BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you
consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it
will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free
access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[New search]
[Contents list]
[Printable RTF version]
[Help]
FIRST
SECTION
CASE
OF IMAKAYEVA v. RUSSIA
(Application
no. 7615/02)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
9
November 2006
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 Imakayeva v. Russia,
The
European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Mr C.L. Rozakis, President,
Mr L.
Loucaides,
Mrs F. Tulkens,
Mrs N. Vajić,
Mr A.
Kovler,
Mrs E. Steiner,
Mr K. Hajiyev, judges,
and
Mr S. Nielsen, Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 19 October 2006,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 7615/02) against the Russian
Federation lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by a Russian national, Ms Marzet Imakayeva (“the
applicant”), on 12 February 2002.
- The
applicant, who had been granted legal aid, was represented by lawyers
of the Stichting Russian Justice Initiative (“SRJI”), an
NGO based in the Netherlands with a representative office in Russia.
The Russian Government (“the Government”)
were represented by their Agent, Mr P. Laptev,
Representative of the Russian Federation at the European Court of
Human Rights.
- The
applicant alleged that first her son and then her husband
“disappeared” following their apprehension by Russian
servicemen in Chechnya. She referred to Articles 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 13,
34 and 38 of the Convention.
- The
application was allocated to the First Section of the Court (Rule 52
§ 1 of the Rules of Court). Within that Section, the
Chamber that would consider the case (Article 27 § 1 of the
Convention) was constituted as provided in Rule 26 § 1.
- On
1 November 2004 the Court changed the composition of its Sections
(Rule 25 § 1), but this case remained with the First Section.
- By
a decision of 20 January 2005, the Court declared the application
admissible.
- The
applicant and the Government each filed further written observations
(Rule 59 § 1).
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The applicant was born in 1951 and lived
in the village of Novye Atagi, Shali district, Chechnya. In early
2004 she left for the United States of America, where she
sought asylum.
A. The facts
- The
facts surrounding the disappearance of the applicant's son and
husband were partially disputed. In view of this the Court requested
the Government to produce copies of the entire investigation files
opened in relation to the abduction of Said-Khuseyn and Said-Magomed
Imakayev. The submissions of the parties on the facts concerning the
circumstances of the apprehension and disappearance of the
applicant's son and husband and the ensuing investigations are set
out in Sections 1-5 below. A description of the materials submitted
to the Court is contained in Part B.
1. Disappearance of the applicant's son
- The
applicant lived in the village of Novye Atagi in the Shali district,
Chechnya. Her husband, Said-Magomed Imakayev, was born in 1955, and
they had three children: Said-Khuseyn, born in 1977, Magomed-Emir and
Sedo. The applicant is a school teacher by profession. The
applicant's son Said-Khuseyn graduated from medical school in 1999 as
a dentist and continued his studies in the Grozny Oil Institute.
- In
the morning of 17 December 2000 Said-Khuseyn Imakayev drove to the
market in the village of Starye Atagi in a white VAZ-2106 (“Zhiguli”)
car, which he used with the written permission of the owner.
- About
6 p.m. on the same day neighbours informed the applicant that they
had seen her son being detained by Russian servicemen at a roadblock
between the villages of Starye Atagi and Novye Atagi. The applicant
and her relatives immediately started looking for him and collected
several statements from the witnesses who had seen her son's
detention. They initially agreed to testify on condition that their
names were not disclosed, but later agreed to submit their names.
- Witness
Umayat D. is a resident of Novye Atagi and knew Said-Khuseyn Imakayev
from school. On 17 December 2000 he was at the market in Starye
Atagi. At about 2 p.m. he met Said-Khuseyn Imakayev, who said he
had wanted to buy a jacket but had not found anything. He offered D.
a lift back to their village, but D. was driving himself and
declined. He later learnt that Imakayev had been detained by Russian
soldiers on the road near the bridge over the Argun river.
- Witnesses
Zulay T. and Kolita D. are residents of Novye Atagi who were
returning home in a bus from the market in Starye Atagi. At about
3 p.m. on 17 December 2000 the two women saw from the bus
window a group of military personnel wearing masks and standing
around a white Zhiguli car. A young man got out of the Zhiguli. The
women alighted from the bus and wanted to help him, but the military
started shooting in the air and at the ground, and shouted at them
not to approach. They saw the young man being thrown into the
military UAZ car (“tabletka”), and one of the
servicemen drove the white Zhiguli. They left very quickly, and the
witnesses did not note the UAZ number plates. The cars went towards
Novye Atagi. Later that day they learnt that the man detained was
Said-Khuseyn Imakayev.
- Adam
Ts. testified that in the afternoon of 17 December 2000 in Lenin
Street, Novye Atagi, he saw a military UAZ and Said-Khuseyn
Imakayev's Zhiguli, driven by an unknown man aged 30-35. The car was
driving at very high speed. He thought that Imakayev had lent the car
to someone, as he sometimes did. Later that day he learnt that
Said-Khuseyn Imakayev had been detained by the military and that his
car had been taken as well. A witness identified as E. orally stated
to the applicant's representatives that at about 3 p.m. on
17 December 2000 he saw Imakayev's car in Nagornaya Street,
Novye Atagi, followed by a UAZ and an armoured personnel carrier
(APC).
- The
applicant has had no news of her son since.
2. Investigation into the disappearance of Said-Khuseyn
Imakayev
- Starting
on 18 December 2000, the applicant and her husband applied on
numerous occasions to prosecutors of different levels, to the
Ministry of the Interior, to the administrative authorities in
Chechnya and to the Russian President's Special Envoy to the Chechen
Republic for Rights and Freedoms. The applicant submitted several
copies of standard letters stating that her son had been detained by
unknown military servicemen and had then disappeared, and asking for
assistance and details of the investigation, submitted by her to
various authorities. On her request similar letters were signed by
the village council of elders and the head of administration. On
5 January 2001, at her request, a letter was sent from the
office of the Head of Administration of Chechnya to the prosecutor of
the Shali district, the Prosecutor of Chechnya and the President's
representative in the Southern Federal circuit. She and her husband
also personally visited detention centres and prisons in Chechnya and
further afield in the Northern Caucasus.
- The
applicant received very little substantive information from the
official bodies about the investigation into her son's disappearance.
On several occasions she received copies of letters by various
authorities directing her complaints to the prosecutor of the Shali
district and the prosecutor of the Chechen Republic.
- On
5 January 2001 the applicant was informed by the Shali District
Prosecutor's Office that on 4 January 2001 they had initiated
criminal proceedings in respect of kidnapping, under Article
126 § 2 (a) of the Criminal Code. The file was
assigned number 23001.
- On
21 January 2001 the traffic police division of the Ministry of
the Interior department for the Chechen Republic notified the
applicant that the details of her son's car had been entered in the
search database and that servicemen had been instructed to look for
it.
- On
21 April 2001 the Shali district department of the interior
(ROVD) informed the applicant that criminal investigation no. 23001
had been opened at her request. She would be informed of further
developments.
- According
to the information submitted by the Government in July 2002, in
March-May 2001 the Shali District Prosecutor's Office forwarded
requests about Said-Khuseyn Imakayev to the Shali ROVD and the
Federal Security Service (FSB) Department for Chechnya. Both agencies
denied that they had ever detained Imakayev or that they had any
information about his whereabouts. On 15 May 2001 [sic] the
investigation was adjourned and the Shali ROVD was instructed to
continue search for the missing man.
- On
16 June 2001 the Shali District Prosecutor informed the
applicant that the investigation had been adjourned.
- On
26 February 2002 an investigator of the Shali District
Prosecutor's office issued a “progress note” (справка).
It stated that on 17 December 2000, on the road towards Novye
Atagi, Said-Khuseyn Said-Magomedovich Imakayev, born in 1977, a
resident of Novye Atagi, travelling in his own car, had been detained
and taken away by unknown persons wearing camouflage outfits and
masks. His location remained unknown. On 4 January 2001 the
Shali District Prosecutor opened criminal investigation no. 23001
under Article 126 § 2 (a) of the Penal Code
(kidnapping). The investigation had been adjourned under
Article 195 § 3 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
because of the failure to identify the culprits. Investigative
measures to locate Imakayev were continuing.
- According
to the Government, on 22 June 2002 the investigator of the Shali
District Prosecutor's Office forwarded requests for information about
Imakayev to the Chechnya Department of the FSB, to the military
prosecutor of military unit no. 20116 (based in Shali), to the
Shali military commander's office and to the information centres of
the Ministry of the Interior and of the Chechnya Department of the
Interior. It appears that none of these requests produced any result.
On 5 July 2002 the investigation was resumed by an order of the
deputy Chechnya Prosecutor.
- On
16 July 2002, in connection with the disappearance of the
applicant's husband (see below), the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office
informed the applicant that criminal investigation no. 23001 had
failed to establish her son's whereabouts. The letter stated that
following a review of the case-file, the district prosecutor's order
of 11 March 2001 [sic] to adjourn the investigation had been
quashed. The investigator had been instructed to conduct certain
actions, including a thorough check of the possibility of his
abduction by “servicemen from the power structures”
(«сотрудниками
силовых структур»).
- On
24 July 2002 the applicant was granted victim status in criminal case
no. 23001 into her son's abduction.
- On
20 December 2002 the respondent Government submitted further
information to the Court about the investigation. They stated that
two witnesses, S. and T., had testified that Said-Khuseyn Imakayev
had been kidnapped by a group of persons armed with automatic
fire-arms, dressed in camouflage uniforms and using a UAZ-452
vehicle. Neither the applicant's son nor the vehicle he had been
driving had been found. Criminal investigation no. 23001 had
been suspended on 4 March 2001 [sic] due to a failure to
identify the culprits, but on 5 July 2002 the investigation had
been resumed by an order of the first deputy prosecutor of the
Chechen Republic. The new investigation was to pursue “a
complete and thorough examination of all the circumstances of the
committed crime, including checking the version that Imakayev S.-Kh.
had been kidnapped by persons who were members of illegal armed units
for the purpose of discrediting the federal forces”. On 5
August 2002 the investigation was again adjourned.
- On
19 March 2003 the applicant was informed by a letter from the
Chechnya Prosecutor's Office that the investigation had been reopened
on 26 February 2003. On 15 April 2003 the Shali District Prosecutor
informed the applicant that the case had been adjourned.
- On
17 April 2003 the SRJI, on the applicant's behalf, wrote to the Shali
District Prosecutor and asked him to inform them about the progress
in the investigation and to grant the applicant victim status in the
proceedings.
- On
12 May 2003 the Shali District Prosecutor's Office informed the SRJI
that the investigation had been adjourned. A copy of the decision to
grant the applicant victim status had been forwarded directly to her.
- On
19 May 2003 the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office informed the SRJI that
the investigation had taken a number of steps to establish the
whereabouts of Said-Khuseyn Imakayev, including questioning of
witnesses and of eye-witnesses to the crime. However, the culprits
were not established, and on 23 March 2003 the investigation was
again suspended. The applicant was informed accordingly.
- On
4 August and 26 October 2003 the Shali District Prosecutor's Office
informed the applicant that, although the investigation into her
son's abduction had been suspended, the measures to establish his
whereabouts continued. The applicant was also informed of the
possibility to appeal.
- On
26 September 2003 the respondent Government informed the Court that
the acting Chechnya Prosecutor had reversed the decision to suspend
the investigation, and had ordered a number of steps to be taken.
- The
applicant submits that certain investigative actions were taken in
October – December 2003 in the course of investigating her
husband's disappearance (see §§ 74 and 76 below).
- On
9 January 2004 the head of the criminal investigation department of
the Shali district informed the applicant that he had ordered a
search for the car driven by Said-Khuseyn Imakayev on the day of his
disappearance.
- On
20 January 2005 the SRJI asked the Shali District Prosecutor's Office
whether criminal investigation no. 23001 was still pending with
their office and if so, to provide an update on progress. The
applicant submits that no reply was received to this letter, and she
was thus unable to familiarise herself with the file and has had no
information about the progress, if any, of the investigation.
- The
applicant refers to the Human Rights Watch report of March 2001
“The 'Dirty War' in Chechnya: Forced Disappearances, Torture
and Summary Executions” which lists Said-Khuseyn Imakayev as
one of the victims of “forced disappearances” after
detention by Russian servicemen.
