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FIRST
SECTION
CASE OF
SHAKHGIRIYEVA AND OTHERS v. RUSSIA
(Application
no. 27251/03)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
8
January 2009
This
judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44
§ 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial
revision.
In the case of Shakhgiriyeva and Others v. Russia,
The
European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Christos
Rozakis,
President,
Anatoly
Kovler,
Elisabeth
Steiner,
Dean
Spielmann,
Sverre
Erik Jebens,
Giorgio
Malinverni,
George
Nicolaou,
judges,
and
Søren Nielsen, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 4 December 2008,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 27251/03) against the Russian
Federation lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by seven Russian nationals, listed below (the
applicants), on 9 July 2003.
- The
applicants, who had been granted legal aid, were represented by
lawyers of the Stichting Russian Justice Initiative (“SRJI”),
an NGO based in the Netherlands with a representative office in
Russia. The Russian Government (“the Government”) were
represented by Mr P. Laptev and Ms V. Milinchuk,
former Representatives of the Russian Federation at the European
Court of Human Rights.
- The
applicants alleged that their relatives had been detained by
servicemen in Chechnya on 23 October and 3 November 2002 and
then killed. They complained under Articles 2, 3, 5 and 13 of the
Convention.
- On
1 September 2005 the President of the First Section decided to grant
priority to the application under Rule 41 of the Rules of Court.
- By
a decision of 28 February 2008 the Court declared the application
admissible.
- The
Chamber having decided, after consulting the parties, that no hearing
on the merits was required (Rule 59 § 3 in fine), the
parties replied in writing to each other's observations.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicants are:
(1) Ms
Asht Khamidovna Shakhgiriyeva, born in 1960;
(2) Ms
Zarema Baudinovna Esmurzayeva (Magomadova), born in 1971;
(3) Ms
Alpatu Magomadova, born in 1922;
(4) Ms
Zarema Kharonovna Umarova, born in 1968;
(5) Ms
Ayshat Bibulatovna Gerasiyeva, born in 1985;
(6) Ms
Aza Ayubovna Abayeva, born in 1972;
(7) Ms
Svetlana Galaniyevna Dakasheva, born in 1961.
- The
applicants are Russian nationals and residents of the village of
Chechen-Aul, in the Grozny district of Chechnya. The sixth applicant
currently resides outside Russia.
- The
facts of the case are mostly not in dispute between the parties. They
may be summarised as follows.
A. Detention of eight persons and the searches of 23 October 2002
- The
applicants submitted that in the early hours of 23 October 2002 eight
persons had been detained in their village by a group of servicemen
wearing masks and camouflage uniforms and moving around in a Ural
military truck, UAZ all-terrain military vehicles and armoured
personnel carriers (APCs) with obscured number plates. Among the
eight persons there were four relatives of the applicants: Magomed
Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev.
1. Detention of Magomed Shakhgiriyev
- The
first applicant is the mother of Magomed Khamidovich Shakhgiriyev,
born in 1986. She lives with her family in Chechen-Aul at 37 Lenina
Street. In October 2002 Magomed Shakhgiriyev was 16 years old and
attended school. He was described by the school head teacher and the
head of the village administration as a good student and a
well-mannered young man. The first applicant is married and has two
other children, who were then aged 6 and 15.
- On
the night of 22 to 23 October 2002 the first applicant and her family
were at home sleeping. At about 5 a.m. an APC smashed the gates of
their house and entered the courtyard. It was followed by a UAZ
vehicle. Servicemen in uniforms and masks, armed with automatic
weapons, surrounded the house and entered. The military did not
produce identity papers or any documents to justify their actions and
gave no explanations. They did not ask for the inhabitants' identity
documents. The first applicant and her two younger children were
locked in one room. The servicemen threatened to shoot if they tried
to go outside.
- The
first applicant's husband and her elder son, Magomed Shakhgiriyev,
were ordered to go outside into the courtyard. Magomed Shakhgiriyev,
who was wearing a long-sleeved T-shirt, trousers and socks, was
escorted by the soldiers into the APC. He was not allowed to put on
his boots. The first applicant submitted that her husband had been
drunk on that night, and the servicemen seated him on the ground in
the courtyard and asked where his machine gun was. He said that he
had no weapons.
- The
first applicant submitted that a neighbour had tried to find out what
had been happening and wanted to enter their courtyard, but the
servicemen had hit her and told her to stay away.
- During
the search the soldiers seized some items from the house, including
the goods the first applicant traded in the market and those stored
at her house by other traders overnight, because her house was close
to the market.
2. Detention of Ali Magomadov
- The
second and third applicants are the wife and mother of Ali
Baudinovich Magomadov, born in 1966. The applicants' family live in
Chechen-Aul in their own house at 81 Lenina Street. The second
applicant has four minor children, who in October 2002 were aged
between 2 and 11, from her marriage to Ali Magomadov. Ali Magomadov
worked in Grozny at the local branch of Gazprom as a mechanic. The
administration of Chechen-Aul described him as a good member of the
community who had worked hard to support his large family and who had
no connections with illegal armed groups.
- In
October 2002 the applicants were carrying out construction work on
the house, and some windows on the second floor were not glazed.
- On
the night of 22 to 23 October 2002 the second and third applicants,
Ali Magomadov and the children were at home sleeping. At
approximately 4.30 a.m. a group of about 15 masked men in
camouflage forcibly entered the house. They arrived in a Ural truck,
whose number plates the applicants could not distinguish in the
darkness. The servicemen were armed with machine guns and spoke
Russian, largely using swearwords. They were hostile and aggressive.
The military did not produce identity papers or any documents to
justify their actions and gave no explanations.
- The
second applicant submitted that five or six men had entered the house
through the windows of the second floor and had spread out around the
rooms. In addition, about ten servicemen had kept guard in the
courtyard. Once in the house, the servicemen ordered the second
applicant to turn on the light, but she replied that the village was
without electricity on that night. They ordered her to go and get
matches, which she did. The servicemen searched the room where the
applicant and her daughter had been sleeping and asked the applicant
if there were any men in the house. The applicant replied that her
husband was the only man in the house, and the soldiers told her to
fetch him. The second applicant went into the room where her husband
and her sons had been sleeping and told Ali Magomadov that there were
armed men looking for him. He put on a shirt and trousers and came
out of the room.
- The
soldiers put him against the wall and asked him his name. He gave his
full name and the soldiers immediately led him away. They gave no
explanations and asked no further questions. One of the servicemen
asked for Ali Magomadov's passport and the second applicant went to
fetch it from his jacket. When she returned to the corridor the
soldiers had already taken her husband away. Other servicemen took
his passport.
- The
second applicant realised that her husband had been taken away
barefoot and tried to follow them out of the house, but the soldiers
shouted at her to close the door and remain inside.
- The
second applicant saw her husband being put into the Ural truck, which
then left in the direction of Grozny.
- The
third applicant submitted that the armed men had entered the room
where she and her 11-year-old granddaughter had been sleeping and put
a machine gun to the head of her granddaughter, who had hidden under
the blanket out of fear. The third applicant shouted “Don't
shoot, it's a child!” and the armed man put the gun away. She
was shocked by the night raid, she could not understand what was
happening and then through the window she saw her son being led away
by two men armed with machine guns.
3. Detention of Ismail Umarov
- The
fourth applicant is the sister of Ismail Kharonovich Umarov, born in
1975. The Umarov family live in their own house at 9 Sadovaya Street.
Their house has two separate entrances. One part of the house is
occupied by the fourth applicant, her two children, who in October
2002 were aged 9 and 7, and her mother. The fourth applicant is a
widow; her husband died in 1995. The other part of the house is
occupied by the family of the fourth applicant's brother Ismail
Umarov, his wife and two children, aged 2 and 3 at that time. In
October 2002 Ismail Umarov's wife was pregnant with a third baby, who
was born in February 2003.
- At
about 4 a.m. on 23 October 2002 a group of masked men in camouflage
uniforms with black armbands forcibly entered the courtyard of the
Umarovs' house. The servicemen were armed with machine guns and spoke
Russian. They were hostile and aggressive, shouting and shooting in
the air. The military did not produce identity papers or any
documents to justify their actions and gave no explanations.
- They
arrived in two UAZ vehicles, climbed over the fence, opened the gates
from inside and entered the courtyard. The fourth applicant's mother
woke up and alerted the fourth applicant. Together they dressed up
and went out into the courtyard, where there were several servicemen
standing by the door which led to Ismail Umarov's part of the house.
Upon the soldiers' orders, the fourth applicant's mother knocked on
the door and called her son, saying that there were soldiers looking
for him. When he opened the door, the servicemen dragged him out and
put him into the UAZ vehicle. They did not ask for his identity
documents and did not allow him to put on his shoes; he was taken
away in a T-shirt and training trousers, barefoot. The servicemen
then searched the house.
- The
fourth applicant tried to intervene but the soldiers told her that
her brother would be taken to a “filtration point”.
4. Detention of Umalat Abayev
- The
fifth and sixth applicants are the wife and sister of Umalat
Ayubovich Abayev, born in 1978. Shortly before the events of October
2002 the head of the village administration recommended Umalat Abayev
for work as a security guard and described him as a good man who had
no connection with illegal or extremist groups and had not otherwise
discredited himself. Similar recommendation letters were issued to
him by the imam of the village mosque in Chechen-Aul and the local
policeman.
- The
Abayev family live in their own house at 29 Partizanskaya Street. In
the early hours of 23 October 2002 a group of servicemen arrived at
their house in an APC and two UAZ vehicles. They were armed and
wearing camouflage uniforms and masks. They forcibly entered the
Abayev family house and ordered all the men to come out. The women
said that there was only one man in the house, and the soldiers went
into the room where Umalat Abayev was sleeping. They raised him from
his bed and took him out into the street; he was not permitted to get
dressed. When the relatives asked where he was being taken, the
servicemen said that they could put questions to the Argun military
commander's office and that Abayev would be “checked through a
computer” and then released.
- Then
the servicemen searched the house, without producing any documents to
justify their actions. According to the applicants, they “turned
the whole house upside down”, checked the documents and took
away some valuables.
5. Detention of four other men on 23 October 2002
- The
applicants submitted that four other men had been detained in
Chechen-Aul on the same night: S.Yu., R.Z., M.Zh. and A.Zh. (the
latter two are spelled in official documents as M.Dzh. and A.Dzh.).
Two days later, on 25 October 2002, M.Zh. and A.Zh. were released.
According to the applicants, they said that they had been detained in
a cellar but could give no other details of their detention because
they had been taken around blindfolded.
