February 2008. She 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 contested 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 nine applicants the total sum of EUR 5,000, less the sum
of EUR 850 received in legal aid from the Council of Europe, and the
tenth applicant the sum of EUR 3,500, together with any
value-added tax that may be chargeable to the applicants. The net
award to the tenth applicant made under this heading is to be paid
into the representative’s bank account in Russia, as identified
by that applicant.
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 and the remainder of the
applications inadmissible;
- Holds that there has been a substantive
violation of Article 2 of the Convention in respect of Khasan
Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov,
Sayd-Ali Musayev, Kharon Musayev and Usman Mavluyev;
- 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 Khasan
Batayev, Zaur Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov,
Sayd-Ali Musayev, Kharon Musayev and Usman Mavluyev disappeared;
6. Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 3 of the Convention in respect of the applicants;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 5 of the Convention in respect of Khasan Batayev, Zaur
Ibragimov, Magomed Temurkayev, Rizvan Ismailov, Sayd-Ali Musayev,
Kharon Musayev and Usman Mavluyev;
8. Holds
that there has been a violation of Article 13 of the Convention
in conjunction with Article 2 of the Convention;
9. Holds
that no separate issues arise under Article 13 of the Convention in
respect of the alleged violations of Articles 3 and 5;
- 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)
in respect of pecuniary damage:
α. EUR 745
(seven hundred and forty-five euros) to the second and third
applicants jointly;
β. EUR 1,490
(one thousand four hundred and ninety euros) to the fourth applicant;
γ. EUR 12,000
(twelve thousand euros) to the fifth applicant;
δ. EUR 745
(seven hundred and forty-five euros) to the sixth applicant;
ε. EUR 12,000
(twelve thousand euros) to the seventh applicant;
ζ. EUR 1,865
(one thousand eight hundred and sixty-five euros) to the eighth
applicant;
η. EUR 3,130
(three thousand one hundred and thirty euros) to the ninth applicant;
and
θ. EUR 11,000
(eleven thousand euros) to the tenth applicant;
(ii)
in respect of non-pecuniary damage:
α.
EUR 60,000 (sixty thousand euros) to the second and third
applicants jointly;
β. EUR 60,000
(sixty thousand euros) to the fourth and fifth applicants jointly;
γ. EUR 60,000
(sixty thousand euros) to the sixth and seventh applicants jointly;
δ. EUR 60,000
(sixty thousand euros) to the eight applicant;
ε. EUR 120,000
(one hundred and twenty thousand euros) to the ninth applicant; and
ζ. EUR 60,000
(sixty thousand euros) to the tenth applicant;
(iii) EUR 4,150
(four thousand one hundred and fifty euros) to the first nine
applicants jointly and EUR 3,500 (three thousand five hundred
euros) to the tenth applicant, plus any tax that may be chargeable to
the applicants, in respect of costs and expenses; the net award to
the tenth applicant made under this heading is to be paid into the
representative’s bank account in Russia, as identified by the
applicant;
(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 17 June 2010, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis
Registrar President