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FOURTH
SECTION
CASE OF
MUSIAŁEK AND BACZYŃSKI v. POLAND
(Application
no. 32798/02)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
26 July
2011
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 Musiałek and Baczyński v. Poland,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Nicolas Bratza, President,
Lech
Garlicki,
Ljiljana Mijović,
Sverre Erik
Jebens,
Zdravka Kalaydjieva,
Nebojša
Vučinić,
Vincent A. De Gaetano, judges,
and
Lawrence Early, Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 5 July 2011
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in application (no. 32798/02) against the Republic of
Poland lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for
the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by two Polish nationals, Mr Tomasz Musiałek
(“the first applicant”) and Mr Jarosław
Baczyński (“the second applicant”), on 12 August
2002 and 20 November 2003 respectively.
- The
Polish Government (“the Government”) were represented by
their Agent, Mr J. Wołąsiewicz of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs.
- The
applicants mainly complained under Article 3 of the Convention of the
inadequate conditions of their detention, in particular of
overcrowding.
- On
23 June 2008 a Chamber of the Fourth Section of the Court decided to
give notice to the Government of the complaints under Article 3 of
the Convention. It was decided to rule on the admissibility and
merits of the application at the same time (Article 29 § 1 of
the Convention).
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
first applicant, Mr Tomasz Musiałek, is a Polish national who
was born in 1966. He lives in Kamień, Poland. The second
applicant, Mr Jarosław Baczyński, is a Polish national
who was born in 1974. He is currently serving a prison sentence in
Zaręba Górna Prison.
A. The first applicant
1. The period of the applicant’s detention
- The
applicant, who had been convicted of murder, was deprived of liberty
on two separate occasions.
- On
the first occasion, he was in continuous detention (committed to
different penitentiary facilities) from 2 July 1995 until
9 July 2004. On the latter date he was released on leave to
seek medical treatment outside prison.
- On
the second occasion, he was in continuous detention (committed to
different penitentiary facilities) from 26 January 2006 until 2
February 2009.
2. The applicant’s first detention
- From
8 until 23 November 1999 and from 1 December 2000 until 12 September
2001 the applicant was detained in Wrocław Prison No. 1. From
12 September 2001 until 9 July 2004 he was detained in Wołów
Prison.
(a) The conditions of the applicant’s
detention
- According
to official data, throughout 1999 and the greater part of 2000, the
number of detainees in Wrocław Prison was inferior to the
prison’s designated capacity. In December 2000, however, the
prison’s designated capacity was exceeded by 144 persons.
- In
December 2000 the applicant was detained in a hospital wing of
Wrocław Prison and it appears that he was not affected by the
prison’s general overcrowding at that time.
- The
applicant submitted, however, that from 2001 until an unspecified
later date he had been held in severely overcrowded cells in both
Wrocław and Wołów Prisons. He had had one-hour
outdoor exercise per day and one shower per week.
- The
Government did not submit any information as to the number of
detainees held in Wrocław Prison in 2001 or in Wołów
Prison from September 2001 until July 2004. They did not contest the
applicant’s submission about the limited accessibility to the
outdoor yard and shower.
(b) The applicant’s medical care in
prison
- Since
1998 the applicant had suffered from Dupuytren’s contracture, a
condition that, if untreated, prevents the fingers and toes from
straightening.
- On
an unspecified date the applicant had operations on his right hand
and right foot in Warsaw Remand Centre hospital.
- Subsequently,
on 7 December 2000, he again underwent surgery, this time in
Wrocław Prison hospital.
The
applicant submitted that both operations had been performed
incorrectly and that he had not received sufficient medical attention
after each procedure. As a result, his wounds had taken a long time
to heal and he had developed inflammation, mycosis and scar
contracture of two fingers of his right hand.
- A
number of expert reports and testimonies of witnesses which had been
produced in the course of criminal investigations instituted by the
applicant (see paragraphs 40-43 below) revealed that shortly after
the second surgery the applicant soaked his hand in an unspecified
disinfectant and put needles in his healing wound.
- It
appears that on an unspecified date in 2001 the applicant was
examined by a plastic surgeon who recommended a third operation on
the applicant’s hand in the specialised orthopaedic centre of
Warsaw Remand Centre.
- On
22 January 2002 the Governor of Wołów Prison informed the
applicant that he qualified for reconstructive surgery of his right
hand, but that such surgery could not be performed within the
penitentiary system. The applicant was also informed that prison
hospitals could not offer him any further diagnostic care or surgical
treatment.
- An
expert medical report which was obtained on 18 February 2002 by
the penitentiary court (see paragraph 38 below) stated that the
applicant required surgery, but not urgently, and that his condition
could be improved by physiotherapy available in prison. In
consequence, on 8 July 2002 the Wrocław Regional Court
rejected the applicant’s request for a short period of leave
from the enforcement of the sentence.
- On
6 March 2003 the Chief Doctor of the Wołów Prison
hospital issued a written statement in which he noted that the
contracture of the applicant’s right-hand little finger was so
advanced that it could no longer be treated. The doctor recommended
instead that the finger be amputated. The applicant did not consent
to amputation.
- The
Government submitted that in 2003 the applicant had five orthopaedic
examinations and refused to undergo another two specialist
consultations scheduled. At that time, the condition of the
applicant’s right thumb was considered satisfactory but changes
in his right elbow were detected. The applicant also qualified for an
operation on his two contracted left-hand fingers. His damaged
hip-joint was monitored periodically.
- In
2004 four specialist examinations were scheduled for the applicant
but he agreed to undergo only three of them. In April 2004 surgery on
the contracted fingers was recommended.
- On
9 July 2004 the applicant was granted release from prison for
eighteen months in order to seek medical treatment outside the
penitentiary health-care system.
3. The applicant’s actions concerning the
conditions of his first detention and his medical care in prison
(a) Actions concerning the conditions of
the applicant’s detention
(i) Penitentiary and administrative
complaints
- The
applicant lodged numerous complaints about different aspects of his
detention with the administration of the detention establishments
concerned and with the State and penitentiary authorities.
- In
a letter of 14 November 2001 the Director of the Central Board of the
Prison Service (Centralny Zarząd Służby Więziennej)
stated, inter alia, that between 22 May and 28 August 2001 the
applicant had been held in cell no. 84 of wing no. II ward 1B of
Wrocław Prison No. 1. His cell had been shared by four
prisoners, including the applicant. Later on, he had been transferred
to cell no. 84 of wing no. I ward 3A. The size of the cells in
question was not indicated.
