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FIFTH
SECTION
CASE OF DROZD v. UKRAINE
(Application
no. 12174/03)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
30 July 2009
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 Drozd v. Ukraine,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fifth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Peer Lorenzen, President,
Karel
Jungwiert,
Rait Maruste,
Mark
Villiger,
Mirjana Lazarova Trajkovska,
Zdravka
Kalaydjieva, judges,
Stanislav Shevchuk, ad hoc
judge,
and Stephen Phillips,
Deputy Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 7 July 2009,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 12174/03) against Ukraine
lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by a Ukrainian national,
Mr Nikolay Pavlovich Drozd (“the applicant”),
on 18 March 2003.
- The
Ukrainian Government (“the Government”) were represented
by their Agent, Mr Y. Zaytsev.
- The
applicant alleged, in particular, that he had been beaten up by
police officers and that the domestic authorities had failed to
conduct an effective investigation of his complaints.
- On
13 April 2005 the President of the Second Section decided
to give notice of the application to the Government. It was also
decided to examine the merits of the application at the same time as
its admissibility (Article 29 § 3).
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicant was born in 1963 and lives in the village of Velykyy
Listven, Gorodnya District, in the Chernihiv Region.
- According
to the applicant, at about 11 a.m. on 11 September 1997,
when he was in company of Mr O.K. and two ladies, three police
officers, S.V., V.V. and I.P., entered the house. They pushed him and
Mr O.K. out to the police car and drove both to the collective
farm office. There they were joined by Mr Y.M., another
villager, who, along with officers S.V. and V.V. severely beat the
applicant and Mr O.K..
- Between
12 September 1997 and 2 October 1997 the applicant underwent
inpatient treatment on account of numerous leg injuries, including
surgical dissection and drainage of a haematoma. As regards Mr O.K.,
between 12 and 29 September 1997 he was also treated in the hospital
on account of traumatic vascular asthenia (астено-вегетативний
синдром).
- On
10 October 1997 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office rejected
Mr O.K.'s request for criminal proceedings to be initiated
against the officers S.V. and V.V., having found no appearance of
criminal conduct on their part. On 17 November 1997 the
Chernihiv Prosecutors' Office annulled this decision and remitted the
case for additional investigation. On 3 December 1997 the
Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to initiate criminal
proceedings.
- Following
a further complaint by the applicant and Mr O.K., lodged on
9 March 1998, the Chernihiv Department of the Ministry of
Interior conducted an internal investigation. On 19 March 1998
it announced that the circumstances described by the complainants
“were found to be partly true”. However, there was no
appearance that the police officers had infringed applicable law. In
particular, it was confirmed that on 11 September 1997
officers S.V., V.V. and I.P. had invited the applicant and Mr O.K.
to the farm office for questioning concerning their suspected
involvement in a burglary at a village store. When near the office,
they encountered Mr Y.M., who got into a fight with Mr O.K.
After the fight was over, the police officers left the villagers and
went off to continue their investigation. According to another
villager, Mr Y.L., Mr O.K. and the applicant had fought
each other the night before at a drinking party in his house.
- According
to the applicant, at about 9:30 p.m. on 4 November 1999
the same police officers, S.V. and V.V., together with officer A.B.,
found the applicant in the company of Mr O.P. and Mr Y.K. in a
house belonging to Mr O.P. Officers S.V. and V.V. beat the
applicant severely, causing him cerebral concussion. The applicant
did not, however, see a doctor, since he was afraid of reprisals by
police, and attempted to recover at home on his own. However, as he
continued to suffer (in particular, from headaches and dizziness) he
sought medical advice on 27 January 2000. According to the
medical records, on this date the applicant was prescribed medication
for the after-effects of a head injury. Subsequently (between 2 and
18 August 2000) the applicant underwent inpatient treatment
for pyramidal insufficiency and vegetative-vascular syndrome,
recorded as after-effects of a head injury. The applicant has
allegedly suffered from frequent headaches, vertigo, general weakness
and bouts of depression ever since the injury.
- In
the meantime, on an unspecified date criminal proceedings were
instituted against the applicant, who was suspected of having stolen
hay from the collective farm's barn on or around 20 November 1999.
