CEDH · CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;COMMITTEE;ENG — 20 avril 2021
- ECLI
- ECLI:CE:ECHR:2021:0420JUD003576107
- Date
- 20 avril 2021
- Publication
- 20 avril 2021
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Solution
source officielleViolation of Article 3 - Prohibition of torture (Article 3 - Effective investigation) (Procedural aspect);Violation of Article 3 - Prohibition of torture (Article 3 - Inhuman treatment) (Substantive aspect);Violation of Article 3 - Prohibition of torture (Article 3 - Degrading treatment) (Substantive aspect);Violation of Article 13+3 - Right to an effective remedy (Article 13 - Effective remedy) (Article 3 - Prohibition of torture;Degrading treatment)
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margin-left:34pt; margin-bottom:0pt; text-indent:-17pt; text-align:justify } .sE5BF05B1 { width:2.33pt; font:7pt 'Times New Roman'; display:inline-block } .s7F175FE6 { margin-top:0pt; margin-left:51.05pt; margin-bottom:0pt; text-indent:-17.05pt; text-align:justify } .sE5C1F6E3 { width:3.33pt; font:7pt 'Times New Roman'; display:inline-block } .sC39E194 { margin-top:0pt; margin-left:51.05pt; margin-bottom:0pt; text-indent:-17.05pt; text-align:justify; page-break-inside:avoid; page-break-after:avoid } .s69DCC830 { margin-top:36pt; margin-bottom:0pt } .s78255940 { width:8.55pt; display:inline-block } .s6004795D { width:203.78pt; display:inline-block } .sA2E62387 { width:204.97pt; display:inline-block } .sF6A12959 { width:33%; height:1px; text-align:left } .s2EB42ED2 { margin-top:0pt; margin-bottom:0pt; font-size:10pt } .s653E6C45 { font-family:Arial; font-size:6.67pt; vertical-align:super; color:#0069d6 }       FOURTH SECTION CASE OF LUKASHOV v. UKRAINE (Application no. 35761/07)         JUDGMENT   This version was rectified on 20 May 2021 under Rule 81 of the Rules of Court   STRASBOURG 20 April 2021     This judgment is final but it may be subject to editorial revision. In the case of Lukashov v. Ukraine, The European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting as a Committee composed of:   Faris Vehabović, President,   Carlo Ranzoni,   Péter Paczolay, judges, and Ilse Freiwirth Deputy Section Registrar, Having deliberated in private on 23 March 2021, Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date: PROCEDURE 1.     The case originated in an application (no. 35761/07) 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 Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Lukashov (“the applicant”), on 26 July 2007. 2 .     The applicant, who had been granted legal aid, was represented by Mr   Andrey Kadochnikov , a lawyer practicing in Vinnytsia. The Ukrainian Government (“the Government”) were represented by their Agent, most recently Mr I. Lishchyna of the Ministry of Justice. 3.     On 11 March 2013 notice of the application was given to the Government and they were invited to comment on the complaints concerning the applicant ill-treatment in police custody and in prisons and the ineffectiveness of the ensuing investigations, poor conditions of the applicant’s detention and inadequacy of his medical treatment, arbitrary detention in solitary confinement and placement under preventive monitoring in detention, and the alleged lack of an effective domestic remedy in respect of his complaints of poor detention conditions and lack of adequate medical treatment. 4.   The Government objected to the examination of the application by a Committee. Having considered the Government’s objection, the Court rejects it. THE FACTS 5.     The applicant was born in 1962 and lives in Pervomaisk, Luhansk Region. He has a long history of criminal convictions. In March 2017 his prison term under the latest conviction came to an end. Alleged ill-treatment of the applicant The applicant’s arrest and alleged ill-treatment by the police 6 .     The official records provided by the Government suggest that on 23   October 2001 the applicant committed a robbery near Velyka Krynytsia village in Zaporizhia Region, but escaped from the crime scene. Several hours later he was seen by traffic police in a nearby village. Having noticed a police car approaching him, he tried to run away. He was chased by traffic-police officers and was caught when he got stuck in a marsh. 7 .     According to the Government, the applicant actively resisted the arrest and one of the police officers used “hand-to-hand combat techniques” and handcuffs to overcome his resistance. 8 .     The applicant submitted that he had shown no resistance to the police and no force, and that only handcuffs had been used on him during his arrest. According to him, from 5 p.m. on 23 October 2001 to 1 a.m. on 24   October 2001 he had been tortured by the police officers at the main police station in Zaporizhia with the aim of extracting his confession to the crimes of which he had been suspected. The police officers had allegedly beaten him on his head, back and chest, administered electric shocks to his penis, suffocated him using a gas mask and a plastic bag and hung him over a bar, changing his position from time to time ( подвесили на палке, периодически меняя положение ). Unable to withstand the ill-treatment, the applicant had made self-incriminating statements and signed some blank pieces of paper. Following that, he had been taken to the Ordzhonekidzivskyy district police station where he had been left bleeding in a cell. His requests for an ambulance had been allegedly ignored. 9 .     