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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Tamarevichute v The Russian Federation [2008] EWHC 534 (Admin) (19 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/534.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 534 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MRS JUSTICE SWIFT DBE
____________________
RAISA ALYAKSOVA TAMAREVICHUTE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE GOVERNMENT OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION |
Respondent |
____________________
Melanie Cumberland (instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 26 February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE SWIFT:
The appeal
The background
The grounds of appeal
(a) she should have found that the appellant's extradition was barred by extraneous considerations (section 79(1) (b) of the Act), in that there was a real risk that she might be prejudiced at her trial in Kaliningrad on account of her race; and/or
(b) she should not have been satisfied that extradition would be compatible with the appellant's human rights under Articles 3, 5 and/or 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).
The relief sought
"(2) The court may allow the appeal only if the conditions in subsection (3) or the conditions in subsection (4) are satisfied.
(3) The conditions are that
(a) the judge ought to have decided a question before him at the extradition hearing differently;
(b) if the judge had decided the question in the way he ought to have done, he would have been required to order the person's discharge.
(4) The conditions are that
(a) an issue is raised that was not raised at the extradition hearing or evidence is available that was not available at the extradition hearing;
(b) the issue or evidence would have resulted in the judge deciding a question before him at the extradition hearing differently;
(c) if the judge had decided the question in that way, he would have been required to order the person's discharge".
The law
Extraneous considerations
"A person's extradition to a category 2 territory is barred by reason of extraneous considerations if (and only if) it appears that
(a) the request for his extradition (though purporting to be made on account of the extradition offence) is in fact made for the purpose of prosecuting or punishing him on account of his race, religion, nationality, gender, sexual orientation or political opinions, or
(b) if extradited, he might be prejudiced at his trial or punished, detained or restricted in his personal liberty by reason of his race, religion, nationality, gender, sexual orientation or political opinions".
Passage of time
Compatibility with human rights
The circumstances of the alleged offences and the appellant's arrest
The respondent's account
The appellant's evidence
The parties' contentions
The findings of the district judge
The evidence of Dr Blitz
Before the district judge
"88. There is no question that the state of human rights protection in Russia is extremely poor and that Russia has been condemned on multiple accounts as a result of the prevalence of torture and mistreatment by police, prison and other law enforcement officials; corruption and political influence in the judiciary, and for the persistence of race-hate crimes, speech and violence towards minorities, above all Roma.
89. There is considerable evidence to suggest that should the defendant be extradited to Russia she would be subject to many potential violations of the ECHR by the Russian authorities. These include not enjoying a fair trial, potential abuse by law enforcement officials during transit, abuse and torture in prison, and that she would enjoy poor living standards both in detention and in prison "
"The forms of ill-treatment alleged concern punches, slaps, kicks and blows with a truncheon, baseball bat or other hard objects, sometimes whilst being handcuffed to a radiator or suspended, whipping with wet towels and beating with plastic bottles filled with water. A few allegations were also received of asphyxiation using a gas mask or plastic bag and the infliction of electric shocks. The ill-treatment alleged was an occasion of such severity that it could be considered as amounting to torture".
"The cells seen by the delegation were totally unacceptable for extended periods of custody: dark, poorly ventilated, dirty and usually devoid of any equipment except a bench. Persons held overnight were not provided with mattresses or blankets. Further, there was no provision for the supplying detainees with food and drinking water, and access to a toilet was problematic".
"The conduct of criminal proceedings was also negatively impacted by close connections between the judiciary and public prosecutors, with most courts routinely overlooking flaws in preliminary investigations".
"There is [sic] no comprehensive official statistics of investigations of complaints about tortures in police institutions, and the same situation can be seen with the complaints about tortures in penal institutions. Very few human rights organizations in the Russian regions managed to get some information from Prosecutor's office regarding torture administration in the penal institutions. Human rights organizations in different regions in Russia noted some specific cases where the penal institution officials were held liable for cruelty to detainees and other official malfeasances, but these cases are rare and unique, and there are considerably less of them than the cases when police officials were held liable for tortures".