6. Information from the Government
- The
Government in their observations did not challenge the facts as
presented by the applicants. They stated that it had been established
that on 23 October 2002, at about 4 a.m., unidentified persons armed
with automatic weapons and wearing camouflage uniforms had kidnapped
in Chechen-Aul and taken in an unknown direction M. Shakhgiriyev,
A. Magomadov, I. Umarov, U. Abayev, R.Z., M.Zh. (M.Dzh.), A.Zh.
(A.Dzh.) and S.Yu. The last-mentioned person had sustained a firearm
wound. M.Zh. and A.Zh. had been released later.
B. Search for the men detained on 23 October 2002
- Immediately
after the detention of their family members the applicants and other
relatives started to look for them. On 23 October 2002 the first
applicant wrote a letter to the Chechnya Prosecutor about the
detention of her son and seven other men by armed men in an APC. She
also complained about the taking of property and money from her
house.
- On
the applicants' behalf letters enquiring about the fate of their
relatives were forwarded by a member of the State Duma, Mr Igrunov,
and by the NGO “Civic Assistance” to the Chechnya
Prosecutor's Office and to the Prosecutor General's Office. On 18
November 2002 the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office informed Civic
Assistance that on 26 January 2002 (sic) the Grozny District
Prosecutor's Office had opened a criminal investigation into the
kidnapping of Mr Abayev and others under Article 126 of the Criminal
Code, and that at present the investigation had been adjourned for
failure to identify the culprits.
C. Disappearance of three persons on 3 November 2002
- On
3 November 2002 three men from Chechen-Aul went looking for their
missing fellow villagers Aslan Israilov, Khasin Yunusov and Adash A.
No complaint was brought in relation to the disappearance of Adash A.
- The
sixth applicant is the wife of Aslan Ramzanovich Israilov, born in
1972 (she is also the sister of Umalat Abayev, who was detained on
23 October 2002). Aslan Israilov was a graduate of the Teachers'
Institute and a teacher in a local sports school. He had three minor
children, who in 2002 were aged between 1 and 10, from his marriage
to the sixth applicant.
- The
seventh applicant is the sister of Khasin Gelaniyevich Yunusov, born
in 1971. Khasin Yunusov was a sub-lieutenant in the police force and
served in the Grozny district department of the interior (ROVD).
- The
applicants submitted that Khasin Yunusov as a policeman had obtained
information that the detained men might be held in Khankala, the main
Russian military base in Chechnya. On 3 November 2002 the three men
left in the morning in Khasin Yunusov's Gazel utility vehicle and
went to Khankala in order to meet a man named “Ilyas” who
had allegedly worked for the Main Military Intelligence Department of
the Army (GRU) and who could help them to find the persons detained
on 23 October 2002. Later on the same day they met the head of the
village administration of Chechen-Aul, Saypudin Ts., in a café
by the roadside. Mr Ts. later recounted to the applicants that
the three men had told him that they had not found “Ilyas”
in Khankala and had headed to his house in the village of
Tolstoy-Yurt, but that they would return to Khankala by 3 p.m. on the
same day because they had arranged for a meeting there. The seventh
applicant later talked to the women who had served in the café,
who confirmed that the three men had eaten there, that they had said
that they were in a hurry and that they were going to Khankala.
- The
applicants submitted that on 3 November 2002 a military helicopter
had been downed above Khankala. They submitted a number of press and
human rights groups' reports, according to which that day the
military, in response to the attack, had detained a large number of
people on the road, had blown up three five-storey buildings from
where the rocket could have been fired and had shelled the village of
Prigorodnoye near the airport.
- Later
the applicants learned from unnamed local residents that their three
relatives could have been detained on 3 November 2002 at a roadblock
in Minutka Square in Grozny. According to this information, a group
of servicemen had arrived at the roadblock in an APC and a GAZ
vehicle and had taken three men and a Gazel vehicle away. The
applicants did not submit any additional information on this matter.
- The
Government in their observations did not challenge the principal
facts as presented by the applicants. They stated that it had been
established that on 3 November 2002 Khasin Yunusov had left home in
his own Gazel vehicle in an unknown direction, accompanied by his
friends Aslan Israilov and Adash A. They had never returned. The
Government also stated that the applicants had never informed any
State bodies of the fact that their relatives had been detained in
Minutka Square.
D. Discovery of five bodies on 8 November 2002 and the
investigation
- According
to the applicants, on 8 November 2002 five male bodies were
discovered by the local residents in the forest near the village of
Vinogradnoye, in the Grozny district, near the road to Tolstoy-Yurt.
The bodies were delivered to the mosque of Tolstoy-Yurt. On 9
November 2002 several relatives of the persons missing since 23
October 2002 travelled there and identified them as the five men who
had been detained in Chechen-Aul: Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali
Magomadov, Ismail Umarov, Umalat Abayev and R.Z. The body of the
sixth person detained on that night, S.Yu., has never been found and
he is still considered missing. On the same day the five bodies were
brought to Chechen-Aul and buried.
- According
to the Government, the five bodies had been found in the forest in
the vicinity of Darbanbakhi village, in the Gudermes district. They
also stated that, according to the information from the prosecutor's
office, the relatives had identified only four bodies – those
of the applicants' relatives – while the relatives of R.Z. had
not identified the fifth body as his.
- Among
the documents submitted by the Government (see below) the
27 September 2003 decision of the Grozny District Prosecutor's
Office to adjourn the investigation contained the following
description:
“On 8 November 2002 at about 10 a.m. in the
forest, about 10 kilometres away from the village of Darbanmakhi,
Gudermes district, towards the village of Vinogradnoye, Grozny
district, two kilometres to the south from the Darbanmakhi –
Vinogradnoye road, five male bodies were discovered with the heads
bound with fragments of cloth, the hands tied and firearm wounds.
They were later identified by their relatives as having been
kidnapped in Chechen-Aul on 23 October 2002: I.Kh. Umarov, A.B.
Magomadov, M.Kh. Shakgiriyev, U.A. Abayev and [R.Z.].”
- It
appears that the applicants did not see the bodies before they were
buried, nor did they submit them for an autopsy. It also appears that
they did not take any photographs before the burial. However, it
appears that the bodies were photographed and submitted for a
forensic report in Tolstoy-Yurt and that a local medical worker in
Chechen-Aul inspected the bodies before the burial.
- Ali
Magomadov's sister Khazhar I. submitted an account of how she
identified her brother's body:
“My brother was killed by unimaginable acts of
torture. His whole body was covered with strange pink spots, the
upper part of the body was darker in colour as if the blood had
rushed to it. Maybe he was tortured by electricity or suspended
upside down. His hands were tied together behind his back, the neck
was also covered with something. Maybe there was a mark there. The
feet up to the ankles and hands were as if they had been put into hot
water, skin peeled off like after a blister. He was wearing the same
clothes and barefoot. The nose was broken, the face was covered with
blood mixed with dirt. Everything was too unexpected, the signs of
torture were too horrible, we were all in shock...”
- The
first applicant submitted that the bodies of the five men had borne
numerous firearm wounds, bones had been broken, and skin on the
fingers had been chipping off.
- On
22 November 2002 the Chechen-Aul outpatient medical service issued a
medical certificate of death in respect of Ali Magomadov. The date
and place of death were recorded as 9 November 2002, Gudermes
district. The certificate indicated that a doctor had examined the
body and concluded that death had occurred as a result of murder
through strangulation and numerous blows.
- On
10 December 2002 the same medical service issued a certificate of
death in respect of Magomed Shakhgiriyev. The date and place of death
were recorded as 9 November 2002, Vinogradnoye village. The cause of
death was recorded as a firearm wound to the head – an act of
murder.
- On
10 December 2002 the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office forwarded the first
applicant's letter to the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office and
informed her that the investigation into the “kidnapping”
of her son was under way.
- On
11 December 2002 the Grozny district civil registration office issued
a death certificate for Ali Magomadov. The date and place of death
were recorded as 9 November 2002, Gudermes.
- On
15 December 2002 the first applicant was granted victim status in
criminal investigation no. 56166, opened into the kidnapping and
subsequent murder of her son and other men.
- On
17 December 2002 Mr Igrunov, a member of the State Duma, again wrote
to the Prosecutor General's Office and asked him to ensure that
additional investigative steps were taken in order to find out who
was responsible for the kidnapping and murder of Umalat Abayev and
other villagers. He noted that the arrest and detention had been
carried out by a military group and that it should be relatively easy
to establish who had been responsible for the mission in question.
- On
15 January 2003 the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office issued the
second applicant with a note confirming that the death of her husband
on 23 October 2002 was being investigated by that office. The
certificate was issued for submission to Ali Magomadov's employer,
the Grozny branch of Gazprom.
- On
17 January 2003 the Grozny district civil registration office issued
a death certificate for Magomed Shakhgiriyev. The date and place of
death were recorded as 9 November 2002, Vinogradnoye, Grozny
district.
- On
23 January 2003 the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office replied to
Mr Igrunov's enquiry about the investigation into the abduction
and murder of Umalat Abayev. The letter stated that on 23 October
2002 the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office had opened criminal
investigation file no. 56166 under Article 126, paragraph 2, of
the Criminal Code (kidnapping). After the discovery of Umalat
Abayev's body on 8 November 2002, the Gudermes District Prosecutor's
Office had opened criminal investigation no. 57103 under
Article 105, paragraph 2 (murder with aggravating
circumstances). On 10 January 2003 the two sets of proceedings had
been joined as file no. 56166 at the Grozny District
Prosecutor's Office. The letter further stated that the Chechnya
Prosecutor's Office had examined the investigation file. In order to
solve the crime, requests for information had been forwarded to
various military and security services in Chechnya and in the
Northern Caucasus. The investigation obtained information that
Mr Abayev had been a follower and a supporter of the “Wahhabi”
movement, and had actively promoted its teachings. The letter also
explained that the previous letter of 18 November 2002 from the
Chechnya Prosecutor's Office, which had referred to the adjourned
criminal investigation into Mr Abayev's abduction, had in fact
concerned his detention on 24 December 2001 during a special
operation. After a check Mr Abayev and others had returned home. On
26 January 2002 criminal investigation file no. 56014 had been
opened into his kidnapping but had later been adjourned for failure
to identify the culprits. On 15 February 2003 Mr Igrunov
forwarded his correspondence with the prosecutor's office to Umalat
Abayev's family.
- On
11 April 2003 the relatives of the five men from Chechen-Aul wrote to
the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office and the Chechnya Prosecutor's
Office. They asked for details of the criminal investigation and
requested to be granted victim status in the proceedings.
- On
16 April 2003 the Grozny district civil registration office issued a
death certificate for Umalat Abayev. The date and place of death were
recorded as 23 October 2002, Chechen-Aul.