(ii) Criminal proceedings against the
prison staff and administration
- On
26 June 2003 the Wołów District Prosecutor discontinued
the investigation into the applicant’s allegations that in
February 2003 the Governor of Wołów Prison (Dyrektor
Zakładu Karnego) had exceeded his authority (przekroczenie
uprawnień) and neglected his duties (niedopełnienie
obowiązków) in that he had authorised the admission
of new prisoners causing severe overcrowding and inadequate living
conditions in that establishment. The investigation was closed
because it could not be established that the offence in question had
been committed (niestwierdzenie popełnienia czynu
zabronionego). It was found that, at the relevant time, the
applicant had been held with six other prisoners in a cell designed
for five persons. Despite that, it was considered that the sanitary
and living conditions were adequate. Prisoners had individual beds,
access to TV-sets and they benefited from extended periods of outdoor
exercise.
- Similarly,
on 16 September 2003 the Wołów District Prosecutor
discontinued the investigation into the applicant’s allegations
of mismanagement in Wołów Prison since 13 September 2003.
The applicant asserted that the Governor of Wołów Prison
had exceeded his authority and neglected his duties in that he had
authorised the admission of new prisoners despite the existing
overcrowding. In the course of the investigation it was established
that the applicant had been held in eight different cells (in wings
A and B) which measured from 16 to 16.3 square metres. The cells in
question had been designed for five persons but, in fact, they were
shared by up to eight prisoners. It was stressed that, despite the
existing overcrowding in Wołów Prison, the rights of
prisoners were respected. The cells were sufficiently ventilated and
heated. The sanitary conditions were adequate. Prisoners had
individual beds and access to TV sets, as well as to other
technical equipment. Because of the overcrowding, prisoners were
allowed to have longer periods of outdoor exercise and to use the
prison gymnasium and library. It was concluded that the case of Wołów
Prison was not unique since overcrowding was a systemic problem in
the country. The administration of Wołów Prison could not
be blamed for aggravating the situation by admitting new prisoners.
The Governor was acting in accordance with the law. His decisions to
reduce the size of cells to less than three square metres per
prisoner were taken every three months and they were regularly
conveyed to the penitentiary judge (sędzia penitencjarny).
Finally, it was stressed that a decision to admit a convicted person
to prison did not lie within the discretion of a prison governor
since it was a domestic court which ordered where a convicted person
was to serve his sentence.
- On
22 January 2004 the Wołów District Court (Sąd
Rejonowy) dismissed an interlocutory appeal against the above
decision. The court held that the investigation into the matter had
been conducted thoroughly and diligently, while the prosecutor’s
conclusions had been accurate. Irrespective of that finding, the
court acknowledged that overcrowding and inadequate living conditions
were a general problem in numerous detention establishments in the
country, including Wołów Prison. Consequently, the
situation in Wołów Prison did not result from bad
management or negligence on the part of the prison administration.
(iii) Civil proceedings against Wrocław
Prison and the State Treasury
- On
21 March 2004 the applicant brought a civil action for infringement
of his personal rights against Wrocław Prison.
- On
1 February 2005 the Wrocław Regional Court refused to appoint a
legal-aid lawyer as requested by the applicant. The applicant
submitted that he had not been aware of that fact.
- On
an unspecified date the applicant was heard by the Wołów
District Court under the court-cooperation scheme (pomoc sądowa).
The applicant was notified about the subsequent court hearings in
Wrocław but he did not attend.
- It
appears that on 31 August 2005 the Wrocław Regional Court
dismissed the applicant’s claim for compensation. No appeal was
lodged against that judgment.
- The
applicant submitted that he had not been informed about the decisions
or the first-instance judgment until he had consulted the case file
at the court on 9 March 2006. He further submitted that the
judgment itself had never been served on him.
(b) Actions concerning the applicant’s
medical care in prison
(i) Penitentiary appeals
- It
appears that between 2001 and 2003 the applicant applied a number of
times for a short period of leave from the enforcement of his
sentence (przerwa w wykonaiu kary pozbawienia wolnosci) on
medical grounds. The applicant was examined by many medical
commissions but the penitentiary court rejected all his requests.
- By
letter of 3 October 2001 the Governor of Wrocław Prison informed
the applicant that as a result of an internal inquiry, it had been
found that the applicant had been examined by a plastic surgeon who
had recommended a third operation on the applicant’s arm in the
specialist orthopaedic centre of Warsaw Remand Centre.
- On
22 January 2002 the Governor of Wołów Prison informed the
applicant that he had been diagnosed with third-degree Dupuytren’s
contracture and, in addition, with nerve damage in his right elbow.
It was also stated that the applicant qualified for reconstructive
surgery of his right hand, but that such surgery could not be
performed within the penitentiary system. Lastly, the applicant was
informed that prison hospitals could not offer him any further
diagnostic care or surgical treatment.
(ii) Court proceedings
- On
one occasion the court initiated proceedings of its own motion
because of discrepancies between the medical reports issued by prison
doctors and the doctors of the Wrocław Forensic Medicine
Institute (Zakład Medycyny Sądowej). The court heard
evidence from one of the expert doctors. On 18 February 2002 the
court obtained a new medical report which stated that the applicant
required surgery, but not urgently, and that his condition could be
improved by physiotherapy available in prison. On 8 July 2002
the Wrocław Regional Court rejected the applicant’s
request for a short period of leave from the enforcement of the
sentence.
(iii) Criminal investigations
- In
the meantime, on 13 April 2001 the applicant complained to the
prosecution service about alleged medical malpractice committed by
the medical staff of the Wrocław Prison during and after his
surgery.
- On
25 June 2001 the Wrocław Police discontinued the inquiry due to
the lack of statutory features of a criminal offence (brak znamion
czynu zabronionego). It was established that the Wrocław
Prison hospital doctors and staff had provided the applicant with
adequate surgical treatment and post-surgery medical care. On the
other hand, it was established that the applicant himself had
worsened his condition by soaking his hand in an unspecified
disinfectant and putting needles in his healing wound.
