CEDH · CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;COMMITTEE;ENG — 8 octobre 2019
- ECLI
- ECLI:CE:ECHR:2019:1008JUD003687511
- Date
- 8 octobre 2019
- Publication
- 8 octobre 2019
Mes notes
privées · visibles par vous seulRésumé structuré
version préliminaireFaits
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Procédure
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Question juridique
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Solution
source officielleViolation of Article 2 - Right to life (Article 2-1 - Life) (Substantive aspect);Violation of Article 2 - Right to life (Article 2-1 - Effective investigation) (Procedural aspect);Violation of Article 3 - Prohibition of torture (Article 3 - Inhuman treatment) (Substantive aspect);Violation of Article 5 - Right to liberty and security (Article 5-1 - Lawful arrest or detention);Violation of Article 13+2 - Right to an effective remedy (Article 13 - Effective remedy) (Article 2 - Right to life);Violation of Article 13+3 - Right to an effective remedy (Article 13 - Effective remedy) (Article 3 - Prohibition of torture);Violation of Article 13+P1-1 - Right to an effective remedy (Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 - Protection of property);Violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 - Protection of property (Article 1 para. 1 of Protocol No. 1 - Peaceful enjoyment of possessions)
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RUSSIA   (Applications nos. 36875/11 and 4 others – see appended list)               JUDGMENT               STRASBOURG     8 October 2019       This judgment is final but it may be subject to editorial revision. In the case of Khakimova and Others v. Russia, The European Court of Human Rights (Third Section), sitting as a Committee composed of:   Georgios A. Serghides, President,   Branko Lubarda,   Erik Wennerström, judges, and Stephen Phillips, Section Registrar, Having deliberated in private on 17 September 2019, Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date: PROCEDURE 1.     The case originated in five applications against Russia lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) on the various dates indicated in the appended table. 2.     The Russian Government (“the Government”) were given notice of the applications. 3.     The Government did not object to the examination of the applications by a Committee. THE FACTS I.     THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE 4.     The applicants are Russian nationals who, at the material time, lived in the Chechen Republic. Their personal details are set out in the appended table. They are close relatives of individuals who disappeared after allegedly being unlawfully detained by servicemen during special operations. The events concerned took place in areas under the full control of the Russian federal forces. The applicants have not seen their missing relatives since the alleged arrests. Their whereabouts remain unknown. 5 .     The applicants reported the abductions to the law ‑ enforcement authorities, and official investigations were opened. The proceedings were ongoing for several years without any tangible results being achieved. The applicants lodged requests for information and assistance in the search for their relatives with the investigating authorities and various law ‑ enforcement bodies. Their requests received either only formalistic responses or none at all. The perpetrators have not been identified by the investigating authorities. It appears that all of the investigations are still ongoing. 6.     Summaries of the facts in respect of each application are set out below. Each account is based on statements provided by the applicants and their relatives and/or neighbours to both the Court and the domestic investigating authorities. The Government did not dispute the principal facts of the cases as presented by the applicants, but questioned the involvement of servicemen in the events. A.     Khakimova and Others v. Russia (no. 36875/11) 7.     The first applicant is the wife of Mr Saitaksi Umarov, who was born in 1953. The second applicant is his son. The third applicant was his daughter, who died on 22 January 2016. 1.     Background information 8 .     Mr Saitaksi Umarov lived in the village of Duba-Yurt. During the first Chechen war in 1994 to 1996 he was a member of the Duba-Yurt self ‑ defence unit. After the war he continued living in the village, which was regularly subjected to “sweeping-up” operations by the federal forces between 2001 and 2005 (see Kukurkhoyeva and Others v. Russia [Committee], nos. 50556/08 and 9   other applications, §§ 100-12, 22/01/2019; Sagayeva and Others v. Russia , nos. 22698/09 and 31189/11, §   32, 8 December 2015; and Bitiyeva and Others v. Russia , no. 36156/04, §§   7-24, 23   April 2009) and was surrounded by numerous checkpoints (see Sagayeva and Others , cited above, § 33). 9 .     On 27 March 2004 eight members of the Duba-Yurt self-defence unit were taken into custody by State agents. About two weeks later they were each found to have suffered a violent death (the State’s responsibility for their apprehension and deaths was established by the Court in Bitiyeva and Others , cited above, §§   80-102). 10 .     On 3 December 2004 State agents arrested another village resident, Mr Rasul Mukayev, who never returned home and was presumed dead following his detention in custody (see Sagayeva and Others, cited above, §§ 74-76 and 81-83). 2.     Abduction of Mr Saitaksi Umarov and subsequent events 11 .     