On 25 October 2001 the applicant was taken to the Zaporizhia Town Hospital for a medical examination. He was found to be suffering from a chest abrasion ( забій грудної клітини ) and had several scratch marks on his head. 10 .     On an unspecified date after completion of the pre-trial investigation in his criminal case, which, according to the Government, was more than a year after the applicant’s arrest, the applicant complained to the Zaporizhia regional prosecutor’s office in respect of his purported ill-treatment by the police in October 2001. He described the ill-treatment in a similar way to how he did before the Court (see paragraph 8 above) and stated that his injuries had been documented in the Zaporizhia [1] Town Hospital. 11.     On 1 November 2002 the Tokmak Town Court convicted the applicant of several counts of aggravated robbery and other crimes and sentenced him to thirteen years’ imprisonment, having dismissed his allegations of ill-treatment by the police as unsubstantiated. 12.     On 11 December 2002 the Zaporizhia regional prosecutor’s office notified the applicant that there was no call for instituting criminal proceedings into ill-treatment allegations as it had been established following an investigation into his complaint that his injuries had resulted from application of proportionate force by the police to overcome the applicant’s resistance during his arrest. 13.     On 1 September 2003 and 9 November 2004, the Zaporizhia Regional Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court of Ukraine respectively rejected appeals by the applicant against his conviction and dismissed allegations by the applicant of ill-treatment by the police, referring to the prosecutor’s office’s findings. 14.     On 12 March 2007 the applicant again complained to the prosecutor’s office in respect of his alleged torture in police custody in October 2001. 15.     On 31 August 2007 the Zaporizhia regional prosecutor’s office refused to institute criminal proceedings following the applicant’s complaint, finding no evidence that the police officers had committed any crime during the applicant’s arrest or during the police interviews. The prosecutor established, on the basis of statements made by the police officers who had arrested the applicant and those who had witnessed the arrest, that the applicant had actively resisted arrest and that physical force and handcuffs had therefore been used to overcome his resistance which had caused the injuries reported later at the Zaporizhia Town Hospital (see paragraph 9 above). The prosecutor further referred to the fact that neither during questioning nor at some other point during the pre-trial investigation had the applicant complained of having been beaten by the police. He also noted in this connection that the first complaints by the applicant against various actions of the police dated back to 14 February 2002 and   January 2003 and that in neither of them had the applicant raised the issue of his ill ‑ treatment by the police on 23 October 2001. 16.     On 22 October 2007 the Ordzhonekidzivskiy District Court of Zaporizhia rejected an appeal by the applicant against the decision of 31   August 2007 and found that the investigation conducted by the prosecutor had been thorough and comprehensive. According to the applicant, no copy of the mentioned decision was served on him. Alleged ill-treatment of the applicant in post-conviction detention (a)    Incidents in the Zhytomyr prison no. 8 and the ensuing investigation (i)       Incidents of 21 and 28 February 2008 17.     On 21 February 2008 the applicant arrived at the Zhytomyr prison no.8 (“the Zhytomyr prison”). 18 .     According to the applicant, upon his arrival he was searched and beaten by two officers, who threatened him that he would be killed if he continued his practice of complaining about the prison authorities. Thereafter he was placed in cell no. 102, a so-called “pressure cell” ( прес ‑ хата – a cell where detainees who had been illicitly contracted by the prison authorities to harass rebellious inmates were detained). These detainees engaged in a groundless conflict with the applicant and, having pulled his jumper over his head, hit him in his stomach with a hard object. He was released from the “pressure cell”, but on 28 February 2008 he was again placed to that cell and was immediately beaten by his cellmates. During the fight, they allegedly inserted a foreign object into his abdomen. 19.     According to the Government and the relevant official reports submitted by them, upon the applicant’s arrival on 21 February 2008 he was searched and a saw blade was seized from him. The applicant actively resisted his search, waved his walking stick in front of himself attempting to hit a prison guard, swore, and, eventually, deliberately hit himself on the head with his walking stick. Later, in his cell, the applicant behaved aggressively and provoked a conflict between him and inmates T. and Po. The applicant threw his affairs at the other inmates and hit the cell door with his head and foot, all the while using abusive language. When the guards arrived, he did not comply with their demands and continued behaving aggressively. He was then taken out of the cell to the reception unit. On his way, the applicant behaved violently and tried to hit the escorting officers. After a number of warnings, a sambo (a martial art) technique was used by one of the officers to calm the applicant’s down. In particular, the officer screwed the applicant’s left hand behind the back while securing the applicant’s chest with the right hand. The applicant was then examined by the prison doctor and was found to be suffering from abrasions on his forehead and on the left part of the cranial area ( забій тім’яної ділянки ліворуч ). Until the return of the prison governor the applicant was placed in solitary confinement for twenty-four hours; the next day seven days’ disciplinary detention were ordered for his misbehaviour. Upon his release from the disciplinary cell on 28 February 2008 [2] , he was returned to cell no.   102 and again provoked a conflict with the inmates held there, Pa. and Zhy. He was placed in solitary confinement for three months thereafter. 