- In
October 2005 the Government presented additional submissions about
the progress of the investigation. According to them, the
investigation into the kidnapping of the applicant's son established
that, at about 3 p.m. on 17 December 2000, the VAZ-2106 driven
by Said-Khuseyn Imakayev had been stopped by a group of armed persons
near the village of Novye Atagi. His subsequent whereabouts could not
be established.
- The
Government further submitted that the applicant had been questioned
on several occasions, and that on 24 July 2002 she had been granted
victim status. She was not an eye-witness to the events and learnt of
them from the statements of others. Two female witnesses, S. and T.,
stated to the investigation that on 17 December 2000 they had seen
from a bus that a group of men armed with automatic rifles had
detained the above-mentioned car and its driver, Said-Khuseyn
Imakayev. The bodies of the interior ministry and the security
service stated that S.-Kh. Imakayev had never been charged with a
criminal offence. The investigation into criminal case no. 23001
continued and its progress was being monitored by the General
Prosecutor's Office.
- At
the same time the Government submitted copies of several documents
from criminal investigation file no. 23001 (see § 93
below). These documents are summarised in Part B below.
- On
12 February 2002 the applicant and her husband, Said-Magomed
Imakayev, lodged a complaint with the European Court of Human Rights
concerning the disappearance of their son, Said-Khuseyn Imakayev. It
was given the above application number on 21 February 2002. Both Mr
and Mrs Imakayev
issued forms of authority for the SRJI and were listed as applicants.
3. Disappearance of the applicant's husband
- According
to the applicant, on 2 June 2002 she and her husband were in
their house in Novye Atagi. At 6.20 a.m. they were awakened by
loud noise in their courtyard. They saw several APCs and a UAZ car.
The Imakayevs' neighbours later noted down the numbers of three out
of the six APCs involved in the operation and the number plates of
the UAZ.
- About
20 servicemen in military camouflage uniforms came into the house,
some of them wearing masks. The servicemen spoke Russian between
themselves and to the applicant, with no trace of an accent. They
searched the house without showing any warrants or providing
explanations. During the search the applicant managed to talk to the
senior officer in the group. He was wearing camouflage uniform and
had no mask, and the applicant described him as being about 40 years
old, about 180 cm tall and bearded. The officer told her that
his name was “Boomerang Alexander Grigoryevich”. The
applicant understood that “Boomerang” was his nickname.
She also managed to talk to another officer who refused to introduce
himself, but whose appearance the applicant describes as about
40 years old, with fair hair and slightly shorter than
“Boomerang”.
- The
military seized some papers and floppy disks. The applicant asked for
some sort of receipt for these items, for which they left her the
following hand-written note: “Receipt. I, Boomerang A.G. seized
in the Imakayevs' house a bag of documents of the Republic of
Ichkeria and a box of floppy disks. 2.06.02”.
- In
return, “Boomerang” asked the applicant to sign a receipt
that she had no claims to the servicemen in connection to the search.
The applicant agreed to sign the slip acknowledging that no force was
used, but added that she objected to her husband being detained
without any grounds. She also added that the floppy disks and papers
did not belong to her husband, since they were taken from a place
where they stored items belonging to their relatives who had fled
from Grozny in 1999. She gave this signed receipt to “Boomerang”.
- The
applicant's husband, Said-Magomed Imakayev, was held against the wall
during the search, and after it was over he was forced into the UAZ
vehicle. He was allowed to dress appropriately, since it was raining
heavily, and to take 50 roubles “for the road back”. When
the applicant asked where he was taken, “Boomerang” told
her they would take him to Shali, the district centre.
- After
the visit to the Imakayevs' house, the APCs went to other places in
the village and detained four other men.
They then departed.
- The
applicant submitted 30 witnesses' statements collected by her and
relating to the events of 2 June 2002, including those produced
by the relatives of the four other men detained on that night. They
noted the hull numbers of the three APCs involved in the operation:
no. 1252, which went to the applicant's house, and nos. 889 and 569.
One of the neighbours also noted the registration number of the UAZ
vehicle in which Said-Magomed Imakayev was placed, namely 344.
- Since
2 June 2002 the applicant has continued to search for her
husband. She has had no news of him. There has been no news of the
other four men detained on the same night in the village.
4. Investigation into the disappearance of Said-Magomed
Imakayev
- On
2 June 2002 the applicant travelled to the Shali military commander's
office and talked to the military commander, who told her not to
worry and reassured her that all would be fine with her husband. On
the same day she also travelled to Grozny, where she complained in
person and in writing to the Chechnya administration and the military
commander's office. On 4 June 2002 an unnamed officer of the
local FSB department in Shali told her that her husband had probably
been taken to Mesker-Yurt.
- The
applicant attempted to ascertain whether an officer by the name of
“Boomerang” served in the military units in the vicinity,
and she was led to understand by some unnamed military personnel in
the military commander's office in Starye Atagi that they knew him.
The applicant has on many occasions attempted to meet him, but has
always been told that he was absent on “mopping up”
operations.
- On
4 June 2002 the applicant informed the SRJI, her representative in
the case concerning her son, about her husband's apprehension. On
4 June 2002 the Moscow offices of the SRJI and of Human Rights
Watch intervened on the applicant's behalf by writing letters to the
Envoy of the Russian President on Human Rights in the Chechnya and to
the Chechnya Prosecutor. They informed them about the known
circumstances of the detention of Said-Magomed Imakayev and four
other men in Novye Atagi and asked for urgent measures to be taken to
find the detainees. On 6 June 2002 they sent additional
information to those offices submitting the numbers of the APCs noted
by the neighbours, details of the officer in charge of the arrest,
who had introduced himself as “Alexander Grigoryevich
Boomerang”, and the applicant's description of the second
officer.
- On
11 June 2002 the European Court of Human Rights, acting under Rule
49 § 1 of the Rules of Court, requested the Government
to submit information concerning the applicant's husband's
apprehension and whereabouts.
- On
2 July 2002 the applicant was visited at her home by a senior
investigator from the Ministry of the Interior, Department for the
Southern Federal Circuit. He questioned her about the circumstances
of her husband's detention and confirmed that the investigation was
linked to her application to the European Court of Human Rights.
- On
16 July 2002 the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office informed the applicant
that pursuant to her applications, on 28 June 2002 the Shali
District Prosecutor had opened criminal proceedings no. 59140
under Article 126 § 2 (a) of the Penal Code. The
investigation established that the applicant's husband had not been
detained by the law-enforcement agencies, and that there were no
grounds for such detention.
- On
24 July 2002 the Russian Government submitted to the Court a
response to the request for information. They cited a report by the
Directorate of the General Prosecutor Office for the Southern Federal
Circuit, according to which on 17 June 2002 the applicant had
filed a report with the Shali District Prosecutor's Office stating
that “a group of unidentified armed men” had forcibly
removed her husband on 2 June 2002. On 28 June 2002
criminal proceedings were initiated by the district prosecutor under
Article 126 § 2 (a) of the Penal Code. At the
same time, the Government denied that the applicant's husband had
been detained by the authorities. The Government submitted:
“Before the initiation of this criminal case, in
the course of examination and initial investigative actions no facts
that Mr Said-Magomed Imakayev was detained by servicemen of Federal
Forces were obtained. Mr Said-Magomed Imakayev was not conveyed to
law machinery bodies or institutions of Penalty Execution System and
he is not being kept there now. Moreover, law machinery bodies do not
have grounds for his detention. ...
Shalinskiy district of Chechen Republic (and the village
of Novye Atagi in particular) is an area of active criminal
activities of terrorist and extremist organisations that commit
crimes with a view to discredit Federal Forces in Chechen Republic
using camouflage uniforms and motor vehicles that are similar to
uniforms and vehicles used by servicemen and employees of law
machinery bodies in Chechen Republic. Along with other crimes,
illegal armed formations perpetrate abduction and kidnapping of
persons who live or stay in Chechen Republic. In this connection the
main version as regards this criminal case is kidnapping of Mr
Said-Magomed Imakayev by members of one of the terrorist
organisations acting in Chechen Republic and using an outfit of
servicemen of Federal Forces with a view to disguise”.
- The
Government further submitted that the services whose forces are
present in Chechnya - the FSB and the Ministry of the Interior - had
not conducted any special operations in the village of Novye Atagi on
2 June 2002, and that the applicant's husband was not
listed among the detainees held by those agencies.
- It
appears that on 25 July 2002 the applicant was granted victim status
in the proceedings concerning the kidnapping of her husband.
- On
31 July 2002 the Government made further submissions in relation to
the application. They described certain procedural steps related to
the opening, adjournment and re-opening of the criminal proceedings
in relation to the disappearances of the applicant's son and husband.
They also referred to requests sent by the investigators to the
law-enforcement authorities for information related to their
whereabouts. Despite the measures taken, their whereabouts were not
established and the investigations in both cases were pending.
- The
applicant submits that in early August 2002 she, together with
relatives of the other four men who had been apprehended on 2 June
2002, visited the Shali military commander, General Nakhayev. In the
courtyard of the commander's office they spotted APC no. 569, which
had been used in the detention of their relatives. At their request,
a crewmember of the APC was brought to the General's office, where he
was asked if he had been in Novye Atagi on 2 June. The
serviceman accepted that he had been there, but could not recall the
exact date. The General then asked him if he “had driven people
away”, and he said that two persons had been taken away in his
APC, but that they had been removed at the first military roadblock
and that he did not know what had happened to them. The applicant
submits that during the same conversation, in the presence of other
relatives of the “disappeared” men, General Nakhayev
informed them that 27 people had been detained in June and 15 of
them had been “eliminated” (see also § 90
below).
- In
late August 2002 the applicant visited the Chechnya Prosecutor's
Office, where she was told that the criminal proceedings in relation
to her husband's disappearance had been transferred to the military
prosecutor's office, which, under national law, is responsible for
investigation of crimes committed by military servicemen.
- In
their letters and observations the Government submitted several
different dates of procedural steps and case-file numbers assigned to
the criminal case. It appears from these documents that in early
September 2002 the investigation was transferred to the military
prosecutor of military unit no. 20116, where it was assigned
number 34/35/0172-02. It also appears that on 26 September 2002 the
investigation was adjourned on account of failure to identify the
culprits (as follows from the Government's observations of
26 September 2003, 27 October 2005 and the decision of 9 July
2004 by the Main Military Prosecutor to withdraw the applicant's
victim status).
- On
5 September 2002 the applicant submitted an unofficial composite
sketch of “Boomerang”, along with other additional
information collected by her, to the Shali District Prosecutor. No
receipt of that letter has been acknowledged and the applicant
believes that the actions requested by her were not carried out at
that time, such as establishing the location of the APCs whose
numbers were noted or questioning her neighbours.
- On
20 December 2002 the Government submitted that the criminal
proceedings were pending with an investigator of the military
prosecutor of military unit no. 20116 in Shali. No further
information was available about the “disappearance without
trace” of the applicant's husband.
- On
17 April 2003 the SRJI, acting on the applicant's behalf, requested
the military prosecutor of military unit no. 20116 to grant the
applicant victim status in the proceedings or, if that had already
been done, to forward her a copy of such a decision.
- On
25 and 30 April 2003 the military prosecutor of the United Group
Alliance in the Northern Caucasus (UGA) informed the applicant that
on 9 September 2002 the criminal investigation into her
husband's abduction had been transferred to the military prosecutor
of military unit no. 20116 in Shali, where it had been assigned
file number 14/35/0172-02 (see also § 63 above).
- On
16 June 2003 the military prosecutor of military unit no. 20116
responded to the SRJI that they would be informed of the results of
the preliminary investigation.
- On
23 September 2003 an investigator of the Main Military Prosecutor's
Office in Moscow informed the applicant that on 18 August 2003
the military prosecutor of the UGA had resumed the investigation into
her husband's abduction. On 23 September 2003 the case was assigned
to the Main Military Prosecutor's Office, and the term of
investigation was extended until 25 March 2004. The investigator
further informed the applicant that he was on mission in Shali, in
military unit no. 20116, and invited the applicant to contact
him with any further questions.
- On
7 October 2003 the SRJI wrote to the investigator and asked him to
appoint a date for a meeting with the applicant. They also noted that
the investigators from the military prosecutor's office had not
questioned her, despite the applicant's visits to that office.
- On
10 October 2003 the applicant was summoned as a witness to the Shali
ROVD.