According to the applicants, on the night of 15 to 16 February 2005, armed men in two UAZ minivans or armoured personal carriers (APCs) arrived at a brick factory on the outskirts of Duba-Yurt village, where Mr   Saitaksi Umarov worked as a night guard. They forcibly took him away to an unknown destination, passing undetected through military checkpoints despite there being a curfew in place. 12 .     The applicants submitted interview records of three village residents, Ms L.A., Ms Kh.E., and Ms A.A. prepared by the NGO Materi Chechni on 27 April 2011. On the night of 15 to 16   February 2005 they had seen two UAZ vehicles driving to the outskirts of the village in the direction of the brick factory and then back again. 13 .     On the morning of 16 February 2005 Mr Saitaksi Umarov’s relatives arrived at the brick factory and found his passport lying on the table. His clothing was scattered about. The applicants noticed tyre tracks in the vicinity, presumably belonging to UAZ vehicles. According to the applicants, they informed the authorities of the abduction that day. 3.     Official investigation into the abduction 14 .     On 18 February 2005 the head of the Duba-Yurt village administration asked the Shali district prosecutor’s office to open a criminal case into Mr Saitaksi Umarov’s disappearance. 15.     On 11 March 2005 police officers from the Shali district department of the interior (ROVD) examined the crime scene. No evidence was collected. 16 .     On 14 March 2005 the first applicant contacted the Chechen President asking for his assistance in the search for her husband. She claimed that he had been abducted by armed men in APCs. Her request was forwarded to the Chechen Prosecutor and registered as a crime report. 17 .     On 23 March 2005 the police officers established that during the first Chechen war in 1994 to 1996 Mr Saitaksi Umarov had been a member of the Duba-Yurt self-defence unit. Eight other members of the unit had been abducted on 27 March 2004 and found dead two weeks later (the circumstances surrounding their deaths and the ensuing investigation were examined by the Court in Bitiyeva and Others , cited above, §§   80-102). 18.     On 4 October 2005 the first applicant asked the Chechen Government to assist in the search for her husband. Her request was forwarded to the Shali district prosecutor’s office on 28 October 2010. 19.     On 9 November 2005 the Shali district prosecutor’s office opened criminal case no. 46151 under Article 105 of the Russian Criminal Code (“the CC”) (murder). 20.     On 14 November 2005 the investigators sent requests to various authorities to check if Mr Saitaksi Umarov had been arrested. The replies received stated that the authorities had no information either about the alleged arrest of the applicants’ relative or his subsequent detention. 21.     On the same date the first applicant was granted victim status in the criminal proceedings and questioned. 22 .     On 9 February 2006 the investigation was suspended for failure to identify the perpetrators. Subsequently, it was resumed on 8 September 2006, 2 March 2010, 14 October and 29 November 2011 and then suspended on 11   October 2006, 1   April 2010 and 19 October 2011 respectively. 23.     On 3 October 2006 the investigators examined the crime scene. No   evidence was collected. 24.     On 4 October 2006 the investigators questioned Mr I.Z, the applicant’s neighbour, who had heard that on 15 February 2005 Mr Saitaksi Umarov had not returned home from work. 25.     On 9 October 2006 the investigators questioned the first applicant, who described what her husband had been wearing on the day of his abduction. 26 .     On 14 May 2009 the first applicant requested access to the criminal case file. Four days later, on 18 May 2009, the request was granted. 27.     On 19 March 2010 the investigators interviewed the manager of the brick factory. He submitted that he had learned of Mr Saitaksi Umarov’s disappearance on 16 February 2005 and that the disarray at his workplace suggested that he had been abducted. 28.     On 24 March 2010 the second applicant was granted victim status. 29.     On 29 March 2010 the investigators collected blood samples from Ms K.U., the daughter of Mr Umarov, for inclusion into the database containing DNA samples of relatives of missing persons. 30.     On 15 October 2011 the investigators refused to declare the first applicant a civil claimant in the criminal proceedings. 31.     On 23 November 2011 that decision was quashed by a supervising authority as ill-founded. 32.     On 29 November 2011 the first applicant was declared a civil claimant in the criminal proceedings. 4.     Proceedings against the investigators 33.     On 17 February 2010, an unspecified date and 21   October   2010 the first applicant complained to the Shali Town Court about the investigators’ decisions to suspend the investigation, alleging that they had failed to take basic investigative steps. The court dismissed her complaints on 3   March 2010, 1   November 2010 and 17 February 2011 respectively. B.     Dedishev v. Russia (no. 46624/11) 34.     The applicant is the brother of Mr Pasha Dedishev, who was born in 1948. 1.     Abduction of Mr Pasha Dedishev 35 .     In January 2000 the Russian federal forces conducted an extensive military operation against members of illegal armed groups ( незаконные вооруженные формирования ) in Grozny. The town was subjected to shelling and sweeping-up operations. By the end of January 2000 the central parts of the city were under the control of the Russian forces (see Umayeva v.   