20 .     On 27 February 2008 the applicant’s forensic medical examination took place. The applicant complained to the doctor that he had been kicked by two prison officers in his abdominal area and left hand and afterwards by his cellmates in his head, chest and abdomen. He also admitted that he had hit himself in the head with a walking stick. A number of bruises and abrasions as well as an infected abdominal injury in a form of a triangle were discovered on the applicant and he was sent to a surgeon and neuropathologist for further examination. 21.     On 28 February 2008 the applicant was examined by the Zhytomyr prison surgeon who diagnosed him with an infected abdominal wound and a post-traumatic arthrosis of the left knee. 22 .     On 29 February 2008 acting Zhytomyr prison governor refused to institute criminal proceedings into the circumstances leading to the applicant’s injuries recorded on 21 February 2008, having found that the applicant himself had been at fault for them. The decision was based on the Zhytomyr prison officers’ reports and those of the prison medical staff as well as on evidence given by the applicant’s cellmates. It is apparent from the prison governor’s decision that the applicant had refused to give any evidence regarding the incident. 23.     On 11 March 2008 the applicant was seen by a neuropathologist and was diagnosed with osteochondrosis and the after-effects of a head injury accompanied by headaches. 24 .     On 14 March 2008 the forensic medical examination which commenced on 27 February 2008 (see paragraph 20 above) was completed. The applicant was diagnosed with an abrasion on his forehead, a bruise on the cranial part of his head and two abrasions on his chest. Those injuries, according to the expert, had been inflicted with blunt firm objects, possibly in the dates and circumstances specified by the applicant. As regards the abdominal wound, the expert found that it had been caused by an object with limited contact surface and that it was impossible to establish the date of infliction because the wound had become infected. 25.     On 21 March 2008 the prison doctor examined the applicant and found no bodily injuries. 26.     On unspecified dates the applicant and his representative complained to the prosecutor’s office of ill-treatment of the applicant by inmates and the prison staff on 21 and 28 February 2008. 27 .     On 21 March 2008 the prosecutor’s office refused to institute criminal proceedings against the prison officers and the applicant’s cellmates. On the basis of the statements made by the prison officers and prisoners from cell no. 102, as well as the applicant’s file, the prosecutor concluded that the abrasion on the applicant’s forehead, the bruise on the cranial part of his head and the abdominal injury recorded by the forensic medical expert on 14 March 2008 (see paragraph 24 above) had been self-inflicted and two abrasions on his chest had resulted from lawful and reasonable use of a sambo technique by the prison guard. 28 .     On 24 April 2008 the supervising prosecutor annulled the above ‑ mentioned decision, pointing to a number of deficiencies in the investigation and finding it impossible on the basis of the prosecutor’s submissions to establish the real picture of what happened on 21 February 2008. It was noted, inter alia , that the questioning of the participants in the incident and the witnesses had been superficial and that a number of important details were missing: details that had to be obtained from the applicant included which injuries had been caused by the prison offices and which by his cellmates, and in which way. A forensic medical examination was required in order to establish whether some of the injuries could have resulted from the alleged use of sambo techniques. Moreover, no legal assessment had been made in respect of the conclusion of the forensic expert that the applicant’s injuries could have been inflicted at the time and in the circumstances indicated by the applicant. It had also not been established whether the applicant had been examined by the prison medical staff straight after his arrival at the prison (and, if so, whether he had had any injuries) and why the applicant’s cellmates, who had not been newcomers, had been in the quarantine cell. 29 .     On 19 May 2008 the prosecutor’s office took a fresh decision not to institute criminal proceedings against the Zhytomyr prison officers and the applicant’s cellmates because of the absence of the elements of a crime in their actions. In addition to his earlier reasoning, the prosecutor relied on the statements of prison officers who had been present during the applicant’s search on 21 February 2008 and had denied any ill-treatment on the part of their colleagues. It was further noted that the applicant had been the only newcomer to the prison and, as soon as it had been prohibited to leave him without supervision given that he had been a person inclined to self-mutilate, he had been placed together with two other prisoners. 30.     The applicant appealed challenging, inter alia , the prosecutor’s explanation of the cause of his injuries, claiming that no necessary measures, such as a confrontation between him and the relevant individuals and forensic medical experts, had been carried out to resolve inconsistencies between the two versions of the events. 31.     On 22 October 2008 the Korolyovskiy District Court of Zhytomyr, in the absence of the applicant and his representative, dismissed the applicant’s complaint, having found the prosecutor’s conclusions to have been objective, comprehensive and substantiated. It further noted in this connection that the circumstances raised in the applicant’s complaint before the court had been duly addressed in the course of the prosecutor’s investigation. 32.     On 12 January and 17 November 2009, the Zhytomyr Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court of Ukraine upheld the decision of the lower court. The Supreme Court stated, in particular, that the prosecutor’s assessment of the results of the applicant’s forensic medical examination was supported by the testimonies of the Zhytomyr prison staff and prisoners. (ii)     Incidents in November 2008 33.     On 8 November 2008 the applicant arrived at the Zhytomyr prison from the Bucha prison hospital following a surgery performed with a view to extracting a foreign body from his abdominal wall and post-operative treatment. His medical examination upon arrival revealed a new cut on his abdomen and no other injuries. 34 .     According to the documents submitted by the Government, the applicant informed the Zhytomyr prison authorities that he had inserted a metal wire into his abdominal wall on his way to the Zhytomyr prison. The applicant stated before the Court that he had committed an act of self-harm and placed a foreign object into his abdominal wall on 10 November 2008, after having been attacked by other inmates (see paragraph 42 below). 35.     The applicant further suggested that, immediately upon his arrival he had been searched in an inhuman and degrading manner. In particular, officers had stripped him of his clothes and had forced him to do sit-ups (apparently to push down objects hidden in the anal orifice, if any). He had protested, referring to his recent surgical operation and problems with his knee joints. Following the search, he had been ordered to follow the guards to cell no.   101. He had protested again, knowing that cell no.   101 had been a “pressure cell” (see paragraph 18 above). In response to his protests, the guards had beaten him severely, including hitting his jaw and chest, and dragged him into cell no.   101. Soon afterwards, two inmates, who had been there, had started harassing him verbally, promising to “teach him” how to stop complaining. Eventually, they had started pushing him around, avoiding, however, application of stronger force given that he had already been in a bad physical condition. Later, the guards arrived and moved him to a disciplinary cell. 36.     The Government, relying on reports by the Zhytomyr prison guards and the applicant’s cellmates’ statements, submitted that once placed in cell no. 101 the applicant had started screaming that he had been having a conflict with his cellmates, using abusive language towards them, and threatening to harm himself by placing a pen in his abdomen if he had been left in the cell. The guards had intervened but the applicant had continued to behave aggressively and had not complied with the guards’ demands. He had insisted that he should be held in a cell only with those persons whose names he would be able to provide to the authorities. He had then been placed in a disciplinary cell following the incident. 37.     On 9 November 2008 the applicant was returned to cell no.   101, where two different inmates were being held by that time. 38.     According to the applicant, those inmates started harassing him and threatened him with physical violence. As soon as his demands to fix bodily injuries inflicted by the guards the day earlier and to call for a prosecutor were not complied with, the applicant, as alleged by him, cut his veins and was taken to Zhytomyr City Hospital. 39.     According to the Government’s submissions, in particular the reports made by the prison guards to the prison governor after the incident of 9   November 2008 [3] , the applicant again sought to create a conflict with his cellmates, behaving aggressively and threatening to commit suicide. However, following warnings from guards, he calmed down. Similar statements were also made on that day by the applicant’s cellmates who, submitted, in addition, that they had not been acquainted with the applicant before and had had no conflict with him. The Government’s submissions suggest that the applicant refused to give any explanation following the incident. 40.     Having found the applicant responsible for breaching the prison rules and causing the conflict with inmates, the prison governor ordered his placement in a disciplinary cell for another day. 41.     On 10 November 2008 the applicant was returned to cell no.   101. 42 .     According to the applicant, his inmates hit him in his face and chest and tried to suffocate him with a small chain he was wearing around his neck. 43.     