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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Antonovic, R (on the application of) v The Prosecutor General's Office (A Lithuanian Judicial Authority) [2010] EWHC 2967 (Admin) (02 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/2967.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2967 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF ANDZEJ ANTONOVIC | Claimant | |
v | ||
THE PROSECUTOR GENERAL'S OFFICE (A LITHUANIAN JUDICIAL AUTHORITY) | Defendant |
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Mr A Wilkes (instructed by CPS Extradition) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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"[The appellant] submitted documentary medical evidence to support his claim of having been seriously assaulted and stabbed by gang members. It is noted that in his judgment, the District Judge accepted that the Appellant was the victim of violence at the hands of gang members.
The Appellant therefore resists the extradition request on the grounds that his life is in danger from non-state actors (criminal gangs). He insists that members of a criminal gang have seriously assaulted him in the past on three separate occasions, two of which resulted in in-patient hospital treatment. The Appellant was coerced into agreeing to give evidence against these men in court by the police, who told him that if he did not, he would be placed in the same prison cell as them. Members of the gang were convicted of murder and other serious offences in 2004.
Post-2004, the Appellant was assaulted and threatened by the gang on two further occasions, demanding money and warning him against giving evidence in court. The Appellant was under so much pressure he attempted suicide by slashing his wrists. On the second occasion, following a sustained assault which caused injury, the Appellant was so afraid for his safety, rather than tell hospital staff what had actually happened, he told them that he had fallen out of a window."
"I find [the appellant] was involved in some violence at hands of criminal gang members. Having seen and heard him I also find he was willingly, through joint voluntary drug abuse, involved with gang members. Such people fall out with alarming frequency and violence is often the currency or language that follows. None of that, on the facts herein, persuades me [the appellant] is in 2010 at real risk of ill-treatment in/out custody if returned. The Lithuanian authorities indicate a willingness to consider protective measures once returned. I must take that to be an honest and clear indication of two things. Firstly an undertaking to assess the actual current circumstances and any apparent risks from the vantage point of being on the ground in Lithuania. Secondly an undertaking - and ability - to provide reasonable levels of protection if adjudged necessary. To my mind that must lead to a rejection of any article 3 challenge to this request."
"Council of Europe countries should be assumed to act fairly. Lord Brown, giving the judgment of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Gomes v Government of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago [2009] 1 WLR 1038 explained at paragraph 35:
'Council of Europe countries in our view present no problem. All are subject to Article 6 of the Convention and should readily be assumed capable of protecting an accused against an unjust trial whether by an abuse of process jurisdiction like ours or in some other way.'
We consider that, by analogy, those countries that are signatories to the Convention would be assumed to be capable of protecting the rights of people in their country. Lithuania is of course a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights."
"11. Considerations which apply in a removal case apply with equal or greater force in an extradition case. There is a compelling public interest for category 1 Convention states in seeing their own criminal law upheld in relation to those who may have infringed it. The European Arrest Warrant system is intended to provide an effective means of seeing that that important public interest is upheld without undue delay. Category 1 states can be taken to have accepted between themselves that conditions of detention, and the adequacy of fairness of criminal justice systems in such states, will not be required to be examined by other States when considering extradition applications by them. For those reasons and in my opinion for the purposes of Articles 2, 3 and, if relevant, 8, the treatment of a person extradited to a category 1 State which is a signatory of the Convention is a matter between the individual extradited and that State and not between the individual and the United Kingdom.
12. I would hold that, save in circumstances in which the constitutional order of a Convention State was overthrown, by for example military coup or violent revolution, a District Judge considering the risk to an extradited person in the hands of such a State is not required to undertake an examination of conditions in its prison estate or of the management of psychiatric illness in that State. I find it difficult to conceive that evidence about such matters would be relevant and so admissible in extradition proceedings for the purpose of determining whether an individual should be discharged under section 21."
"If extradition for an offence of no great gravity were sought in relation to someone who had sole responsibility for an incapacitated family member, this combination of circumstances might well lead a judge to discharge the extraditee under section 87 of the 2003 Act."