- On
20 October 2003 the applicant met with the investigator at the
military prosecutor's office in Shali and was questioned about her
husband's apprehension. On the same day the investigator collected
from her the “receipt” issued to her by “Boomerang”
on 2 June 2002.
- Also
on 20 October 2003 the applicant applied to the investigator with a
request to forward the photographs of her son and husband, supplied
by her, to all regions of the Russian Federation, in order to check
whether they had been detained under false identities. On 21 October
2003 the investigator granted the applicant's request and assured her
that once she submitted the photographs, they would be forwarded to
all the regional departments of the Ministry of the Interior and of
the Ministry of Justice.
- The
applicant submits that on several occasions in October –
November 2003 she met with the investigator at the premises of
military unit no. 20116, in connection with the abduction of her
son and husband. Her neighbours were also questioned there. In late
October 2003 a group of investigators arrived in Novye Atagi and
questioned the neighbours about the applicant's son and husband. In
November 2003 two investigators inspected the applicant's house and
collected pictures made after the search of 2 June 2002 from her.
- The
applicant submits that during one of the meetings the investigator
told her that he had questioned serviceman Alexander Grigoryevich
“Boomerang”, who had admitted his participation in the
search and the apprehension of the applicant's husband, but had
insisted that he had released him.
- At
the end of November 2003 the applicant was summoned to the
Oktyabrskiy ROVD in Grozny to participate in a photo-identification
in conjunction with the disappearance of her son. She was shown a
total of 58 photographs of unidentified corpses, but did not identify
her relatives among them.
- The
applicant further submits that in early December 2003 she was
summoned to the Shali District Court and asked to put in writing the
information about the apprehension of her son and husband, and the
State bodies to which she had applied in this connection. The
applicant did as requested, indicating also that she had applied to
the European Court of Human Rights. She submits that she was asked to
specify if she had ever filed an application to a domestic court in
connection with these events.
- On
9 July 2004 the criminal investigation into the applicant's husband's
abduction was closed under Article 24 part 1.1 of the Criminal
Procedure Code because no criminal offence had been committed. On
10 July 2004 the Main Military Prosecutor's office communicated
this to the applicant and stated that her husband had been detained
by military servicemen in accordance with the Federal Laws on the
Suppression of Terrorism and on the Federal Security Service. After a
check he was handed over by the head of the Shali district bureau of
the FSB to the head of the Shali administration, Mr Dakayev.
Since Said-Magomed Imakayev did not subsequently return home, the
relevant documents were forwarded to the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office
for purpose of organising a search for him as a missing person. The
applicant was informed of the possibility of appealing against that
decision.
- Also
on 9 July 2004 the investigator of the Main Military Prosecutor's
Office withdrew the applicant's victim status in case
no. 29/00/0015-03. The order stated that the investigation had
established that on 2 June 2002 military servicemen, acting in
accordance with section 13 of the Suppression of Terrorism Act,
had carried out an operative-combat action (оперативно-боевое
мероприятие)
and detained Said-Magomed Imakayev on suspicion of involvement in one
of the bandit groups active in the district. Following an inquiry,
his involvement with illegal armed groups was not established and he
was simultaneously transferred to the head of the Shali
administration for return to his home. The order continued that it
had thus been established that no abduction had been committed and
that the actions of the servicemen who had detained Imakayev did not
constitute an offence. Imakayev's further absence from his place of
residence was not connected to his detention by military servicemen
on 2 June 2002. No pecuniary or non-pecuniary damage had thus been
caused to the applicant, and the decision to grant her victim status
was quashed. She was informed of the possibility to appeal.
- On
21 July 2004 the SRJI asked the Main Military Prosecutor's Office to
inform them what investigative measures had been taken prior to
closure of the investigation and to send them a copy of the decision.
- On
12 August 2004 the Main Military Prosecutor's Office refused to
provide copies of documents to the SRJI on the ground that they were
not the applicant's lawyers.
- On
22 September 2004 the SRJI forwarded to the Chechnya Prosecutor a
copy of the applicant's power of attorney and asked him to inform
them where the case file was located and to allow them access to it.
- On
13 October 2004 the Chechnya Prosecutor informed the SRJI that the
criminal case remained in the Main Military Prosecutor's Office, to
which all further questions should be addressed.
- On
1 March 2005 a lawyer of the Moscow Regional Bar, representing the
applicant, requested the Main Military Prosecutor's Office to grant
him access to the documents of the criminal case opened in relation
to her husband's abduction. In a telephone conversation on 21 March
2005 an officer of the Main Military Prosecutor's Office informed the
lawyer that the applicant's status as a victim in the criminal
proceedings had been withdrawn, and therefore she no longer had the
right to familiarise herself with the case file, either in person or
through a representative.
- In
May and October 2005 the Government submitted additional information
about the investigation. They claimed that the investigation into
Said-Magomed Imakayev's abduction had established that he had been
detained on 2 June 2002 but had subsequently been released and
transferred to the head of Shali administration, Mr Dakayev. Mr
Dakayev could not be questioned because he had died. The
investigation also established that “ideological literature of
propaganda nature and of extremist orientation” had been found
at the Imakayevs' house. No further details about the literature
could be provided, because it had been destroyed.
- All
this was established on the basis of statements from the special
forces servicemen who had participated in the counter-terrorist
operation in Chechnya in 2002. Among them was the military serviceman
who had signed the receipt issued to the applicant on 2 June 2002.
The Government explained that, in accordance with section 15 of the
Suppression of Terrorism Act, no information about the special forces
servicemen who had taken part in the counter-terrorist operations
could be divulged.
- The
Government further stated that after the criminal investigation by
the military prosecutor's office had been closed, a new criminal case
file, no. 36125, had been opened by the Shali District
Prosecutor's Office under Article 105 (murder) on 16 November 2004.
An investigative group had been put together because the case was a
complex one. Within these proceedings about 70 persons had been
questioned, including the head of administration of Novye Atagi, a
representative of the Shali district administration and the
applicant's neighbours. However, the witnesses had no information
about the abduction or the subsequent whereabouts of the missing man.
The whereabouts of Mr Imakayev or of his corpse, or the fact that he
had died, could not be established. In view of this, on
16 February 2005 the investigation was adjourned due to
failure to identify the culprits. Despite that, actions aimed at
solving the crime continued.
- The
applicant was granted victim status in the new proceedings, but the
order was not communicated to her because she had left Russia. She
also could not be questioned about the case. The investigation
forwarded relevant requests to the law-enforcement bodies of the USA,
but these were not carried out.
5. Questioning of the applicant
- The
applicant submits that she was twice questioned by the authorities in
connection with her application to the Court. On 24 July 2002
the applicant was questioned by an investigator of the Shali District
Prosecutor's Office. The investigator asked the applicant how much
money she had paid to get her case to the Court. The applicant stated
that she had not paid any legal fees, but the investigator expressed
his disbelief.
- In
early August 2002 the applicant visited the Shali military commander
General Nakhayev, seeking information about her husband (see also
§ 61 above). He questioned her about her application to the
European Court and suggested that “a Russian citizen needs
15,000 dollars or more to get to the European Court.” He went
on to ask her how much she had paid. When the applicant denied paying
any fees, the commander apparently stated that her husband had been
detained because of his involvement with financing the rebel
activities. The applicant concluded from the conversation that the
question of her husband's detention was in some way linked with her
application to the Court, because both had financial implications.
6. Requests for the investigation files
- In
July 2003 the complaint was communicated to the Russian Government,
who were requested to submit copies of the investigation files opened
in relation to the abduction of the applicant's son and then husband.
In September 2003 the Government responded that the provision of
copies of the files was impossible because both cases were still
under investigation. The Court reiterated the requests in October and
November 2003, but the Government insisted that a copy of the
investigation file could be provided only when the proceedings had
been completed. In their letter of 15 December 2003 the
Government argued that submission of the documents prior to the end
of the domestic investigation could interfere with the rights of the
parties to the proceedings and of third persons, for instance, to
familiarise themselves with the case file. They agreed that copies of
certain documents from the file could eventually be submitted.
- In
February 2004 the Court reiterated its request for copies of the
documents. It also invited the Government to submit a detailed
outline of the proceedings. In March 2004 the Government rejected
this request. They informed the Court that certain documents had been
classified as “secret” in accordance with section 5 §
4 of the Federal State Secrets Act, because they contained data
received as a result of undercover operative measures
(оперативно-розыскная
деятельность).
With regard to the requested outline of the investigations, the
Government submitted the following in respect of the investigation
into the applicant's husband's abduction:
“A wide range of investigative actions have been
carried out in the mentioned criminal case, many possible
eye-witnesses of the crime scene were identified. The major part of
them are military servicemen and at present have moved out from the
territory of Chechen Republic to other regions of the Russian
Federation. The relevant investigative commissions were forwarded to
places of their whereabouts. A part of the commissions have been
executed and an additional [time] is required to complete the
others”.
- On
20 January 2005 the application was declared admissible, following
which both parties submitted observations on the merits. At the same
time the Court asked the parties to submit their position as regards
a possible violation of Article 2 of the Convention in respect of the
applicant's husband. In September 2005 the Court sought additional
observations from the parties concerning the Government's compliance
with Article 38 of the Convention in view of their refusal to submit
the requested documents. At the same time it again reiterated the
request. In October 2005 the Government submitted 32 pages from
case-file no. 23001, opened in relation to the abduction of the
applicant's son. It appears from the page numbers that the case-file
consisted of at least 240 pages. They also submitted seven pages of
documents from criminal investigation file no. 36125, opened in
November 2004 by the Shali District Prosecutor's Office under Article
105 part 1 (murder). These documents are summarised below in Part B.
- The
Government did not submit any documents from the initial criminal
investigation file opened in relation to Said-Magomed Imakayev's
abduction, which had been closed in July 2004. They stated that the
submission of other documents was impossible because they contained
state secrets. They also stated that their disclosure would be in
violation of Article 161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and would
compromise the investigation and prejudice the rights and interests
of the participants of the proceedings.
B. Documents submitted by the parties
1. Documents from the investigation file no. 23001
- The
Government submitted 32 pages of documents from the criminal case
into the abduction of Said-Khuseyn Imakayev. These documents contain
only formal decisions to open, adjourn and resume the investigation
and the notifications to the applicant about these steps. No other
documents have been submitted, such as witness statements (including
those collected from the applicant), requests for information
forwarded to various bodies and their replies etc.
- According
to the submitted documents, the investigation was opened on 4 January
2001 by an investigator of the Shali District Prosecutor's Office
under Article 126 part 2 (kidnapping). The decision referred to the
information that Said-Khuseyn Imakayev had been detained by unknown
persons wearing camouflage uniforms and masks at the entry to the
village of Novye Atagi and then taken to an unknown destination. The
investigation was opened following the applicant's application to the
prosecutor's office on 29 December 2000.
- The
investigation further established that these “unknown persons”
had been armed with automatic weapons and had used a grey-white
UAZ-452 vehicle, in which they had placed Imakayev and driven him in
the direction of the town of Shali. The whereabouts of Imakayev, the
identity of the abductors and the location of his VAZ-2106 had not
been established.
- On
24 July 2002 the applicant was granted victim status in the
proceedings.
- Between
January 2001 and October 2005 the investigation was adjourned and
reopened on at least five occasions. The order of 5 July 2002 by
which the investigation was reopened stated that the decision to
adjourn the investigation had been unfounded because the
investigation had failed to identify and question eye-witnesses or to
establish whether the crime had been committed by members of illegal
armed groups for the purpose of discrediting the federal forces. On
17 October 2005 the Shali District Prosecutor again issued an order
to resume the investigation, to question the applicant in the USA and
to take other steps to identify the perpetrators of the crime.
2. Documents from the investigation file no. 36125
- In
October 2005 the Government submitted copies of several documents
from criminal case file no. 36125, opened in November 2004 by
the Shali District Prosecutor's Office. The file was opened on the
basis of unspecified documents from the Main Military Prosecutor's
Office concerning the disappearance of Said-Magomed Imakayev. The
prosecutor's order stated that on 2 June 2002 Said-Magomed Imakayev
had been detained at his house by servicemen from the federal forces
on suspicion of participation in illegal armed groups. Imakayev had
been delivered to the district premises of the FSB in Shali, where he
had been transferred to the head of Shali administration, Mr Dakayev.
His further whereabouts were unknown. The order stated that there
were grounds to believe that Mr Imakayev had become a victim of a
criminal assault and referred to Article 105 part 1 of the Criminal
Code (murder).
- On
5 May 2005 the investigation was adjourned on account of failure to
identify the culprits. On 17 October 2005 the investigation was
reopened. On the same day the applicant was granted victim status;
this decision could not be served on her because of her absence.
3. Relevant information submitted within application
no. 29133/03
- As
stated above, in the night of 2 June 2002 four other men were
detained in Novye Atagi beside Said-Magomed Imakayev. They were Islam
Utsayev, Movsar Taysumov, Idris Abdulazimov and Masud Tovmerzayev,
all of whom also disappeared subsequent to their arrest (see § 48
above). Their relatives applied to the European Court with a
complaint about enforced disappearance, which was registered under
no. 29133/03, Utsayeva and Others v. Russia. They are
also represented before the Court by the SRJI.
- The
relatives of the four men submitted in their application that they
had conducted the search for their missing relatives together with
the applicant in the present case, and with support from the head of
the Novye Atagi administration, Mr Datsayev. At their request, the
Shali District Prosecutor's Office opened criminal investigations in
respect of the kidnappings of their relatives: no. 59176 in respect
of Islam Utsayev, no. 59155 in respect of Movsar Taysumov, no.
59159 in respect of Idris Abdulazimov and no. 59154 in respect of
Masud Tovmerzayev. From the letters received from different
authorities the relatives of the four detained men also understood
that at some point the investigation was joined with the file
initially opened in relation to the kidnapping of Said-Magomed
Imakayev. The applicants also understood that in October 2002 the
investigation was transferred from the Shali District Prosecutor's
Office to the military prosecutors. At some point the case file was
then returned to the Shali office. The proceedings were adjourned and
reopened on several occasions, but did not establish the perpetrators
of the abductions.
- When
communicating the complaint to the Russian Government in September
2004 the European Court of Human Rights requested them to submit
copies of the criminal investigation files opened in relation to the
kidnappings of the four men on 2 June 2002. In response, the
Government refused to do so, referring to Article 161 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. They denied that the four men had ever been
detained by the federal authorities. They conceded that Said-Magomed
Imakayev had been detained on that night by state bodies, but
insisted that his detention had been lawful and that he had later
been released.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
1. The Code of Criminal Procedure
- Until
1 July 2002 criminal-law matters were governed by the 1960 Code of
Criminal Procedure of the Russian Soviet Federalist Socialist
Republic. From 1 July 2002 the old Code was replaced by the Code of
Criminal Procedure of the Russian Federation (CCP).
- Article
161 of the new CCP establishes the rule of impermissibility of
disclosure of data from the preliminary investigation. Under part 3
of the said Article, information from the investigation file may be
divulged with the permission of a prosecutor or investigator and only
so far as it does not infringe the rights and lawful interests of the
participants of the criminal proceedings and does not prejudice the
investigation. Divulging information about the private life of the
participants in criminal proceedings without their permission is
prohibited.
2. The Suppression of Terrorism Act
- The
Suppression of Terrorism Act (Федеральный
закон от 25 июля
1998 г. № 130-ФЗ «О борьбе
с терроризмом»)
provides as follows:
Section 3. Basic Concepts
“For purposes of the present Federal Law the
following basic concepts shall be applied:
... 'suppression of terrorism' shall refer to activities
aimed at the prevention, detection, suppression and minimisation of
the consequences of terrorist activities;
'counter-terrorist operation' shall refer to special
activities aimed at the prevention of terrorist acts, ensuring the
security of individuals, neutralising terrorists and minimising the
consequences of terrorist acts;
'zone of a counter-terrorist operation' shall refer to
an individual terrain or water surface, means of transport, building,
structure or premises with adjacent territory where a
counter-terrorist operation is conducted; ...”
Section 13. Legal regime in the zone of an
anti-terrorist operation
“1. In the zone of an anti-terrorist operation,
the persons conducting the operation shall be entitled:
... (2) to check the identity documents of private
persons and officials and, where they have no identity documents, to
detain them for identification;
(3) to detain persons who have committed or are
committing offences or other acts in defiance of the lawful demands
of persons engaged in an anti-terrorist operation, including acts of
unauthorised entry or attempted entry to the zone of the
anti-terrorist operation, and to convey such persons to the local
bodies of the Ministry of the Interior of the Russian Federation;
(4) to enter private residential or other premises ...
and means of transport while suppressing a terrorist act or pursuing
persons suspected of committing such an act, when a delay may
jeopardise human life or health;
(5) to search persons, their belongings and vehicles
entering or exiting the zone of an anti-terrorist operation,
including with the use of technical means; ...”
Section 15. Informing the public about terrorist acts
“...2. Information that cannot be released to the
public includes:
(1) information disclosing the special methods,
techniques and tactics of an antiterrorist operation; ...
(4) information on members of special units, officers of
the operational centre managing an antiterrorist operation and
persons assisting in carrying out such operation.
Section 21. Exemption from liability for damage
In accordance with the legislation and within the limits
established by it, damage may be caused to the life, health and
property of terrorists, as well as to other legally-protected
interests, in the course of conducting an anti-terrorist operation.
However, servicemen, experts and other persons engaged in the
suppression of terrorism shall be exempted from liability for such
damage, in accordance with the legislation of the Russian
Federation.”
3. The State Secrets Act (Law no. 5485-1 of 21 July
1993)
- The
State Secrets Act of 1993, with subsequent amendments, lists in
Section 5 part 4 the types of information which constitute state
secrets in the area of intelligence, counter-intelligence and
undercover operative activities. They include, inter alia,
data on the measures, sources, methods, plans and results of such
activities; data on persons who corroborate on a confidential basis
with the agencies carrying out such activities; data about the
organisation and methods of maintaining security at state security
premises and of the systems of secured communications.
THE LAW
I. ESTABLISHMENT OF FACTS
- The
applicant alleged that her son and her husband were detained by the
representatives of the State and then disappeared. She invited the
Court to draw inferences as to the well-foundedness of her factual
allegations from the Government's failure to provide the documents
requested from them.
- The
Government referred to the absence of conclusions from the pending
investigations and denied the State's responsibility for the
disappearances of the applicant's relatives.
1. General principles
- In
cases in which there are conflicting accounts of the events, the
Court is inevitably confronted when establishing the facts with the
same difficulties as those faced by any first-instance court. When,
as in the instant case, the respondent Government have exclusive
access to information able to corroborate or refute the applicants'
allegations, any lack of co-operation by the Government without a
satisfactory explanation may give rise to the drawing of inferences
as to the well-foundedness of the applicants' allegations (see Taniş
and Others v. Turkey, no. 65899/01, § 160,
ECHR 2005 ...).
- The
Court recalls a number of principles that have been developed in its
case-law when it is faced with a task of establishing facts on which
the parties disagree. As to the facts that are in dispute, the Court
recalls its jurisprudence confirming the standard of proof “beyond
reasonable doubt” in its assessment of evidence (see Avşar
v. Turkey, no. 25657/94, § 282, ECHR 2001 VII
(extracts)). Such proof may follow from the coexistence of
sufficiently strong, clear and concordant inferences or of similar
unrebutted presumptions of fact. In this context, the conduct of the
parties when evidence is being obtained has to be taken into account
(see Taniş and Others v. Turkey, cited above,
§ 160).
- The
Court is sensitive to the subsidiary nature of its role and
recognises that it must be cautious in taking on the role of a
first-instance tribunal of fact, where this is not rendered
unavoidable by the circumstances of a particular case (see, for
example, McKerr v. the United Kingdom (dec.), no. 28883/95, 4
April 2000). Nonetheless, where allegations are made under Articles 2
and 3 of the Convention the Court must apply a particularly thorough
scrutiny (see, mutatis mutandis, the judgments in Ribitsch
v. Austria, 4 December 1995, Series A no. 336, § 32;
and Avşar v. Turkey, cited above, § 283) even
if certain domestic proceedings and investigations have already taken
place.
- Where
the events in issue lie wholly, or in large part, within the
exclusive knowledge of the authorities, such as in cases where
persons are under their control in custody, strong presumptions of
fact will arise in respect of injuries and death occurring during
that detention. Indeed, the burden of proof may be regarded as
resting on the authorities to provide a satisfactory and convincing
explanation (see the judgments in Tomasi v. France, 27
August 1992, Series A no. 241-A, pp. 40-41, §§ 108-111;
Ribitsch v. Austria, cited above, § 34; and Selmouni
v. France [GC], no. 25803/94, § 87, ECHR 1999-V).
- These
principles apply also to cases in which, although it has not been
proved that a person has been taken into custody by the authorities,
it is possible to establish that he or she entered a place under
their control and has not been seen since. In such circumstances, the
onus is on the Government to provide a plausible explanation as to
what happened on the premises and to show that the person concerned
was not detained by the authorities, but left the premises without
subsequently being deprived of his or her liberty (see Taniş
cited above, § 160).
- Finally,
when there have been criminal proceedings in the domestic courts
concerning those same allegations, it must be borne in mind that
criminal-law liability is distinct from international-law
responsibility under the Convention. The Court's competence is
confined to the latter. Responsibility under the Convention is based
on its own provisions which are to be interpreted and applied on the
basis of the objectives of the Convention and in light of the
relevant principles of international law. The responsibility of a
State under the Convention, arising for the acts of its organs,
agents and servants, is not to be confused with the domestic legal
issues of individual criminal responsibility under examination in the
national criminal courts. The Court is not concerned with reaching
any findings as to guilt or innocence in that sense (see Avsar,
cited above, § 284).
2. Application in the present case
- The
above-enumerated principles were developed in the context of
applications against Turkey where the applicants complained of
enforced disappearances or alleged that the deaths of their relatives
were attributable to the respondent State. When faced with the task
of establishing the facts in these cases, the Convention bodies
regularly undertook fact-finding missions for the purpose of taking
depositions from witnesses, in addition to assessing the parties'
observations and the documentary evidence submitted by them. Thus,
even when presented with conflicting accounts of the events or with
the Government's eventual lack of cooperation, the Court, and before
it the Commission on Human Rights, could draw factual conclusions
basing on those first-hand testimonies, to which particular
importance was attached.
- In
previous applications raising issues of serious human rights abuses
in Chechnya, where the applicants and the Government disputed the
State's involvement in the applicants' relatives' deaths, the Court
held a hearing and obtained from the Government copies of the
documents from the criminal investigation files, which served as a
basis for the judgments (see Khashiyev and Akayeva v. Russia,
nos. 57942/00 and 57945/00, § 138-139, 24 February 2005).
- The
situation in the present case is different. The applicant presents
very serious allegations, supported by the evidence collected by her.
The Government refused to disclose any documents which could shed
light on the fate of the applicant's son and husband and did not
present any plausible explanation concerning their alleged detention
or subsequent fate. In view of this patent denial of cooperation, the
Court is obliged to take a decision on the facts of the case with the
materials available.
(a) As regards Said-Khuseyn Imakayev
- The
applicant alleged that her son had been detained by servicemen on 17
December 2000 and then disappeared. She referred to eye-witnesses'
statements describing the abductors as “military personnel”
and asserting that they had used military vehicles, namely a UAZ and,
according to one witness, an APC. She also insisted that the
abduction had occurred at the entry to the village of Novye Atagi, in
the immediate vicinity of a military roadblock guarding that village
(see §§ 12-15 and 96 above).
- In
view of these statements, the Court communicated the applicant's
complaints to the Russian Government and asked them to produce
documents from the criminal investigation file opened into
Said-Khuseyn Imakayev's abduction. This request was reiterated on no
less than four occasions, both before and after the application was
declared admissible, because the evidence contained in that file was
regarded by the Court as crucial for the establishment of the facts
in the present case.
- In
their submissions the Government did not deny that Said-Khuseyn
Imakayev had been abducted by unknown armed men on 17 December
2000 at the entry to the Novye Atagi village. However, they did not
submit any relevant information about his whereabouts, merely stating
that an investigation into the kidnapping was under way. They refused
to disclose any documents of substance from the criminal
investigation file, invoking a number of reasons for that decision.
First, they stated that the investigation was pending; then, that it
contained certain documents classified as secret and, finally,
referred to Article 161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which
allegedly precluded the submission of these documents.
- The
Court has on several occasions reminded the Government of the
possibility to request the application of Rule 33 § 2
of the Rules of Court, which permits a restriction on the principle
of the public character of the documents deposited with the Court for
legitimate purposes, such as the protection of national security and
the private life of the parties, as well as the interests of justice.