According to the Government’s submissions, at about 6.30 a.m. on 10 November 2008 the applicant engaged in a groundless conflict with other inmates: he threw his belongings at them; he used abusive language; he tried to hit his forearms and tore a thin chain from his neck and threw it to the ground. The duty guards called the “emergency unit” to intervene. The applicant was asked to cease this unlawful behaviour. However, he cut his left forearm with a metal staple. The applicant was taken to the duty station and then to the medical unit where he complained that he had been beaten by inmates and asked that his injuries be recorded. 44 .     His medical examination at 6.35 a.m. on 10 November 2008 by the on-duty paramedic revealed a scratch mark on his left forearm and no other injuries. Two hours later, he was examined by a panel made up of staff and officials from the Zhytomyr prison. He was found to be suffering from bruises and abrasions on both his forearms, a line-form abrasion on his neck, a surface cut on the left elbow and an abdominal cut. An abdominal X-ray further revealed a metal-density foreign body in his abdominal cavity measuring about 6 cm. On the same date, the applicant refused an operation to extract this body in the prison medical unit and demanded to be placed in the surgical unit of a clinic of the State Prison Service. 45.     From 10.05 to 10.28 a.m. on 10 November 2008 cell no. 101 was inspected by a prison inspections officer in the presence of two attesting witnesses. The inspection report suggests that some belongings were laying in disorder next to the applicant’s bed; a staple, one side of which was covered with a brown liquid, was discovered next to the washstand; and a broken neck chain was found next to the table. 46.     On the same day the applicant and his cellmates were interviewed by the prison inspections officer. The applicant refused to give any explanations in respect of the incident. His cellmates denied any ill ‑ treatment and provided their version of the events, which was concordant with that of the guards in their reports to the prison governor following the incident. One of the cellmates further submitted that in the morning the applicant had been rubbing his neck with his neck chain and had hit the toilet door with his left shoulder and hand several times. 47.     On 11 November 2008 the applicant’s disciplinary detention for fifteen days was ordered for his misconduct the day before. The chief of the Zhytomyr prison medical unit examined the applicant and confirmed that his injuries were compatible with his disciplinary detention. 48 .     On 12 November 2008 the applicant was examined by a forensic medical expert following an order made by the prison governor on 11   November 2008. The relevant report suggests that during the examination the applicant submitted that on 9 and 10 November 2008 his cellmates had beaten him with their hands and feet on his face and chest and that they had suffocated him with his neck chain. He further stated that on 10 November 2008 he had tried to cut his veins and had inserted a metal wire in his body. A number of bruises and abrasions, mostly on the applicant’s chest and forearms, as well as an abdominal surface wound were recorded by the expert. An X-ray examination of his jaw and chest was prescribed in order to complete the assessment. 49.     According to the applicant, he also complained to the expert of his beating on 8 November 2008 by the prison officers but these allegations remained unrecorded. 50 .     On 15 November 2008 the applicant’s cellmates were again interviewed by the prison authorities. In their “explanations”, they re-stated their accounts of events on 8 November 2008 and stated that they had not used force on the applicant. In addition to their earlier statements concerning the events of 9 November 2008 they stated that after the guards had opened the door the applicant had gone out of the cell and refused to return. The duty officer had taken the applicant’s hand and brought him back to the cell. They further stated that they had not seen whether the applicant had had bodily injuries as he had been dressed, but attested that on 10 November 2008 they had seen the applicant squeezing his left forearm with his right hand and hitting himself with the right hand “in the area of the left elbow curve”. He also hit himself in the chest with his left hand and tore a thin chain from his neck and threw it to the ground. According to them, he was shouting that after all he would attain his goal and would be transferred to another detention facility. Lastly, they stated that no force had been used towards the applicant on their part or by prison guards at any date. 51.     On 17 November 2008 one of the guards on duty on 9 November 2008 was questioned again. In addition to statements made in his report to the prison governor following the incident, he submitted that the applicant had left his cell without authorisation and refused to return. The officer therefore took the applicant’s right hand and brought him back to the cell. 52.     On the same date the applicant underwent an X-ray examination in the Zhytomyr Regional Hospital as prescribed by the forensic expert. No pathologies were revealed in his jaw or ribs. 53 .     Later on the same date the forensic medical examination was completed. According to the expert conclusion (a) a bruise on his chest was caused by contact with a hard, blunt object, which could have been a hand, on 10 November 2008; (b) three bruises on the right forearm were caused by hard, blunt objects, which could have been the fingers of another person, on 9 November 2008; (c) a bruise on the left forearm was caused by a hard blunt object, which could have been the fingers of another person, on 10   November 2008; (d) an abrasion on the back part of his neck was inflicted on 10 November 2008 by means of friction or squeezing, or both, and could have been caused with a thin chain, even by the applicant himself; (e) an abrasion on his left elbow was caused on 10 November 2008 by means of cutting with a sharp object and could have been self-inflicted; and (f) an abdominal cut was inflicted with a sharp object in the two months prior to the examination. 