- On
24 October 2001 the investigation into the above-mentioned
allegations was discontinued by the Wrocław District Prosecutor,
who found no statutory features of a criminal offence. The Prosecutor
relied on two expert reports and the testimony of the chief surgeon
of one of the prison hospitals. It was concluded that the surgery at
the Warsaw Prison hospital had been conducted correctly. The need to
operate again arose because of the natural progress of the
applicant’s disease and his own negligence in post-surgery
therapy rather than any malpractice during the first surgery.
- It
appears that on an unspecified date the decision was quashed by a
domestic court and that the investigation was reopened.
- Nevertheless,
on 29 April 2002 the Wrocław District Prosecutor once more
discontinued the investigation, reiterating the grounds mentioned
above. The investigation, in which the report of an expert in
forensic medicine was obtained on 25 March 2002, revealed that the
medical treatment and care provided to the applicant during and after
his surgery had been adequate. On the other hand, it was found that
the applicant himself had impeded the process of his post-surgery
rehabilitation. A number of witnesses gave evidence that the
applicant used to soak his hand in an unspecified disinfectant and
that he put needles in his wound. The latter caused infection and
difficulties in recovery.
- The
applicant, who at that point was represented by an attorney, appealed
against the prosecutor’s decision.
- On
4 April 2003 the Wrocław District Court dismissed the appeal.
4. The applicant’s second detention
- From
10 July 2006 until 25 May 2007 the applicant was committed to Wołów
Prison. From 26 May until 26 October 2007 he was detained in Wrocław
Prison No. 1. From 26 October 2007 until 2 February 2009 he was held
again in Wołów Prison.
(a) The conditions of the applicant’s
detention
- The
applicant submitted that he had been detained in overcrowded and
insanitary cells. He had a one-hour outdoor exercise per day and one
shower per week.
- The
Government did not submit any information as to the number of
prisoners sharing the applicant’s cells in Wołów
Prison between July 2006 and May 2007.
As to
Wrocław Prison, they submitted that in 2007 the prison’s
designated capacity had been exceeded by 340 persons.
Lastly,
the applicant’s more recent Wołów Prison records
indicate that from October 2007 until February 2009 he was held in
cells in which the space per person ranged from 2.3 up to 8 square
metres.
(b) The applicant’s medical care in
prison
- The
applicant made a general statement that during his second detention
he had not been afforded adequate medical care.
The
Government submitted that on 2 June 2006 the applicant had informed
the prison authorities in writing that he did not agree to undergo a
medical examination or to receive any direct medical treatment in the
orthopaedic centre of Wrocław Prison.
- In
September 2006 the applicant had been examined by a neurologist and
in October 2006 he had refused to have an EMG scan of his muscles.
- In
March 2007 the applicant refused to undergo an orthopaedic check-up.
Eventually, in July 2007 he was examined by an orthopaedist at
Warszawa-Mokotów Remand Centre. At that time, the applicant
was considered not to qualify for surgery in that healthcare
establishment.
- On
28 August 2007 the applicant was examined at the orthopaedic clinic
in Wrocław and he was scheduled to undergo surgery on his
contracted right hand three months later.
On 10
October 2007, however, he withdrew his consent for the operation.
It
appears that soon afterwards the prison authorities renewed their
request for the applicant’s surgery but no date was set by the
clinic.
5. The applicant’s actions concerning the
conditions of his second detention and his medical care in prison
(a) Actions concerning the conditions of
the applicant’s detention
- It
appears that the applicant did not lodge any complaints concerning
the living conditions with the penitentiary authorities or prison
administration. He complained about the quality of his medical care
to the Wołów Prison administration. He did not bring,
however, a civil action for compensation for the infringement of
personal rights on account of overcrowding, inadequate living
conditions and medical care in prison during his second detention.
(b) Actions concerning the applicant’s
medical care in prison
- The
applicant made a number of complaints about the quality of medical
care provided to him in Wołów Prison.
- In
a letter of 15 November 2006 the Governor of Wołów Prison
acknowledged that on 24 and 31 October 2006 the applicant had not
been taken to see a doctor despite his prior appointment. It was
explained that the number of prisoners who claimed to have a medical
emergency on those dates was so high that some of the routine
check-ups, such as the applicant’s, had to be cancelled. The
fact that the applicant had not been seen by the doctor had not
caused any deterioration of his health. The Governor stressed that,
with the above exception, the applicant had received medical
attention on a regular basis. On 23 October 2006 he had been examined
by the in-house doctor and in the months of October and November 2006
he had been taken six times to the prison infirmary.
- By
letter of 15 November 2006 the Governor of Wołów Prison
acknowledged that on 24 and 31 October 2006 the applicant could not
be examined by an in-house doctor because of the significant number
of new admissions. On the other hand, it was stressed that the
applicant had not required urgent medical attention and the fact that
he had missed two appointments had not affected his health.
6. Acts of alleged persecution during the applicant’s
detention and applications for parole
- The
applicant submitted that he had been persecuted by the staff and
administration of Wrocław and Wołów Prisons. To that
effect the applicant relied on the following events and procedures.
- On
19 April 2001 the applicant’s cell no. 211 in Wrocław
Prison was searched by the prison staff. It was discovered that the
applicant kept files of documents in a quantity exceeding the number
allowed. The documents were stored in the prison storage room. In
addition, the applicant’s tape player was temporarily seized in
the course of the search. After verifying that the tape player did
not conceal any forbidden material inside it, the prison
administration returned it to the applicant on the following day.
- On
28 August 2001 the Penitentiary Commission (Komisja Penitencjarna)
of Wrocław Prison decided to change the applicant’s
sub category from ‘first-time offender detained in a
semi-open prison with resocialisation programme’ (P-2/p)
to ‘first-time offender detained in a closed prison with
resocialisation programme’ (P-1/p). The Penitentiary
Commission relied on the gravity of the offence of which the
applicant had been convicted, his negative psychological assessment,
his vexatious character and the fact that he had incited other
prisoners to complain about prison conditions.
-
By letter of 3 October 2001 the Governor of Wrocław Prison
(Dyrektor Zakładu Karnego) informed the applicant that as
a result of an internal inquiry, it had been found that the applicant
received writing paper, envelopes and stamps in an amount which
allowed him to engage in extensive correspondence with various State
authorities. The applicant’s out-going letters were dispatched
without any delay.