No such request has been made in this case. The Court further remarks
that the provisions of Article 161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
to which the Government refer, do not preclude disclosure of the
documents from a pending investigation file, but rather set out a
procedure for and limits to such disclosure. The Government failed to
specify the nature of the documents and the grounds on which they
could not be disclosed (see, for similar conclusions, Mikheyev v.
Russia, no. 77617/01, § 104, 26 January 2006). The
Court also recalls that in a number of comparable cases reviewed and
pending before the Court, similar requests have been made to the
Russian Government and the documents from the investigation files
have been submitted without a reference to Article 161 (see, for
example, Khashiyev and Akayeva v. Russia cited above, § 46;
Magomadov and Magomadov v. Russia (dec.), no. 58752/00, 24
November 2005). For these reasons the Court considers the
Government's explanations concerning the disclosure of the case file
insufficient to justify the withholding of the key information
requested by the Court.
- In
view of this and bearing in mind the principles cited above, the
Court finds that it can draw inferences from the Government's conduct
in this respect. The Court considers that the applicant has presented
a coherent and convincing picture of her son's detention on 17
December 2000. The Court reviewed no material which could cast doubt
on the credibility of the applicant's statements or the information
submitted by her. Even though she herself was not an eye-witness of
the events, she identified three such witnesses and collected their
statements, which refer to the involvement of the military or
security forces in the abduction. The fourth witness informed the
applicant that he had seen Said-Khuseyn Imakayev's car followed by an
APC in Novye Atagi (see §§ 14-16 above). In her
applications to the authorities, the applicant constantly maintained
that her son had been detained by unknown military servicemen and
requested the investigation to determine their identity (see § 17
above). According to the Government, as far back as 2001 the
investigation into Said-Khuseyn Imakayev's detention took steps to
find out whether he had been detained by the Ministry of the
Interior, the FSB or the military commander (see § 22
above). The letter sent to the applicant in July 2002 by the Chechnya
Prosecutor's Office stated that the investigation was focusing on the
version that her son had been detained by the servicemen from one of
the “power structures” (see § 26 above).
Despite the statement by the Government that the abduction could have
been committed by members of illegal armed groups for the purpose of
discrediting the federal forces (see § 28 above), no
evidence has been submitted to the Court to support such an
allegation.
- The
Court notes in this respect that the absence of any custody records
concerning Said-Khuseyn Imakayev cannot as such be regarded as
conclusive evidence that he was not detained. In the similar
situation concerning his father, Said-Magomed Imakayev, detention had
initially also been denied by the authorities, but was acknowledged
two years later without the production of any custody records.
- Furthermore,
in a case such as the present one, the Court finds it particularly
regrettable that there should have been no thorough investigation
into the relevant facts by the domestic prosecutors or courts. The
few documents submitted by the Government from the investigation file
opened by the district prosecutor do not suggest any progress in more
than five years and, if anything, show the incomplete and inadequate
nature of those proceedings.
- Accordingly,
the Court finds that the evidence available permits it to establish
to the requisite standard of proof that Said-Khuseyn Imakayev was
last seen in the hands of unknown military or security personnel
during the afternoon of 17 December 2000. His subsequent fate and
whereabouts cannot be established with any degree of certainty.
(b) As regards Said-Magomed Imakayev
- The
applicant maintained that her husband had been detained by servicemen
in the early hours of 2 June 2002. She relied on her own statements
and the statements of 30 witnesses collected by her and stressed that
on the same night four other men from Novye Atagi had been detained
by the same group. The applicant and other witnesses submitted
details of some of the servicemen who had conducted the operation and
noted the registration numbers of the APCs and the UAZ vehicle
involved (see §§ 43-49 above). They later saw one of
these vehicles at the district military commander's office (see § 61
above).
- The
Court communicated the applicant's complaint to the respondent
Government and asked for their comments and the documents from the
criminal investigation file opened into her husband's abduction.
Between July 2002 and September 2005 this request was reiterated on
at least four occasions. This information was regarded as crucial by
the Court in view of the seriousness and well-foundedness of the
applicant's allegations and also given that Mr Imakayev had been an
applicant to this Court and his wife had stated that the kidnapping
was a form of retaliation for his application with regard to their
son's disappearance.
- The
Government first denied that Said-Magomed Imakayev had been
apprehended by law-enforcement or security bodies. In their reply of
July 2002 they stated that none of the law-enforcement or security
bodies stationed in Chechnya had conducted special operations in
Novye Atagi on the date in question and that Said-Magomed Imakayev
was not listed among the detainees of any of these bodies. They
therefore stated that the main version of the criminal investigation
opened into his kidnapping was that he had been abducted by members
of a terrorist organisation with a view to discrediting the federal
forces (see § 57 above). Similar answers were given to the
applicant by the investigative authorities.
- However,
in July 2004 the investigation established that the applicant's
husband had indeed been detained on suspicion of involvement in a
terrorist organisation. It also established that, after questioning
at the local department of the FSB, he had been released and
transferred to the head of the district administration, who later
died. The applicant's husband had then disappeared. This was
apparently established on the basis of witness statements by a number
of servicemen involved in the operation. The Government refused to
produce any documents or to disclose any details of the
investigation, referring to the Suppression of Terrorism Act and to
the facts that the case file contained state secrets and that its
disclosure would be in violation of Article 161 of the Code Criminal
Procedure.
- The
Court finds that its above findings concerning the non-disclosure of
information and documents in respect of Said-Khuseyn Imakayev apply
equally and fully to the present situation (see § 123
above). For the same reasons it concludes that the respondent
Government's explanations are wholly insufficient to justify the
withholding of the key information specifically sought by the Court.
- In
view of this and bearing in mind the principles cited above, the
Court finds that here, as well, it can draw inferences from the
Government's conduct. The applicant submitted a comprehensive and
coherent account of the events of 2 June 2002, complete with several
dozen witness statements and detailed description of the individual
servicemen and vehicles involved in the operation. This information
was immediately available to the authorities to whom the applicant
applied with requests to carry out an investigation and to ensure her
husband's release. However, they failed to act with the promptness
which could possibly have prevented the disappearance. Instead, for
more than two years officials denied that Said-Magomed Imakayev had
ever been detained. In the meantime, the investigation appears to
have obtained information that the applicant's husband had indeed
been detained on suspicion of involvement in illegal activities. On
the basis of witness statements by unnamed servicemen, the
investigators also concluded that he had been released after a
certain time in custody, even though no records of his detention,
questioning or release existed. In July 2004 the investigation
conducted by the military prosecutor was closed and the applicant's
victim status was withdrawn, thus depriving her of the possibility to
have access to the case file and to learn who had detained her
husband and why.
- The
Court notes that the mere acknowledgement of detention took more than
two years and that no significant information was given to any
interested party at the conclusion of the investigation by the
military prosecutor. In November 2004 the local prosecutor in
Chechnya was charged with the task of solving Said-Magomed Imakayev's
disappearance. However, given that no documents of substance from the
initial investigation were disclosed to him, these proceedings were a
priori doomed to failure. As the Government admit, despite a
large number of persons being questioned, none of them had any
relevant information about the missing man. These proceedings had to
be suspended again three months later without any result (see § 87
above).
- Accordingly,
the Court finds it established to the standard of proof “beyond
reasonable doubt” that Said-Magomed Imakayev was detained by
the security forces on 2 June 2002. No records were drawn up in
respect of his detention, questioning or release. After that date he
“disappeared” and his family had no news of him.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 2 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant alleged that first her son, and then her husband, were
unlawfully killed by the agents of the State. She also submitted that
the authorities failed to carry out an effective and adequate
investigation into the circumstances of their disappearance. She
relied on Article 2 of the Convention, which provides:
“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 alleged failure to protect the right to life of
Said-Khuseyn Imakayev
1. Arguments of the parties
- The
applicant submitted that her son, Said-Khuseyn Imakayev, was detained
by servicemen on 17 December 2000 and that he was killed by
servicemen in circumstances that lacked any justification under
Article 2 of the Convention. She based this assertion on the
circumstances surrounding his detention, the fact that more that five
years after his apprehension no information was available about his
whereabouts and the failure of the authorities to provide a plausible
version of his disappearance. The applicant further drew the Court's
attention to the specific features of individual disappearances in
Chechnya, whereby many persons detained by the military or security
forces were later found dead without any records of their detention
or release ever being produced. The applicant referred to the reports
by human rights NGOs and to the individual applications alleging such
violations pending before the European Court.
- The
Government argued that the circumstances of the applicant's son's
kidnapping and his subsequent whereabouts were under investigation,
and that it had not been established that he was dead.
2. The Court's assessment
- The
Court recalls, in addition to the general principles with regard to
the establishment of facts which are in dispute, cited above (see
§§ 111-116 above), that Article 2, which safeguards
the right to life and sets out the circumstances when deprivation of
life may be justified, ranks as one of the most fundamental
provisions in the Convention, to which no derogation is permitted.
Together with Article 3, it also enshrines one of the basic values of
the democratic societies making up the Council of Europe. The
circumstances in which deprivation of life may be justified must
therefore be strictly construed. The object and purpose of the
Convention as an instrument for the protection of individual human
beings also requires that Article 2 be interpreted and applied so as
to make its safeguards practical and effective (see McCann and
Others v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 27 September 1995,
Series A no. 324, § 146-147).
- In
the Timurtaş v. Turkey judgment (no. 23531/94, §§ 82-83,
ECHR 2000 VI) the Court stated:
“... where an individual is taken into custody in
good health but is found to be injured at the time of release, it is
incumbent on the State to provide a plausible explanation of how
those injuries were caused, failing which an issue arises under
Article 3 of the Convention .... In the same vein, Article 5 imposes
an obligation on the State to account for the whereabouts of any
person taken into detention and who has thus been placed under the
control of the authorities.... Whether the failure on the part of the
authorities to provide a plausible explanation as to a detainee's
fate, in the absence of a body, might also raise issues under Article
2 of the Convention will depend on all the circumstances of the case,
and in particular on the existence of sufficient circumstantial
evidence, based on concrete elements, from which it may be concluded
to the requisite standard of proof that the detainee must be presumed
to have died in custody...
In this respect the period of time which has elapsed
since the person was placed in detention, although not decisive in
itself, is a relevant factor to be taken into account. It must be
accepted that the more time goes by without any news of the detained
person, the greater the likelihood that he or she has died. The
passage of time may therefore to some extent affect the weight to be
attached to other elements of circumstantial evidence before it can
be concluded that the person concerned is to be presumed dead. In
this respect the Court considers that this situation gives rise to
issues which go beyond a mere irregular detention in violation of
Article 5. Such an interpretation is in keeping with the effective
protection of the right to life as afforded by Article 2, which ranks
as one of the most fundamental provisions in the Convention....”
- In
view of the above, the Court identifies a number of crucial elements
in the present case that should be taken into account when deciding
whether Said-Khuseyn Imakayev can be presumed dead and whether his
death can be attributed to the authorities. The Court recalls that it
has found it established that the applicant's son was last seen on
17 December 2000 in the hands of unidentified military or
security personnel. There has been no news of him since that date,
which is more than five and a half years ago. The Court also notes
the applicant's reference to the available information about the
phenomenon of “disappearances” in Chechnya and agrees
that, in the context of the conflict in Chechnya, when a person is
detained by unidentified servicemen without any subsequent
acknowledgement of detention, this can be regarded as
life-threatening. Furthermore, the Government failed to provide any
explanation of Said-Khuseyn Imakayev's disappearance and the official
investigation into his kidnapping, dragging on for more than five
years, produced no known results.
- For
the above reasons the Court considers that Said-Khuseyn Imakayev must
be presumed dead following unacknowledged detention. Consequently,
the responsibility of the respondent State is engaged. Noting that
the authorities do not rely on any ground of justification in respect
of the use of lethal force by their agents, it follows that liability
for his presumed death is attributable to the respondent Government.
- Accordingly,
there has been a violation of Article 2 on that account in respect of
Said-Khuseyn Imakayev.