On 10 December 1999 the applicant was placed in the
Gorodnya temporary detention centre, apparently kept in custody some
two weeks and then released. On 24 February 2000 the
applicant was remanded in custody pending trial. On 22 May 2000
the Gorodnya District Court convicted the applicant and another
villager, Mr O.G. of stealing 460 kilos of hay. The
applicant was subjected to a fine and three years' imprisonment
suspended on a two-year probation term. This judgment was not
appealed against and became final on 30 May 2000.
- On
30 July 2002, after his probation term ended, the applicant
complained to the national ombudsman (Уповноважений
Верховної Ради
з прав людини)
that there had been incidents of police ill-treatment on
11 September 1997 and 4 November 1999. On
15 August 2002 the ombudsman forwarded his complaints to
the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office.
- On
4 September 2002 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office decided
not to institute criminal proceedings against the officers accused by
the applicant of ill-treating him, having found no appearance of
criminal conduct on their part. The decision was based on the
testimonies of police officers only.
- On
13 September 2002 the Chernihiv Prosecutors' Office found
that this decision was based on a perfunctory enquiry and ordered an
additional investigation.
- On
7 October 2002 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to
institute criminal proceedings. It noted in particular that the
applicant, his wife, Mr O.P. and Mr Y.K., who had allegedly
witnessed the incident of 4 November 1999, had ignored
repeated invitations to appear for questioning. As regards the
applicant's neurological symptoms, they could be associated with his
oligophrenia and vegetative-vascular dystonia, which had already been
diagnosed in 1983. Furthermore, according to the applicant's
psychiatrist, oligophrenia sufferers are prone to inadequate
interpretation and distortion of facts.
- On
14 January 2003 the Chernihiv Prosecutors' Office upheld
this decision. The applicant appealed to the court. He argued, in
particular, that neither he nor his former wife had ever received an
invitation to appear for questioning. His oligophrenia was irrelevant
to the facts, as his physical injuries had been confirmed by medical
certificates.
- On
2 June 2003 the Gorodnya District Court annulled the
decision of 7 October 2002, having found that the
investigation of the applicant's complaint had been perfunctory. In
particular, the prosecution should have questioned the applicant and
his family and should have ordered an assessment of the applicant's
health by a commission of experts.
- On
10 November 2003 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused
to institute criminal proceedings. According to this decision,
several villagers had testified that they had never seen the police
beat the applicant. Moreover, Mrs L.K., the collective farm
accountant, remembered seeing him fight with his brother and Mr A.L.
in September 1997.
- On
15 December 2003 the Chernihiv Prosecutors' Office annulled
the decision of 10 November 2003. It mentioned in particular that the
court's instruction to arrange a medical expert assessment had not
been complied with.
- On
10 January 2004 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office ordered
the applicant to be examined by a medical expert.
- On
18 May 2004 the applicant was examined by a medical expert,
who confirmed that he had suffered numerous leg injuries on
11 September 1997. She further found that the applicant's
assertion that he had suffered a head injury on 4 November 1999
was not improbable.
- On 20 May 2004
the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to institute criminal
proceedings. It found that the applicant had suffered minor injuries
and could avail himself of the opportunity to bring a private
prosecution.
- On
10 September 2004 the Gorodnya District Court annulled this
decision as based on a perfunctory enquiry. The court found, in
particular, that the prosecution had been under the obligation to
determine the relevant facts in so far as it was possible. In
particular, according to the court's earlier instructions, the
applicant's assessment should have been carried out by a commission,
rather than by a single expert. Furthermore, the authorities had not
determined the identity of the collective farm employees who could be
questioned about the events and had not verified the testimony of
Mrs L.K. concerning the applicant's fights with his brother and
Mr A.L.
- On
26 December 2004 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused
to institute criminal proceedings. Additionally to the earlier
reasons, it referred to the testimonies by Messrs A.L. and Y.L., the
applicant's neighbours, who asserted having seen the applicant and
his brother kicking each other in September 1997.
- On
28 January 2005 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office annulled
this decision, referring, in particular, to its own failure to comply
with the court's instructions concerning the expert assessment.