- On
22 April 2003 the applicants wrote to the Chechnya Prosecutor and the
Grozny District Prosecutor asking to be informed of the progress in
the investigation concerning the abduction and murder of six men from
Chechen-Aul. They noted that they were not aware of the criminal
investigation file number or whether there had been any progress in
the proceedings. They also asked to be granted victim status in the
proceedings. As no reply was received to that letter, they sent it
again in May or June 2003.
- On
9 July 2003 the SRJI, acting upon the applicants' behalf, asked the
Chechnya Prosecutor and the Grozny District Prosecutor for an update
on the criminal investigation into the abduction and murder of five
men from Chechen-Aul and asked them to grant the relatives victim
status.
- On
9 July 2003 the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office forwarded the
“collective letter from the villagers of Chechen-Aul” to
the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office.
- On
27 September 2003 the investigator of the Grozny District
Prosecutor's Office ordered the adjournment of investigation
no. 56166 for failure to identify the culprits. According to the
relevant document, the investigation had been adjourned on 23 January
2003, reopened on 15 August 2003 and adjourned on 27 September
2003. In the same document the Grozny ROVD was instructed to continue
to take steps to identify the culprits.
- On
14 October 2005 the SRJI, acting on the applicants' behalf, asked the
Grozny District Prosecutor's Office to inform it about the progress
made and to allow the relatives access to criminal investigation file
no. 56166.
- On
14 February and on 31 March 2008 the relatives of the missing men
were informed by the Grozny inter-district department of the
investigation committee that on the same days the investigation of
criminal case no. 56166 had been adjourned.
E. Search for Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov and the discovery
of the bodies on 18 April 2003
- The
sixth and seventh applicants started to look for their missing
relatives, Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov, immediately after their
disappearance on 3 November 2002.
- On
an unspecified date the head of the village administration of
Chechen-Aul, the village imam and the chairman of the committee of
elders signed requests to the authorities asking for the release of
the three men who had been illegally detained on 3 November 2002 in
Minutka Square in Grozny.
- The
seventh applicant submitted that on 6 November 2002 she and the head
of the village administration, Mr Ts., had gone to the head of the
Grozny ROVD and asked him if he was aware that Khasin Yunusov, one of
his servicemen, had disappeared after a trip to Khankala. The seventh
applicant submitted that the head of the department had assured her
that he was aware of that fact and that a large number of people had
been detained after the downing of the helicopter. He allegedly told
her that the Federal Security Service (FSB) had been checking the
detainees and that they would all be released after 15 November
2002.
- After
15 November 2002 the applicants continued to look for their
relatives. The seventh applicant submitted that she had talked to a
man who had allegedly worked at the Khankala military base and who
had initially agreed to help them find out the fate of their
relatives. He assured her that he had seen the name of her husband
and two other men in the lists of detainees. However, one month later
the same man allegedly told her that the lists had been destroyed and
that he could not help them.
- On
11 December 2002 the seventh applicant wrote a formal complaint to
the Chechen Government about the disappearance of her brother on
3 November 2002. She stressed that her brother had been a member
of the police force and that, according to rumours, he had been
detained at the Khankala military base.
- On
15 December 2002 the Grozny Town Prosecutor's Office opened a
criminal investigation under Article 105, paragraph 2, of the
Criminal Code. The decision to open the criminal investigation stated
that on 3 November 2002 Khasin Yunusov had left home in a Gazel
vehicle and disappeared. The facts of the case, including Mr
Yunusov's membership of the police force, gave rise to a suspicion
that he had been killed. The disappearance of Mr Yunusov was
confirmed by his family members and a report of 22 November 2002 by
the head of the Grozny ROVD.
- On
16 January 2003 the Chechnya Prosecutor's Office informed the seventh
applicant that on 15 December 2002 the Grozny Town Prosecutor's
Office had opened criminal investigation file no. 56192 into the
disappearance of Khasin Yunusov, Aslan Israilov and Adash A. The
investigation established that on 3 November 2002 at about 3 p.m. the
three men had been seen in the Zara café on the road near
Tolstoy-Yurt. They had been heading to Grozny in order to find
missing fellow villagers. After that they had not been seen again.
The investigation into the circumstances of the disappearance was
continuing.
- On
31 March 2003 Khasin Yunusov's sister was granted victim status in
the proceedings.
- On
18 April 2003 the SRJI wrote to the Grozny District Prosecutor's
Office on behalf of the sixth and seventh applicants and asked it for
an update in criminal case no. 56192.
- According
to the applicants, on 18 April 2003 three male bodies were discovered
in Khankala, 400 metres away from the fence of the military base. The
Government stated that the bodies had been found near the village of
Berdykel in the Grozny district. The decision of the Grozny District
Prosecutor's Office of 10 May 2003 to transfer the investigation
contained the following description:
“On 18 April 2002 at about 5 p.m. in the village
of Khankala, at the bottom of a quarry, about 400 metres from the
location of the VV [Internal Troops] of the Ministry of the Interior
and about one kilometre from the location of the VOGO and P
[Temporary Operative Alignment of Bodies and Services] of the
Ministry of the Interior, three unidentified male bodies with signs
of violent death were discovered.”
- The
bodies were inspected by a policeman of the Grozny ROVD and by a
military prosecutor, who authorised the Grozny ROVD to take the
bodies away for identification and burial. The bodies were taken to
the mosque of the village of Berket-Yurt and the local policeman
informed the policeman in Chechen-Aul and the relatives of the
missing persons. On 24 April 2003 the policeman from Chechen-Aul
and Khasin Yunusov's brother identified his body by the clothes he
had been wearing. The relatives of Aslan Israilov and Adash A. also
identified them by their clothes. It appears that the bodies had been
in an advanced stage of decomposition. No documents were found on
them.
- On
the same day the three bodies were taken to Chechen-Aul and buried.
The applicants did not have a chance to look at them. It appears that
upon the discovery of the bodies a report was drawn up, and
photographs were taken of them and of the objects collected from
them, but the applicants do not have copies of those reports. The
applicants did not submit the bodies for an autopsy or a medical
examination before burial. They referred to unnamed witness
statements which indicated that the three bodies had numerous firearm
wounds to the head and chest, that there were pieces of rope and that
the right legs of the three bodies had been missing as if they had
been tied together and blown up by an explosive charge.
- The
seventh applicant submitted that one month later the head of the
administration of Chechen-Aul, Ts., and the local policeman who had
first identified the bodies had been killed.
- On
18 April 2003 the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office opened criminal
investigation file no. 42076 following the discovery of three
unidentified male bodies with signs of violent death. On 10 May 2003
this investigation was joined to criminal investigation no. 56192,
following the identification of the corpses.
- On
7 May 2003 the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office informed the SRJI
and the seventh applicant that the criminal case had been pending
with that office since 15 December 2002 as file no. 56192 and
that the “interested parties” could access the documents
within the file by visiting the premises of that office.
- On
22 May 2003 the military prosecutor of military unit no. 20102
based in Khankala replied to the family of Khasin Yunusov that there
were no reasons to suspect the involvement of military servicemen in
the abduction and killing of their relative and two other men. The
criminal investigation into the abduction and murder was pending
before the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office.
- On
6 June 2003 an investigator of the Grozny District Prosecutor's
Office adjourned the investigation of criminal case no. 56192 for
failure to identify the persons responsible for the crime.
- On
14 October 2005 the SRJI, acting on the applicants' behalf, asked the
Grozny District Prosecutor's Office and the Chechnya Prosecutor's
Office to inform it, and/or the relatives of the missing and killed
men from Chechen-Aul, about the status of the investigation. They
also asked the prosecutor's office to allow the relatives access to
the case file. In its letter the SRJI reminded the prosecutor's
office of its obligations under the Code of Criminal Procedure and
the Convention to inform the victims of progress in the
investigation.
- The
applicants submitted they had not been informed of the progress of
the proceedings and that they had no effective access to the
investigation file.
- In
April 2008 the applicants' representatives informed the Court that
the sixth applicant, the wife of Aslan Israilov and sister of Umalat
Abayev, had moved outside the Russian Federation following several
instances of harassment of her family in 2004 by masked men in
camouflage uniforms. She and one of her minor children had suffered
from psychological trauma and required medical assistance, as
attested by medical documents.
F. Information from the Government
- In
their observations the Government did not dispute the information
concerning the investigation of the deaths of Magomed Shakhgiriyev,
Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov, Umalat Abayev, Aslan Israilov and
Khasin Yunusov as submitted by the applicants. Relying on information
obtained from the Prosecutor General's Office, they referred to a
number of other procedural steps taken by the investigation which had
not been mentioned by the applicants. However, despite specific
requests from the Court, the Government did not submit copies of most
of the documents to which they referred (see below).
1. Investigation into the kidnappings of 23 October 2002
- As
regards the investigation into the kidnapping of the applicants' four
relatives on 23 October 2002, the Government stated that on the same
day the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office had opened investigation
file no. 56166 upon an application by Umalat Abayev's mother and
by the head of the Chechen-Aul administration. The investigation had
initially been opened to investigate the charges of kidnapping
committed by a group, but was later altered to include the charges of
kidnapping of several persons, committed with the use of violence,
destruction of property, robbery and armed robbery.
- The
Government submitted that on 25 October 2002 the head of military
unit no. 3671 had informed the investigation that the servicemen
of that unit had not taken part in any military operations in
Chechen-Aul and that no military vehicles of the Argun military
commander's office had been used for these purposes.
- In
November 2002 the Gudermes District Prosecutor's Office received
applications from Umalat Abayev's mother about the kidnapping of her
son, as well as the theft of money, an audio player and documents for
a car. They also received an application from the head of the Chechen
branch of Gazprom about the kidnapping of its employee Mr Magomadov.
- Immediately
after the finding of five bodies, on 8 November 2002 the Gudermes
District Prosecutor's Office opened criminal investigation file
no. 57103 in respect of the aggravated murder of several
persons. According to the Government, the investigators had examined
the site where the bodies had been discovered, carried out forensic
examinations, produced ballistic expert reports and questioned the
person who had found the bodies, as well as the head of the village
administration of Darbanbakhi. On 10 November 2002 the forensic
expert reports were produced for the five bodies. They concluded that
the deaths could have been caused by gunfire wounds to the heads. One
bullet found together with the bodies had been submitted for a
ballistic report, which concluded on 19 November 2002 that it had
been fired from a Russian-made PM or APS pistol.
- On
10 January 2003 the two criminal cases were joined as file no. 56166.
- The
investigators questioned a number of applicants and other relatives
of the victims. The first applicant was questioned and granted victim
status on 25 December 2002. She gave statements relating to the
kidnapping of her son, Magomed Shakhgiriyev, and the subsequent
finding of his body in the Gudermes district. She had identified the
body of her son in the village cemetery on 9 November 2002. On 17
January 2006 the investigation questioned Magomed Shakhgiriyev's
father, who explained that on 23 October 2002 a group of armed men
had taken away his son and his friend, R.Z., from their house. On 9
November 2002 he had identified both his son and R.Z. among the five
bodies brought to the village cemetery.
- On
23 October 2002 the investigators questioned the second applicant,
Ali Magomadov's wife, who was granted victim status on 25 December
2002. She explained that during the night she had heard noise in the
courtyard and had seen about ten armed men wearing masks. They had
asked if there were any men in the house and had driven her husband
away in a Ural truck. She specified that the “military”
had spoken unaccented Russian between themselves. Later her husband's
body had been discovered. It had been identified by her husband's
sister.
- Also
on 23 October 2002 the investigators questioned Ismail Umarov's
mother and wife and granted victim status to the latter. Both women
stated that at about 5 a.m. on 23 October 2002 about ten men armed
with automatic weapons and wearing camouflage uniforms, using two UAZ
vehicles, had entered their house and taken away Ismail Umarov. She
was again questioned on 12 January 2006. The fourth applicant, Ismail
Umarov's sister, was questioned on 19 December 2002. She confirmed
the statements about her brother's abduction. On 8 December 2005
Islam Umarov's brother testified that on 9 November 2002 he had
identified his brother's body in the village cemetery. The body had
haematomas and abrasions, but he had not noticed any firearm wounds.
- Umalat
Abayev's mother was questioned on 23 October 2002 and on 11 January
2006. During her first interview she stated that her son had been
detained by a group of about 20 armed men wearing camouflage
uniforms, who had placed him in an APC and had also searched the
house. They had also taken away family property and some documents.
She had also noted a UAZ vehicle in the street. On 25 December 2002
she was granted the status of victim in the proceedings. Later,
Umalat Abayev's body had been discovered in the Gudermes district.
His mother had identified him and described a wound to the back of
the head and an abrasion on the left side of the face.
- According
to the Government, on 23 October 2002 the investigators questioned a
son of M.Zh., who stated that on that night his father had been taken
away by unknown armed men, who had first checked their documents.
M.Zh.'s wife gave similar statements on 23 October 2002. They also
specified that they saw Ural trucks and UAZ cars in the street. The
same men had taken the family's VAZ-2107 car and an audio player. On
17 September 2003 M.Zh.'s wife was granted victim status. On an
unspecified date M.Zh. was also questioned and granted victim status.
He stated that on that date a group of about 30 armed men had entered
their courtyard, checked their documents and ordered them to lie on
the ground in the courtyard. Then he had been blindfolded and placed
in a car, together with some other fellow villagers, including his
neighbour Ali Magomadov. He, Ali Magomadov and four other persons
from their village had been kept in a former bath house for two days.
Then everyone except for himself and A.Zh. had been taken away and he
and A.Zh. had been released and had returned home. Later he had
learnt that other persons who had been kidnapped had been found dead.
On 11 January 2006 M.Zh. brought a civil claim, in the same
proceedings, relating to the theft of his property.
- A.Zh.
was questioned on 9 November 2002 and granted victim status. He was
again questioned on 1 December 2005. He stated that in the evening of
23 October 2002 he had been coming home and had been stopped in the
street by unknown armed persons. He had been taken to an unknown
location, where he had stayed for three days. He had not been
ill-treated.
- According
to the Government, the investigators also questioned relatives and
neighbours of S.Yu., who had also been kidnapped on 23 October
2002 and whose whereabouts had not been established. Some of the
witnesses referred to the UAZ vehicles used by the perpetrators. His
relatives explained that a large group of armed men in camouflage
uniforms had entered their house, asked if they had any weapons,
beaten up three brothers from the Yu. family and when one of them,
S.Yu., had tried to escape, had shot at him and wounded him. He had
been dragged into the UAZ vehicle and driven away. The same men, who
had spoken Russian and Chechen among themselves, had taken 500 United
States dollars from their house. His mother had been granted victim
status on 25 December 2002.
- Furthermore,
the Government stated that the identity and place of residence of the
eighth person kidnapped on that day, R.Z., could not be established.
No one had applied to the law-enforcement authorities in relation to
his kidnapping and his relatives could not be identified.
- Among
the documents submitted by the Government, one witness statement made
in April 2006 by a neighbour of the Shakhgiriyevs, I.S., contained
the following information:
“At about 2-3 a.m. on 23 October 2002 I was at
home and heard noise in the street. I looked outside and saw men
running around wearing camouflage uniforms. I didn't go out, because
we are afraid of the military. In the morning I learnt that during
the night masked men in military camouflage uniforms had come to the
Shakhgiriyevs' house. They came in one APC and two or three UAZ cars.
The military broke the gates with the APC and entered into the
courtyard. They did not let anyone enter. There were more than 25 of
them, all armed with automatic weapons. They took away [seven men]
from our village. They collected them from all over Chechen-Aul. ...
The men in camouflage uniforms carried out their operation in ten or
15 minutes, i.e. they broke the gates, took the men and left. They
spoke Russian among themselves. I did not note the numbers on the
cars and vehicles. ...”
- From
the documents submitted by the Government and from their
observations, it follows that in 2006, within the same set of
criminal proceedings, the investigators questioned and granted victim
status to other persons whose property had been damaged on 23 October
2002. On 10 January 2006 the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office
granted victim status and the status of civil claimant to Zhabrail
Kh. on the following grounds:
“It has been established that on 23 October 2002
at about 3 a.m. in the village of Chechen-Aul in the Grozny district,
in the course of a special operation being carried out in the said
village, the servicemen fired at the house situated at 31
Ordzhionikidze Street, the property of Zhabrail Kh. As a result of
opening fire, a stallion belonging to Zhabrail Kh. was killed in the
barn.”
- On
11 January 2006 the same investigating authority granted victim
status and the status of civil claimant to Gulnara E. on the
following grounds:
“On 23 October 2002 at about 4 a.m. unknown
persons wearing camouflage uniforms and masks, armed with automatic
weapons, committed arson in a room in the house and exploded a hand
grenade in another room of the house situated at 83 Lenina
Street, by which pecuniary damage in the amount of 45,000 roubles and
non-pecuniary damage was caused to Gulnara E.”
- As
indicated in the documents submitted by the Government, the same
investigation also dealt with the kidnapping and murder on 27 October
2002 in Chechen-Aul of Ismail G., born in 1977, and Isa G., born in
1966, committed by “unidentified armed persons in camouflage
uniforms”.
- It
further appears that a number of applicants, their relatives and
neighbours were additionally questioned in January 2006 and gave
statements confirming the above descriptions of the kidnappings, the
theft of property and the subsequent discovery of the bodies.
2. Investigation into the disappearance of three men on 3 November
2002
- The
Government submitted that on 15 December 2002 criminal investigation
file no. 56192 had been opened by the Grozny District
Prosecutor's Office. The murder investigation under Article 105 of
the Criminal Code had been opened on the basis of a complaint by
Khasin Yunusov's sister concerning the disappearance of her brother.
- The
investigation established that on 3 November 2002 Khasin Yunusov and
his two friends Aslan Israilov and Adash A. had left Chechen-Aul in
Yunusov's Gazel vehicle.
- Among
the documents submitted by the Government, on 11 November 2002 a
waitress from a roadside café testified that on 3 November
2002 she had served lunch to three men, one of them Khasin Yunusov.
They had talked about a special operation in Chechen-Aul and Khankala
and were in a hurry. They had then left in the direction of the
village of Petropavlovskaya. On the same day an employee of a petrol
station located at the same place testified that Khasin Yunusov had
bought gasoline for his Gazel vehicle there.
- In
December 2002 the Chechnya Department of the Interior carried out an
internal investigation into the disappearance of its staff member
Khasin Yunusov. It did not establish his whereabouts and the Grozny
ROVD concluded that Khasin Yunusov's disappearance could be linked to
the latter's professional service.
- On
18 April 2003 three male bodies with signs of violent death were
found near the village of Berdykel of the Grozny district. On the
same day the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office opened criminal
investigation file no. 42076 in respect of aggravated murder
(paragraph two of Article 105 of the Criminal Code). Later the
three bodies had been identified as those missing from 3 November
2002.
- On
10 May 2003 the two criminal cases were joined as file no. 56192.
- On
13 May 2003 the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office obtained the
report of the examination of the site where the three bodies had been
found, compiled by the servicemen of military unit no. 20112
(the Khankala military base). The report stated that the bodies had
been found in a quarry near the village of Khankala with signs of
advanced decomposition. The body no. 1 had the left leg missing
from the knee joint down, and bodies nos. 2 and 3 had the right
feet missing.
- Forensic
reports found that the three bodies had perforating wounds to the
head, chest and neck, which could have caused the deaths. It is
unclear if any other injuries were mentioned. The Government did not
submit copies of these reports and did not specify whether they had
established the time of the deaths.
- According
to the Government, at some point the investigators questioned Khasin
Yunusov's brother, who confirmed that his brother had been missing
since 3 November 2002. He also stated that three months after that
the frame of his brother's vehicle had been found in a forest. On
5 April 2003 the witness had learnt of the discovery of three
unidentified bodies. He and a brother of Aslan Israilov had
identified the bodies of their relatives, as well as the body of
Adash A. All three bodies had parts of their legs missing below the
knee.
- At
some point the investigation questioned Umalat Abayev's mother, who
stated that the three men had been involved in the search of those
kidnapped on 23 October 2002. Aslan Israilov had told her that on
3 November 2002 they had arranged a meeting with a man named
“Ilyas” in Khankala, who could help in obtaining the
release of her son and other detainees. On the same day she learnt
that a helicopter had been downed above Khankala, following which all
transport movement had been restricted. She had managed to return
home, while her son-in-law Aslan Israilov had not returned. Six
months later his body, together with the bodies of Khasin Yunusov and
Adash A., had been found near Khankala with signs of violent death.
- According
to the Government, other relatives of the three missing men were
questioned and granted victim status on unspecified dates. They gave
similar statements and testified that they had no information about
their relatives' deaths. Khasin Yunusov's sister was granted victim
status on 31 March 2003. His mother was also questioned and
granted victim status on an unspecified date. Aslan Israilov's
brother and Adash A.'s mother were also questioned and granted victim
status at some point.
- The
Government stated that the sixth and seventh applicants, the sisters
of Umalat Abayev and Khasin Yunusov respectively, had not been
granted victim status in the proceedings because they had never
applied to the law-enforcement bodies with such requests. The
Government also noted that the victims had been informed about the
progress of the investigation and that they had never requested to be
informed of the results of the forensic expert reports.