B. The alleged inadequacy of the investigation into
Said-Khuseyn Imakayev's abduction
1. Arguments of the parties
- The
applicant maintained that the respondent Government had failed to
conduct an independent, effective and thorough investigation into the
circumstances of Said-Khuseyn Imakayev's disappearance, in violation
of the procedural aspect of Article 2. She argued that the
investigation had fallen short of the standards of the European
Convention and of the national legislation. She pointed to the
repeated suspensions and to the fact that five and a half years after
the investigation had been opened it was not completed and had failed
to produce any known results. The authorities systematically failed
to inform her of progress in the proceedings and refused to disclose
any documents of substance.
- The
Government disputed that there were failures in the investigation.
2. The Court's assessment
(a) General considerations
- The
obligation to protect the right to life under Article 2 of the
Convention, read in conjunction with the State's general duty under
Article 1 of the Convention to “secure to everyone within
[its] jurisdiction the rights and freedoms defined in [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 (see, mutatis
mutandis, the McCann and Others v. the United Kingdom
judgment cited above, p. 49, § 161, and the Kaya v. Turkey
judgment of 19 February 1998, Reports 1998-I, p.
329, § 105). The essential purpose of such investigation is
to secure the effective implementation of the domestic laws which
protect the right to life and, in those cases involving state agents
or bodies, to ensure their accountability for deaths occurring under
their responsibility. What form of investigation will achieve those
purposes may vary in different circumstances. However, whatever mode
is employed, the authorities must act of their own motion once the
matter has come to their attention. They cannot leave it to the
initiative of the next of kin either to lodge a formal complaint or
to take responsibility for the conduct of any investigatory
procedures (see İlhan v. Turkey [GC] no. 22277/93,
§ 63, ECHR 2000-VII).
- For
an investigation into alleged unlawful killing by state agents to be
effective, it may generally be regarded as necessary for the persons
responsible for and carrying out the investigation to be independent
from those implicated in the events (see, for example, the Güleç
v. Turkey judgment of 27 July 1998, Reports 1998-IV,
§§ 81-82; and Ögur v. Turkey [GC],
no. 21954/93, §§ 91-92, ECHR 1999-III). The
investigation must also be effective in the sense that it is capable
of leading to a determination of whether the force used in such cases
was or was not justified in the circumstances (see, for example, Kaya
v. Turkey, cited above, p. 324, § 87) and to the
identification and punishment of those responsible (see Ögur
v. Turkey, cited above, § 88). This is not an
obligation of result, but of means. The authorities must have taken
the reasonable steps available to them to secure the evidence
concerning the incident, including, inter alia, eyewitness
testimony (see for example, Tanrıkulu v.
Turkey [GC], no. 23763/94, § 109,
ECHR 1999 IV). Any deficiency in the investigation which
undermines its ability to establish the cause of death or the person
responsible will risk falling below this standard.
- In
this context, there must also be an implicit requirement of
promptness and reasonable expedition. It must be accepted that there
may be obstacles or difficulties which prevent progress in an
investigation in a particular situation. However, a prompt response
by the authorities in investigating the use of lethal force may
generally be regarded as essential in maintaining public confidence
in the maintenance of the rule of law and in preventing any
appearance of collusion in or tolerance of unlawful acts (see
Tanrikulu v. Turkey cited above, § 109; Mahmut
Kaya v. Turkey, no. 22535/93, ECHR 2000-III, §§ 106-107).
(b) Application in the present case
- In
the present case, an investigation was carried out into the
kidnapping of the applicant's son. The Court must assess whether that
investigation met the requirements of Article 2 of the Convention.
- The
Court observes that the only known important procedural step - that
of granting the applicant victim status - occurred only in July 2002,
that is, more than one and a half years after it was opened. The
prosecutor's orders of July 2002 and of October 2005 do not suggest
that the investigation had made any progress whatsoever in the task
of solving Said-Khuseyn Imakayev's disappearance, while the
Government refused to submit other documents from the file or to
disclose their contents. The Court further notes the inconsistencies
in the various documents regarding the adjournment of the
investigation communicated by the different authorities (see §§ 21,
26 and 28 above).
- In
these circumstances the Court finds that the respondent State has
failed in its obligation to conduct an effective, prompt and thorough
investigation into the applicant's son's disappearance. Accordingly,
there has been a violation of Article 2 of the Convention on this
account.
C. The alleged failure to protect the right to life of
Said-Magomed Imakayev
- The
applicant submitted that her husband, Said-Magomed Imakayev, had been
detained by military servicemen in life-threatening circumstances. In
view of the time during which no news of him has been forthcoming, he
must be presumed to have died in the hands of the representatives of
the State.
- The
Government referred to the absence of conclusions about Mr Imakayev's
whereabouts from the domestic investigation. They argued that the
investigation had looked into the version of murder, but had found no
conclusive evidence to support it or to charge anyone with the crime.
- The
Court recalls the applicable general principles cited above (see
§§ 111-116). In respect of Said-Magomed Imakayev, the
following key elements can be identified. It has been established
that Said-Magomed Imakayev was detained by military servicemen during
a special operation on 2 June 2002. His family have had no news of
him since. No records were drawn up of his detention, questioning or
release, and until July 2004 the authorities denied that he had ever
been detained, both to the applicant and to the European Court. In
July 2004 his detention was acknowledged, with a broad reference to
the Suppression of Terrorism Act. At the same time the criminal
investigation into the actions of the military servicemen was closed
for absence of corpus delicti. The investigation concluded
that the servicemen had acted lawfully and that Said-Magomed Imakayev
had been released, some time after detention, from the Shali District
Department of the FSB to the head of the Shali district
administration, who by that time had died and therefore could not be
questioned. No information of substance about these proceedings was
disclosed to the applicant or to the Court, despite several specific
requests. Moreover, it was not disclosed to the district prosecutor,
who was instructed in November 2004 to open a new investigation into
Said-Magomed Imakayev's presumed murder without the benefit of
acquainting himself with the statements of the servicemen who, it
appears, were the last persons to see him alive. This new
investigation failed to identify any relevant witnesses or to collect
any information about the missing man's fate (see § 87
above).
- The
Court finds that Said-Magomed Imakayev was detained in circumstances
that can be described as life-threatening (see § 141
above). The absence of any news from him for almost four years
supports this assumption. Moreover, the stance of the prosecutor's
office and other law-enforcement authorities after the news of his
detention had been communicated to them by the applicant
significantly contributed to the possibility of disappearance,
because no necessary actions were taken in the crucial first days or
weeks after the detention. Their behaviour in the face of the
applicant's well-established complaints gives a strong presumption of
at least acquiescence in the situation and raises strong doubts as to
the objectivity of the investigation.
- For
the above reasons the Court considers that Said-Magomed Imakayev must
be presumed dead following unacknowledged detention by State
authorities. The respondent Government did not invoke any reasons as
to the lawfulness of the deprivation of life.
- Accordingly,
there has been a violation of Article 2 on that account in respect of
Said-Magomed Imakayev.
D. The alleged inadequacy of the investigation into
Said-Magomed Imakayev's abduction
- The
applicant argued that the investigation into her husband's
disappearance did not attain the level required by the procedural
obligations of Article 2. She referred, in particular, to the
authorities' failure to act immediately after his detention and to
the refusal to disclose any relevant information from the
investigation file. She also stated that the decision to quash her
procedural status in the criminal investigation carried out by the
military prosecutor violated her right to be aware of the progress of
the proceedings.
- The
Government submitted that the investigation was in compliance with
the requirements of Article 2. They argued that the new investigation
opened in November 2004 by the Shali District Prosecutor's Office had
taken the necessary steps to resolve the crime, but had nevertheless
failed to do so. The applicant left the country to take up permanent
residence in the United States, and thus avoided contact with the
law-enforcement bodies, who could not question her about the
circumstances of the case.
- In
view of the above considerations relating to the investigation
carried out into Said-Magomed Imakayev's investigation both by the
military prosecutor and by the Shali District Prosecutor's Office
(see §§ 133-134), the Court finds that there has been
a violation of Article 2 also in this respect.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that the suffering inflicted upon her in
relation to her close family members' disappearance constituted
treatment proscribed by the Convention. She relied on Article 3 which
provides
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
- The
applicant submitted, referring to the Court's practice, that she
herself was a victim of a violation of Article 3. She stressed that
as a result of the disappearance of her son and husband, and of the
authorities' indifference towards the investigation and the
questioning of herself, she and her family were obliged to leave
their home in 2004 and to seek asylum in another country.
- The
Government denied that the applicant had been a victim of treatment
contrary to Article 3, referring to the absence of such information
in the materials of the domestic investigation.
- The Court recalls that the question whether a family
member of a “disappeared person” is a victim of treatment
contrary to Article 3 will depend on the existence of special factors
which gives the suffering of the applicant a dimension and character
distinct from the emotional distress which may be regarded as
inevitably caused to relatives of a victim of a serious human-rights
violation. Relevant elements will include the proximity of the family
tie – in that context, a certain weight will attach to the
parent-child bond, – the particular circumstances of the
relationship, the extent to which the family member witnessed the
events in question, the involvement of the family member in the
attempts to obtain information about the disappeared person and the
way in which the authorities responded to those enquiries (see Orhan
v. Turkey, no. 25656/94, § 358, 18 June 2002;
Çakıcı v. Turkey, cited above, § 98;
and Timurtaş v. Turkey, cited above, § 95).
The Court would further emphasise that the essence of such a
violation does not so much 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.
It is especially in respect of the latter that a relative may claim
directly to be a victim of the authorities' conduct (see Çakıcı,
cited above, § 98).
- In
the present case, the Court notes that the applicant is a close
relative of the two disappeared men – the mother of
Said-Khuseyn Imakayev and wife of Said-Magomed Imakayev, and was
present when her husband was detained. She has had no news of her son
for five and a half years, and of her husband for three and a half
years. During this period the applicant applied to various official
bodies with inquiries about her family members, both in writing and
in person. Despite her attempts, the applicant has never received any
plausible explanation or information as to what became of them
following their detention. The responses received by the applicant
mostly denied the responsibility of the State or simply informed her
that an investigation was ongoing. The Court's above findings under
the procedural aspects of Article 2 are also relevant here (see
§§ 150-151, 160). As an additional element
contributing to the applicant's sufferings, the Court notes the
authorities' unjustified denial to the applicant of access to the
documents of the criminal investigation files, which could shed light
on the fate of her relatives, either directly or through the
proceedings in this Court.
- In
view of the above, the Court finds that the applicant suffered, and
continues to suffer, distress and anguish as a result of the
disappearance of her son and husband and of her inability to find out
what had happened to them. The manner in which her complaints have
been dealt with by the authorities must be considered to constitute
inhuman treatment contrary to Article 3.
- The
Court concludes therefore that there has been a violation of Article
3 of the Convention in respect of the applicant.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that the provisions of Article 5 as a whole had
been violated in respect of Said-Khuseyn and Said-Magomed Imakayev.
Article 5 reads:
“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:
(a) the lawful detention of a person after
conviction by a competent court;
(b) the lawful arrest or detention of a
person for non- compliance with the lawful order of a court or in
order to secure the fulfilment of any obligation 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;
(d) the detention of a minor by lawful order
for the purpose of educational supervision or his lawful detention
for the purpose of bringing him before the competent legal authority;
(e) the lawful detention of persons for the
prevention of the spreading of infectious diseases, of persons of
unsound mind, alcoholics or drug addicts or vagrants;
(f) the lawful arrest or detention of a
person to prevent his effecting an unauthorised entry into the
country or of a person against whom action is being taken with a view
to deportation or extradition.
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.”
1. Submissions of the parties
- The
applicant alleged that her son and then her husband were victims of
unacknowledged detention, in violation of the domestic legislation
and the requirements of Article 5 as a whole. As regards her husband,
the applicant stressed that the State had acknowledged his detention
two years after the event, but had failed to submit any information
related to the reasons for the detention or any other relevant
details.
- The
Government submitted that any violation of the applicant's son's
rights was the result of actions by private persons and not of any
State authority. The investigation had not established the
involvement of any officials in his apprehension and, if it had,
their actions could additionally be classified as official
malfeasance under, for example, Article 286 of the Criminal Code.
With regard to the applicant's husband, the Government submitted that
he had been detained pursuant to section 13 of the Suppression of
Terrorism Act by a competent body - the FSB - on suspicion of
involvement in terrorist activities. Propaganda literature of an
extremist nature had been seized at his place of residence. However,
following verification, no proof of his involvement had been obtained
and he was thereafter transferred to the head of the local
administration to be taken home. The Government argued that
Said-Magomed Imakayev's detention was thus in conformity with the
national legislation and with Article 5 § 1 (c)
of the Convention.