- In
a letter of 9 October 2001 the Governor of Wrocław Prison
informed the applicant that his allegations that the prison
administration had forged his signature in the mail register and that
he had been receiving inadequate health-care had been considered
ill-founded.
-
In a letter of 14 November 2001 the Director of the Central Board of
the Prison Service (Centralny Zarząd Służby
Więziennej) apologised for the fact that one of the letters
sent to the applicant from the Central Board of the Prison Service
had been opened by mistake before it was handed over to the
applicant.
- On
2 April and 2 May 2002 the Wrocław District Prosecutor
(Prokurator Rejonowy) discontinued two investigations into the
applicant’s allegations that his out-going and in-coming mail
was opened by the staff of the Wrocław Prison. Both decisions
were justified by the absence of the features of a criminal offence.
They were upheld by the Wrocław District Court on 4 November and
15 October 2002 respectively.
- On
8 May 2002 the Wrocław District Prosecutor discontinued the
investigation into the applicant’s allegations that the staff
of Wrocław Prison had forged his signatures in the register of
prisoners’ mail. The preliminary investigation revealed that
the alleged offence had not taken place. On 14 October 2002 the
Wrocław District Court upheld that decision.
- On
10 June 2002 the Wrocław District Prosecutor discontinued an
investigation into the applicant’s allegations that the
Penitentiary Commission of Wrocław Prison had breached their
duties in that they had changed his prisoner’s classification.
The investigation was discontinued on the ground of the absence of
the features of a criminal offence (brak znamion czynu
niedozwolonego). On 5 December 2002 the Wrocław District
Court upheld that decision.
- On
10 November 2003, the Wołów District Police Station
(Komenda Powiatowa Policji) discontinued the investigation
into the applicant’s allegations that the staff of Wołów
Prison did not allow him to have adequate access to the prison radio,
library, doctor or cultural and social activities, and did not
provide the applicant with an adequate number of cupboards inside his
cell or sufficient lighting. In addition, the investigators looked
into the applicant’s allegations that on 20 September 2001 the
staff of Wołów Prison had withheld a letter to the
Committee for the Prevention of Torture in Strasbourg. The
applicant’s allegations were ruled to be ill founded and
the investigation was discontinued. On 14 November 2003 that
decision was upheld by the Wołów District Prosecutor and
on 1 April 2004 by the Wołów District Court.
- By
letter of 26 November 2003 the Deputy Governor of Wołów
Prison (Zastępca Dyrektora) informed the applicant about
the results of the internal inquiry into the allegations that on 13
November 2003 the warder searching the applicant’s cell no. 41
had stolen his tape player, a number of telephone cards and stamps.
The inquiry had revealed that the applicant’s tape player had
been seized by the warder because, contrary to the prison’s
internal security rules, the applicant had removed special security
seals from it. Moreover, it had been established that the warder had
not stolen any telephone cards or stamps.
- On
15 January 2004 the Wołów District Police Station refused
to open an inquiry into the applicant’s allegations that on 13
November 2003 one of the Wołów Prison warders had stolen
his radio, stamps and calling cards. On 29 January 2004 the Wołów
District Prosecutor (Prokurator Rejonowy) upheld that
decision, however, the date of the final court’s ruling in that
matter has not been disclosed to the Registry.
- On
1 April 2004 the Wołów District Prosecutor discontinued
an investigation regarding a certain R.A., a warder in Wołów
Prison who on 28 October 2002 had allegedly forged the
applicant’s signature in the prison mail register. The
investigation revealed that the suspected person had indeed committed
the offence in question. However, due to the minimal social danger of
the offence (znikoma społeczna szkodliwość czynu),
and the fact that the warder had admitted his fault and shown
repentance, the investigation had to be closed. On 13 January 2005
the Wołów District Court upheld that decision.
- The
applicant lodged numerous requests for parole (warunkowe
zwolnienie) but all of them were rejected by the penitentiary
court on the ground of his negative criminological prognosis.
- On
9 July 2004 the applicant was granted release from prison to seek
medical treatment outside the penitentiary health-care system.
- A
letter of 17 August 2006 from the Deputy Governor of Wołów
Prison contained a detailed account of the number of sheets of paper,
envelopes and stamps furnished to the applicant by the prison free of
charge. It was also stated that the applicant had received a pair of
shoes from the prison stock. Consequently, the applicant’s
complaints about insufficient paper supplies and the lack of social
aid were found to be ill founded.
7. Civil proceedings concerning a fight in prison
- On
28 April 2003 the applicant filed a civil action for compensation for
mental distress he had allegedly suffered because he had witnessed a
fight among his cellmates in Wołów Prison.
- In
the initial phase of the trial the applicant was present at the court
hearings and he represented himself. On 9 July 2004 he was released
from prison on health grounds and for nineteen months he remained at
liberty. From that date onwards the applicant did not participate in
the court’s hearings in person since the distance between the
court venue and his home was too great for him to commute. On 23 July
or August 2004 the Wołów District Court appointed a
legal-aid lawyer to represent the applicant.
- On
1 March 2005 the Wołów District Court dismissed the
applicant’s claim. The applicant’s lawyer advised him
that the appeal in that case had no prospects of success.
8. Civil proceedings against domestic courts
- It
appears that in 2005 the applicant brought an action for damages
against the Wrocław Regional Court and Court of Appeal. The
applicant did not inform the court about the course of the
proceedings. In the light of the material at the Court’s
disposal, the proceedings in question are currently pending.
9. Criminal proceedings against the applicant
- On
28 June 2002 the applicant was indicted on the charge of committing
perjury in connection inter alia with the fact that on
20 June 2001 he had informed the Wrocław District
Prosecutor that for several months in 2001 his signatures in the mail
register of Wrocław Prison had been forged by the prison staff.
- On
25 March 2004 the Wołów District Court (Sąd
Rejonowy) acquitted the applicant.
- On
29 June 2004 the Wrocław Regional Court (Sąd Okręgowy)
upheld that judgment.
10. Voting in referendum
- On
2 September 1996 the Jelenia Góra Regional Court convicted the
applicant of murder and sentenced him to fifteen years’
imprisonment and seven years’ deprivation of his civic rights,
including the right to vote.