- On
the same date a commission of six experts from the Chernihiv Regional
Bureau of Court Experts examined the applicant. They found it
established that on 11 September 1997 the applicant had
sustained numerous leg injuries. As regards his head injury, the
available documents were insufficient to make a definite conclusion.
It was probable that in November 1999 the applicant had
sustained a head injury as a result of a fall. However, there was no
appearance that a causal link existed between the alleged injury and
the subsequent neurological symptoms.
- On
3 February 2005 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to
institute criminal proceedings. In addition to previous findings it
referred to the testimonies of the applicant's brother, former wife
and nine collective farm office employees, who asserted that they had
never witnessed the applicant being beaten by the police.
Furthermore, the applicant's brother had confirmed that they had been
on bad terms and had fought on various occasions, including in
September 1997.
- The
applicant appealed, complaining in particular that the investigation
had failed to establish how he had obtained his injuries.
- On
31 March 2005 the Chernihiv Prosecutors' Office annulled
this decision, referring to the prosecution's failure to question
Mrs L.K. about the details of the fight between the applicant
and his brother and the need for further study of medical records to
determine how the applicant's injuries could have been inflicted.
- On
14 May 2005 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to
institute criminal proceedings.
- On
26 May 2005 the Chernihiv Prosecutors' Office annulled this
decision, referring to the need to question the applicant's
acquaintances in whose company he had purportedly encountered
officers S.V. and V.V. on 11 September 1997 and
4 November 1999.
- On
9 June 2005 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to
institute criminal proceedings. In addition to the reasons given
earlier it stated that the applicant had falsely noted that on
11 September 1997 officers S.V. and V.V. had been
accompanied by officer I.P., while no such officer had served in the
Gorodnya Police at that time. It also referred to a statement by
Mrs A.P., one of the two ladies who had been with the applicant
on 11 September 1997 and who had denied seeing the officers
beating him in the house.
- On
5 October 2005 the Gorodnya Court found that the police had
failed to comply with its earlier instructions.
- On
17 October 2005 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to
institute criminal proceedings, on essentially the same grounds as
before.
- On
10 January 2006 the Gorodnya District Court annulled this
decision, having found that it had not been preceded by any
investigatory activities.
- On
1 February 2006 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to
institute criminal proceedings. By way of reasoning, it recited the
findings of the internal investigation of 19 March 1998.
- On
6 March 2006 the Chernihiv Prosecutors' Office annulled
this decision.
- On
12 April 2006 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to
initiate criminal proceedings. In addition to earlier reasons, it
referred, in particular, to the impossibility of questioning Mr O.K.
(the other alleged victim of the events of 11 September 1997),
who had died by hanging in April 2004. It further referred to
the testimonies by the applicant's brother concerning their fight in
1997; to that of Mr Y.M., who remembered being present during
the questioning in the farm office and seeing nobody beating the
applicant. It further referred to the applicant's condition diagnosed
in 1983, making him prone to neurological symptoms as well as to
distortion of facts.
- On
7 June 2006 the Novozavodskyy District Court of Chernihiv
annulled this decision. It found that the prosecution had not
complied with the previous judgments indicating omissions in their
inquiry. In particular, no effort had been made in good faith to
locate Mr Y.K. and Mr O.P., who had allegedly witnessed the
applicant's beating on 4 November 1999. According to the
case file records, they resided in Kyiv, while the prosecution had
unsuccessfully sought their contact details from the Chernihiv
address bureau. Furthermore, no effort had been made to check the
medical records of the temporary detention centre, in which the
applicant had been placed in December 1999 shortly after the alleged
head injury.
- On
26 July 2006 the Chernihiv Regional Court of Appeal upheld
this decision. It also emphasised that the reference to the
applicant's condition diagnosed in 1983 was irrelevant to the
verification of the facts in his case, in particular in light of the
medical documents concerning his injuries.
- On
1 September 2006 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused
to institute criminal proceedings referring to essentially the same
reasons as before as well as to the absence of any information
concerning Mr O.P. and Mr Y.K. in the Chernihiv address bureau.