- On
8 May 2003 the head of the Chechen-Aul administration confirmed the
information from the relatives concerning the disappearance of three
men on 3 November 2002 and the subsequent discovery of their bodies.
The Government submitted a copy of his witness statement.
- In
addition, the investigation questioned five other persons. The
Government did not provide any other information in relation to these
witnesses.
- The
Government also submitted that the investigation had not been made
aware of the relatives' allegations to the Court that the three men
had been detained in the vicinity of Minutka Square on 3 November
2002. The investigators would take steps in order to check this
information.
3. Conclusions in relation to both investigation files
- In
relation to both investigation files, the Government submitted that
they had failed to identify the persons who had committed the crimes.
The investigating authorities sent requests for information to the
competent State agencies in November and December 2002, March 2003,
December 2005, and January and April 2006. The investigation found no
evidence to support the involvement of the “special branches of
the power structures” (специальных
подразделений
силовых
структур)
in the crimes. The law-enforcement authorities of Chechnya had never
arrested or detained the applicants' relatives on criminal or
administrative charges and had not carried out a criminal
investigation in respect of them. The Ministry of the Interior and
the FSB had no information about the involvement of the kidnapped men
with illegal armed groups or any other serious crimes. The
investigation also found out that no special operations had been
carried out in respect of the applicants' relatives and that no
military vehicles had been assigned by the military commander's
office for that purpose.
- In
their submissions the Government stated that the investigation in
both cases carried out by the Grozny District Prosecutor's Office had
been adjourned and reopened on numerous occasions, owing to the fact
that the perpetrators of the crimes could not be identified. The
progress of both cases was monitored by the Prosecutor General's
Office. The persons who had victim status in the proceedings had been
regularly informed of their progress.
- As
indicated in the documents submitted by the Government, between
23 October 2002 and April 2008 the investigation in case
no. 56166 concerning the murder of Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali
Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev was adjourned at least six
times, and every time the investigation was later reopened by
prosecutors. The investigation in case no. 56192 concerning the
murders of Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov was adjourned and
reopened four times between November 2002 and April 2006.
- Despite
specific requests by the Court, the Government failed to disclose
most of the material in criminal files nos. 56166 and 56192,
providing only copies of decisions to suspend and resume the
investigation and to grant victim status, as well as of the
relatives' applications to the district prosecutor's office and
notifications to the relatives about the adjournment and reopening of
the proceedings. They also submitted two witness statements, as
indicated above. Relying on the information obtained from the
Prosecutor General's Office, the Government stated that the
investigation was in progress and that disclosure of the documents
would be in violation of Article 161 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, since the file contained information of a military nature
and personal data concerning the witnesses or other participants in
the criminal proceedings.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
- For
a summary of relevant domestic law see Akhmadova and Sadulayeva v.
Russia, no. 40464/02, § 67-69, 10 May 2007.
THE LAW
I. THE GOVERNMENT'S PRELIMINARY OBJECTION
A. Arguments of the parties
- The
Government contended that the complaint should be declared
inadmissible for non-exhaustion of domestic remedies. They submitted
that the investigation into the disappearance of Magomed
Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov, Umalat Abayev, Aslan
Israilov and Khasin Yunusov had not yet been completed. They argued
that it had been open to the applicants to challenge in court any
actions or omissions of the investigating or other law-enforcement
authorities, but that they had not availed themselves of any such
remedy. They referred to several examples when domestic courts had
allowed complaints by victims in criminal proceedings and obliged the
investigative authorities to carry out certain steps. They also
argued that it was open to the applicants to pursue civil complaints.
- The
applicants contested that objection. With reference to the Court's
practice, they argued that they had not been obliged to apply to the
courts in order to exhaust domestic remedies. They stated that the
criminal investigation had proved to be ineffective and that their
complaints to that effect had been futile.
B. The Court's assessment
- In
the present case, the Court took no decision about the exhaustion of
domestic remedies at the admissibility stage, having found that this
question was too closely linked to the merits. It will now proceed to
examine the arguments of the parties in the light of the provisions
of the Convention and its relevant practice (for a relevant summary,
see Estamirov and Others v. Russia, no. 60272/00, § 73-74,
12 October 2006).
- The
Court notes that the Russian legal system provides, in principle, two
avenues of recourse for the victims of illegal and criminal acts
attributable to the State or its agents, namely civil and criminal
remedies.
- As
regards a civil action to obtain redress for damage sustained through
the alleged illegal acts or unlawful conduct of State agents, this
procedure alone cannot be regarded as an effective remedy in the
context of claims brought under Article 2 of the Convention (see
Khashiyev and Akayeva v. Russia, nos. 57942/00 and
57945/00, §§ 119-121, 24 February 2005, and Estamirov
and Others, cited above, § 77). In the light of the
above, the Court confirms that the applicants were not obliged to
pursue civil remedies. The preliminary objection in this regard is
thus dismissed.
- As
regards criminal-law remedies, the Court observes that two sets of
investigations into the disappearances have been pending since
October and December 2002. The applicants and the Government
disagreed as to their effectiveness.
- The
Court considers that this limb of the Government's preliminary
objection raises issues concerning the effectiveness of the criminal
investigation which are closely linked to the merits of the
applicants' complaints. Thus, it considers that these matters fall to
be examined below under the substantive provisions of the Convention.
II. THE COURT'S ASSESSMENT OF THE EVIDENCE AND THE
ESTABLISHMENT OF THE FACTS
A. The parties' arguments
- The
applicants maintained that it was beyond reasonable doubt that
Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov, Umalat Abayev,
Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov had been taken away and then killed
by State agents. The applicants submitted that their relatives had
been detained by servicemen in the course of sweeping operations in
Chechen-Aul and in Grozny. They had then been deprived of their
lives, while still under the full control of State representatives.
The applicants also noted that the State had failed to advance any
other version of the events or to disclose documents from the
criminal investigation files which could shed light on the
circumstances of the deaths, and invited the Court to draw the
relevant inferences.
- The
Government submitted that on 23 October 2002 “unidentified
masked men in camouflage uniforms armed with machine guns” had
abducted Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and
Umalat Abayev. They further contended that the investigation into the
incident was still pending, that there was no evidence that the men
had been State agents and that there were therefore no grounds for
holding the State liable for the alleged violations of the
applicants' rights. No information had been obtained by the
investigation about the carrying out of special operations in
Chechen-Aul on that day. They also referred to some other criminal
investigations where gangs in Chechnya had been equipped with
camouflage uniforms, weapons and forged documents belonging to
members of the security forces. They also noted that the witnesses
had said that some of the abductors had spoken among themselves in
Chechen.
- As
to the disappearance on 3 November 2002 of Aslan Israilov and
Khasin Yunusov, the Government stressed that the documents in the
criminal investigation file had contained no information about the
latter's detention in Grozny. The applicants and other relatives of
the missing men had never informed the investigating authorities
about the alleged detention of their relatives during a sweeping
operation in Grozny. Furthermore, they drew the Court's attention to
the fact that, according to the conclusions of the internal
investigation carried out by the Ministry of the Interior in relation
to the disappearance of its staff member Khasin Yunusov, his death
had been linked to the carrying out of his professional duties. In
such circumstances, there were no reasons to suspect that the State
agents had been implicated in his abduction and murder.
B. Article 38 § 1 (a) and consequent
inferences drawn by the Court
- The
Court has on many occasions reiterated that the Contracting States
are required to furnish all necessary facilities to the Court and
that a failure on a Government's part to submit information which is
in their hands, without a satisfactory explanation, may reflect
negatively on the level of compliance by a respondent State with its
obligations under Article 38 § 1 (a) of the
Convention (see Timurtaş v. Turkey, no. 23531/94,
§ 66, ECHR 2000-VI).
- In
the present case the applicants alleged that their relatives had been
illegally arrested and then killed by servicemen. They also alleged
that no proper investigation had taken place. In view of these
allegations, the Court asked the Government to produce documents from
the file on the criminal investigation opened in relation to the
kidnapping. The evidence contained in that file was regarded by the
Court as crucial to the establishment of the facts in the present
case.
- The
Government confirmed the principal facts as submitted by the
applicants. They refused to disclose most of the documents from the
criminal investigation files, relying on Article 161 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. The Government also argued that the Court's
procedure contained no guarantees of the confidentiality of
documents, in the absence of sanctions for applicants in the event of
a breach of confidentiality. They also argued that the applicants
were represented by foreign nationals who could not be brought to
account in Russia in the event of such a breach. Lastly, the
Government argued that by providing detailed information about the
progress of the investigation and some documents from the criminal
investigation files, they had complied with their obligations under
Article 38 § 1 (a).
- The
Court notes that Rule 33 § 2 of the Rules of Court
permits a restriction on the principle of the public character of
documents deposited with the Court for legitimate purposes, such as
the protection of national security, the private life of the parties
or the interests of justice. The Court cannot speculate as to whether
the information contained in the criminal investigation file in the
present case was indeed of such nature, since the Government did not
request the application of this Rule and it is the obligation of the
party requesting confidentiality to substantiate its request.
- The
Court further notes that it has already found on a number of
occasions that the provisions of Article 161 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure do not preclude the disclosure of documents from a pending
investigation file, but rather set out a procedure for and limits to
such disclosure (see Mikheyev v. Russia, no. 77617/01,
§ 104, 26 January 2006, and Imakayeva v. Russia,
no. 7615/02, § 123, ECHR 2006 XIII). For these
reasons the Court considers the Government's explanation insufficient
to justify the withholding of the key information requested by it.
- As
to the Government's argument that they had complied with the
requirements of Article 38 § 1 (a) by
providing a summary of the investigative steps and some documents
from the investigation files requested, the Court reiterates that in
cases where the applicants raise the issue of the effectiveness of
the investigation, the documents of the criminal investigation are
fundamental to the establishment of facts and their absence may
prejudice the Court's proper examination of the complaint both at the
admissibility and at the merits stage (see Tanrıkulu
v. Turkey [GC], no. 23763/94, § 70, ECHR 1999 IV).
The Court would also stress in this regard that the evaluation of the
evidence and the establishment of the facts is a matter for the
Court, and it is incumbent on it to decide on the evidentiary value
of the documents submitted to it (see Çelikbilek v. Turkey,
no. 27693/95, § 71, 31 May 2005).
- Reiterating
the importance of a respondent Government's cooperation in Convention
proceedings, the Court finds that there has been a breach of the
obligation laid down in Article 38 § 1 (a) of the
Convention to furnish all necessary facilities to assist the Court in
its task of establishing the facts.