" Roma, persons from Caucasus and Central Asia, dark skinned persons, and foreigners faced widespread governmental and societal discrimination, which was often reflected in official attitudes and actions Skinhead groups and other extreme nationalist organizations fomented racially motivated violence".
"The problem of law enforcement bodies and local administrations which use the discrimatory sentiments of the population towards Roma for their own interests is widely spread. Moreover, in some parts of Northwest Russia local politicians use anti-Roma sentiments as a catalyst in their election campaign. They presented their plan for "cleaning" their city from "gypsies" as the biggest promise to be fulfilled after winning the elections. In their propaganda, presented by the mass media, these politicians openly accuse the entire local Roma population of earning a living on drug trade."
"Substantial research undertaken by the ERRC in Russia in recent years has revealed a disturbing pattern of police abuse of Roma, including fabrication of evidence of drug dealing followed by extortion of money from Romani individuals. Failure to produce the requested sum often results in arrests on drug charges".
"Roma continues to be exposed to the interference of racism in the administration of justice. The frequent use by criminal justice officials of stereotyping implicating Roma in drug dealing indicates that the conduct of criminal proceedings against Roma is not free of racial bias. In a number of instances, criminal investigation against Roma and subsequent trial proceedings have been carried out in a manner incompatible with international and domestic human rights standards for fair trial. Roma who have suffered human rights violations by law enforcement officials as well as by non-state actors, usually do not have access to an effective investigation of their complaints".
"The segregated Roma community in Dorozhnoe was created in 1956 when Soviet authorities forced them to settle on what was then unwanted land. Following the fall of the Soviet Union, the local government began the process of granting Roma residents full ownership of their homes. But in 2002, the government halted the process and began a concerted effort to drive the Roma off their land.
A government propaganda campaign vilified the community as criminals and drug dealers. At the same time, a series of sham legal proceedings stripped residents of ownership of their homes. The May 29 through June 2 operation capped a series of demolition campaigns carried out by the Russian authorities in Kaliningrad in 2005 and 2006.
The local authorities undertook a series of quick court cases proving that the houses of Roma were illegal, which allowed them to obtain permission to demolish the houses. Most of the decisions were made in the absence of the defendants, and none of the court cases were postponed, despite the fact that some of the Roma had not received any summons for the court hearing and learned about the pending demolition of their houses only when the bulldozers arrived in the village.
By June 2006, approximately 40 homes, comprising the entire Roma community of Dorozhnoe, had been razed, effectively wiping out the whole village".
The findings of the district judge
"When using such phrases as "intense anti Roma activity" and "the history of racist attacks against Roma in Kaliningrad" this court would have expected a number of specific incidents to be cited. As it is the report relies solely upon one serious incident occurring in Kaliningrad in 2006 some 5 years after the defendant had left the country and in particular the village of Dorozhnoe".
" once Roma come into contact with judiciary they are subject to the same general traditions of corruption and political intrigue which have routinely brought the Russian system into disrepute".
"This is a bold assertion unsupported by any cogent or specific evidence."
The appeal
The respondent's submissions
The law
"Taking stock of the whole case, I would make these final observations. There are I think two factors which constitute important, and justified, obstacles to the appellants' claims. They are obstacles which might arise in other cases. The first is the starting-point: Kennedy LJ's observation in Serbeh that "there is (still) a fundamental assumption that the requesting state is acting in good faith". This is a premise of effective relations between sovereign States. As I have said the assumption may be contradicted by evidence; and it is the court's plain duty to consider such evidence (where it is presented) on a statutory appeal under the 2003 Act. But where the requesting State is one in which the United Kingdom has for many years reposed the confidence not only of general good relations, but also of successive bilateral treaties consistently honoured, the evidence required to displace good faith must possess special force. The second obstacle is linked to the first. It is a general rule of the common law that the graver the allegation, the stronger must be the evidence to prove it. In this case it has been submitted that the United States will violate, at least may violate, its undertakings given to the United Kingdom. That would require a proof of a quality entirely lacking here."