2. The Court's assessment
- The Court stresses the fundamental importance of the
guarantees contained in Article 5 for securing the rights of
individuals in a democracy to be free from arbitrary detention at the
hands of the authorities. It has stressed in that connection that any
deprivation of liberty must not only have been effected in conformity
with the substantive and procedural rules of national law but must
equally be in keeping with the very purpose of Article 5, namely to
protect the individual from arbitrary detention. In order to minimise
the risks of arbitrary detention, Article 5 provides a corpus of
substantive rights intended to ensure that the act of deprivation of
liberty be amenable to independent judicial scrutiny and secures the
accountability of the authorities for that measure. The
unacknowledged detention of an individual is a complete negation of
these guarantees and discloses a most grave violation of Article 5.
Bearing in mind the responsibility of the authorities to account for
individuals under their control, Article 5 requires them to take
effective measures to safeguard against the risk of disappearance and
to conduct a prompt and effective investigation into an arguable
claim that a person has been taken into custody and has not been seen
since (see Çakici v. Turkey [GC], no.23657/94,
§ 104, ECHR-1999-IV; and Çiçek v. Turkey,
no. 25704/94, § 164, 27 February 2001).
- It
is established that Said-Khuseyn Imakayev was detained on 17 December
2000 by the federal authorities and has not been seen since. The
Government submitted no explanation of his detention and provided no
documents of substance from the domestic investigation into the
apprehension. The Court thus concludes that Said-Khuseyn Imakayev was
a victim of unacknowledged detention, in violation of Article 5 of
the Convention.
- As
far as Said-Magomed Imakayev's detention is concerned, the Court
reiterates that the reasonableness of the suspicion on which an
arrest must be based forms an essential part of the safeguard against
arbitrary arrest and detention which is laid down in Article
5 § 1 (c). Having a “reasonable suspicion”
presupposes the existence of facts or information which would satisfy
an objective observer that the person concerned might have committed
the offence (see Fox, Campbell and Hartley v. the United Kingdom,
judgment of 30 August 1990, Series A no. 182, p. 16, § 32).
However, facts which raise a suspicion need not be of the same level
as those necessary to justify a conviction or even the bringing of a
charge, which comes at a later stage of the process of criminal
investigation (see Murray v. the United Kingdom, judgment of
28 October 1994, Series A no. 300-A, p. 27 § 55).
- Nevertheless
the Court must be enabled to ascertain whether the essence of the
safeguard afforded by Article 5 § 1 (c) has been
secured. Consequently the respondent Government have to furnish at
least some facts or information capable of satisfying the Court that
the arrested person was reasonably suspected of having committed the
alleged offence (see Tuncer and Durmuş v. Turkey, no.
30494/96, § 48, 2 November 2004).
- In
the present case the Government did not submit any material
concerning the applicant's arrest which would enable it to evaluate
its reasonableness. The mere reference to the provisions of the
Suppression of Terrorism Act cannot replace a proper assessment of
the reasonableness of suspicion in respect of the person in question.
Any other interpretation of the provisions of Article 5 § 1 (c)
would run contrary to its purpose of protection from arbitrary
detention. The Government's assertion that Said-Magomed Imakayev's
detention was in compliance with its provisions is not therefore
conclusive.
- Furthermore, it appears from the materials of the
case that Imakayev's detention was not logged in the relevant custody
records and there exists no official trace of his questioning,
release or subsequent whereabouts. For more than two years the
authorities denied that he had ever been detained, before they
collected witness statements from unnamed servicemen involved in his
apprehension. The Government declined to disclose any information
concerning the exact timing and place of Said-Magomed Imakayev's
detention, the agency and officials responsible for his apprehension
and release and the legal and factual basis for those actions. 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 holding data
recording such matters as the date, time and location of detention,
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 Kurt v.
Turkey, judgment of 25 May 1998, Reports of Judgments and
Decisions 1998 III, p. 1185, § 125; and the
above-cited Timurtaş v. Turkey, § 105 and Orhan
v. Turkey, § 371).
- The
Court further considers that the authorities should have been alert
to the need to investigate more thoroughly and promptly the
applicant's complaints that her son and then her husband were
detained by the security forces and taken away in life-threatening
circumstances. However, the Court's above findings in relation to
Article 2, in particular as concerns the conduct of the
investigation, leave no doubt that the authorities failed to take
prompt and effective measures to safeguard Said-Khuseyn and
Said-Magomed Imakayev against the risk of disappearance.
- Accordingly,
the Court finds that Said-Khuseyn and Said-Magomed Imakayev were held
in unacknowledged detention in the complete absence of the safeguards
contained in Article 5 and that there has been a violation of the
right to liberty and security of person guaranteed by that provision.
V. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant stated that she was deprived of access to a court, contrary
to the provisions of Article 6 of the Convention. Article 6 reads, as
far as relevant:
“1. In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by
[a] ... tribunal...”
- The
applicant alleged that she had no effective access to court because a
civil claim for damages would entirely depend on the outcome of the
criminal investigation into the disappearances. In the absence of any
findings, she could not effectively apply to a court.
- The
Government disputed this allegation.
- The
Court finds that the applicant's complaint under Article 6 concerns,
essentially, the same issues as those discussed under procedural
aspect of Article 2 and of Article 13. It should also be noted that
the applicant submitted no information which would prove her alleged
intention to apply to a domestic court with a compensation claim. In
such circumstances, the Court finds that no separate issues arise
under Article 6 of the Convention.
VI. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant alleged a violation of Article 8 of the Convention, which
reads:
“1. Everyone has the right to respect
for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public
authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in
accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in
the interests of national security, public safety or the economic
well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others.”
- The
applicant argued that the search carried out at her house on 2 June
2002 during her husband's apprehension was unlawful both under
domestic legislation and under Article 8 of the Convention.
- The
Government referred to the provisions of Article 13 of the
Suppression of Terrorism Act which permitted persons conducting a
counter-terrorist operation to enter freely dwellings and premises in
the course of the operation or during the pursuit of persons
suspected of having committed a terrorist action. Since there were
grounds to suspect the applicant's husband of involvement in
terrorist activities, the servicemen's actions in inspecting the
Imakayevs' household had been in compliance with the domestic
legislation and with Article 8 § 2 of the Convention. They
also referred to the “extremist literature” seized at the
applicant's house, which had later been destroyed.
- It
has thus been established that on 2 June 2002 the applicant's home
was searched and a number of items were confiscated. Accordingly,
there was an interference with the applicant's right to respect for
her home. It now remains to be seen whether this interference was
permissible under Article 8 § 2 of the Convention and, more
particularly, if it was “in accordance with the law” for
the purposes of that paragraph.
- The
Court notes that no search warrant was produced to the applicant
during the search and that no details were given of what was being
sought. Furthermore, it appears that no such warrant was drawn up at
all, either before or after the search, assuming that the security
forces acted in a situation which required urgency. The Government
were unable to submit any details about the reasons for the search,
to refer to any record of a legitimisation of it or to indicate the
procedural significance of this action. The Government could not give
any details about the items seized at the Imakayevs' house because
they had allegedly been destroyed. It thus appears that no record or
description of these items was made. The receipt drawn up by a
military officer who had failed to indicate his real name or rank or
even the state body which he represented, and which referred to “a
bag of documents and a box of floppy discs” (see § 45
above), appears to be the only existing paper in relation to the
search.
- The
Government's reference to the Suppression of Terrorism Act cannot
replace an individual authorisation of a search, delimiting its
object and scope, and drawn up in accordance with the relevant legal
provisions either beforehand or afterwards. The provisions of this
Act are not to be construed so as to create an exemption to any kind
of limitations of personal rights for an indefinite period of time
and without clear boundaries to the security forces' actions. The
application of these provisions in the present case is even more
doubtful, given the Government's failure to indicate, either to the
applicant or to this Court, what kind of counter-terrorist operation
took place on 2 June 2002 in Novye Atagi, which agency conducted it,
its purpose, etc. Moreover, the Court remarks that for over two years
after the event various state authorities denied that such an
operation had taken place at all. The Court is again struck by this
lack of accountability or any acceptance of direct responsibility by
the officials involved in the events in the present case.
- The
Court thus finds that the search and seizure measures in the present
case were implemented without any authorisation or safeguards. In
these circumstances, the Court concludes that the interference in
question was not “in accordance with the law” and that
there has been a violation of Article 8 of the Convention.
VII. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 13 IN CONJUNCTION WITH
ARTICLES 2, 3, 5 AND 8 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that she had no effective remedies in respect of
the violations alleged under Articles 2, 3, 5 and 8. She referred to
Article 13 of the Convention, which states:
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth
in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy
before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has
been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”
- The
Government disagreed. They referred to her position as a victim in
the criminal cases opened into the kidnapping of her relatives, which
allowed her to participate effectively in the proceedings. They also
contended that the applicant could have applied to the competent
bodies with complaints about the alleged ineffectiveness of the
investigation, which she had failed to do.
- The Court reiterates that Article 13 of the
Convention guarantees the availability at the national level of a
remedy to enforce the substance of the Convention rights and freedoms
in whatever form they might happen to be secured in the domestic
legal order. The effect of Article 13 is thus to require the
provision of a domestic remedy to deal with the substance of an
“arguable complaint” under the Convention and to grant
appropriate relief, although Contracting States are afforded some
discretion as to the manner in which they comply with their
Convention obligations under this provision. The scope of the
obligation under Article 13 varies depending on the nature of the
applicant's complaint under the Convention. Nevertheless, the remedy
required by Article 13 must be “effective” in
practice as well as in law, in particular in the sense that its
exercise must not be unjustifiably hindered by acts or omissions by
the authorities of the respondent State (see Aksoy v. Turkey,
judgment of 18 December 1996, Reports 1996-VI, p. 2286, § 95;
and Aydin v. Turkey judgment of 25 September 1997,
Reports 1997-VI, p. 1895-96, § 103).
- Given
the fundamental importance of the rights guaranteed by Articles 2
and 3 of the Convention, Article 13 requires, in addition to the
payment of compensation where appropriate, a thorough and effective
investigation capable of leading to the identification and punishment
of those responsible for the deprivation of life and infliction of
treatment contrary to Article 3, including effective access for
the complainant to the investigation procedure leading to the
identification and punishment of those responsible (see Anguelova
v. Bulgaria, no. 38361/97, §§ 161-162, ECHR
2002-IV; Assenov and Others v. Bulgaria, cited above, § 114
et seq.; and Süheyla Aydın v. Turkey, no. 25660/94,
§ 208, 24 May 2005). The Court further recalls that the
requirements of Article 13 are broader than a Contracting
State's obligation under Article 2 to conduct an effective
investigation (see Orhan cited above, § 384; and
Khashiyev and Akayeva v. Russia, cited above, § 183).
- In
view of the Court's findings above on Articles 2 and 3, these
complaints are clearly “arguable” for the purposes of
Article 13 (see Boyle and Rice v. the United Kingdom,
judgment of 27 April 1988, Series A no. 131 § 52).
The applicant should accordingly have been able to avail herself of
effective and practical remedies capable of leading to the
identification and punishment of those responsible and to an award of
compensation, for the purposes of Article 13.
- However,
in circumstances where, as here, the criminal investigations into the
disappearances and probably deaths were ineffective (see §§ 133-135,
160 above), and where the effectiveness of any other remedy that may
have existed, including civil remedies, was consequently undermined,
the Court finds that the State has failed in its obligation under
Article 13 of the Convention.
-
Consequently, there has been a violation of Article 13 of the
Convention in connection with Articles 2 and 3 of the Convention.
- As
regards the applicant's reference to Articles 5 and 8 of the
Convention, the Court recalls its findings of a violation of these
provisions (see §§ 178 and 189 above). In the light of
this it considers that no separate issues arise in respect of Article
13 in connection with Articles 5 and 8 of the Convention.
VIII. OBSERVANCE OF Articles 34 and 38 § 1 (a)
of the convention
- The
applicant argued that the Government's failure to submit the
documents requested by the Court, namely the criminal investigation
files, disclosed a failure to comply with their obligations under
Articles 34 and 38 § 1 (a) of the Convention. She
also alleged that the Russian Government were in breach of their
obligation not to hinder the right of individual petition. These
Articles read, as far as relevant:
Article 34
“The Court may receive applications from any
person, non-governmental organisation or group of individuals
claiming to be the victim of a violation by one of the High
Contracting Parties of the rights set forth in the Convention or the
Protocols thereto. The High Contracting Parties undertake not to
hinder in any way the effective exercise of this right.”