- In
June 2003 the applicant wished to cast his vote in the referendum on
Poland’s accession to the European Union. The staff of Wołów
Prison did not allow him to do so.
- The
applicant complained about that fact to the Wołów Prison
administration and the domestic courts. He asserted that if the
deprivation of his civic rights was enforceable immediately after the
relevant judgment had become effective, but the running of time for
that purpose was then suspended until the end of his imprisonment,
that would make the period of deprivation of his civic rights much
longer than the seven years imposed by the court.
- By
a letter of 26 February 2007 the Deputy Governor of Wołów
Prison explained that the applicant could not vote in the referendum
because he had been deprived of his civic rights by a court decision.
It was explained that in the light of the applicable law, the
deprivation in question became effective as soon as the judgment had
become final, but that the disqualification period, in the
applicant’s case of seven years, did not begin to run until
after the end of the term of imprisonment.
- By
a decision of 31 January 2007 the Jelenia Góra Regional Court
refused to resolve doubts (odmówić rozstrzygnięcia
wątpliwości) as to the enforcement of the deprivation
of the right to vote as imposed by the relevant judgment. The court
held that there was no basis for resolving the issue. Nevertheless,
the court went on to explain that the suspension of the term of the
deprivation of civic rights had been envisaged by the legislature in
order to ensure that the punishment which a punitive measure (środek
karny) was meant to carry did not become a fiction.
11. Education outside prison
- Throughout
his incarceration the applicant made requests to be allowed to study
at a university outside the prison system.
- On
18 December 2002 the Penitentiary Commission of Wołów
Prison decided not to grant the applicant’s request because of
his negative criminological prognosis.
- On
24 February 2003 the Wrocław Regional Court upheld that
decision.
B. The second applicant
1. The period of the applicant’s detention
- On
8 November 2000 the applicant was remanded in custody in connection
with criminal proceedings against him.
- He
was committed to Wołów Prison where he was held until an
unspecified date. It appears that he is currently detained in Zaręba
Górna Prison.
2. The conditions of the applicant’s detention
- The
applicant submitted that he had been detained in inadequate living
and sanitary conditions. In particular, he complained about severe
overcrowding.
- During
an unspecified period the applicant was held in cell no. 76 ward
IV A. The total size of the cell in question was sixteen square
metres but, in fact, the habitable area was reduced to thirteen
square metres because of the toilet annex and other equipment placed
inside. The cell was shared by six to eight persons at a time.
Detainees had no access to hot water inside the cell. There was no
loudspeaker to allow them to listen to the prison radio. The cell in
question was insufficiently ventilated and lit. Two small windows
were permanently covered by the bunk beds and the artificial lighting
was inadequate.
- The
Government submitted that on an unspecified date, presumably in
November 2009, the applicant had been placed in Zaręba
Górna Prison, in a cell in which the statutory minimum
standard of 3 m² per person was respected. The applicant did not
contest this submission.
3. The applicant’s actions concerning the
conditions of his detention
- The
applicant did not lodge any complaints in that connection with the
penitentiary authorities or prison administration. Nor did he bring a
related civil action for compensation for the infringement of
personal rights on account of overcrowding and inadequate living
conditions.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
- A
detailed description of the relevant domestic law and practice
concerning general rules governing conditions of detention in Poland
and domestic remedies available to detainees alleging that the
conditions of their detention were inadequate are set out in the
Court’s pilot judgments given in the cases of Orchowski v.
Poland (no. 17885/04) and Norbert Sikorski v. Poland (no.
17599/05) on 22 October 2009 (see §§ 75-85 and
§§ 45 88 respectively). More recent
developments are described in the Court’s decision in the case
of Łatak v. Poland (no. 52070/08) on 12 October 2010
(see §§ 25-54).
THE LAW
I. THE GOVERNMENT’S REQUEST TO STRIKE OUT THE
APPLICATION UNDER ARTICLE 37 OF THE CONVENTION
- In
their letter of 16 March 2009 the Government asked that the
application be struck out of the Court’s list of cases on the
basis of Article 37 of the Convention, which, in its relevant
part, reads as follows:
“1. The Court may at any stage of the
proceedings decide to strike an application out of its list of cases
where the circumstances lead to the conclusion that
(a) the applicant does not intend to pursue
his application; or
(b) the matter has been resolved; or
(c) for any other reason established by the
Court, it is no longer justified to continue the examination of the
application...”
- The
Government maintained that the applicants had failed to pursue their
application in that they had not submitted their observations on the
admissibility and the merits of the case.
- The
Court notes that the applicants acted without legal representation.
The first applicant, who pursued the case on his and the second
applicant’s behalf, maintained extensive correspondence with
the Court throughout the entire proceedings. In all of his letters,
including the last letter which was sent to the Court before the
expiration of the time-limit for observations, the first applicant
stated that he confirmed his and the second applicant’s
original pleadings and wished to pursue the application. He explained
that he could not respond to the Government’s observations in
detail because he did not speak either of the Court’s official
languages.
In
such circumstances and having regard to the fact that the first
applicant expressed clearly, on his and on the second applicant’s
behalf, their intention to pursue the application, the Court must
continue the examination of the case.
- This being so, the Court rejects the Government’s
request to strike the application out under Article 37 of the
Convention.
II. THE ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
ON ACCOUNT OF OVERCROWDING AND INADEQUATE CONDITIONS OF THE
APPLICANTS’ DETENTION AND OF INADEQUATE MEDICAL CARE AFFORDED
TO THE FIRST APPLICANT DURING HIS DETENTION
- The
first applicant complained under Article 3 of the Convention about
the overcrowding, inadequate conditions and medical care in Wołów
and Wrocław Prisons.
- The
second applicant complained of the inadequate conditions of his
detention in Wołów Prison.
A. Admissibility
1. The Government’s objection on exhaustion of
domestic remedies
- The
Government raised a preliminary objection, arguing that the
applicants had not exhausted the domestic remedies available to them.
(a) The Government
- The
Government submitted that the first applicant had been released from
prison on 2 February 2009 and that the second applicant had been
moved to a prison in which he had been secured at least the statutory
minimum standard space of 3 square metres per person shortly
after the delivery of the Orchowski and Norbert Sikorski
pilot judgments. In these circumstances, the situation giving
rise to the alleged breach of Article 3 of the Convention no longer
existed and the applicants should bring a civil action under Article
24 taken in conjunction with Article 448 of the Civil Code in order
to seek compensation for the past violation.