- On
12 April 2007 the Novodazovskyy District Court of Chernihiv
annulled this decision. It found that the courts' previous
instructions had not been complied with. It further ordered an
additional medical assessment, questioning of the applicant's brother
and a check of the records of the Gorodnya termporary detention
centre.
- On
12 June 2007 the Gorodnya Prosecutors' Office refused to
institute criminal proceedings, referring to essentially the same
reasons as before. It also referred to additional questioning of the
head of the previous expert commission, who believed that a new
medical assessment would be futile. Furthermore, by April 2004 the
Gorodnya temporary detention centre had destroyed all the records for
1999.
- On
26 February 2008 the Novozavodskyy District Court annulled
this decision. On 11 March 2008 the Chernihiv Regional
Court of Appeal quashed the decision of the trial court, having found
that its analysis of the case file was perfunctory.
- On
11 April 2008 the Novozavodskyy District Court found the
decision not to institute criminal proceedings sufficiently
substantiated and upheld it. On 29 April 2008 the Chernihiv
Regional Court of Appeal upheld the decision of the trial court.
- On
25 June 2008 the Supreme Court of Ukraine rejected the
applicant's request for leave to appeal in cassation.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
- Relevant
domestic law can be found in the judgment in the case of Kozinets
v. Ukraine (no. 75520/01, §§ 39-42,
6 December 2007).
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that he had been beaten by the police officers.
He further maintained that the investigation undertaken by the
domestic authorities into his complaints had been lengthy and
insufficient. The applicant relied on Articles 3 and 6 § 1
of the Convention in respect of his complaints.
- The
Court, which is master of the characterisation to be given in law to
the facts of the case (see as a recent authority Castravet v.
Moldova, no. 23393/05, § 23, 13 March 2007)
finds that the complaints at issue fall to be examined under
Article 3 of the Convention which is the relevant provision and
reads as follows:
Article 3
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
A. Admissibility
- The Government submitted that this complaint is
inadmissible, as the applicant failed to lodge it within six months
of the date on which the incidents occurred. As an alternative, they
maintained that the applicant had lodged his application before
exhausting the remedies provided under domestic law.
- The
applicant disagreed with these submissions.
- The Court reiterates that in accordance with
Article 35 § 1 of the Convention, it may only
deal with a matter if it has been raised before it within six months
of the date of the final domestic decision in the process of
exhaustion of effective domestic remedies (see, among other
authorities, Walker v. the United Kingdom (dec.),
no. 34979/97, ECHR 2000-I). The six-month period runs from the
act alleged to constitute a violation of the Convention only where no
effective domestic remedy is available (see, among other authorities,
Antonenkov and Others v. Ukraine, no. 14183/02,
§ 32, 22 November 2005).
- The
applicant in the present case attempted to instigate a criminal
investigation into his alleged ill-treatment and subsequently
appealed before the domestic courts against the decisions not to
institute it. On 18 March 2003 he lodged the present application with
the Court and the final domestic decision concerning his claims was
taken on 25 June 2008. The Court has earlier recognised that recourse
to the remedies used by the applicant in domestic proceedings for his
complaints of ill-treatment may in principle be effective (see
Yakovenko v. Ukraine, no. 15825/06, §§ 71-73,
25 October 2007). It finds therefore that the Government's
objection concerning the observance of the six-month time-limit must
be dismissed.
- As
regards the Government's objection concerning non-exhaustion, the
Court finds that this objection should be dismissed, as by the
present date the decision not to institute criminal proceedings
concerning the applicant's alleged ill-treatment has been upheld by
the courts of three instances.
- The
Court concludes that the applicant's complaints raise issues of fact
and law under the Convention, the determination of which requires an
examination on the merits. The Court finds no ground for declaring
them inadmissible. The Court must therefore declare them admissible.
B. Merits
1. The submissions of the parties
- The
applicant maintained, in particular, that along with Mr O.K.,
the other alleged victim of the beating on 11 September 1997,
he immediately complained about the incident on 12 September 1997.
The authorities however failed to conduct a proper investigation and
to question all the witnesses as they should have. Subsequent
complaints lodged by the applicant since 2002 have also been in vain,
as the authorities have consistently failed to take all the necessary
procedural steps and to establish relevant facts.