C. The Court's evaluation of the facts
- The
Court observes that it has developed a number of general principles
relating to the establishment of facts in dispute, in particular when
faced with allegations of disappearance under Article 2 of the
Convention (for a summary of these, see Bazorkina v. Russia,
no. 69481/01, §§ 103-109, 27 July 2006). The Court
also notes that the conduct of the parties when evidence is being
obtained has to be taken into account (see Ireland v. the
United Kingdom, 18 January 1978, § 161, Series A
no. 25). In view of this, and bearing in mind the principles
referred to above, the Court finds that it can draw inferences from
the Government's conduct in respect of the well-foundedness of the
applicants' allegations. The Court will thus proceed to examine
crucial elements in the present case that should be taken into
account when deciding whether the deaths of the applicants' relatives
can be attributed to the authorities.
1. As regards Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov,
Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev
- The
applicants alleged that the persons who had taken Magomed
Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev away on
23 October 2002 and then killed them had been State agents.
- The
Government suggested in their submission that the persons who had
detained Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and
Umalat Abayev could have been members of paramilitary groups.
However, this allegation was not specific and they did not submit any
material to support it. The reference to other criminal cases where
members of criminal gangs had used camouflage uniforms or forged
documents does not invalidate the information collected in the
present case attesting to the carrying out of a security operation.
Furthermore, from the information reviewed by the Court it does not
appear that the domestic investigation has ever considered this
possibility.
- The
Court notes that, on the contrary, the applicants' version of the
events is supported by the witness statements collected by the
applicants and by the investigation. The applicant and the neighbours
stated that the perpetrators had acted in a manner similar to that of
a security operation – they had checked the residents' identity
documents, and they had spoken Russian among themselves and to the
residents. Some witnesses also referred to the use of military
vehicles such as APCs, which could not be available to paramilitary
groups (see, for example, paragraphs 91 and 93 above). In the only
witness statement produced by the Government from the investigation
file no. 56166, the witness referred to them as “military”
(see paragraph 96 above). In their applications to the authorities
the applicants consistently maintained that their relatives had been
detained by unknown servicemen and requested the investigation to
look into that possibility. Finally, some of the documents issued by
the investigation directly mentioned the carrying out of a security
operation (see paragraph 99 above).
- The
Court finds that the fact that a large group of armed men in uniform
during curfew hours, equipped with military vehicles, was able to
move freely through military roadblocks and proceeded to check
identity documents and to arrest several persons at their homes in an
urban area strongly supports the applicants' allegation that these
were State servicemen. The other detainees' accounts about the
circumstances of their detention and release support this conclusion.
The domestic investigation also accepted factual assumptions as
presented by the applicants and took steps to check the involvement
of law-enforcement bodies in the arrest. The investigation was unable
to establish which precise military or security units had carried out
the operation, but it does not appear that any serious steps were
taken in that direction.
- The
Court observes that where the applicants make out a prima facie
case and the Court is prevented from reaching factual conclusions
owing to the lack of such documents, it is for the Government to
argue conclusively why the documents in question cannot serve to
corroborate the allegations made by the applicants, or to provide a
satisfactory and convincing explanation of how the events in question
occurred. The burden of proof is thus shifted to the Government and
if they fail in their arguments, issues will arise under Article 2
and/or Article 3 (see Toğcu v. Turkey, no. 27601/95,
§ 95, 31 May 2005, and Akkum and Others v. Turkey,
no. 21894/93, § 211, ECHR 2005 II).
- Taking
into account the above elements, the Court is satisfied that the
applicants have made a prima facie case that their relatives
were detained by State servicemen. The Government's statement that
the investigation did not find any evidence to support the
involvement of the special forces in the abduction is insufficient to
discharge them from the above-mentioned burden of proof. Drawing
inferences from the Government's failure to submit the documents
which were in their exclusive possession or to provide another
plausible explanation of the events in question, the Court considers
that Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat
Abayev were arrested on 3 November 2002 at their homes in
Chechen-Aul by State servicemen during an unacknowledged security
operation.
- The
bodies of the five detained men, including four of the applicants'
relatives, were discovered on 8 November 2002 in a forest. The
forensic documents cited by the Government and witness statements
attest that the deaths were violent, referring to gunshot wounds to
the heads.
- The
next point to be considered by the Court is whether there is a causal
link between the arrest of the four men by State servicemen and their
deaths. The Court reiterates in this connection that where the events
in issue lie wholly, or in large part, within the exclusive knowledge
of the authorities, such as in cases where persons are under their
control in custody, strong presumptions of fact will arise in respect
of injuries and death occurring during that detention. Indeed, the
burden of proof may be regarded as resting on the authorities to
provide a satisfactory and convincing explanation (see, among many
authorities, Tomasi v. France, 27 August 1992,
Series A no. 241-A, §§ 108-11, and Avşar v. Turkey,
no. 25657/94, § 392, ECHR 2001 VII).
- In
the present case there was no news of the four men between their
apprehension on 23 October 2002 and the finding of their bodies on
8 November 2002. The Court also notes that although forensic
expert examinations have been carried out on the bodies, it does not
appear that they established the dates of the deaths with any degree
of precision.
- The
Government did not dispute the circumstances of the finding of the
bodies. The link between the kidnappings and deaths has furthermore
been assumed in the domestic proceedings, and the Court takes this
into account. The Government have not given any version of events
differing from the one presented by the applicants.
- The
Court finds that the facts of the present case strongly suggest that
the deaths of these detainees were part of the same sequence of
events as their apprehension and support the assumption that they
were extrajudicially executed by State agents. In these
circumstances, the Court finds that the State bears the
responsibility for the deaths of the applicants' four relatives.
- For
the above reasons the Court considers that it has been established
beyond reasonable doubt that Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov,
Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev were killed following their
unacknowledged detention by State servicemen.
2. As regards Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov
- The
applicants likewise submitted that Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov
had been unlawfully detained by State servicemen on 3 November 2002,
allegedly in Grozny. They had later been killed by the same
servicemen and their bodies had been found in the vicinity of the
Khankala military base. The Government regarded this version as
unfounded. They reiterated that the applicants had not given this
information to the investigation and that Khasin Yunusov's death had
been found to be linked to his professional activities as a member of
the police force.
- The
Court observes that it has found the Russian State authorities
responsible for extrajudicial executions or disappearances of
civilians in the Chechen Republic in a number of cases, even in the
absence of final conclusions from the domestic investigation (see,
among other examples, Bazorkina, cited above; Imakayeva,
cited above; Luluyev and Others v. Russia, no. 69480/01,
ECHR 2006 XIII; Baysayeva v. Russia, no. 74237/01,
5 April 2007; Akhmadova and Sadulayeva v. Russia, cited above;
and Alikhadzhiyeva v. Russia, no. 68007/01, 5 July
2007). It has done so primarily on the basis of witness statements
and other documents attesting to the presence of military or security
personnel in the area concerned at the relevant time. It has relied
on references to military vehicles and equipment, on other
information on security operations and on the undisputed effective
control of the areas in question by the Russian military. On that
basis, it has concluded that the areas in question were “within
the exclusive control of the authorities of the State” in view
of the military or security operations being conducted there and the
presence of servicemen (see, mutatis mutandis, Akkum and
Others, cited above, § 211, and Zubayrayev v.
Russia, no. 67797/01, § 82, 10 January 2008).
- However,
in the present case the Court has little evidence on which to draw
such conclusions. The only verifiable information about the
applicant's two relatives indicates that they were last seen in the
afternoon of 3 November 2002 on the road between Grozny and
Tolstoy-Yurt. The exact circumstances or the timing of their alleged
abduction and death have not been elucidated.
- The
Court notes that some information about the alleged detention of the
applicants' two relatives on 3 November 2002 was indeed communicated
by them to the authorities. In particular, the undated letter from
the village authorities and the letter of 7 November 2002 from the
seventh applicant stated that the three men had been illegally
arrested in Minutka Square in Grozny and that they had been detained
in the Khankala military base (see paragraphs 66 and 67 above).
However, the applicants could not point to any more specific
information concerning the alleged kidnapping. They themselves were
not eyewitnesses to the events, and no witnesses were ever identified
by them or by the investigation. The seventh applicant's letter
referred to “rumours” as the basis of her suspicion that
her husband had been detained in the Khankala military base.
Furthermore, from the documents reviewed by the Court it does not
appear that the applicants informed the investigation about the
alleged link between the disappearance of their relatives and the
security operations in Grozny following the downing of the
helicopter, which they assumed in the submissions to the Court. Nor
does it appear that they ever relayed to the investigating
authorities the information about the meetings with the head of the
village administration and the head of the Grozny ROVD (see paragraph
67 above).
- The
bodies of the three missing men were found six months later with
signs of violent death, but there is no information allowing the
Court to draw inferences about the implication of State agents in
their deaths to the extent proposed by the applicants. The fact that
the bodies were found several hundred metres away from the fence of
the military base cannot serve as the sole basis for such a
conclusion, since it was not alleged that the area in question had
been guarded by the military servicemen or could otherwise be
described as being under their “undisputed effective control”.
Nor has this link been assumed in the domestic investigation, which,
on the contrary, connected Khasin Yunusov's death with his service in
the police force.
- Taking
the above into account, the Court finds that it has not been
established to the required standard of proof of “beyond
reasonable doubt” that the security forces were implicated in
the deaths of Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov. Nor can the Court
conclude that in the present case the burden of proof can be entirely
shifted to the Government.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 2 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained under Article 2 of the Convention that their
relatives had been killed after having been detained by Russian
servicemen and that the domestic authorities had failed to carry out
an effective investigation of the matter. Article 2 reads:
“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.
2. Deprivation of life shall not be regarded
as inflicted in contravention of this article when it results from
the use of force which is no more than absolutely necessary:
(a) in defence of any person from unlawful
violence;
(b) in order to effect a lawful arrest or to
prevent the escape of a person lawfully detained;
(c) in action lawfully taken for the purpose
of quelling a riot or insurrection.”
A. Alleged violation of the right to life of Magomed
Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev
- The
Court has already found it established that the applicants'
relatives' deaths can be attributed to the State. In the absence of
any justification in respect of the use of lethal force by State
agents, the Court finds that there has been a violation of Article 2
in respect of Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and
Umalat Abayev.
B. Alleged violation of the right to life of Aslan
Israilov and Khasin Yunusov
- The
Court has established above that, in the absence of relevant
information, it is unable to find that the security forces were
implicated in the deaths of the applicants' relatives. In such
circumstances the Court finds no State responsibility and thus no
violation of the substantive limb of Article 2 in respect of Aslan
Israilov and Khasin Yunusov.
C. Alleged inadequacy of the investigation into the
abduction of Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and
Umalat Abayev
- The
applicants argued that the investigation had not been effective and
adequate, as required by the Court's case-law on Article 2. They
noted that it had been adjourned and reopened a number of times and
that the taking of the most basic steps had thus been protracted, and
that the applicants had not been informed properly of the most
important investigative steps. They argued that the fact that the
investigation had been pending for such a long period of time without
producing any known results had been further proof of its
ineffectiveness. The applicants invited the Court to draw conclusions
from the Government's unjustified failure to submit the documents
from the case file to them or to the Court.
- The
Government claimed that the investigation into the disappearance of
the applicants' relatives met the Convention requirement of
effectiveness, as all measures envisaged in national law were being
taken to identify the perpetrators. They argued that the decisions to
adjourn and to reopen the investigation signified that the
authorities had continued to take steps in order to resolve the
crime. They also noted that the investigation had been opened on the
same day as the kidnapping, and that on that day a large number of
witnesses had been questioned, that the prosecutor's office had
forwarded numerous information requests to various bodies, trying to
check the applicants' version of the events. The absence of results
could not be treated as a breach of the positive obligations under
Article 2, which entailed an obligation to use particular means.
- The
Court has developed a number of guiding principles to be followed for
an investigation to comply with the Convention's requirements (for a
summary of these principles see Bazorkina, cited above,
§§ 117-119).
- In
the present case, an investigation of the abduction was carried out.
The Court must assess whether that investigation met the requirements
of Article 2 of the Convention.
- The
Court notes at the outset that most of the documents from the
investigation were not disclosed by the Government. It therefore has
to assess the effectiveness of the investigation on the basis of the
few documents submitted by the parties and the information about its
progress produced by the Government.
- Turning
to the facts of the case, the Court notes that the authorities were
immediately aware of the crime through the applicants' submissions.
The investigation was opened on 23 October 2002. It also appears that
on that day and within the following days some applicants, members of
the detained men's families and their neighbours were questioned and
the scene of the crime inspected. On 25 October 2002 the local
military commander's office informed the investigation that none of
its servicemen had been involved in the special operation in
question. Following the discovery and identification of the five
bodies on 8 November 2002, a new investigation was opened. Within the
following days the site of the crime was examined, two witnesses were
questioned and forensic and ballistic expert examinations were
carried out. Members of the kidnapped men's families were granted
victim status between October and December 2002. However, it appears
that after that a number of crucial steps were delayed and were
eventually taken only after the communication of the complaint to the
respondent Government, or not at all.
- In
particular, the Court notes that, as appears from the documents and
information provided by the Government, many eyewitnesses and other
victims of the events were questioned in 2006 (see paragraphs 96, 99
and 100 above).
- A
number of essential steps were never taken. First, it does not appear
that the investigation attempted to find out whether any special
operations had been carried out in Chechen-Aul on the night in
question, or identified and questioned any of the servicemen who had
carried it out and were involved in the detention of Magomed
Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev, or
their fellow detainees.
- Further,
it does not appear that the investigation fully established the
circumstances of the applicants' relatives' deaths. Even though a
forensic examination of the bodies was carried out, it does not
appear that it established the timing of the deaths or that it
addressed any injuries except for firearm wounds, as described by the
relatives and a medical doctor in Chechen-Aul (see paragraphs 46 and
47 above). There has been no explanation for the difference in the
results communicated by the Government, according to which the deaths
of all the victims had been caused by firearm wounds, and the medical
report issued by the Chechen-Aul medical service to the effect that
that the death of Ali Magomadov had resulted from strangulation and
numerous blows (see paragraph 48 above). The Court also notes that
the death certificates issued by the local registration office
indicated 23 October and 9 November 2002 as the dates of the deaths
(see paragraphs 49, 51, 55 and 58 above).
- The
Court also notes that even though some of the applicants and other
relatives of the disappeared men were granted victim status, they
were only informed of the adjournment and reopening of the
proceedings, and not of any other significant developments.
Accordingly, the investigators failed to ensure that the
investigation received the required level of public scrutiny, or to
safeguard the interests of the next of kin in the proceedings.
- Lastly,
the Court notes that the investigation was adjourned and resumed a
number of times and that there were long periods of inactivity during
the years when it was pending.
- The
Government raised the possibility for the applicants to make use of
judicial review of the decisions of the investigating authorities in
the context of exhaustion of domestic remedies. The Court observes
that the applicants, having no access to the case file and not being
properly informed of the progress of the investigation, could not
have effectively challenged actions or omissions of investigating
authorities before a court. Furthermore, the investigation was
resumed by the prosecuting authorities themselves a number of times
owing to the need to take additional investigative steps. However,
they still failed to investigate the applicants' allegations
properly. Moreover, owing to the time that had elapsed since the
events complained of, certain investigative measures that ought
to have been carried out much earlier could no longer usefully be
conducted. Accordingly, the Court finds that the remedy relied
on by the Government was ineffective in the circumstances and
dismisses their preliminary objection as regards the applicant's
failure to exhaust domestic remedies within the context of the
criminal investigation.
- In
the light of the foregoing, the Court holds that the authorities
failed to carry out an effective criminal investigation into the
circumstances surrounding the deaths of Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali
Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev, in breach of Article 2.
D. Alleged inadequacy of the investigation of the
deaths of Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov
- The
applicants further alleged a violation of the positive obligation
under Article 2 to investigate the deaths of Aslan Israilov and
Khasin Yunusov. The Government disputed this allegation.
- The
Court first notes that the authorities were aware of the applicants'
two relatives' disappearance at the latest by 11 November 2002 (see
paragraph 106 above). Nevertheless, the investigation into the murder
was not opened until 15 December 2002. This delay in itself was
liable to affect the investigation of such a serious crime, where
crucial action had to be taken within the first days after the
reported disappearance.
- From
the documents submitted by the Court it does not appear that since
the finding and the identification of the bodies in April 2003 any
progress whatsoever has been made in the investigation of the
murders. It does not appear, for example, that the timing of the
deaths has been established, or that the investigation has taken any
steps at all in order to check the applicants' version, however
vague, that Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov could have been
arrested by servicemen in Grozny or that in November 2002 they could
have been detained at the military base in Khankala. It is true that
the obligation to carry out an effective investigation is not an
obligation of result, but of means. However, any deficiency in the
investigation which undermines its ability to establish the cause of
death of the person will risk falling below this standard (see
Tanrıkulu, cited above, § 109).
- Furthermore,
the Court notes that the applicants were not fully informed about the
progress of the investigation, except for occasional communication to
them of the decisions to reopen and adjourn it. In such
circumstances, and for reasons similar to those listed in paragraph
174 above, the Court finds that the Government's preliminary
objection about the failure to exhaust domestic remedies in the
context of the criminal investigation should be dismissed.
- In
view of the above, and drawing inferences from the Government's
failure to disclose most of the documents from the criminal
investigation file, the Court finds that there has been a violation
of the obligation to carry out an effective investigation into the
deaths of Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants further relied on Article 3 of the Convention, submitting
that as a result of their relatives' abduction and murder and the
State's failure to investigate those events properly, they had
endured mental suffering in breach of Article 3 of the Convention.
Article 3 reads:
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
- The
Government disagreed with these allegations and argued that in the
absence of any evidence suggesting that the applicant's relatives had
been abducted and murdered by representatives of the State, there
were no grounds for alleging a violation of Article 3 of the
Convention on account of the applicant's mental suffering.
- The
Court notes that while a family member of a “disappeared
person” can claim to be a victim of treatment contrary to
Article 3 in view of the suffering endured as a result of uncertainty
about the fate of their relatives and the authorities' inadequate
reaction (see Kurt v. Turkey, 25 May 1998, §§ 130-34,
Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1998-III, and Bazorkina,
cited above, §§ 139-41), the same principle would not
usually apply to cases where the person taken into custody has later
been found dead (see, for example, Tanlı v. Turkey,
no. 26129/95, § 159, ECHR 2001-III). In such cases the
Court would limit its findings to Article 2. However, if a period of
initial disappearance is long it may in certain circumstances give
rise to a separate issue under Article 3 (see Gongadze v. Ukraine,
no. 34056/02, §§ 184-86, ECHR 2005-XI, and Luluyev
and Others, cited above, §§ 114-15).
- In
the present case, in so far as the complaint was brought by the
relatives of Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and
Umalat Abayev, the news of the applicants' relatives' deaths was
preceded by a period of about ten days during which they were deemed
to have disappeared. They immediately notified the authorities of the
kidnappings, and on 23 October 2002, i.e. on the day following the
events, the district prosecutor's office commenced a criminal
investigation. While not doubting that the situation caused the
applicants profound distress and anxiety, the Court does not find, in
the circumstances of the present case, that a separate issue arises
under Article 3 as distinct from its above conclusions
concerning the double violation of Article 2.
- In
so far as the sixth and seventh applicants complained about the
disappearance and deaths of Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov, the
Court notes that it has been unable to reach the conclusion suggested
by the applicants that their two relatives were abducted and killed
by State agents. In view of this, and having already found a
violation of the obligation to investigate effectively under Article
2 of the Convention, the Court does not find that additional
questions arise under Article 3 in the present case.
V. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant further stated that Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov,
Ismail Umarov, Umalat Abayev, Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov had
been detained in violation of the guarantees of Article 5 of the
Convention, which reads, in so far as relevant:
“1. Everyone has the right to liberty
and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save
in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed
by law:...
(c) the lawful arrest or detention of a
person effected for the purpose of bringing him before the competent
legal authority on reasonable suspicion of having committed an
offence or when it is reasonably considered necessary to prevent his
committing an offence or fleeing after having done so;
...
2. Everyone who is arrested shall be informed
promptly, in a language which he understands, of the reasons for his
arrest and of any charge against him.
3. Everyone arrested or detained in
accordance with the provisions of paragraph 1 (c) of this
Article shall be brought promptly before a judge or other officer
authorised by law to exercise judicial power and shall be entitled to
trial within a reasonable time or to release pending trial. Release
may be conditioned by guarantees to appear for trial.
4. Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by
arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which
the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court
and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful.
5. Everyone who has been the victim of arrest
or detention in contravention of the provisions of this Article shall
have an enforceable right to compensation.”
- The
Court has previously noted the fundamental importance of the
guarantees contained in Article 5 to secure the right of individuals
in a democracy to be free from arbitrary detention. It has also
stated that unacknowledged detention is a complete negation of these
guarantees and discloses a very grave violation of Article 5 (see
Çiçek v. Turkey, no. 25704/94, § 164,
27 February 2001, and Luluyev and Others, cited above, § 122).
- The
Court has found it established that Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali
Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev were detained by State
servicemen on 23 October 2002 and then unlawfully deprived of
their lives. Their detention was not acknowledged, was not logged in
any custody records and there exists no official trace of their
subsequent whereabouts or fate.