- In
that regard they relied, in particular, on the Orchowski judgment,
reiterating that the Court, having regard to the principle of
subsidiarity, had held that in cases where the alleged violation of
Article 3 no longer continued and could not be eliminated with
retrospective effect, the only means of redress for the applicant was
pecuniary compensation.
- In
view of the foregoing, the Government invited the Court to reject the
application for non-exhaustion of domestic remedies, pursuant to
Article 35 § 1 of the Convention.
(b) The applicants
- The
applicants did not submit any comments.
(c) The Court
(i) Recently established principles
- The
Court already examined a similar objection on exhaustion of domestic
remedies raised by the Government in the above-mentioned cases of
Łatak v. Poland and Łomiński v. Poland
and considered their arguments not only in the context of those two
particular applicants but also in respect of other actual or
potential applicants with similar cases (see Łatak v. Poland
no. 52070/08 and Łomiński v. Poland no. 33502/09
(dec.), 12 October 2010, §§ 71-85 and §§
62-76 respectively).
- In
so doing, the Court had regard to the fact that on the date of the
adoption of its decisions there were 271 cases pending before it
where the applicants had raised complaints similar in substance,
alleging a violation of Article 3 in that at various times and for
various periods they had been adversely affected by the same
structural problem, having been detained in overcrowded, insanitary
cells (ibid. § 84 and § 75 respectively).
- Having
found that a civil action under Article 24 taken in conjunction with
Article 448 of the Civil Code could be considered an “effective
remedy” for the purposes of Article 35 § 1 of the
Convention as from 17 March 2010 and having regard to the 3-year
limitation period for lodging such an action, the Court held that
essentially in all cases in which in June 2008 the alleged violation
had either been remedied by placing the applicant in
Convention-compliant conditions or had ended ipso facto because
the applicant had been released, the applicants concerned should
bring a civil action for the infringement of personal rights and
compensation (ibid. § 85 and § 76 respectively).
(ii) The Court’s conclusion
concerning the first applicant
- In
the present case the first applicant was deprived of liberty in two
separate periods (see paragraphs 7 and 8 above).
(α) The applicant’s first
detention
- The
applicant’s first detention lasted in total from
26 September 1995 until 9 July 2004. It
effectively ended on the latter date because the applicant was
released on an eighteen-month long break to seek medical treatment
outside prison.
-
The Court notes that the applicant’s complaint under Article 3
of the Convention is not limited to the overcrowding and resultant
poor living and sanitary conditions of his detention. The applicant,
who suffers from a particular orthopaedic disorder, complained, in
parallel, that the medical care provided to him within the
penitentiary system had been inadequate and that his health had
deteriorated as a result.
The
Court has already held in a similar case that only a remedy able to
address the applicant’s complaint in its integrity and not
merely its selected aspects, could realistically redress his
situation (see Sławomir Musiał v. Poland,
no. 28300/06, § 80, ECHR 2009 ... (extracts)).
- In
any event, between 2001 and 2003 the applicant applied a number of
times to be released from prison on health grounds. He also
instituted criminal investigations against the medical staff of
Wrocław Remand Centre. By taking those actions the applicant has
sufficiently drawn the attention of the penitentiary authorities to
the question of the compatibility of his living conditions and
medical care in prison with the state of his health (see paragraphs
35-45 above).
Moreover,
the applicant took steps to complain specifically of his detention
conditions and the overcrowding. He lodged penitentiary complaints,
instituted criminal proceedings against the staff and administration
of Wołów Prison and civil proceedings against Wrocław
Prison (see paragraphs 25-34 above).
- Bearing
in mind that the applicant’s Article 3 complaint is two fold,
the Court will, nevertheless, examine the Government’s
objection as it has been formulated, that is, in relation to the
overcrowding and resultant poor living and sanitary conditions of the
applicant’s detention.
The
Court reiterates that in its pilot judgments in the cases of
Orchowski and Norbert Sikorski (see Orchowski,
cited above, § 96 and Norbert Sikorski, cited above,
§§ 100-101) it held that the findings made by the
Constitutional Court and by this Court that overcrowding in Polish
detention facilities was of a structural nature, “undermined
the effectiveness of any domestic remedy available, making them
theoretical and illusory and incapable of providing redress in
respect of the applicant’s complaint” (ibid. § 111
and § 121 respectively). This conclusion equally applies to the
present case in so far as it concerns the applicant’s first
detention which ended in 2004, especially given that the Government
explicitly acknowledged the existence and the systemic nature of the
problem of overcrowding in Polish detention facilities at the
relevant time (ibid. § 146 and § 148 respectively) and that
the applicant’s civil actions and penitentiary complaints,
which he had lodged against Wołów and Wrocław
Prisons between 2001 and 2004, were to no avail (see paragraphs 18-27
above).
Moreover,
noting that the applicant’s first detention ended in 2004 and
that a relevant civil action under Articles 24 and 448 of the Civil
Code is barred by the three-year statute of limitation, the Court
considers that the applicant cannot presently be required to avail
himself of the civil remedy in question.
- Accordingly, the Court dismisses the Government’s
preliminary objection as to the non-exhaustion of domestic remedies
in so far as the applicant’s first detention is concerned.
- The
Court also considers that this part of the application is not
manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of
the Convention. It further finds that it is not inadmissible on any
other grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible.
(β) The applicant’s second
detention
- The
applicant’s second detention lasted from 26 January 2006 until
2 February 2009. During that time, the applicant made a number
of complaints about the quality of medical care provided to him in
Wołów Prison but he did not lodge any such complaints
concerning the overcrowding and overall living conditions. Nor did he
bring a civil action for compensation for the infringement of
personal rights.
That
being so, the Court will examine the admissibility of the applicant’s
Article 3 complaint in each of its aspects.
- In
so far as the applicant complained of the overcrowding and resultant
poor living and sanitary conditions of his detention, the Court
observes that he is now at liberty and that he still has adequate
time to prepare and lodge with the Polish civil courts an action
under Article 24 taken in conjunction with Article 448 of
the Civil Code. It follows that, he should, before having his
complaint concerning the conditions of his second detention examined
by the Court, be required to seek redress at domestic level.