Russia , no. 1200/03, § 79, 4 December 2008, and Khashiyev and Akayeva v.   Russia , nos. 57942/00 and 57945/00, §§ 16 and 41, 24 February 2005). 36 .     On 17 January 2000 a group of armed service personnel of Slavic appearance, wearing camouflage uniforms and equipped with portable radios, arrived at the town in a Ural lorry and arrested several residents including Mr   Pasha Dedishev, Mr Vasilkov, Mr Ch. and Mr G. The circumstances of their arrest are described in Vasilkova v. Russia (see Isayeva and Others v. Russia [Committee], no.   53075/08 and 9 others, § 55, 28 May 2019). 2.     Official investigation into the abduction 37 .     As submitted by the applicant and not disputed by the Government, on an unspecified date in June 2000 he reported his brother’s abduction to the law-enforcement authorities, but the investigators did not accept his complaint. On the following day unidentified Russian military servicemen attempted to arrest him. 38.     On 30 June 2000 Mr Ch.’s mother asked the Zavodskoy district temporary department of the interior in Grozny to open a criminal case into the abduction on 17 January 2000 of her son and other men by federal servicemen during a sweeping-up operation. 39.     On 7 July 2000 the investigators refused to open a criminal case. 40.     On 17 November 2000 that decision was overruled by the Grozny prosecutor’s office, which opened criminal case no. 12284 under Article   126 of the CC (abduction) into the incident. 41.     On 17 January 2001 the investigators suspended the proceedings for failure to identify the perpetrators. 42.     On 15 April 2001 the Grozny prosecutor’s office opened a separate criminal case no. 13064 under Article 126 of the CC into the abduction of Mr   Sergey Vasilkov and Mr G. 43.     On 11 July 2001 the Grozny prosecutor’s office opened a new criminal case no. 13103 into the abduction of Mr Sergey Vasilkov. 44 .     In the meantime, according to the applicant, between 2000 and 2003, his sister and mother lodged abduction complaints with various authorities, including the North Caucasus military commander’s headquarters, the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Chechen President. It appears that as a result of those complaints Mr Pasha Dedishev was included in the list of abducted persons in criminal case no. 12284. 45.     On 6 November 2003 the investigation was resumed and cases nos.   13064 and 13103 were joined to case no. 12284. 46 .     The subsequent developments in the proceedings between 6   November 2003 and 5 February 2013 are described in Isayeva and Others v.   Russia, cited above, §§ 67-76. In particular, the proceedings were suspended on 27 February 2005 and then resumed on 1 December 2009. 47.     Subsequently, the investigators resumed the proceedings on 16 June 2016 and suspended them again on 6   July 2016. 3.     Court proceedings 48 .     According to the applicant, on 9 October 2007 he lodged a claim with the Zavodskoy District Court in Grozny seeking compensation for pecuniary and non-pecuniary damage, including that caused by the alleged abduction of his brother by federal servicemen. Subsequently, his claim was transferred to the Leninskiy District Court of Grozny because the initial court declined jurisdiction. 49 .     On 6 April 2009 Leninskiy District Court of Grozny dismissed the complaint as unsubstantiated. That decision was upheld on appeal by the Chechnya Supreme Court on 17   November 2009. С.     Dzhankhotova and Dzhankhotov v. Russia (no. 65054/11) 50.     The first applicant is the wife of Mr Uvays Shaipov, who was born in 1967, and the sister of Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov, who was born in 1983. The second applicant is the latter’s brother. 1.     Abduction of Mr Uvays Shaipov and subsequent events 51 .     On 23 May 2001 Mr Uvays Shaipov was stopped by armed men at a checkpoint next to the Kirov-Yurt settlement in Chechnya. The servicemen threatened him with firearms, forced him into an APC with the registration number K-149 and drove off to an unknown destination. 52 .     The event took place in the presence of several witnesses, including Ms E.Kh, the mother of Mr Uvays Shaipov. Immediately afterwards she followed the APC and saw it entering the base of a military unit stationed in the village of Khatuni, Chechnya. 53 .     Later that day a military officer who introduced himself as Mr Igor Strelkov informed the applicants that Mr Uvays Shaipov had been taken to the headquarters of the federal forces in Khankala, Chechnya. 54 .     In June 2001 Mr Uvays Shaipov was shown on the television as an accomplice of illegal armed groups in Chechnya arrested by federal forces. It is unclear whether the applicants provided this information to the investigators. 2.     Official investigation into the abduction 55 .     On an unspecified date the applicants informed the authorities of the abduction of Mr Uvays Shaipov. 56 .     On 18 July 2001 the Vedeno district prosecutor’s office opened criminal case no. 73059 under Article 126 of the CC (abduction). 57.     On an unspecified date in September 2002 (the precise day is illegible) Ms   E.Kh., the mother of Mr Uvays Shaipov, was granted victim status in the case. She was questioned by the investigators and confirmed the circumstances of the abduction as described above. 58.     On an unspecified date in September (the precise day is also illegible) the investigators questioned one of the witnesses, Ms Z.M., who confirmed the circumstances of Mr Uvays Shaipov’s detention by military servicemen at the checkpoint next to Kirov-Yurt. 59.     