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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Tuba v County Regional Court of Gyor-Monson-Sopron, Hungary [2013] EWHC 1767 (Admin) (21 June 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/1767.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1767 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GYORGY TUBA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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COUNTY REGIONAL COURT OF GYOR-MONSON-SOPRON, HUNGARY |
Respondent |
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James Stansfeld (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 5 and 14 June 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Foskett:
"23. I found [the appellant's] evidence to lack credibility. I am satisfied that he dishonestly changed his account of knowledge of the proceedings, in an attempt to deal with the further information provided by the [judicial authority]. His evidence before me was evasive.
24. I am satisfied so that I am sure that he was interviewed on a number of occasions by the police as a suspect, that he was aware of his prosecution and the requirement to notify the authorities of his new address within three days of any change. I am satisfied so that I am sure that the [requested person] is a fugitive.
25. The [requested person] has been sentenced to four terms of imprisonment in 2004 and 2005. He is clearly familiar with the legal procedures in Hungary. In addition, as set out above he had been through a number of stages of the criminal process in connection with the offences detailed in this EAW. He left Hungary in the knowledge of those ongoing proceedings. If I had not found him to be a classic fugitive … I would have found him to be a fugitive as defined by Teare J in Slovac Republic v Zigmund [2009] EWHC 922 (Admin)."
"He had attempted suicide much before the extradition became an issue. The first suicide attempt when he stood in a railway track happened 18 months ago. The attempted hanging happened in October last year. The recent reported suicide attempt which was not independently verified appeared to have happened after the extradition became an issue. The suicidal thought he has appears to be independent of the extradition matter and a symptom of his depression. Any adversity such as extradition will increase the risk of suicide and that will make a causal link to the risk of suicide."
"… I am satisfied that:
- Prior to his arrest on this EAW he had made three suicide attempts.
- Those attempts have resulted from his mixed anxiety and depressive disorder. That condition arose from a combination of the injury to his eye, his inability to work, feelings of hopelessness and helplessness, separation from his wife and son in Hungary, the threat of his extradition and imprisonment in Hungary.
- His risk of suicide is high.
- His condition is managed in the community where he lives alone.
- His condition can be managed through a General Practitioner/Psychiatrist and psychological support through counselling and cognitive development. His current dosage of medication is a low one. He is not currently receiving psychological treatment. His condition is not helped by his excess use of alcohol.
- Dr Mahadun … is of the opinion that [his] condition can be managed.
- Dr Mahadun is of the view that extradition and imprisonment are "serious events, which could cause a deterioration in [his] mental health and that could lead to an increase in his risk of suicide from high to very high". I accept that this assessment is correct.
- [He] will receive the necessary psychiatric treatment in Hungary."
"I am satisfied that the risk of suicide arises from [his] pre-existing psychiatric disorder. That pre-existing risk will increase because of the prospect of extradition.
I am satisfied that the risk of suicide is substantial and that his mental condition removes his capacity to resist the impulse to commit suicide.
I am not satisfied that [he] will succeed in committing suicide whatever steps are taken."
"The CPT reiterates its view that it would be highly desirable for the IMEI to be re-located; this would help to ensure that a medical, rather than a penal, ethos prevails. The Committee urges the Hungarian authorities to find a solution as a matter of priority."
"… The construction of a new forensic psychiatric institution has been on the agenda for several years .… Consequently, there is not any possibility for major state of repair of the building."
"The condition of the IMEI building has greatly decayed. No additional nurses can be employed due to the freeze of employment. It is a grave problem that the age of psychiatrists working there is between 70 and 75 years and their replacement is inadequate. The placement of persons with mental or physical impairment does not meet the stipulations of the UN Convention on the rights of persons with disabilities; the building is not all free of obstacles and additional activities of therapy and others promoting rehabilitation should be arranged for besides the one or two special circles. The Ombudsman has found that the placement of patients undergoing psychiatric treatment and those sent there for treatment gravely violates their right to human dignity. Therefore, he pressed for the creation of the conditions of IMEI for a modern operation within a foreseeable time and that the transcript of the institution under the supervision of the Minister of Health should be considered."
"The ombudsman handles prison complaints in general and conducts ex officio inquiries but has no authority to act on behalf of prisoners. During the year the ombudsman released reports on the conditions of four youth detention centers … and five prisons …. The ombudsman assessed the conditions at four prisons for adult detainees as inhumane and humiliating due to the small size of cells and the separation of toilets with curtains instead of walls. The ombudsman also criticized the lack of psychologists and psychiatrists in several facilities."
"NGOs continued to complain about the lack of independent oversight of government-run long-term care institutions for persons with mental disabilities. According to the MDAC, 25,000 persons with disabilities were living in long-term care psychiatric and social care institutions. On October 15, the ombudsman released a report on the accommodation and care of psychiatric patients in the Forensic Psychiatric Mental Institute (FPMI). The FPMI is the only institute where forced medical treatment ordered by a court can be carried out and where detainees with psychiatric or neurological problems are transferred from penitentiary institutions. The ombudsman's report concluded that the present circumstances constituted a violation of patients' rights to human dignity and to health."
"The Commissioner for Fundamental Rights also paid a visit to the IMEI; his concerns were articulated in a report dated 11 October 2012. Beyond observing the bad physical conditions the Commissioner requested the Minister of Public Administration and Justice to resolve the hiring freeze of employees in order to increase the number of healthcare staff at the institution. The Commissioner also criticized the placement of patients; found highly problematic that 10-19 patients with different psychiatric disorders are squeezed into one hospital room.
…
Detainees in the IMEI are forced to take psychiatric medication, and the medication – as unofficial sources and NGO-monitoring experiences suggest — is claimed to be old-fashioned medication which has more severe side effects than more modern medications. The HHC brought a lawsuit on behalf of a detainee who was unlawfully medicated. In June 2012 the first instance court established the violation of the detainee's inherent personal rights and obliged the IMEI to pay HUF 5 million as non-pecuniary damages because the IMEI staff subjected him to the so called "chemical straitjacket": the indiscriminate usage of multiple anti-psychotic drugs.
The unofficial responses received from prison staff and psychologists only reinforce the HHC's experiences in interacting with detainees with psycho-social disabilities who were placed in other detention facilities after their medication was determined in the IMEI. The HHC has experienced numerous times that detainees arriving from the IMEI, where they supposed to receive the appropriate medication or their medication was supervised, cannot communicate, fall asleep during discussion and are addicted to medication."
i) An urgent transcript of this judgment can be obtained at the public expense, to be made part of a dossier to be sent to the Hungarian authorities before the appellant's extradition takes place.ii) Both the appellant's advisers and the respondent to this appeal may furnish to the Hungarian authorities any further material in that dossier that, in their opinion, touches upon treatment and supervision that may be required to reduce the risk of successful suicide when the appellant is received in the Hungarian prison estate. What that material includes will be a matter for them, but Dr Mahadun's report is an obvious example of something to be supplied, plus any report from the prison medical service. Another helpful report would be that of Dr Paul Reed whose discharge summary, following the appellant's hospitalisation after his suicide attempt, is also helpful in relation to the medication required. The prison medical service will be able to indicate the current (satisfactory) medication regime.