- It
follows that the applicant’s complaint in so far as it concerns
the conditions of his detention from 26 January 2006 until 2 February
2009 must be rejected under Article 35 §§ 1 and 4 of the
Convention for non exhaustion of domestic remedies.
- In
so far as the applicant complained that he had not been afforded
adequate medical care during his second detention, the Court takes
note of the following elements.
The
parties did not submit any medical certificates or reports on the
applicant’s health during or after his second detention. Six
months into his detention, the applicant informed the prison
authorities that he did not consent to any medical examinations or
medical treatment in the orthopaedic centre of Wrocław Prison
(see paragraph 49 above) and in October 2007 he withdrew his consent
for a scheduled surgery (see paragraph 52 above). Lastly, the
authorities made considerate efforts to monitor the applicant’s
health and offer him specialist treatment despite his unwillingness
to cooperate, arranging his medical check-ups in establishments other
that Wrocław Prison (see paragraph 51 above).
In
the light of all the material in its possession, the Court finds that
the authorities complied with their obligation under Article 3 of the
Convention to provide the applicant with medical care and treatment
adequate to his health requirements at the relevant time.
- It
follows that this part of the applicant’s complaint is
manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected in accordance with
Article 35 §§ 3 and 4 of the Convention.
(iii) The Court’s conclusion
concerning the second applicant
- The
second applicant has been detained since 8 November 2000. On an
unspecified date, presumably in November 2009, he was placed in a
prison cell in which the statutory minimum size requirement of 3
square metres per person was respected. He is currently
held in Zaręba Górna Prison and he is not complaining
with regard to this penitentiary establishment.
That
being so, and having regard to the fact that the applicant still has
adequate time to prepare and lodge with the Polish civil courts an
action under Article 24 taken in conjunction with Article 448 of the
Civil Code, he should, before having his Convention claim examined by
the Court, be required to seek redress at domestic level.
In
any event, as from 6 December 2009, the date on which Article
110 § 2 (f) of the Code of Execution of Criminal
Sentences entered into force, a detainee placed in conditions where
the area per person is less than the statutory minimum may lodge a
complaint with the court and contest a decision of the prison
administration to reduce his cell space (see Łatak and
Łomiński cited above, §§ 42-43 and 86-87 and
§§ 34-35 and 77 78 respectively).
- It
follows that the application of the second applicant must be rejected
under Article 35 §§ 1 and 4 of the Convention for
non-exhaustion of domestic remedies.
B. Merits
1. The first applicant
- The
first applicant submitted that from 2001 until 2004 the conditions of
his detention in Wołów and Wrocław Prisons had
fallen short of standards compatible with Article 3 of the
Convention. In particular, he complained that he had been detained in
overcrowded cells with less than 3 square metres of space per
person and allowed to spend a very limited time outside the cell,
i.e. he had only a one-hour long outdoor exercise per day and a right
to take only one shower per week.
The
applicant also complained that he had been afforded inadequate
medical care during his first detention.
2. The Government
- The
Government argued that during his first detention the applicant had
not suffered inhuman or degrading treatment which attained the
minimum level of severity within the meaning of Article 3 of the
Convention. The applicant’s health and life were not in danger
as he received regular specialised medical care and treatment.
3. The Court’s assessment
- The
case raises the issue of the compatibility of the applicant’s
state of health with his detention in the conditions of Wołów
and Wrocław Prisons. The Court must also answer the question of
whether that situation attained the minimum level of severity to fall
within the ambit of Article 3 of the Convention.
- A summary of the general principles concerning the
examination of medical care and conditions of detention under Article
3 may be found in the Court’s recent judgments in Sławomir
Musiał v. Poland (no. 28300/06, §§ 85-88,
ECHR 2009-...(extracts)) and Orchowski v. Poland (cited
above, §§ 119-229).
- The
Court notes that the applicant limited his complaint to the period
from an unspecified date at the beginning of 2001 until 9 July 2004,
that is, a period of approximately three years and six months (see
paragraphs 12 and 123 above).
He
submitted that during all that time he had been held in severely
overcrowded cells and that he had a one-hour period of outdoor
exercise per day and one shower per week.
- The
Government did not submit any information as to the number of inmates
sharing the applicant’s cell or the total number of detainees
held in Wrocław Prison in 2001 and in Wołów Prison
from September 2001 until July 2004 (see paragraph 13 above).
Various
domestic proceedings which had been instituted by the applicant
revealed, however, that Wołów Prison faced, at the
relevant time, the problem of overcrowding and that the applicant
himself had been affected by it. It was confirmed that eight of the
applicant’s cells in Wołów Prison measured
approximately 16 square metres and they were shared by up to eight
prisoners (see paragraphs 28 and 29 above).
- The
Court has already found in its two pilot judgments of
Orchowski v. Poland and Norbert Sikorski v.
Poland that, for many years, namely from 2000 until at least
mid-2008, the overcrowding in Polish prisons and remand centres had
revealed a structural problem consisting of “a practice that
[was] incompatible with the Convention” (see Orchowski,
cited above § 151 and Norbert Sikorski, cited above,
§§ 155-156).
- Taking
all these elements into consideration, the Court finds it established
that during approximately three years and six months the applicant
was detained in overcrowded cells with less than 3 square metres of
personal space and with the possibility of having only a one-hour
outdoor exercise per day and one shower per week.
- Moreover,
the Court notes that during his detention the applicant undeniably
suffered from Dupuytren’s contracture, a disorder that, if
untreated, prevents the fingers and toes from straightening (see
paragraph 14 above).
- It
appears that in the early stages of his detention prior to 2001, the
applicant underwent two operations on his right hand and right foot
(see paragraphs 15 and 16 above). A number of expert reports and
testimonies of witnesses which had been produced in the course of
criminal investigations instituted by the applicant revealed that
shortly after the second surgery the applicant had soaked his hand in
an unspecified disinfectant and put needles in his healing wound,
which had impeded the recovery process (see paragraph 17 above).
-
Furthermore, the material in the Court’s possession shows that
the applicant’s condition was monitored by specialised doctors
(see paragraphs 18-23 above), despite the fact that the applicant was
not always cooperative. Several expert reports were obtained to
verify whether or not the applicant’s evolving disorder could
effectively be treated within the penitentiary system (see paragraphs
20; 22 and 23 above).