On 18 September 2002 the investigation in the case was suspended for failure to identify the perpetrators. 60.     On 17 December 2002 the criminal case file was destroyed by a fire at the prosecutor’s office. 61.     On 27 October 2004 the acting Vedeno district prosecutor ordered that the criminal case material be restored and the investigation be resumed. 62.     On 27 November 2004 the investigation in the case was suspended. 63.     The Government did not provide the Court with the case material relating to the period that followed. From the materials submitted by the applicants it appears that the investigation progressed as follows. 64 .     On 26 April 2005 the investigation was resumed. Subsequently, it was suspended on 26 May 2005, resumed on an unspecified date between 2009 and 2011 and again suspended on 7 May 2011. It appears that the applicants were not informed of the suspension order of 26 May 2005. 65 .     On 15 April 2009 Ms E.Kh asked the head of the Chechen Parliamentary Committee on the Search for Missing Persons to assist her in the search for her son. The request was forwarded to the investigators, who informed her on 20 May 2009 that the proceedings in the case had been suspended and that operational-search activities were being taken in order to establish Mr Uvays Shaipov’s whereabouts. 66 .     On 28 April 2011 the first applicant applied for victim status. The investigators granted her request on 5 May 2011. 67.     On 24 May 2011 the investigators allowed a request by the first applicant to consult the case file. 3.     Abduction of Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov 68 .     At around 4.30 a.m. on 31 March 2002 armed men in military camouflage uniforms and balaclavas arrived at the applicants’ block of flats in the village of Chiri-Yurt in an URAL lorry and a grey UAZ-452 with the registration number 835 XA/RUS 95. A group of about five men broke into the family flat where Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov lived with his mother, Ms   R.Dzh., and aunt, Ms L.A. The men forced him outside and then took him away to an unknown destination. 69 .     The same morning two other residents of Chiri-Yurt, Mr Ibragim Asabayev and Mr Alkhazur Asabayev, were abducted in similar circumstances (see Israilovy and Others v. Russia, no. 34909/12 and 4   others [CTE], § 73, 24 September 2019). 70 .     Three days after the abduction, on 3 April 2002, the servicemen brought Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov back to Chiri-Yurt in a UAZ   minivan. They took him into his flat and searched it. Ms L.A. was at home and witnessed the search. Thereafter, they forced him back into the vehicle and drove off. 71 .     The abduction took place in the presence of numerous witnesses, including Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov’s relatives and neighbours. 4.     Official investigation into the abduction 72 .     On 24 April 2002 a relative of Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov informed the authorities of the abduction and requested that criminal proceedings be opened. 73 .     On 31 July 2002 the Shali district prosecutor’s office opened criminal case no. 59174 under Article 126 of the CC (abduction). 74.     From the documents submitted it appears that on 31 July 2002 (the date was also stated as 30 July 2002, the day before the case was opened) the first applicant was granted victim status. 75.     On the same date the investigators questioned Ms L.A., the aunt of Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov, who confirmed the circumstances of the abduction as stated above. 76.     On 31 July 2002 the investigators informed a relative of Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov that they would provide an update about the progress of the investigation. 77.     On 27 August 2003 the investigators asked the military commander of the Shali district in Chechnya whether federal servicemen had arrested Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov or had a UAZ-452 vehicle with the registration number 835 XA/RUS 95. The commander replied that the subordinate military unit had not been involved in the arrest, and that the military headquarters had several UAZ-452 vehicles. 78 .     On 31 September 2002 the investigation in the case was suspended for failure to identify the perpetrators. The applicants were not informed of that decision. 79 .     On various sates between 2003 and 2007 the mother of Mr   Alvi Dzhankhotov asked a number of authorities, including the Russian Prosecutor General, the Prosecutor General’s Office in the South Federal Circuit, the Chechen Prosecutor and the Chechen Government to assist her in the search for her son. Her requests were forwarded to the investigators, who replied on 17 May 2003, 14 July 2003, 8 February 2006 and 24   March 2007 that operational-search activities to establish her son’s whereabouts were in progress. 80.     On 24 May 2011 the investigators granted a request by the first applicant to be provided with access to the criminal case file. 81.     On 19 December 2011 they dismissed a request by her to be provided with a specific document from the case file. 82 .     On 25 June 2012 the first applicant enquired about the developments in the case. The next day she was informed that the proceedings had been suspended on 31 September 2002 for failure to identify the perpetrators. 83.     On 10 September 2012 the investigators asked the Shali ROVD to intensify the search for Mr Alvi Dzhankhotov, in particular to identify the witness to the abduction and the perpetrators. D.     Chapanovy v. Russia (no. 76566/11) 84 .     The first and second applicants were the parents of Mr Lema Chapanov, born in 1974, and Mr Aslan Chapanov, born in 1979. They died after the application had been lodged with the Court. After the death of the second applicant, his son, Mr Ramzan Chapanov (a brother of Mr Lema Chapanov and Mr Aslan Chapanov) expressed the wish to pursue the application in his stead. 85.     The third and fourth applicants are the brothers of Mr Lema Chapanov and Mr Aslan Chapanov. 1.     Abduction of the Chapanov brothers 86 .     At around 5 a.m. on 12 September 2000 (in the documents submitted the date was also referred to as 15 September 2000) the Chapanov family were at home in the village of Alkhazurovo, Chechnya, when a group of about twenty armed men in camouflage uniforms and balaclavas arrived in two APCs and a white VAZ ‑ 2106 vehicle. After searching the house and checked the family’s identity documents, the men informed the applicants that they were going to detain the Chapanov brothers (in particular, Mr   Lema Chapanov, Mr Aslan Chapanov, as well as the third and fourth applicants) and take them to the town of Urus ‑ Martan for further identity checks. 87 .     The men ordered the applicants to show them the ownership documents for the family car, a Niva with the registration number 8405   MT parked in the courtyard of their house. After taking the documents, the men ordered the brothers to follow the APCs in the family   car. 88 .     On the main road between the village of Goyskoye and Urus-Martan the convoy stopped. The servicemen ordered the brothers to get out of their car and pull their t-shirts over their heads. They then put them into one of the APCs and drove them to an unknown destination about three hours away. 89 .     On their arrival the brothers were ordered to get out of the APC and take their t-shirts off their heads. The brothers saw a large area with a big number of military vehicles and armed men speaking unaccented Russian. 90 .     The servicemen then blindfolded the brothers, tied their hands behind their backs and put them in cells. When one of the brothers asked where they were, a cellmate replied that they were in Khankala, where the headquarters of the Russian federal forces was located. 91 .     The next day the men put the fourth applicant into an APC with a registration number containing the digits 823 and took him back to Alkhazurovo. After searching the applicants’ family house, the servicemen dropped the fourth applicant off at the outskirts of the village. 92 .     The third applicant was released a week later and returned home. According to his statements, throughout his detention in Khankala he was detained in the same cell as one of his brothers, Mr Aslan Chapanov. 93 .     Mr Lema Chapanov and Mr Aslan Chapanov have not been seen since. 94 .     The abduction took place in the presence of several witnesses, including the applicants, their relatives and neighbours. The applicants submitted written statements of Mr S.A. and Mr B.B., supporting their version of events. 2.     Official investigation into the abduction of Mr Lema Chapanov and Mr   Aslan Chapanov 95 .     On 8 December 2000 the first applicant informed the authorities of the abduction of her sons and theft of their Niva car by the abductors. She requested assistance in the search for her missing relatives as well as protection for having made the abduction complaint. 96 .     On 15 February 2001 the Urus-Martan district prosecutor’s office opened criminal case no. 25025 under Article 126 of the CC (abduction). 97 .     A comparison of the documents submitted by the parties showed that the Government did not provide the Court with the criminal file in its entirety, despite its request to that effect. As far as can be seen from the documents in the Court’s possession, the proceedings may be summarised as follows. 98 .     On 15 April 2001 the investigation in the case was suspended for failure to identify the perpetrators. It was subsequently resumed on 11   August 2001, 18 March 2002 and 19 May 2006 following criticism from the senior prosecutors, and then suspended on 11 September 2001, 25   April 2003 and 19 June 2006 respectively. 99.     In the meantime, on 2 and 8 September August 2001, Mr Lema Chapanov’s partner and the fourth applicant were granted victim status in the criminal proceedings and questioned. The statement of Mr Lema Chapanov’s partner was similar to the applicants’ submissions to the Court. The copy of the fourth applicant’s statement submitted to the Court was illegible. 100.     In April 2003 the investigators sent a number of requests to various law-enforcement authorities to check if the Chapanov brothers had been detained during a special operation. The replies received stated that those authorities had no information about them. 101 .     On 2 October 2003 the first applicant asked several officials in the Urus-Martan district, including the district military commander, the military prosecutor, the prosecutor and the head of the ROVD to assist her in establishing the whereabouts of her children. It is not clear whether she received a reply. 102.     On 17 May 2006 the first applicant asked the Urus-Martan prosecutor to grant her victim status in the criminal proceedings, update her about the progress of the investigation and provide her with a copy of the decision to open a criminal case dated 15 February 2001. 103.     On 22 May 2006 the first applicant was granted victim status and questioned. She confirmed the circumstances of her sons’ abduction and mentioned that she had no information concerning their whereabouts or the Niva car. 104.     On 5 June 2006 the investigators asked the head of the Urus ‑ Martan department of the interior to identify the registration plate and for details of the Niva car belonging to the Chapanov brothers. The outcome of the request is unknown. 105.     On 9 June 2006 the investigator questioned the fourth applicant, who described the circumstances of the brothers’ abduction in great detail. 106.     On 15 June 2006, at the request of the first applicant, the Urus ‑ Martan Town Court declared Mr Lema Chapanov and Mr   Aslan Chapanov dead. 107 .     On an unspecified date in August 2006 the first applicant asked the NGO Memorial to assist in the search for her sons. On 31 August 2006 the NGO forwarded her request to the investigators, who replied on 16 October 2006 that the proceedings had been suspended, but operative-search activities in the case were ongoing. 108 .     On 7 July 2010 and 4 April 2011 the first applicant asked the investigators to resume the proceedings in the criminal case and grant her full access to the case file. On 12 July 2010 and 6 April 2011 respectively her requests were rejected. 109 .     On 28 July 2011 the first applicant enquired about the course of the proceedings. It is not clear whether she received a reply. 3.     Proceedings against the investigators 110 .     On 6 June 2011 the first applicant complained to the Urus-Martan Town Court that she had been denied access to the criminal case file. The outcome of the proceedings is unknown. E.     Gerimovy v. Russia (no. 8435/12) 111.     The applicants are close relatives of Mr Akhyad Gerimov, who was born in 1961. The first applicant is his wife, while the second and third applicants are his children. 1.     Abduction of Mr Akhyad Gerimov 112 .     At about 3 p.m. on 2 June 2000 Mr Akhyad Gerimov was driving to work at the Lenina factory in Grozny in a VAZ 2106 car with the registration number AZ-05-VA-347. On the way he picked up an acquaintance, Ms R.I. 113 .     In the Zavodskoy district in Grozny, at a checkpoint manned by Russian servicemen, several armed men in camouflage uniforms with bandanas covering their heads (typically worn by State servicemen) stopped the car, pointed their guns at Mr Akhyad Gerimov and Ms R.I. and ordered them to get out. They then forced Mr Akhyad Gerimov into an APC waiting nearby and took him and his car away. 114 .     Ms R.I. was taken behind the checkpoint and held there until 10   p.m. She was then blindfolded, tied up by her hands and taken away in another APC. On her arrival she was put in a tent. She saw tanks and helicopters nearby. A few minutes later she heard Mr Akhyad Gerimov in a neighbouring tent screaming and asking for help. Ms R.I. was then taken to the tent, interrogated and beaten up. 115 .     At 9 a.m. the next day Ms R.I. was taken blindfolded and with her hands tied in an APC to the centre of Grozny and released. The men took all her jewellery and told her not to speak to anyone about the incident. 2.     Official investigation into the abduction 116 .     On 23 June 2000 the Grozny prosecutor’s office opened criminal case no. 12073 under Article 126 of the CC (abduction). The Government did not submit all the documents from the criminal case file, despite the Court’s request to that effect. Accordingly, it is unclear on what dates the investigation was suspended or resumed and whether or not the applicants were informed of the relevant decisions. From the parties’ submissions it appears that the proceedings progressed as follows. 117 .     In August 2000 the investigators took statements from the first applicant and Ms R.I. The first applicant’s statement was similar to the applicants’ submissions to the Court. Among other details she gave the model and registration number of her husband’s car. 118.     On an unspecified date in August 2000 (the date on the document is illegible), in reply to a request for information, the Ministry of the Interior informed the investigators that the checkpoint had been manned by a police special forces unit from Irkutsk. 119.     In 2001 the first applicant forwarded several requests to the Grozny prosecutor’s office and the Russian Prosecutor General’s Office asking for assistance in establishing Mr Akhyad Gerimov’s whereabouts. 120.     On 21 August 2001 the Russian Prosecutor General’s Office informed the applicant that her request had been forwarded to the Chechen Prosecutor’s Office. 121.     On 13 February 2002 the investigators questioned the first applicant about the abduction. She confirmed her previous statement. 122 .     On an unspecified date in March 2003 the first applicant was granted victim status in the criminal proceedings. On 27 March 2003 and 20   May 2004 she was questioned again. She repeated her previous statements. 123.     On 7 August 2006, in reply to a request for information on the progress of the investigation into the abduction of Mr   Akhyad Gerimov, the applicants were informed by the Zavodskoy district prosecutor’s office that it was not currently investigating the incident. 124 .     On 6 October 2008 the investigator of the Chechnya Investigative Committee questioned Ms R.I. about the abduction. 125.     On 23 April 2010 the Leninskiy district department of the Investigative Committee informed the applicants that the Zavodskoy district prosecutor’s office had not forwarded the criminal case concerning their relative’s abduction to them for investigation. 126.     On 4 May 2010 the Chechnya Investigative Committee separated several documents concerning Mr Akhyad Gerimov’s abduction from criminal case file no. 12073 and launched a new pre-investigation inquiry into the offence proscribed by Article 162 of the CC (robbery). 127 .     On 7 June 2010 the Chechnya Investigative Committee opened a new criminal investigation, this time under the case number 21027, into Mr   Akhyad Gerimov’s abduction (Article 126 of the CC (abduction)) and the theft of his car by the abductors (Article 162 of the CC (robbery)). 128.     On 29 June 2010 the first applicant was granted victim status in criminal case no. 21027. 129.     On 7 August 2010 the criminal case was suspended for failure to identify the perpetrators. Subsequently, it was resumed on 21 November 2011 and 6 April 2015 and then suspended on 20 December 2011 and 16   April 2015 respectively. 130.     On 15 September 2011 the first applicant asked the investigators to allow her to access the investigation file. Her request was granted after she complained to the courts (see paragraph 132 below). 131.     On 6 April 2015 the second applicant was granted victim status in the criminal proceedings and questioned as a witness. His statement was consistent with the applicants’ previous submissions. 3.     Proceedings against the investigators 132 .     On 15 November 2011 the first applicant complained to the Staropromyslovskiy District Court in Grozny about the investigators’ failure to reply to her request concerning access to the criminal case file and the decision to suspend the investigation. 133.     On 25 November 2011 the court stated that the applicant was to be allowed access to the case file. As for the complaint against the decision to suspend the investigation, it was dismissed as four days earlier, on 21   November 2011, the investigators had resumed the proceedings. II.     RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND INTERNATIONAL MATERIAL 134.     For a summary of the relevant domestic law and international and domestic reports on disappearances in Chechnya and Ingushetia, see Aslakhanova and Others v. Russia (nos. 2944/06, 8300/07, 50184/07, 332/08 and 42509/10, §§ 43-59 and §§ 69-84, 18 December 2012). THE LAW I.     JOINDER OF THE APPLICATIONS 135.     In accordance with Rule 42 § 1 of the Rules of Court, the Court decides to join the applications, given their similar factual and legal background. II.     LOCUS STANDI 136.     The Court notes that the first two applicants in Chapanovy (no.   76566/11) died after the application had been lodged with the Court, and that the second applicant’s son, Mr Ramzan Chapanov, expressed the wish to pursue the application in his stead (see paragraph 84 above). The Government objected, stating that Mr Ramzan Chapanov had neither witnessed the abduction nor participated in the criminal proceedings. According to the Government, he could not therefore claim to be a victim of the alleged violations. 137.     The Court normally permits the next-of-kin to pursue an application, provided they have a legitimate interest, where the original applicant has died after lodging the application with the Court (see   Murray v.   the Netherlands   [GC], no.10511/10, § 79, 26 April 2016, and Maylenskiy v.   Russia , no.   12646/15, § 27, 4 October 2016; for cases concerning abductions in   Chechnya see Sultygov and Others v. Russia , nos.   42575/07   and 11 others, §§ 381-86). Having regard to the subject matter of the application and all the information in its possession, the Court considers that the second applicant’s son, and the brother of the abducted men, Mr Ramzan Chapanov, has a legitimate interest in pursuing the application and that he thus has the requisite locus   standi under Article   34 of the Convention. III.     COMPLIANCE WITH THE SIX-MONTH RULE A.     The parties’ submissions 1.     The Government 138.     In their observations, the Government argued that the applicants had lodged their applications with the Court several years after the abduction of their relatives, and more than six months after the date when they ought to have become aware of the ineffectiveness of the ensuing investigations, or more than six months after the most recent decision of the investigators. The Government also pointed out that the applicants had remained passive and had not maintained contact with the investigating authorities for a significant amount of time. According to the Government, all the applications should be declared inadmissible as brought “out of time”. 2.     The applicants 139.     The applicants submitted that they had complied with the six ‑ month rule. They had taken all possible steps within a reasonable time ‑ limit to initiate the searches for their missing relatives and assist the authorities in the proceedings. In Dedishev (no. 46624/11) the applicant acknowledged a delay in lodging a formal abduction complaint with the authorities but stated that it had been due to the hostilities in the region, the authorities’ refusal to register his abduction complaint and their subsequent attempt to arrest him (see paragraph 37 above). He further explained than between 2007 and 2009 he had had serious health problems and had undergone inpatient treatment, which had affected his ability to maintain regular contact with the investigators. 140.     