" pursuant to the provisions of the international law will enjoy all the resources for defence, including legal counseling will not be the subject to torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment ".
"It is, however, important that reports which identify breaches of human rights, or other reprehensible activities on the part of governments or public authorities are kept in context. The fact that human rights violations take place is not of itself evidence that a particular individual would be at risk of being subjected to those human rights violations in the country in question. That depends on the extent to which the violations are systemic, their frequency and the extent to which the particular individual in question could be said to be specifically vulnerable by reason of a characteristic which would expose him to human rights abuse".
"There is not in our view the slightest basis for saying that the conditions in Russian prisons today are such as to amount to a breach of Article 3 for each prisoner".
The evidence
"Often those opinions [i.e. of so-called 'country experts'] are in letters or in statements and the writer is not called to give evidence or be cross-examined. Some such experts are highly respected and at the very least their evidence can be said to have been given in good faith and to be based on reliable sources. Others range from the generally reasonable to the unacceptable, and even venal. But all suffer from the difficulty that very rarely are they entirely objective in their approach and the sources relied on are frequently (and no doubt sometimes with good reason) unidentified. Many have fixed opinions about the regime in a particular county and will be inclined to accept anything which is detrimental to that regime. This means that more often than not the expert in question, even if he has the credentials which qualify him in that role, will be acting more as an advocate than an expert witness. While the principles which apply to expert witnesses called in High Court actions are not directly applicable, they give guidance when the weight to be attached to such evidence is considered. The most important are the need for independent assistance to the adjudicator or tribunal, the prohibition against assuming the role of an advocate and the need to specify the facts upon which an opinion is based ".
The appellant's submissions
"93. Relations between the police and the Roma can be very problematic. The issues raised in other parts of this report concerning the conduct of law enforcement officials are particularly relevant to Roma: they are victims of arbitrary identity checks, detention, extortion of money and the fabrication of incriminating evidence by members of the police. There are allegations of some Roma having been ill-treated and even tortured by police officers, resulting in some cases in death of the victim.
94. In 2002 a nation-wide operation was carried [out] in order to combat drug trafficking. This operation was called "Tabor", which means "Roma encampment". It consisted of random police raids against several Roma encampments in order to find drugs and drug-dealers, without concrete reasons for believing that there were drugs in the encampments searched. Roma organisations have complained about this discriminatory operation to the Ministry of Interior, whose representative accepted that it was a matter for regret and promised that it would not be repeated. Unfortunately, it seems that since then, local police, such as the police of St Petersburg in 2004, have occasionally organised raids under the same pretext as "Tabor"
97. The level of stereotyping of and prejudices against Roma disseminated in the media remains high. Roma are generally portrayed as naturally inclined to crime, especially drug dealing. In some cases the media have even incited to racial hatred, notably by reporting open calls to murder Roma, without issuing any warning or condemnation. ".
"99. ECRI notes with regret that the Roma coming from CIS countries experience double discrimination resulting from their ethnic origin combined with their lack of Russian citizenship. Particular attention should therefore be paid to their situation in taking measures to combat racism and racial discrimination against the Roma in general, in order to ensure that they benefit from these measures."
"Rather than prosecuting individuals for alleged involvement in crime the authorities instituted legal proceedings in the Gurievsk District Court. In proceedings that violated fundamental standards of due process, the Gurievsk District Court declared the residents' occupancy of their homes illegal, thereby authorizing the government to demolish the homes. All of the applicants appealed these decisions, but in further proceedings that denied the applicants a fair trial, the Kaliningrad Regional Court upheld the District Court's conclusions".
Discussion and conclusions
Extraneous considerations
"The problem of growing drug addiction among young Russians is constantly used as a reason to scapegoat Roma. However, in order to evict Roma officially, totally different arguments are presented in the courts".
Compatibility with human rights
Article 3
"It is not, ordinarily, for this country to require, as a price for extradition, another country to adopt the sentencing practice of this country".
Articles 5 and 6
Passage of Time
Disposal
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS