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    You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> European Court of Human Rights >> TAYLOR Family & Ors v UNITED KINGDOM - 23412/94 [2004] ECHR 729 (30 August 1994)
    URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/2004/729.html
    Cite as: [2004] ECHR 729

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                          AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
    
                          Application No. 23412/94
                          by the TAYLOR family, the CRAMPTON family, the
                          GIBSON family and the KING family
                          against the United Kingdom
    
         The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in private on
    30 August 1994, the following members being present:
    
               MM.   C.A. NØRGAARD, President
                     S. TRECHSEL
                     A. WEITZEL
                     F. ERMACORA
                     E. BUSUTTIL
                     G. JÖRUNDSSON
                     A.S. GÖZÜBÜYÜK
                     J.-C. SOYER
                     H.G. SCHERMERS
                     H. DANELIUS
               Mrs.  G.H. THUNE
               MM.   F. MARTINEZ
                     C.L. ROZAKIS
               Mrs.  J. LIDDY
               MM.   L. LOUCAIDES
                     J.-C. GEUS
                     M.P. PELLONPÄÄ
                     B. MARXER
                     M.A. NOWICKI
                     I. CABRAL BARRETO
                     B. CONFORTI
                     N. BRATZA
                     I. BÉKÉS
                     J. MUCHA
                     E. KONSTANTINOV
                     D. SVÁBY
    
               Mr.   H.C. KRÜGER, Secretary to the Commission
    
         Having regard to the application introduced on 7 January 1994 by
    the Taylor family, the Crampton family, the Gibson family and the King
    family against the United Kingdom registered on 7 February 1994 under
    file No. 23412/94.
    
         Having regard to the report provided for in Rule 47 of the Rules
    of Procedure of the Commission;
    
         Having deliberated;
    
         Decides as follows:
    
    THE FACTS
    
         The applicants, British citizens, are represented before the
    Commission by Ms. Françoise Hampson, a senior law lecturer.
    
    The applicants
    
         The first and second applicants were born in 1966 and are
    resident in Grantham. They are the parents of Liam Taylor who was born
    in 1990 and died on 23 February 1991.
    
         The third applicant, Paul Crampton, was born in 1985. He lives
    in Lincoln with his parents, the fourth and fifth applicants, who were
    born in 1958 and 1955 respectively.
    
         The sixth applicant, Bradley Gibson, was born in 1985. He lives
    in Grantham with his parents, the seventh and eighth applicants, who
    were born in 1955 and 1956 respectively.
    
         The ninth applicant, Christopher King, was born in 1991. He lives
    in Bally with his parents, the ten and eleventh applicants, who were
    born in 1965 and 1963 respectively.
    
    The particular circumstances of the case
    
         The facts of the present case, as submitted by the applicants and
    as may be deduced from the documents, may be summarised as follows.
    
         On 5 December 1990, Beverley Allitt who was completing her
    training as state enrolled nurse (SEN) was interviewed by Grantham
    hospital which was recruiting for adult wards. All the trainees who
    were interested in a post were accepted except for Allitt.
    
         Since she had taken considerable sick leave during her training
    period, Allitt was required to work on wards for a further 10 weeks
    after completing her written examinations. She asked to work on Ward
    Four, the children's ward and the sister of the ward, Sister B., and
    Allitt's manager agreed. Allitt worked on Ward Four for ten weeks from
    December 1990.
    
         Allitt applied for but was refused a place on a training course
    in children's medicine at another hospital. Ward Four was seeking to
    recruit a Registered Sick Children's nurse (RSCN) but no-one replied
    to the advertisement. Since they were short of staff, they interviewed
    Allitt for the post with some reluctance, given her status as a newly
    qualified and inexperienced SEN. On 15 February 1991, Allitt was
    appointed to work on Ward Four on a short contract due to expire in
    August 1991.
    
         Ward Four was also short of doctors. There were two consultants
    but no registrar. The junior doctors who were available had limited
    experience in paediatrics.
    
         The Ward procedures were irregular and complaints had been made
    prior to the incidents which began on 21 February 1991. When on
    14 February 1991, Allitt reported that the key to the ward refrigerator
    (in which drugs such as insulin were kept) was lost no Untoward
    Incident Report was filed. Though the lock on the refrigerator was
    replaced, it was not realised that the lost key could open all the
    other refrigerators in the hospital. The official monitoring procedure
    for the use of the insulin was later found by the police to be
    inadequate in that it was not possible to match the record of the
    amount of insulin supplied to the ward with the record of insulin on
    the ward. Staff sometimes left the drug cupboard unlocked in the
    treatment room. There was no defibrillator (an item of emergency
    resuscitation equipment) on the ward.
    
         On 21 February 1991, Liam Taylor (the son of the first and second
    applicants) who was seven weeks old was admitted to Ward Four diagnosed
    as suffering from  bronchiolitis. On 23 February 1991 he collapsed
    suddenly and required emergency resuscitation. He had stopped breathing
    for an estimated hour and a quarter. Though his heart had started
    beating again and he was breathing on a ventilator, he showed no other
    signs of life. He began to suffer severe convulsions which the
    consultant judged as indicating that he had suffered severe brain
    damage. His parents (the first and second applicants) asked for Liam
    to be taken off the ventilator and drugs and he died that afternoon.
    
         The consultant's death certificate indicted the cause of death
    as "probable septicaemia". The coroner rejected this and instructed the
    pathologist at Grantham Hospital to conduct a post-mortem. The
    consultant protested, insisting that if there was to be a post-mortem
    it should be conducted by a paediatric pathologist. This was ignored.
    The post-mortem disclosed that the heart was damaged in the left
    ventricle, a symptom of heart attack extremely rare in children. The
    pathologist found no cause for the attack and recorded that Liam had
    died of a myocardial infarction. The consultant challenged this finding
    and gave the opinion that there should be a second post-mortem. The
    coroner however had signed the death certificate and was not prepared
    to order a second post-mortem. The consultant contacted a paediatric
    pathologist at another hospital who agreed to look at samples of
    tissue. It appears that the hospital pathologist did not send off the
    samples.
    
         Subsequently when a photograph of Liam's heart was discovered by
    the police and examined by the paediatric pathologist he confirmed the
    cause of death as myocardial infarction but attributed it to
    asphyxiation or poisoning.
    
         On 5 March 1991, Timothy Hardwick, 11 years old and suffering
    from severe cerebral palsy, died within three hours of admission to
    Ward Four. The cause of death was recorded as "status epilepticus"
    although there was no evidence that he had been suffering a fit prior
    to his collapse.
    
         On 10 March 1991, Kayley Desmond, 15 months old and admitted to
    Ward Four with a chest infection and vomiting history, collapsed twice
    and was transferred to Queen's Med., Nottingham. The X-rays of her
    chest, which revealed traces of air which should not have been there,
    were not sent on to a radiologist for examination.
    
         On 20 March 1991, Paul Crampton (the third applicant), five
    months old, was admitted to Ward Four for observation after his doctor
    had diagnosed bronchiolitis. On 23 March 1991 shortly before he was due
    to be released he suffered a hypoglycaemic attack while being fed. He
    suffered two subsequent attacks. After his transfer to another hospital
    Paul recovered without any medication.
    
         A blood sample taken from Paul after the third attack on or about
    28 March 1991 was sent for analysis but only arrived at the laboratory
    on 4 April 1991. At the laboratory no-one was aware that there was any
    urgency about the case. The test for insulin was conducted a week later
    on 12 April 1991. The result of the test was that the insulin level was
    so high that its level could not be measured accurately on the
    equipment being used. The laboratory rang one of Ward Four's
    consultants directly with the finding, which indicated an injection of
    a large amount of insulin. The consultant raised his concern at this
    finding with some of the other staff available at the time but told
    them to do nothing but to keep watch.
    
         Bradley Gibson (the sixth applicant), aged five and a half, was
    admitted to Ward Four on 29 March 1991 suffering from pneumonia. His
    parents (the seventh and eighth applicants) were called to the hospital
    and told that his heart had stopped and that he had taken a long time
    to resuscitate. He was transferred to Queen's Med., Nottingham. On
    1 April 1991 he recovered consciousness and made a remarkably speedy
    recovery. He suffered symptoms indicative of brain damage including
    pains in his legs and loss of control of his bladder and bowels.
    
         On 31 March 1991, Yik Hung Chan, two years old, collapsed twice
    and was transferred to Queens Med.
    
         On 4 April 1991, Becky Phillips, a baby of two-three months, was
    discharged from Ward Four. She stopped breathing during the early hours
    of the morning and died before arrival at the hospital. The cause of
    death, unknown, was attributed to cot death syndrome. Her twin sister
    admitted to Ward Four for observation collapsed on three occasions and
    was transferred on 7 April 1991 to Nottingham City Hospital. Rib
    fractures in her chest were not not remarked on the X-rays taken at the
    time.
    
         On 9 April 1991, Michael Davidson collapsed while being given an
    injection on Ward Four and required emergency resuscitation. His
    reaction was attributed to extreme anxiety at being injected.
    
         On 13 April 1991, Christopher Peasgood, eight weeks old, stopped
    breathing suddenly on two occasions while in Ward Four and was
    transferred to Queens Med.
    
         On 16 April 1991, Christopher King (the ninth applicant), aged
    five weeks, who had been admitted to Ward Four with coughing and
    vomiting, deteriorated with a sudden respiratory attack (the second
    attack, although his parents, the tenth and eleventh applicants, had
    not been informed of the first on 14 April). He had a third attack
    before it was decided to transfer him to Queens Med., Nottingham, where
    he recovered. The tenth applicant, his mother and a nurse in another
    part of the hospital, approached one of the consultants with her
    criticisms of the way Ward Four was run and the absence of emergency
    equipment. He said that he would write to the manager who would contact
    her. No such contact was ever made.
    
         On 18 April 1991, Patrick Elstone, aged seven weeks, suffered two
    collapses on Ward Four before being sent on to Queens Med., Nottingham.
    
         On 19 April 1991, one of the consultants voiced his suspicion to
    the hospital management that attacks were being made on children and
    suggested covert surveillance. The hospital management appear to have
    taken the attitude that no drastic step should be taken unless both
    consultants on the ward could agree on the significance of the clinical
    evidence.
    
         On 22 April 1991, Claire Peck, 15 months old, who had entered
    Ward Four with severe asthma, died following cardiac arrest. A blood
    sample taken revealed a high concentration of potassium.
    
         The doctors at Queens Med., Nottingham were baffled by the series
    of emergency collapse cases passed on to them by Grantham Hospital and
    informed the Professor in charge of paediatric services at Nottingham.
    On 29 April 1991, the Professor rang one of the consultants at Ward
    Four and said if they did not call in the police he would.
    
         On 30 April 1991, the hospital manager contacted the Regional
    Health Authority who told him to contact the police but to keep the
    ward open.
    
         Following the involvement of the police on 30 April 1991,  Allitt
    was arrested on 21 May 1991 and taken in for questioning.
    
         On 2 July 1991, the police officer in charge of the investigation
    was informed that the Director of Public Prosecutions (the DPP) was
    taking over the case.
    
         On 20 November 1991, Allitt was charged with the murder of four
    children, nine attempted murders of children and nine counts of causing
    grievous bodily harm to the same children. She was also charged with
    attempting to murder two adults elsewhere and with causing them
    grievous bodily harm with intent. At her trial, she did not give
    evidence in her defence.
    
         In May 1993, Allitt was convicted of the murder of four children,
    including Liam  Taylor, and of attempted murder of three children,
    including Paul Crampton and Bradley Gibson, and of causing grievous
    bodily harm to six children, including Christopher King.  She was
    sentenced to life imprisonment on every count. She was acquitted of the
    charges against the adults.
    
         The Regional Health Authority (RHA) had announced prior to the
    trial that it was going to hold an internal inquiry the findings of
    which would be made public. None of the parents were approached. The
    hospital unions refused to talk to the inquiry and insisted that all
    the jobs of staff on Ward Four be guaranteed. The inquiry appointed by
    the RHA took evidence on 9, 10 and 12 January 1992. On 2 July 1992, a
    final draft of the report was submitted to the RHA. On 17 September
    1992 the RHA announced that it would not publish the report since they
    had been advised that it would prejudice the trial of Allitt.
    
         The RHA re-organised Ward Four passing its management to Queen's
    Med., Nottingham. The two consultants were made redundant. The nurses
    on the ward were made redundant but all obtained posts with the
    exception of Sister B.
    
         At the end of December 1992, the Grantham Advisory Team (GAT),
    representing the hospital, produced a confidential report for the
    Department of Health and another report a month later. They opposed a
    public inquiry and proposed a second internal inquiry to start
    disciplinary proceedings against some staff.
    
         The parents of the children involved had been pressing for a
    public inquiry in which witnesses could be compelled to attend and all
    the causes of the tragedy could be investigated. The GAT and the RHA
    opposed this idea on the basis that it was unnecessary, costly and
    witnesses would be unwilling to give evidence.
    
         On 7 May 1993, the Secretary of State announced that there would
    only be a limited investigation to be conducted in private by a
    chairman selected by the RHA with a panel selected by the RHA terms of
    reference to be agreed by the RHA and without the power to compel
    witnesses to give evidence or to require disclosure of documents.
    
         The RHA, under pressure, agreed to accept Sir Cecil Clothier
    Q.C., a former ombudsman, as chairman of the inquiry.
    
         The parents sought but were refused legal aid for the purpose of
    applying for judicial review of the decision not to hold a public
    inquiry. Their appeal against this decision was turned down by the Area
    Committee.
    
         On 26 May 1993, an application for leave to apply for judicial
    review was refused by the High Court. The Court of Appeal refused a
    renewed application on 9 June 1993, its judgment being delivered on 9
    July 1993.
    
         The Allitt Inquiry
    
         The terms of reference of the Allitt Inquiry included:
    
         "1.1  To enquire into the circumstances leading to the deaths of
               four children and injuries to nine others on Ward Four...
    
         1.2   To consider the speed and appropriateness of the clinical
               and managerial response within the hospital to the
               incidents and to make recommendations;
    
         1.3   To examine the appointment procedures and systems of
               assessment and supervision... and to make recommendations
    
         ...
    
         1.5   In the light of the occurrences on Ward Four...:-
    
               1.5.1      to advise on the most efficient way for Health
                          Authorities to be informed of the serious
                          untoward incidents and to monitor their
                          handling;...
    
         1.6   To consider such other matters relating to the said matters
               as the public interest may require."
    
         The Inquiry explained its approach as follows:
    
         "We know that the tragic events on Ward Four were brought about
         by the hand of Beverly Allitt. In order to inquire into those
         events, we decided that we should address ourselves first to her
         as an individual, considering her personality, health, training
         and finally her entry to the nursing profession. Then we would
         look at the surrounding circumstances in which she committed her
         crimes, including the roles played by other persons not merely
         at GKGH <the hospital> but right up to Regional Health Authority
         and the relevant policies and procedures..."
    
         In the section dealing with the role of the health authorities,
    the Inquiry described the scope of its investigation as follows:
    
         "By agreement with the Department of Health and the Trent
         Regional Health Authority, we therefore confine the review that
         follows to when and how South Lincolnshire Health Authority
         (SLHA) and Trent Regional Health Authority (Trent RHA) were
         informed of the events on Ward Four and what action they took
         after they had been informed."
    
         The Report of the Allitt Inquiry chaired by Sir Cecil Clothier
    was published at the beginning of 1994. The other members of the
    Inquiry were the Director of Quality, Manchester Children's Hopitals,
    and the Emeritus Professor of Clinical Neurology from Newcastle
    University. The Inquiry had heard 94 witnesses, including the medical
    and other staff of Grantham Hospital and Queen's Med., Nottingham,
    senior officers of the RHA and the parents of nine of the children.
    The Report referred to criticisms which had been voiced that the
    Inquiry had no power to compel the attendance of witnesses or the
    discovery of documents. It noted that every single witness whom they
    wanted to see attended, that every document which they wanted to see
    was produced and that if they had required further powers they would
    have asked for and been given them by the Secretary of State.
    
         The Report criticised, inter alia, the following shortcomings
    which contributed to or failed to contain the scope of the tragedy:
    
         - failure to take into account Allitt's health record in her
         employment and the sloppy managerial procedures relating to her
         appointment;
    
         - inadequate staffing levels on Ward Four in terms of number and
         experience, lack of leadership of the nurses or effective action
         when apprised of suspicions of foul play;
    
         - general laxity and indecisiveness of senior hospital
         management;
    
         - failure of the two consultants to grasp sooner the significance
         of the cascade of collapses with which they had to deal, in
    particular their failure to carry out an early and vigorous
    investigation in search of a common cause;
    
         - delay of two weeks between the first suspicion of foul play
         (ie. that an injection had been given to Paul Crampton) and the
         involvement of the police.
    
         The Report only commented indirectly on the allegations of
    failure properly to fund and staff Grantham Hospital. It made
    recommendations in light of its criticisms with a view to improving
    appointment procedures and health screening of nurses, post-mortem
    procedures, and the improvement of serious untoward incident reporting.
    It concluded:
    
         "The foregoing recommendations are aimed at the tightening of
         procedures to safeguard children in hospital. But no measures can
         afford complete protection against a determined miscreant. The
         main lesson from our Inquiry and our principal recommendation is
         that the Grantham disaster should serve to heighten awareness in
         all those caring for children of the possibility of malevolent
         intervention as a cause of unexplained clinical events."
    
     COMPLAINTS
    
         The applicants complain that they have been the victims of a
    violation of Article 2 of the Convention. They submit that the State,
    in relation to its positive obligation to protect the right to life
    where an unlawful killing or life-threatening attack takes place in an
    environment for which it responsible, must show that it has sought out
    the perpetrator and brought him/her to justice; that appropriate
    mechanisms exist for compensating the victims and that appropriate
    mechanisms exist to enable the State to determine whatever lessons need
    to be learnt to prevent or deter the repetition of such unlawful
    killings. This, they argue, requires in the circumstances of this case
    the provision of an independent, public inquiry.
    
         The applicants submit that the inquiry in this case was neither
    public nor had the power to compel witnesses or obtain discovery of
    documents and the terms of reference made no mention of the district
    health authority or the RHA and their management. Members of the panel
    were not independent of the RHA. The parents were unable to attend or
    be represented by a lawyer of their choosing and there was no
    examination or cross-examination of witnesses by counsel. The inquiry
    was accordingly ineffective and fatally flawed. The responsibility of
    the district health authority and the RHA for the events which happened
    was not examined, eg. the inadequate system of incident reporting;
    staff shortages and weak leadership. It also ignored the role played
    by the organisation of the National Health Service generally, ie.
    Grantham Hospital to qualify as a District General Hospital had to run
    a particular level of service and the exigencies of this meant that if
    Ward Four had been closed (as it should have been because it was
    understaffed to a critical level in the applicants' submission) the
    hospital would have lost two consultants and its status.
    
         The applicant parents complain both on behalf of their children
    and on their own behalf. They allege that they continue to be affected
    by the systemic shortcomings which risk other tragic events occurring
    in the future.
    
    THE LAW
    
         The applicants complain of a violation of Article 2 (Art. 2) of
    the Convention. This provides in its first paragraph as follows:
    
         "1.   Everyone's right to life shall be protected by law.  No one
         shall be deprived of his life intentionally save in the execution
         of a sentence of a court following his conviction of a crime for
         which this penalty is provided by law."
    
         The applicants submit that the first sentence of this provision
    imports a procedural requirement that appropriate mechanisms be
    furnished to enable the State to determine whatever lessons need to be
    learnt to prevent or deter the repetition of the unlawful killings and
    life-threatening attacks which occurred in the present case. They
    submit that there was no sufficient inquiry made into the contributory
    factors of the tragedy involving the children. The applicant parents
    complain both on their own behalf and the behalf of their children
    alleging that the lack of such public investigation entails the risk
    of a recurrence of similar events.
    
         The Commission found in the case of McCann, Farrell and Savage
    v. the United Kingdom (No. 18984/91, Comm. Report 4.3.94, pending
    before the European Court of Human Rights) that Article 2 (Art. 2) may
    contain a procedural element. It stated, inter alia, as follows:
    
         "192. The Commission considers however that there is force in the
         applicants' submissions as to the necessity for an ex post facto
         review of the circumstances of a killing. It must often be the
         case where State agents have used lethal force against an
         individual that the factual circumstances and the motivation for
         the killing lie largely, if not wholly, within the knowledge of
         the State authorities and that the victim's families are unlikely
         to be in a position to assess whether the use of force was in
         fact justified. It is essential both for the relatives and for
         public confidence in the administration of justice and in the
         State's adherence to the principles of the rule of law that a
         killing by the State is subject to some form of open and
         objective oversight.
    
         193. Having regard therefore to the necessity of ensuring the
         effective protection of the rights guaranteed under the
         Convention, which takes on added importance in the context of the
         right to life, the Commission finds that the obligation imposed
         on the State that everyone's right to life shall be "protected
         by law" may include a procedural aspect. This includes the
         minimum requirement of a mechanism whereby the circumstances of
         a deprivation of life by the agents of a State may receive public
         and independent scrutiny. The nature and degree of scrutiny which
         satisfies this minimum threshold must, in the Commission's view,
         depend on the circumstances of the particular case. There may be
         cases where the facts surrounding a deprivation of life are clear
         and undisputed and the subsequent inquisitorial examination may
         legitimately be reduced to a minimum formality. But equally,
         there may be other cases, where a victim dies in circumstances
         which are unclear, in which event the lack of any effective
         procedure to investigate the cause of the deprivation of life
         could by itself raise an issue under Article 2 (Art. 2) of the
         Convention."
    
         The Commission found however in that case that the provision of
    a public and independent inquest into the facts surrounding the
    shooting of the three terrorist suspects in Gibraltar by members of the
    armed forces was sufficient to satisfy the procedural requirements of
    Article 2 (Art. 2).
    
         The Commission notes first of all that in the present case,
    unlike the use of lethal force in the McCann case, the attacks on the
    children, including the applicant children, were prosecuted as criminal
    acts and that the nurse, Beverly Allitt, was convicted on counts of
    murder, attempted murder and grievous bodily harm, for which she
    received sentences of life imprisonment. The facts of the case were
    subject in the context of those criminal proceedings to investigation
    and public examination and cross-examination of the people involved
    (save Allitt herself who chose not to give evidence).
    
         The applicants allege however that the responsibility for events
    goes beyond the individual criminal responsibility of Allitt herself
    and that the case raises questions of responsibility for the
    appointment of an individual like Allitt, the procedural inadequacies
    for dealing with untoward incidents and emergencies, and the failure
    to respond promptly and effectively to the series of sudden collapses
    of children in one ward. This requires, they submit, a public and
    independent inquiry at which they would be provided with legal aid to
    be able to have witnesses cross-examined by counsel. The Allitt Inquiry
    however sat in private, its terms of reference were agreed with the
    RHA, whose responsibility was at stake, and it had no powers of
    compulsion.
    
         The Commission notes that the Inquiry which was held into the
    Allitt affair was presided over by Sir Cecil Clothier, an ex-Ombudsman,
    and it is satisfied that the Inquiry was effectively independent of the
    parties involved in the case. Further, while the Inquiry did not have
    powers to compel discovery or witnesses, it does not appear that the
    Inquiry was refused access to any document or that any witness refused
    to attend. The applicants have not referred to any item of evidence or
    testimony that was omitted from the investigation. Moreover, the terms
    of reference of the Inquiry covered aspects of operational
    responsibility of both the hospital and the RHA. While the Inquiry did
    not conduct itself in public, its findings and recommendations were
    made public. The Report identified a number of shortcomings which could
    have contributed to the ease with which and the length of time over
    which Allitt had conducted her attacks, and it made recommendations to
    avoid the same mistakes being repeated in future. To the extent that
    the applicants allege any other aspects of negligence on the part of
    the health authorities which contributed to the failure to protect the
    children in their care from injury, it would be possible for the
    applicants to institute proceedings alleging negligence and/or breach
    of statutory duty, in which it would be possible to seek discovery of
    documents and to have witnesses examined and cross-examined.
    
         The Commission acknowledges that neither the criminal proceedings
    nor the Inquiry addressed the wider issues relating to the organisation
    and funding of the National Health Service as a whole or the pressures
    which might have led to a ward being run subject to the shortcomings
    apparent on Ward Four.  The procedural element contained in Article 2
    (Art. 2) of the Convention however imposes the minimum requirement that
    where a State or its agents potentially bear responsibility for loss
    of life the events in question should be subject to an effective
    investigation or scrutiny which enables the facts to become known to
    the public, and in particular to the relatives of any victims. The
    Commission finds no indication that the facts of this case have not
    been sufficiently investigated and disclosed, or that there has been
    any failure to provide a mechanism whereby those with criminal or civil
    responsibility may be held answerable. The wider questions raised by
    the case are within the public domain and any doubts which may
    consequently arise as to policies adopted in the field of public health
    are, in the Commission's opinion, matters for public and political
    debate which fall outside the scope of Article 2 (Art. 2) and the other
    provisions of the Convention.
    
         The Commission concludes that the present application does not
    disclose any failure by the State to comply with the positive
    obligations, including any procedural requirements, imposed by Article
    2 (Art. 2) of the Convention. It follows that it must be rejected as
    being manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27 para. 2
    (Art. 27-2) of the Convention.
    
         For these reasons the Commission unanimously
    
         DECLARES THE APPLICATION INADMISSIBLE.
    
    Secretary to the Commission            President of the Commission
    
           (H.C. KRÜGER)                         (C.A. NØRGAARD)


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