The applicants further submitted that there had been no excessive or unexplained delays in lodging their applications with the Court, which had been brought as soon as they had considered the domestic investigations to be ineffective. According to them, the armed conflict taking place in Chechnya   at the material time had led them to believe that investigative delays were inevitable. It had only been with the passage of time and a lack of information from the investigating authorities that they had begun to doubt the effectiveness of the investigations and had started looking for free legal assistance to assess the effectiveness of the proceedings and then, subsequently, to lodge their applications with the Court without undue delay. B.     The Court’s assessment 1.     General principles 141.     A summary of the principles concerning compliance with the six ‑ month rule in disappearance cases may be found in Sultygov and Others, cited above, §§   369 ‑ 74, 9 October 2014. 2.     Application of the principles to the present cases 142.     Turning to the circumstances of the present cases, the Court notes that in Khakimova and Others (no. 36875/11) the applicants lodged their application with the Court within less than seven years of the incident and the initiation of the related investigation (see Varnava and Others v.   Turkey   [GC], nos. 16064/90 and 8   others, § 166, ECHR 2009). 143.     In the remainder of the applications at hand that period varied between ten years and five months and eleven years and seven months (it amounted to around eleven years and six months in Dedishev (no.   46624/11); ten years and five months and ten years and nine months in Dzhankhotova and Dzhankhotov (no.   65054/11); eleven years and two months in Chapanovy (no. 76566/11); and eleven years and seven months in Gerimovy (no. 8435/12)). 144.     The Court further notes that in Khakimova and Others (no.   36875/11), Dzhankhotova and Dzhankhotov (no. 65054/11), Chapanovy (no. 76566/11) and Gerimovy (no. 8435/12) the authorities became aware of the abductions within several weeks of the respective incidents, which can be considered as lodging the official complaints without undue delay given the situation at the material time. 145.     In Dedishev (no. 46624/11) the Government did not contest the applicant’s submission that he had informed the authorities of his brother’s abduction in June 2000, but the authorities had refused to accept his claim and the next day had attempted to arrest him. Taking that into account, the situation of armed conflict in the region and the alleged involvement of the authorities in the perpetrated offence, the Court accepts the applicant’s explanation that exceptional circumstances justified the delay. It does not appear that it deprived the investigation of any prospects of success. 146.     The Court further observes that in each of the applications the authorities opened a criminal investigation into the applicants’ complaints of abduction which was repeatedly suspended and then resumed following criticism from the senior investigators. In each case, the investigation was still ongoing when the application was lodged with the Court (see paragraph 5 above). 147.     The Court also notes certain lulls in the criminal proceedings (see in Khakimova and Others (no. 36875/11) paragraph 22 above; in Dedishev (no.   46624/11) paragraph 46 above; in Dzhankhotova and Dzhankhotov (no.   65054/11) paragraphs 64 and 786464; in Chapanovy (no. 76566/11) paragraph 98; and in Gerimovy (no. 8435/12) paragraphs 122 and 124 above), while the investigations were suspended. The most significant of them, which appears to have exceeded five years (the exact dates of suspension and resumption were not always clear), took place in Dzhankhotova and Dzhankhotov (no. 65054/11) and Chapanovy (no.   76566/11). 148.     However, from the documents submitted it appears that in each of those cases the applicants and other relatives of those abducted did not remain passive. In the first case, they contacted the Chechen Parliamentary Committee on the Search for Missing Persons, the Russian Prosecutor General, the Prosecutor General’s Office in the South Federal Circuit, the Chechen Prosecutor and the Chechen Government, asking them for assistance in the search for their relatives. Their requests were subsequently forwarded to the investigators, who then reassured them that operational-search measures were ongoing (see paragraphs 79-82 above). In the second case, on a number of occasions the applicants applied to the investigators both directly and with the assistance of the NGO Memorial. Just like in the first case, the investigators replied stating that the search for their relative was in progress. The applicants also complained to the courts that they had been denied full access to the case file (see paragraphs 107-110 above). 149.     Overall, the documents submitted show that the applicants in every case clearly demonstrated their interest in the search for their missing relatives and took steps to maintain contact with the authorities. 150.     In assessing the circumstances of the cases, the Court takes into account that all of the applications were lodged within twelve years of the incidents (contrast Dzhabrailova and Others v. Russia , nos. 3752/13 and 9   others, 7 May 2019, where the Court declared inadmissible applications submitted more than twelve years after the abduction of the applicants’ relativesArticles de loi cités
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Synthèse
- Juridiction
- CEDH
- Chambre
- CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;COMMITTEE;ENG
- Formation
- 27
- Date
- 8 octobre 2019
- Matière
- droits fondamentaux
Référence
ECLI:CE:ECHR:2019:1008JUD003687511
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