54 .     On 20 November 2008 the acting governor of the prison refused to institute criminal proceedings against the applicant’s cellmates. On the basis of evidence obtained during the internal investigation, he found it established that the bruises on the applicant’s chest and left forearm, and the abrasions on his neck and elbow had been self-inflicted in the cell on 10   November 2008; three abrasions on his right forearm had been caused by the guard when grabbing the applicant’s hand on 9 November 2008 to calm him down; and the abdominal cut had been inflicted before the applicant’s arrival at the prison. He further concluded that the applicant had intentionally instigated the conflict with his cellmates in order to obtain a transfer to another prison. 55 .     According to the applicant, on the same day Deputy Prison Governor M., in the presence of his colleagues, hit the applicant on his body with a firm object covered with a soft material so that no marks from the beating would be visible. On an unspecified date shortly after the incident the applicant complained in respect of this to the prosecutor’s office. 56.     The Government denied any ill-treatment of the applicant on 20   November 2008. 57.     On 25 November 2008 the applicant was released from the disciplinary cell and ordered to return to cell no.   101. According to the Government, the applicant refused to enter the cell, attempted to hit the escorting officer with his walking stick and threatened him and his family with physical violence. No force or measures of restraint were administered on him on that day, but three months’ disciplinary detention were ordered. 58 .     On 1 December 2008, following the applicant’s complaint about his beating by M. on 20 November 2008, he was examined by a forensic medical expert. No copy of the report has been provided to the Court. The available documents suggest that two bruises on the applicant’s right chin, which had been inflicted with a hard blunt object, were found by the forensic expert. It is not clear from the case file whether the expert came to any conclusions as regards the date of infliction of the injuries and their compatibility with the applicant’s account of the events. 59.     On unspecified dates the applicant’s representative lodged complaints with the prosecutor’s office in which she alleged, inter alia , that the applicant had been beaten in the Zhytomyr prison by prison officers and his cellmates. 60 .     On 5 December 2008, in reply to the above-mentioned complaints, the Zhytomyr prosecutor’s office issued a decision not to institute criminal proceedings against the Zhytomyr prison officers owing to the absence of elements of a crime in their actions. The decision was based on the results of the internal investigation conducted by the prison governor; the applicant’s alleged denial of his ill-treatment by the prison staff during the prosecutor’s investigation; statements made by the prison officers and those who had escorted the applicant to the prison; statements of the applicant’s cellmates supported by other prisoners; results of the applicant’s forensic psychiatric examination conducted at some point during criminal proceedings against him, according to which he had been diagnosed with psychopathy and personality disorder and had, inter alia , an explosive temper and inclination for writing unfounded complaints; and on his negative characteristics reported by others. The prosecutor found it sufficiently and objectively established that the applicant’s injuries recorded by the forensic expert on 12 November 2008 (see paragraphs 48 and 53 above) had been self-inflicted. He also stated that the applicant’s allegations of his beating by M. on 20 November 2008 (see paragraph 55 above) were not supported by the results of his forensic medical examination. He noted that two bruises recorded by the forensic expert had been self-inflicted. 61 .     On 22 December 2008 the Zhytomyr regional prosecutor’s office annulled the decision of 5 December 2008 as unsubstantiated, noting the prosecutor’s failure to take necessary measures to duly establish all relevant circumstances related to the applicant’s alleged beating on 20 November 2008 (see paragraph 55 above). It instructed the prosecutor to question the applicant in detail as to this incident and to also interview the persons to whom the applicant referred. 62 .     On 31 December 2008, following additional enquiries, the Zhytomyr prosecutor’s office issued a fresh decision not to institute criminal proceedings. In addition to the reasoning given in the decision of 5   December 2008 (see paragraph 60 above), the prosecutor noted that during additional questioning the applicant had refused to lodge a criminal complaint or make any formal statement with respect to his alleged beating of 20 November 2008, but during his conversation with the prosecutor he had informed the latter that he had been beaten by Officer M. The officer, supported by his colleague, had denied any contact with the applicant on the date referred to. 63.     