- The
Court observes, however, that the expert reports were to a large
extent contradictory. Whereas in 2001 it was considered that the
applicant should undergo reconstructive surgery of his right hand at
an orthopaedic clinic of Warsaw Remand Centre (see paragraph 18
above), in January 2002 such a procedure was no longer available and,
moreover, the applicant was informed that prison hospitals could not
offer him any further diagnostic care (see paragraph 19 above). One
month later it was clarified that the applicant had indeed required
reconstructive surgery, but not urgently, and that his condition
could be improved by physiotherapy available in prison (see paragraph
20 above). It is unknown to the Court whether or not the prescribed
physiotherapy was made available to the applicant in prison. The fact
remains that reconstructive surgery was not performed so long as the
applicant’s remained in detention until July 2004.
- In
addition, the Court is struck by the fact that despite the monitoring
and treatment which was to be afforded to the applicant in prison,
his condition deteriorated to the extent that in March 2003 the
contracture of his right-hand little finger was considered so
advanced that the finger needed to be amputated (see paragraph 21
above).
In
2003 the applicant also qualified for an operation on his two
contracted left-hand fingers but the procedure was not scheduled that
year (see paragraph 22 above). In April 2004 it was still considered
necessary, but the applicant could only seek to undergo such
treatment after July 2004 when he was finally granted release from
prison (see paragraphs 23 and 24 above).
The
Court is not in a position to speculate whether or not the
development of the applicant’s disease could have been arrested
or slowed down had he been at liberty and free to seek medical care
with the professionals of his choice. Likewise, the accuracy of the
medical diagnosis and therapy which was prescribed by prison doctors
cannot be verified.
It is
very apparent in this case, however, that the authorities did not
follow up the doctors’ recommendations that the applicant
undergo two operations and that the delays in assessing his condition
had serious and irreparable consequences on his health, e.g. the
recommended amputation of the applicant’s right-hand little
finger.
Lastly,
in the light of an important doubt as to whether the applicant’s
condition could effectively be treated within the prison healthcare
system, which was raised for the first time as early as January 2002,
the Court considers that the authorities did not act in due time in
releasing the applicant from prison only in July 2004 and prolonged
his suffering resulting from his deteriorating disease.
- The
Court accepts that the very nature of the applicant’s condition
made him more vulnerable than the average detainee. In consequence,
his detention in the conditions described above coupled with the
authorities’ failure to provide him with adequate surgical
treatment or to release him without undue delay to seek such
treatment at liberty, must have resulted in stress, anxiety and even
physical suffering, and has unnecessarily exposed him to a risk to
his health.
- Assessing
the facts of the case as a whole, having regard in particular to the
cumulative effects of the inadequate medical care and to the
inappropriate living conditions during the applicant’s
incarceration, which had likely a detrimental effect on his health
and well-being, the Court considers that the nature, duration and
severity of the ill-treatment to which the applicant was subjected
are sufficient to be qualified as inhuman and degrading (see Egmez
v. Cyprus, no. 30873/96, § 77, ECHR 2000-XII;
Labzov v. Russia, no. 62208/00, § 45, 16 June
2005; and Mayzit v. Russia, no. 63378/00, § 42,
20 January 2005).
- There
has accordingly been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention.
III. THE REMAINING COMPLAINTS
A. Complaints under Article 6 of the Convention and
under Articles 2 and 3 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention
- The
first applicant complained under Article 6 of the Convention of the
outcome of several sets of criminal proceedings instituted by him
against third parties including doctors, warders and prison
administration (see paragraphs 27-29; 39-45; 63-66; 68 and 69 above)
and about his failure to obtain a different prisoner’s category
(see paragraph 59 above) and an early release from prison (see
paragraph 70 above). He also complained of the alleged breach of his
right to education in that the penitentiary authorities did not
authorise him to study at a university outside the prison system (see
paragraphs 85-87 above). In addition, the applicant complained of the
alleged breach of his right to vote in that in June 2003 in Wołów
Prison he was not allowed to cast his vote in the referendum on
Poland’s accession to the European Union (see paragraphs 80-84
above).
- These
complaints are incompatible ratione materiae with the
provisions of the Convention and Protocols within the meaning of
Article 35 § 3 and must be rejected in accordance
with Article 35 § 4.
B. Complaints about three sets of civil proceedings
against the State Treasury
- The
first applicant also complained under Article 6 of the Convention
about the alleged shortcomings and the outcome of three sets of civil
proceedings for compensation brought by him against the State
Treasury. The first set of impugned proceedings (for infringement of
personal rights, see paragraphs 30-34 above) ended with the judgment
of the Wrocław Regional Court of 31 August 2005, against which
the applicant did not appeal. The second set of proceedings (action
for damages against the Wrocław Regional Court and Court of
Appeal, see paragraph 76 above) appears to be pending. And the
third set of impugned proceedings (for compensation for mental
distress after a fight in prison, see paragraphs 73 75 above)
ended with the first-instance judgment of 1 March 2005 and it appears
that the appeal against this judgment was without prospects of
success.
- It
follows that the complaints concerning the first two sets of
proceedings must be rejected under Article 35 §§ 1
and 4 of the Convention for non-exhaustion of domestic remedies.
The complaint concerning the third set of proceedings is manifestly
ill founded, being of a fourth-instance nature, and must be
rejected in accordance with Article 35 §§ 3 and 4 of the
Convention.
C. Monitoring of the applicant’s correspondence
- Lastly,
the applicant complained of the alleged monitoring of his
correspondence and the alleged fact that the authorities had withheld
letters from the Registry of the European Court of Human Rights.
However,
the Court finds that the material in its possession does not disclose
any appearance of a violation of the rights and freedoms set out in
the Convention or its Protocols.
- It
follows that this part of the application is manifestly ill-founded
and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 §§ 3 and
4 of the Convention.
IV. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article
41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
- The applicant did not make a claim for just
satisfaction.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Rejects the Government’s request to strike
the application out of the Court’s list of cases;
- Declares admissible the first applicant’s
complaint under Article 3 of the Convention in so far as it concerns
his first detention and the remainder of the application, including
the second applicant’s complaint, inadmissible;
3. Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 3 of the Convention in respect of the first applicant’s
first detention.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 26 July 2011, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Lawrence Early Nicolas Bratza
Registrar President