Article 38
“1. If the Court declares the
application admissible, it shall
(a) pursue the examination of the case,
together with the representatives of the parties, and if need be,
undertake an investigation, for the effective conduct of which the
States concerned shall furnish all necessary facilities.”
A. As regards the submission of the documents
- The
Court reiterates that proceedings in certain type of applications do
not in all cases lend themselves to a rigorous application of the
principle whereby a person who alleges something must prove that
allegation and that it is of the utmost importance for the effective
operation of the system of individual petition instituted under
Article 34 of the Convention that States should furnish all necessary
facilities to make possible a proper and effective examination of
applications.
- This
obligation requires the Contracting States to furnish all necessary
facilities to the Court, whether it is conducting a fact-finding
investigation or performing its general duties as regards the
examination of applications. It is inherent in the proceedings
relating to cases of this nature, where individual applicants accuse
State agents of violating their rights under the Convention, that in
certain instances it is only the respondent State that has access to
information capable of corroborating or refuting these allegations. A
failure on a Government's part to submit such information which is in
their hands without a satisfactory explanation may not only give rise
to the drawing of inferences as to the well-foundedness of the
applicant's allegations, but may also reflect negatively on the level
of compliance by a respondent State with its obligations under
Article 38 § 1 (a) of the Convention. In a
case where the application raises issues of the effectiveness of the
investigation, the documents of the criminal investigation are
fundamental to the establishment of facts and their absence may
prejudice the Court's proper examination of the complaint both at the
admissibility and at the merits stage (see Tanrıkulu
v. Turkey, cited above, § 70).
- The
Court recalls that it has on several occasions requested the Russian
Government to submit copies of the investigation files opened into
the disappearances of the applicant's relatives. The evidence
contained in both files was regarded by the Court as crucial for the
establishment of facts in the present case. It also recalls that it
found the reasons cited by the Government for their refusal to
disclose the documents requested as insufficient (see §§ 123
and 132 above). Referring to the importance of a respondent
Government's cooperation in Convention proceedings and mindful of the
difficulties associated with the establishment of facts in cases of
such a nature, the Court finds that the Government fell short of
their obligations under Article 38 § 1 of the Convention on
account of their failure to submit copies of the documents requested
in respect of Said-Khuseyn and Said-Magomed Imakayev's
disappearances.
B. As regards the hindrance of the right to individual
petition
- The
applicant argued that her husband's abduction and, most probably, his
subsequent murder, were linked to his application to the European
Court of Human Rights and constituted a grave breach of Russia's
obligation not to hinder in any way the right of individual petition.
She further referred to the questioning to which she had been
subjected in support of her allegation of undue pressure on her. She
also claimed that the Government's failure to disclose, without
sufficient grounds, the documents requested from them, prevented her
from substantiating her claims before the Court.
- The
Government regarded the applicant's complaint about pressure put on
her as totally unfounded and unsubstantiated. They referred to the
absence of any complaints by the applicant about this matter within
the domestic proceedings.
- The
Court recalls that it is of the utmost importance for the effective
operation of the system of individual application instituted by
Article 34 that applicants should be able to communicate freely with
the Court without being subjected to any form of pressure from the
authorities to withdraw or modify their complaints. In this context,
“pressure” includes not only direct coercion and flagrant
acts of intimidation, but also other improper indirect acts or
contacts designed to dissuade or discourage applicants from using a
Convention remedy. The issue of whether or not contacts between the
authorities and an applicant amount to unacceptable practices from
the standpoint of Article 34 must be determined in the light of
the particular circumstances of the case. In the context of the
questioning of applicants about their applications under the
Convention by authorities exercising a domestic investigative
function, this will depend on whether the procedures adopted have
involved a form of illicit and unacceptable pressure which may be
regarded as hindering the exercise of the right of individual
application (see, for example, Aydin v. Turkey, cited above,
§§ 115-117; and Salman v. Turkey, cited
above, § 130).
- In
the present case, in so far as the applicant alleges that her husband
was apprehended in retaliation for his application to the European
Court, the Court notes that in view the Government's failure to
submit documents from the criminal investigation file opened into the
disappearance of the applicant's husband, it is unable to establish
the true reason for his arrest. In any event, having regard to its
above findings of a violation of Articles 2 and 5 of the Convention
in respect of the disappearance of Said-Magomed Imakayev (see §§
157 and 178), the Court does not consider that, in the circumstances
of the present case, this complaints requires a separate examination
under Article 34 of the Convention.
- In
so far as the applicant complains about the substance of the
questioning of her by state officials, the Government deny that any
pressure was put on the applicant. The applicant herself did not
refer to any particular threats or other attempts to dissuade her
from applying to the Court, but rather indicated that she had
perceived their remarks as indicating that she had paid some money in
order to bring her case before the European Court. In such
circumstances, the Court does not have sufficient material to
conclude that the respondent Government have violated their
obligations under Article 34 of the Convention either.
- Finally,
as regards the applicant's reference to Article 34 in the context of
the Government's failure to submit documents from the criminal
investigation files, the Court has already addressed this issue above
in the context of Article 38 of the Convention, and does not consider
that any additional findings are necessary here.
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. Damage
1. Pecuniary damage
- The
applicant claimed damages in respect of the lost wages of her son and
husband from the time of their arrests and subsequent disappearances.
The applicant claimed a total of 2,243,004 Russian roubles (RUR)
under this heading (64,654 euros (EUR)).
- She
claimed that her son had been trained as a dentist and had been
briefly employed in such a capacity, for an annual wage of
RUR 54,000. Taking the average life expectancy for women in
Russia to be 70 years, the applicant assumed that she could be
financially dependant on her son from December 2000 until 2021. His
earnings for that period, taking into account an average 12 %
inflation rate, would constitute RUR 4,414,760. The applicant
could count on 30 % of that sum, which would constitute
RUR 1,470,567.
- Similarly,
the applicant claimed that she could count on 100% of her husband's
wages which would have been used fully to support her and the
household. Even though the applicant's husband was unemployed at the
time of his apprehension, the applicant assumed it reasonable to
suppose that he would have found a job and earned at least an
official minimum wage until his retirement at the age of 60, in 2015.
In July 2002 the official minimum wage constituted RUR 450 per month
and it was increased at an average rate of 25 % in 2002-2006. The
applicant assumed that this growth rate should apply until 2015 and
submitted that the result would have constituted RUR 772,437.
- The
Government regarded these claims as based on suppositions and
unfounded.
- The
Court recalls that there must be a clear causal connection between
the damage claimed by the applicant and the violation of the
Convention, and that this may, in the appropriate case, include
compensation in respect of loss of earnings (see, among other
authorities, Çakici cited above). Having regard to its
above conclusions, there is indeed a direct causal link between the
violation of Article 2 in respect of the applicant's son and
husband and the loss by the applicant of the financial support which
they could have provided for her. The Court finds that the loss of
earnings also applies to dependants and considers it reasonable to
assume that the applicants' son and husband would eventually have
some earnings and that the applicant would benefit from these. Having
regard to the applicant's submissions, the Court awards EUR 20,000
to the applicant in respect of pecuniary damage, plus any tax that
may be chargeable on that amount.
2. Non-pecuniary damage
- The
applicant claimed EUR 70,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage
for the suffering she had endured as a result of the loss of both her
son and her husband, the indifference shown by the authorities
towards her, the latter's failure to provide any information about
the fate of her relatives, the impossibility of burying them and the
fact that she had been forced to flee her homeland.
- The
Government found the amount claimed to be exaggerated.
- The
Court has found a violation of Articles 2, 5 and 13 of the Convention
on account of the unacknowledged detention and presumed death of the
applicant's son and husband in the hands of the authorities. The
applicant herself has been found to be a victim of a violation of
Articles 3 and 8 of the Convention in relation to the emotional
distress and anguish endured by her and the unlawful interference
with her right to respect for her home. The Court thus accepts that
she has suffered non-pecuniary damage which cannot be compensated for
solely by the findings of violations. It awards the applicant EUR
70,000, plus any tax that may be chargeable on the above amount.
B. Costs and expenses
- The
applicant was represented by the SRJI. She submitted that the costs
borne by the representatives included research in Ingushetia and in
Moscow at a rate of EUR 50 per hour, and the drafting of legal
documents submitted to the European Court and domestic authorities at
a rate of EUR 50 per hour for SRJI staff and EUR 150 per hour
for SRJI senior staff.
- The
applicant claimed EUR 15,759 in respect of costs and expenses related
to her legal representation. This included:
EUR 500 for the
preparation of the initial application in relation to her son's
disappearance;
EUR 1,475 for the
preparation of the initial application in relation to her husband's
disappearance;
EUR 2,250 for the
preparation of full applications in respect of the disappearance of
the applicant's son and husband;
EUR 3,400 for the
preparation of additional submissions;
EUR 1,775 for the
preparation of the applicant's reply to the Government's memorandum;
EUR 825 in
connection with the preparation of additional correspondence with
the ECHR;
EUR 2,300 in
connection with the preparation of the applicant's response to the
ECHR decision on admissibility;
EUR 1,850 in
connection with the preparation of legal documents submitted to the
domestic law-enforcement agencies;
EUR 1,006 for
administrative costs (7% of legal fees);
EUR 378 for
international courier post to the ECHR.
- The
Government did not dispute the details of the calculations submitted
by the applicant, but contended that the sum claimed was excessive
for a non-profit organisation such as the applicant's representative,
the SRJI.
- The
Court has to establish, first, whether the costs and expenses
indicated by the applicant were actually incurred and, second,
whether they were necessary (see McCann and Others, cited
above, § 220).
- The
Court notes that the applicant and her husband issued powers of
attorney in respect of the SRJI in February 2002, authorising them to
represent their interests in the European Court of Human Rights. The
SRJI acted as the applicant's representative throughout the
procedure. The Court is satisfied that the above rates are
reasonable.
- Further,
it has to be established whether the costs and expenses incurred by
the applicant for legal representation were necessary. The Court
notes that this case was rather complex, especially in view of the
“double disappearance”. On the other hand, it did not
involve any large amount of documents, especially once the
preparation of the initial submissions was done, and therefore it
doubts whether at later stages it required the research and
preparation in the amounts stipulated by the representative.
- In
these circumstances, having regard to the details of the claims
submitted by the applicant, the Court reduces the amount claimed by
the applicant and awards her the sum of EUR 10,000, less the EUR 886
received by way of legal aid from the Council of Europe, together
with any value-added tax that may be chargeable.
C. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be
based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to
which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 2 of the Convention in respect of the disappearance of
Said-Khuseyn Imakayev;
- 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
Said-Khuseyn Imakayev disappeared;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 2 of the Convention in respect of the disappearance of
Said-Magomed Imakayev;
- 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
Said-Magomed Imakayev disappeared;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 3 of the Convention in respect of the applicant;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 5 of the Convention in respect of Said-Khuseyn Imakayev
and in respect of Said-Magomed Imakayev;
- Holds that no separate issues arise under
Article 6 of the Convention;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
8 of the Convention;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 13 of the Convention in respect of the alleged
violations of Articles 2 and 3 of the Convention;
- Holds that no separate issues arise under
Article 13 of the Convention in respect of the alleged violations of
Articles 5 and 8;
- Holds that there has been a failure to comply
with Article 38 § 1 (a) of the Convention;
- Holds that there is no need to examine
separately the applicant's complaints under Article 34 of the
Convention that her husband was apprehended in retaliation for his
application to the European Court and that the Government failed to
submit documents from the criminal investigation files and that there
has been no failure to comply with Article 34 of the Convention, in
so far as the applicant's complaint about her questioning by State
officials is concerned;
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay the applicant, within three months
from the date on which the judgment becomes final in accordance with
Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the following
amounts:
(i) EUR
20,000 (twenty thousand euros) in respect of pecuniary damage;
(ii) EUR
70,000 (seventy thousand euros) in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(iii) EUR
9,114 (nine thousand one hundred and fourteen euros) in respect of
costs and expenses, to be paid to the applicant's representatives'
bank account in the Netherlands;
(iv) any
tax that may be chargeable on the above amounts.
(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.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 9 November 2006, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis
Registrar President