The applicant’s representative appealed against the above ‑ mentioned decision to a court, asserting, inter alia , that the circumstances in which the applicant had sustained injuries in November 2008 had not been properly established. 64 .     Following a round of court proceedings, on 11 May 2010 the Supreme Court of Ukraine quashed the above-mentioned decision and remitted the case for fresh examination to the first-instance court. Having referred to the findings of the forensic medical examination of 12 November 2008 (see paragraphs 48 and 53 above), it noted, in particular, that it had not been excluded that some of the applicant’s injuries had been caused by other persons and that hard, blunt objects had been used to inflict them. The court therefore found that the prosecutor’s findings about the self-inflicted nature of the applicant’s injuries had been premature, not supported by evidence and unsubstantiated. The court noted that it was necessary to conduct a comprehensive examination to establish the possibility or impossibility of those injuries having been caused by the applicant or other persons. Lastly, the court pointed to the lower courts’ failure to examine the applicant’s allegations that he had been beaten by his cellmates with the consent of the prison authorities and to the prosecutor’s failure to refer to any evidence which would have refuted the applicant’s allegation. It noted in this connection that the statements given by the prison staff and the applicant’s cellmates could not be considered as strong evidence as all of them had been interested persons. 65 .     On 9 July 2010 the Korolyovskiy District Court of Zhytomyr annulled the prosecutor’s decision of 31 December 2008 (see paragraph 62 above) for the reasons set out by the Supreme Court and ordered the prosecutor’s office to eliminate the relevant shortcomings. 66 .     On 19 January 2011, following an order by the prosecutor, a panel of experts conducted a forensic study of the applicant’s medical file. No copy of the expert’s conclusion has been made available to the Court. 67 .     On 21 January 2011 the prosecutor decided not to institute criminal proceeding against the prison officers. In addition to his earlier reasoning, he referred to the above-mentioned forensic study of the applicant’s medical file. According to the prosecutor’s findings, the injuries recorded by the forensic medical examination of 12 November 2008 (see paragraphs 48 and 53 above) had been self-inflicted, with the applicant using his own fingers and hard objects to cause them, and they had been caused on dates other than 9 and 10 November 2008. As regards the bruises recorded on 1   December 2008 (see paragraph 58 above), the prosecutor found it established that they had been caused by the applicant’s own hand on 29 or 30 November 2008. The decision further stated, without providing any details, that “it appear[ed] impossible to establish whether other persons [had] inflicted bodily injuries on the applicant”. This decision was approved by the Zhytomyr regional prosecutor’s office. 68.     The case file suggests that the applicant was informed of this decision belatedly. A number of documents suggest that he and his representative made a number of enquiries in this connection to the domestic authorities. (b)    Other instances of the alleged ill-treatment 69 .     The applicant also stated that he had been ill-treated during his imprisonment on a number of other occasions, namely, at the Donetsk prison no. 124 hospital on 24 January 2008, 11 February 2008 and 16   November 2010; at the Luhansk Pre-trial Detention Centre on 15   June and 13 July 2008 as well as at the Yenakieve prison no. 52 on 15 November 2010. He further submitted that there had been no effective investigation into his ill-treatment complaints related to these incidents. 70 .     The Government denied any ill-treatment and submitted that the investigations into the applicant’s complaints had been effective. Material conditions of the applicant’s detention Donetsk prison hospital 71.     From 17 December 2007 until 11 February 2008 the applicant underwent medical treatment in the Donetsk prison no. 124 hospital (“the Donetsk prison hospital”) for his lower back pain. He was detained in the ward no.   22. (a)    Conditions as presented by the applicant 72 .     The ward allowed very little space per prisoner. It was equipped with six bunk beds. The applicant, who had been assigned the upper bunk, had serious difficulties climbing up and down to his berth on account of his medical condition. The hospital facilities were in an unsanitary state and the premises were infested with rodents, bedbugs and flees. The belongings of the patients were not disinfected upon arrival. The hospital had no outside courtyard for fresh-air exercise and most of the time the patients were locked in their rooms. Nutrition was very poor. In particular, the patients were fed with low-quality cereal most of the time, while such products as butter, meat, eggs and fresh produce were available irregularly or could be acquired through illegal cash payments. 73 .     On various occasions the applicant and some other patients complained to the hospital management and to various outside authorities about the conditions there; no response was forthcoming. The applicant and two other prisoners attempted suicide, inserting metal objects into their abdominal walls. Following this, the Donetsk prison hospital was inspected by a number of State authorities and some violations relating to the conditions of detention were found. (b)    Conditions as presented by the Government 74.     