- The
Government disagreed with these submissions. They acknowledged that
the applicant had sustained leg injuries in September 1997
and that his allegations concerning a head injury in November 1999
were not improbable. They maintained however that there was no
evidence that the injuries complained of had been inflicted by the
police officers. The applicant could have injured his legs in a fight
with another private person. As regards the head injury, assuming the
applicant had suffered one, it was not at all apparent that this
injury had resulted from the use of force rather than from an
accidental fall.
- As
regards the duty to investigate the applicant's complaint, the
Government maintained that it was not easy to establish all relevant
facts, as the applicant's complaint, which related to the events of
1997 and 1999, first reached the prosecutors' office only in
August 2002. However, once the authorities had been notified of
the incidents, an independent enquiry was carried out and all
necessary actions were taken to establish relevant facts.
2. The Court's assessment
a. The alleged ill-treatment
- In light of the general principles determined in its
case-law (see, for example, Kozinets, cited above, §§ 51-54),
the Court considers that the treatment complained of by the applicant
has been such as to fall within the scope of Article 3 of the
Convention. It remains to be considered whether the State authorities
should be held responsible for it.
- The
Court notes that the fact that on 11 September 1997 the
applicant sustained numerous injuries to his legs, which required a
surgical intervention, is not in dispute between the parties. The
applicant's version that these injuries had been inflicted by
officers S.V. and V.V, has not, however, been backed up by any
evidence. On the contrary, several individuals, including Mrs A.P.,
who saw the applicant being taken for questioning, Mr Y.M., who
purportedly witnessed the applicant's interrogation, and Mrs L.K.,
an employee of the farm office where the interrogation took place,
suggested alternative explanations. They named several villagers, in
fights with whom the applicant could have had his legs injured.
Moreover, the applicant's brother acknowledged having fought with him
in September 1997. Given all of the information in its
possession, the Court cannot conclude “beyond reasonable doubt”
that the applicant's leg injuries are attributable to police
officers.
- As
regards the head injury, the Court can equally not establish a
violation of the Convention on the basis of probabilities.
- In
view of the above, the Court finds no violation of the substantive
limb of Article 3 of the Convention.
b. The alleged inadequacy of the
investigation
- In
light of the general principles concerning the duty of the States to
conduct an effective investigation of arguable claims concerning
ill-treatment (see e.g. Kozinets, cited above, §§ 59-60),
the Court notes at the outset that the investigation of the
applicant's allegations, which lasted some six years, has neither
found the persons responsible for his leg injuries in September 1997
nor established how, if at all, he sustained a head injury in
November 1999.
- However,
in assessing to what extent the domestic authorities should be held
responsible for such an outcome of the investigation, the Court first
notes that until July 2002 the applicant had done little to
promote any enquiry. According to the case file materials, he first
complained to the police about the incident of 11 September 1997
only on 9 March 1998. The applicant apparently did not
attempt to challenge the results of the ensuing internal
investigation report dismissing his claims. His next complaint about
the incident of September 1997 as well as his first complaint
about the incident of November 1999 was directed to the
ombudsman only three years after the latter incident. The Court finds
that the delays on the applicant's part made it objectively more
difficult for the authorities to determine the circumstances in his
case.
- At
the same time, the Court considers that the applicant's conduct alone
cannot explain the authorities' failure to establish the facts. The
Court observes that there was no finding by domestic authorities that
his complaint of 2002 was time-barred. The
applicant can therefore not be reproached for failure to observe
statutory formalities in search of an appropriate domestic remedy.
The authorities, for their part, cannot be considered absolved
from a duty to act in investigating his allegations. Furthermore, as
regards the incident of 11 September 1997 the prosecutors'
office was immediately made aware of it by Mr O.K. The
authorities were therefore capable of starting to collect evidence
much earlier than when the applicant lodged his complaint.
- In the meantime, an official enquiry into the
applicant's complaint was discontinued on numerous occasions in view
of the lack of an appearance of criminal conduct on the police
officers' behalf. Subsequently, following appeals by the applicant,
it was reopened and the matter was remitted for further
investigation. In the Court's opinion, repeated remittals of a case
for further investigation may disclose a serious deficiency in the
domestic prosecution system (see Kozinets cited above, § 61).
