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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> SG (Article 3, Military Service, Detention) Algeria [2005] UKIAT 00031 (01 February 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2005/00031.html Cite as: [2005] UKIAT 31, [2005] UKIAT 00031, [2005] UKAIT 00031 |
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SG (Article 3-Military Service-Detention) Algeria [2005] UKIAT 00031
Date of hearing: 17 January 2005
Date Determination notified: 1 February 2005
Secretary of State for the Home Department |
APPELLANT |
and |
|
SG | RESPONDENT |
'All military personnel guilty of desertion within the country in peacetime shall be punished with a term of six months to five years imprisonment.
If desertion occurs in wartime or in a territory in which a state of siege or state of emergency has been declared, the term shall be between two years and ten years.
In all cases, a discharge may be pronounced if the guilty party is an officer.'
'5.150 UNHCR have stated that they are not aware of the authorities using excessive or inhumane or discriminatory treatment in the case of deserters and draft evaders.
5.160 After serving their prison sentence, deserters still have to fulfil the rest of their interrupted time in military service.
5.170 A country visit report of 1999 stated that deserters were dealt with more severely than draft evaders and it is not known how the authorities were presently deciding deserters' cases. Another recent country report of 2003 stated that as conscripts are used in conflicts with the armed opposition, the desertion rate was high, and deserters were punished in accordance with military legislation.
5.180 However, at a country information seminar in June 2001, organised by UNHCR/ACCORD one of the speakers considered that deserters were at risk of torture on return as they would be considered to have broken the law of silences regarding past atrocities by security forces.'
'In any case, Mr Gaid's situation is not merely one of desertion or absence without leave. He had been warned that he would face court martial although the charges have not been specified ... In other words the claimant's oppressions arise not merely because of his desertion but because of what may happen to him as a result of what he accidentally discovered. His situation is such that exceptional circumstances would certainly apply to him, quite apart from the sentence of up to ten years in prison that he formally faces.'
'It has been reported that deserters and conscripts attempting to desert have been executed, and the army generals have even proceeded to execute family members of deserters, including parents, women, children and cousins in order to stop desertions.'
'5.48 In 2004 prison conditions were reportedly spartan but generally met international standards. A country report by the Netherlands authorities dated January 2003 stated that Algeria had about 35,000 prisoners held in 123 penitentiary establishments under the Ministry of Justice. The prison in Algiers were Serkadjk, prison D.El Harrach and Berouagghia. The prisons at Batna was Tazoult. Problems reportedly arose from overcrowding rather than neglect. In 2002 there were riots in several prisons in protest against the prison conditions. These riots concluded several episodes of arson by prisoners and led to about fifty deaths and forty causalities.
5.49 The government has reportedly continued to improve prison conditions and undertaken to reform the prison system. Administering charge of prison reform was appointed in June 2002. In December 2003 Algeria accepted the recommendations of a UNDP programme at a conference in Algiers on measures to improve prisons conditions and to help prisoners integrate into society upon release.
'5.100 However, more recent reports state that absentees are not treated so harshly by the authorities as in the past. The Algerian authorities informed the Canadian Embassy in Algiers in March 1999 that people suspected of being absent without leave are arrested by the police and immediately brought before a military tribunal which is free to decide the punishment for the individual, according to the law. They stated that absence without leave was not considered to be major issue by the Algerian authorities: those convicted of this offence were usually sent to their units to do their national service.
5.101 The same source quoted two Algerian human rights organisations – the Observatoire Nationale des Droits de l'Homme (ONDH), which was linked to the state, and the Liegue Algerienne des Droits de l'Homme (LADH). They stated that they had received no complaints regarding torture of deserters and draft evaders but these organisations also indicated that the situation today is considerably different from what it was in the 1970s, when soldiers who were absent without leave might have been treated more harshly.
Decision