- Consequently,
the Court finds that Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail
Umarov and Umalat Abayev were held in unacknowledged detention
without any of the safeguards contained in Article 5. This
constitutes a particularly grave violation of the right to liberty
and security enshrined in Article 5 of the Convention.
- In
so far as the complaint concerns Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov,
the Court observes that it has not found it established to the
requisite standard of proof that the two men were detained by
representatives of the State. Therefore, no violation of Article 5
can be found in respect of them.
VI. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 13 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained that they had been deprived of effective
remedies in respect of the aforementioned violations, contrary to
Article 13 of the Convention, which provides:
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth
in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy
before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has
been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”
- The
Government contended that the applicants had had effective remedies
at their disposal as required by Article 13 of the Convention and
that the authorities had not prevented them from using them. They
referred to Article 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which
allowed participants in criminal proceedings to complain to a court
about measures taken during an investigation. This was an effective
remedy to ensure the observation of their rights. They had also not
claimed damages in civil proceedings.
- The
Court reiterates that in circumstances where, as here, the criminal
investigation into the violent deaths was ineffective and the
effectiveness of any other remedy that may have existed, including
civil remedies, was consequently undermined, the State has failed in
its obligation under Article 13 of the Convention (see Khashiyev
and Akayeva, cited above, § 183).
- Consequently,
there has been a violation of Article 13 in conjunction with Article
2 of the Convention.
VII APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Pecuniary damage
- The
applicants claimed damages in respect of the lost wages of their
relatives following their arrests and subsequent deaths. They claimed
that their relatives had been unemployed at the time of their arrest,
or that they were unable to obtain salary statements for them, and
that in such cases the calculation should be made on the basis of the
subsistence level established by national law. They calculated their
earnings for the period, taking into account an average 10% inflation
rate. Their calculations were also based on the actuarial tables for
use in personal injury and fatal accident cases published by the
United Kingdom Government Actuary's Department in 2004 (“Ogden
tables”).
- The
second applicant claimed a total of 429,354 Russian roubles (RUB)
under this heading (12,084 euros (EUR)). She claimed that she could
have counted on 20% of her husband's earnings for herself and 10% for
each of their four children until they reached the age of majority.
- The
third applicant, who retired in 1977, submitted that she could have
counted on 10% of her son's earnings. She claimed a total of
RUB 51,590 (EUR 1,448).
- The
fourth applicant, who is the sister of Ismail Umarov, submitted that
she was taking care of his three minor children and that she could
have counted on 10% of his earnings for each of the children until
they reached the age of majority. She claimed a total of RUB 234,510
(EUR 6,583).
- The
fifth applicant, the widow of Umalat Abayev, claimed a total of
RUB 679,497 (EUR 19,074). She submitted that she could have
counted on 30% of her husband's earnings for herself and on 20% for
their daughter until the age of 18.
- The
sixth applicant, who is the widow of Aslan Israilov, claimed
RUB 461,479 (EUR 12,954) and the seventh applicant, who is
the sister of Khasin Yunusov, claimed RUB 216,937 (EUR 6,090)
in respect of pecuniary damage.
- The
Government regarded these claims as based on suppositions and
unfounded. In particular, they noted that in the national proceedings
the applicants had never claimed compensation for the loss of a
breadwinner, although such a possibility was provided for. As to the
relatives of Khasin Yunosov, who had been a police officer, his
family had received compensation arising out of his compulsory State
personal insurance, because his death had been found to have been
connected to his professional duties. His mother, in respect of whom
the claim had been brought by the seventh applicant, had also
received a monthly pension for the loss of a breadwinner as of 1 May
2003.
- The
Court reiterates that there must be a clear causal connection between
the damage claimed by the applicants and the violation of the
Convention, and that this may, in appropriate cases, include
compensation in respect of loss of earnings. Furthermore, under Rule
60 of the Rules of Court, any claim for just satisfaction must be
itemised and submitted in writing together with the relevant
supporting documents, “failing which the Chamber may reject the
claim in whole or in part”. The Court further finds that the
loss of earnings also applies to dependent children (see, among other
authorities, Imakayeva, cited above, § 213). Having
regard to its above conclusions, it finds that there is a direct
causal link between the violation of Article 2 in respect of the
second, third and fifth applicants' family members and the loss by
these applicants of the financial support which they could have
provided.
- As
to the claim brought by the fourth applicant, the Court notes that
she submitted no documents or any other evidence to support her claim
that she took care of her late brother's three minor children. In
such circumstances, the Court finds that there is no reason to award
her compensation for pecuniary damage.
- As
to the claims brought by the sixth and the seventh applicants, the
Court observes that it has been unable to establish the State's
responsibility for the deaths of the applicants' relatives. It
therefore does not discern a causal link between the violations found
and the damage claimed.
- Having
regard to the above and to the second, third and fifth applicants'
submissions, and accepting that it would be reasonable to assume that
their relatives would have eventually had some earnings resulting in
the financial support of their families, the Court awards the
following sums in respect of pecuniary damage, plus any tax that may
be chargeable on these amounts:
(i) EUR 12,000
to the second applicant;
(ii) EUR 1,400
to the third applicant; and
(iii) EUR 10,000
to the fifth applicant.
B. Non-pecuniary damage
- The
applicants claimed financial compensation in respect of non-pecuniary
damage for the suffering they had endured as a result of the loss of
their family members and the indifference shown by the authorities
towards them. They sought the following amounts:
(i) EUR 80,000
for the first applicant;
(ii) EUR 40,000
for the second applicant;
(iii) EUR 40,000
for the third applicant;
(iv) EUR 80,000
for the fourth applicant;
(v)
EUR 60,000 for the fifth applicant;
(vi)
EUR 60,000 for the sixth applicant;
(vii) EUR 80,000
for the seventh applicant.
- The
Government found these amounts exaggerated.
- The
Court has found a violation of Articles 2, 3, 5 and 13 of the
Convention on account of the unacknowledged detention and
disappearance of the first, second, third, fourth and fifth
applicants' relatives. It has also found a procedural violation of
Article 2 and of Article 13 on account of the ineffectiveness of the
investigation into the deaths of the sixth and seventh applicants'
relatives. The Court thus accepts that they have suffered
non-pecuniary damage which cannot be compensated for solely by the
findings of violations. It awards the following amounts to the
applicants, plus any tax that may be chargeable on them:
(i) EUR 35,000
to the first applicant;
(ii) EUR 35,000
to the second and third applicants jointly;
(iii) EUR 35,000
to the fourth applicant;
(iv) EUR 35,000
to the fifth applicant;
(v) EUR 10,000
to the sixth applicant; and
(vi) EUR 10,000
to the seventh applicant.
C. Costs and expenses
- The
applicants were represented by the SRJI. They submitted an itemised
schedule of costs and expenses that included research and interviews
in Ingushetia and Moscow, at a rate of EUR 50 per hour for the work
in the area of exhausting domestic remedies and of EUR 150 per hour
for the drafting of submissions to the Court. The aggregate claim in
respect of costs and expenses related to the applicants' legal
representation amounted to EUR 8,957.
- The
Government disputed the reasonableness and the justification of the
amounts claimed under this heading. They questioned, in particular,
whether all the lawyers working for the SRJI had been involved in the
present case and whether it had been necessary for the applicants to
rely on courier mail.
- The
Court has to establish first whether the costs and expenses indicated
by the applicants' representatives were actually incurred and,
second, whether they were necessary (see McCann and Others v. the
United Kingdom, 27 September 1995, § 220, Series A no.
324).
- Having
regard to the details of the information submitted and the contracts
for legal representation concluded between the SRJI and the
applicants, the Court is satisfied that these rates are reasonable
and reflect the expenses actually incurred by the applicants'
representatives. The Court notes that this case was rather complex
and required the amount of research and preparation claimed by the
applicants.
- Having
regard to the details of the claims submitted by the applicants, the
Court awards them the amount of EUR 8,957, less EUR 850
received by way of legal aid from the Council of Europe, together
with any value-added tax that may be chargeable to the applicants,
the net award to be paid into the representatives' bank account in
the Netherlands, as identified by the applicants.
D. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be
based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to
which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Dismisses the Government's preliminary
objection;
- Holds that there has been a failure to comply
with Article 38 § 1 (a) of the Convention in that the
Government have refused to submit documents requested by the Court;
- Holds that there has been a violation of the
substantive aspect of Article 2 of the Convention in respect of
Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev;
- Holds that there has been no violation of the
substantive aspect of Article 2 of the Convention in respect of
Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov;
- Holds that there has been a violation of the
positive obligations under Article 2 of the Convention on
account of the failure to conduct an effective investigation into the
circumstances in which Magomed Shakhgiriyev, Ali Magomadov, Ismail
Umarov, Umalat Abayev, Aslan Israilov and Khasin Yunusov died;
6. Holds that there has been no violation of
Article 3 of the Convention in respect of the applicants;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 5 of the Convention in respect of Magomed Shakhgiriyev,
Ali Magomadov, Ismail Umarov and Umalat Abayev;
- Holds that there has been no violation of
Article 5 of the Convention in respect of Aslan Israilov and
Khasin Yunusov;
- Holds that there
has been a violation of Article 13 of the Convention in
conjunction with Article 2 of
the Convention;
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay, within three months from the date on
which the judgment becomes final in accordance with Article 44 § 2
of the Convention, the following amounts to be converted into Russian
roubles at the rate applicable at the date of settlement, save in the
case of the sixth applicant and the payment in respect of costs and
expenses:
(i) EUR 12,000
(twelve thousand euros) to the second applicant in respect of
pecuniary damage;
(ii) EUR 1,400
(one thousand four hundred euros) to the third applicant in respect
of pecuniary damage;
(iii) EUR 10,000
(ten thousand euros) to the fifth applicant in respect of pecuniary
damage;
(iv) EUR 35,000
(thirty-five thousand euros) to the first, fourth and fifth
applicants each in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(v) EUR 35,000
(thirty-five thousand euros) to the second and third applicants
jointly in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(vi) EUR 10,000
(ten thousand euros) to the sixth and seventh applicants each in
respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(vii) EUR 8,107
(eight thousand one hundred and seven euros), plus any tax that may
be chargeable to the applicants, in respect of costs and expenses, to
be paid into the representatives' bank account in the Netherlands;
(b) that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement
simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal
to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the
default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses the remainder of the applicants'
claim for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 8 January 2009, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis
Registrar President