- Furthermore,
the domestic authorities themselves referred to the prosecution's
omissions as reasons for such remittals and instructed the enquirers
to take additional measures. However, these instructions were not
always properly followed. In particular, notwithstanding that in
June 2002 the judicial authorities found it necessary for the
applicant to be assessed by a commission of medical experts, three
decisions to wrap up the enquiry were subsequently taken and annulled
before the assessment finally took place in January 2005. The
second medical assessment, recommended by the judicial authorities on
12 April 2007, has never been ordered.
- A
number of actions was taken with unnecessary delays. In particular,
it was only on 26 May 2005 that the Chernihiv Prosecutors'
Office ordered the questioning of the individuals in whose company
the applicant encountered officers S.V. and V.V. (see § 31
above). The collective farm employees who might have been in the
office while the applicant was being questioned, were questioned in
accordance with court instructions only on 3 February 2005
(see §§ 23, 27 above). In view of the delays by
domestic authorities certain potential sources of relevant evidence,
which existed in 2002 when the applicant first lodged his complaint
with the ombudsman, became unavailable before the prosecution had
explored them. In particular, Mr O.K., the other purported
victim of the beating on 11 September 1997, died by hanging
in April 2004 (see § 38 above). The temporary detention
centre records, which could have shed light on the applicant's
purported head injury in November 1999, had been destroyed by
April 2004 (see § 43 above).
- Next,
according to the information in the Court's possession, certain
potential sources of important evidence have not at all been properly
explored. In particular, there is no record of questioning of
Mrs I.K., one of the two ladies who purportedly witnessed the
applicant being taken for questioning on 11 September 1997.
No effort in good faith appears to have been made to locate Mr Y.K.
and Mr O.P. (purported witnesses to the applicant's beating on
4 November 1999). Although on 7 June 2006 the
Novozavodskyy District Court specifically pointed out that it was
likely that these individuals lived in Kyiv, the prosecution
continued to seek their details from the Chernihiv address bureau
(see §§ 39, 41 above).
- Finally,
even where relevant evidence was secured, it was not always properly
explored and verified. In particular, witnesses suggested that the
applicant could have sustained leg injuries in fights with various
individuals, including his brother, Mr A.L. and Mr O.K. The
applicant's head injury could have been intentional or accidental.
The prosecution has not made an effort to determine which of the
numerous versions was more probable (for example by organising
confrontations between various parties). Neither has it addressed
certain inconsistencies between various pieces of information, such
as whether an officer named I.P. accompanied officers S.V. and V.V.
on 11 September 1997 (see §§ 9 and 32 above)
and concerning the role of Mr Y.M. in the events on that date
(in particular whether he was present during questioning or simply
met the applicant and his companions near the farm office, see §§ 9,
36 and 38 above).
- In
light of the above, the Court finds
that the authorities did not take all measures that could be
reasonably expected from them to establish the circumstances
concerning the applicant's complaint about ill-treatment and to find
those responsible for his injuries. The Court concludes therefore
that in the present case there has been a violation of
the procedural limb of Article 3 of the Convention.
II. OTHER ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant also complained under Article 6 § 1 and
13 of the Convention that his conviction in 2000 was unfair and
referred to Articles 10 and 17 without further details.
- Having carefully examined the applicant's submissions
in the light of all the material in its possession and in so far as
the matters complained of are within its competence, the Court finds
that they do not disclose any appearance of a violation of the rights
and freedoms set out in the Convention.
- It
follows that this part of the application must be declared
inadmissible as being manifestly ill-founded, pursuant to Article
35 §§ 3 and 4 of the Convention.
III. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
- The
applicant did not submit a claim for just satisfaction within the
time-limit allotted for this purpose. Accordingly, the Court
considers that there is no call to award him any sum on that account.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Declares the complaint about ill-treatment and
inadequate investigation of this complaint admissible and the
remainder of the application inadmissible;
- Holds that there has been no violation of
Article 3 of the Convention under its substantive limb;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
3 of the Convention under its procedural limb.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 30 July 2009, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Stephen Phillips Peer Lorenzen
Deputy Registrar President