The Donetsk prison hospital was designed to accommodate 200   prisoners, but in the autumn and winter the overall sickness rate increased and therefore bunk beds had to be set up in some hospital wards in order to provide places for all patients. Prisoners with minor somatic diseases were given places on upper bunks. Having referred to a certificate issued by the State Prison Service, the Government submitted that the applicant had never been given an upper bunk. 75 .     Following a suicide attempt by the applicant and two other prisoners on 24 January 2008 (see paragraph 73 above) the hospital was inspected by the Donetsk Sanitary Service and by the prosecutor’s office. On 28   January 2008 the Sanitary Service concluded that the applicant’s allegations concerning poor detention conditions were unsubstantiated. In particular, no traces of rodents, flees, or other pests had been found during the inspection; the hospital staff disinfected the patients’ belongings upon arrival at the hospital and carried out routine disinfection measures on a regular basis; the cells were equipped with individual sleeping berths and were in a satisfactory sanitary state. Patients received three meals a day, the quality of which was regularly checked by the staff and recorded in a special registry. The food had the necessary quality certificates. 76 .     On 29 January 2008 the Donetsk regional prosecutor’s office acknowledged that the hospital had no courtyard for fresh-air exercise in breach of applicable standards and that the available living space per patient in the applicant’s cell was less than the minimum standard of 4 sq. m allowed by domestic law. The cell was equipped with bunk beds and accommodated six patients, while there should not have been more than four. The prosecutor’s office instructed the hospital authorities to address these breaches of the applicable standards. On 14 February 2008 the overcrowding problem was resolved as two prisoners were transferred from ward no. 22 to another ward. On an unspecified date in February 2008 a walking yard was also built at the Donetsk prison hospital. In the meantime, the prisoners had been given opportunity to walk in the hospital’s area. Zhytomyr prison 77.     The applicant served his sentence from 21 February 2008 till 4   April 2009 in the Zhytomyr prison, with some interruptions for medical treatment in different detention facilities. (a)    Conditions as presented by the applicant 78 .     The cells were poorly heated, if at all. During the daytime the bed was fastened to the wall and the applicant was not allowed to use it, notwithstanding his health problems. He had therefore to lie on a cold concrete floor which caused him mental and physical suffering. In addition, the disciplinary cell, in which he had been held for three month, was infested with huge rats with which he had to fight all the time during the day and also at night, instead of sleeping, as the rats jumped all over him. He was living in a permanent state of fear and inferiority. 79 .     To support his allegations, the applicant submitted photos which he claimed had been taken with a mobile phone by a compassionate guard during the applicant’s solitary confinement between November 2008 and March 2009. The photos show a heavy man – the applicant claimed it was him – holding big rats in his hands in a small cell. 80.     On numerous occasions the applicant and his representative unsuccessfully complained to various authorities about the material conditions of his detention in the Zhytomyr prison. (b)    Conditions as presented by the Government 81.     During his stay in the Zhytomyr prison the applicant was held in cells nos. 102, 213, 214, 212, 332, 101, 107 and 209, which included multi ‑ occupancy cells, single occupancy cells, disciplinary cells or isolation wards. 82.     The Government submitted that the conditions of the applicant’s detention in the prison had been adequate. In doing so they mainly referred to the statutory regulations on detention. Their submissions may be summarised as follows. 83.     The cells allowed at least 4 sq. m. of personal space per prisoner. The walls were unplastered cement and painted in light colours. The toilets were separated from the living area by a solid barrier. The concrete floor of the cells was covered with wooden planks. The cells were equipped with collapsible bunk beds, a table, narrow benches without backs, a wash basin, a lavatory pan and a shelf or a cupboard. The temperature in the cells was between 18 and 20˚C in autumn and winter and between 21 and 24˚C in spring and summer. 84.     Beds in disciplinary cells were fastened to the wall during daytime but prisoners were able to sit on the benches installed in the cells. 85 .     The Government denied that there had been rats in the cells, having alleged that once a month thorough measures against rats were implemented and the entire facility was disinfected. The sanitary unit also disinfected the cells on a weekly basis. 86 .     The applicant’s numerous complaints in respect of poor detention conditions had been carefully examined by the prosecutor’s office and no violation of the relevant domestic standards had been establishedArticles de loi cités
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Synthèse
- Juridiction
- CEDH
- Chambre
- CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;COMMITTEE;ENG
- Formation
- 28
- Date
- 20 avril 2021
- Matière
- droits fondamentaux
Référence
ECLI:CE:ECHR:2021:0420JUD003576107
Données disponibles
- Texte intégral