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FIRST
SECTION
CASE OF ŠUPUT v. CROATIA
(Application
no. 49905/07)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
31 May
2011
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 Šuput v.
Croatia,
The
European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Anatoly Kovler, President,
Nina
Vajić,
Christos Rozakis,
Peer
Lorenzen,
Elisabeth Steiner,
Khanlar
Hajiyev,
George Nicolaou, judges,
and Søren
Nielsen, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 10 May 2011,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 49905/07) against the Republic
of Croatia lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by a Croatian national, Mr Zeljko Šuput
(“the applicant”), on 15 October 2007.
- The
applicant was represented by Mr Ð. Vučinić, a lawyer
practising in Rijeka. The Croatian Government (“the
Government”) were represented by their Agent, Ms Š.
StaZnik.
- On
19 June 2008 the President of the First Section decided to
communicate the complaints concerning the adequacy of the medical
care administered to the applicant and the complaint that the reasons
relied on by the domestic courts for extending the applicant’s
detention were not relevant and sufficient throughout the detention
to the Government. It was also decided to examine the merits of the
application at the same time as its admissibility (Article 29 §
1).
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicant was born in 1971 and lives in Korenica.
1. Background to the case
- In
July 2005 the police, at the request of the State Attorney, commenced
an inquiry into allegations that during 1991, at the beginning of the
Homeland War in Croatia, a large number of civilians were tortured
and killed or detained in Korenica, Croatia by members of the
so-called “Krajina Autonomous Region Militia” (Milicija
“Autonomne Oblasti Krajina”), where they were
allegedly tortured and some of them killed. A large number of
survivors and other individuals who witnessed these events were
interviewed by the police. A voluminous case file was produced and
the inquiry resulted in the supposed perpetrators being identified,
among whom was the applicant.
2. Criminal proceedings against the applicant
(a) Investigation
- The
applicant was arrested on 4 December 2006 on suspicion that he had
committed war crimes against the civilian population and prisoners of
war. On the same day the investigation judge of the Gospić
County Court (istraZni sudac Zupanijskog suda u Gospiću)
heard evidence from the applicant in the presence of a defence
counsel. The applicant denied the charges. On the same day the
investigation judge heard evidence from two other suspects.
- On
5 December 2006 an investigation was opened in respect of the
applicant and two other suspects in the Gospić County Court in
connection with suspected war crimes against the civilian population
and prisoners of war in 1991 in Korenica, Croatia.
- On
7 and 11 December 2006 the police interviewed two newly discovered
potential witnesses.
- On
14 December 2006 the investigation judge requested a report from the
Korenica Social Welfare Centre (Centar za socijalnu skrb Korenica)
on the suspects’ personal circumstances. On the same day the
investigation judge scheduled a hearing, with an identification
parade, for 21 December 2006, and ordered the Gospić
Police Station to ensure the presence of twelve other individuals of
an appropriate age and physical appearance at the identification
parade.
- At
a hearing held on 21 December 2006 the investigation judge heard
evidence from nine witnesses and held an identification parade. Two
of the witnesses were asked to identify the applicant and both of
them recognised the applicant as a person named Zeljko Šuput
who they alleged had ill-treated prisoners in Korenica in 1991.
- On
the same day the Gospić State Attorney’s Office asked for
evidence from eighteen witnesses to be heard by the investigation
judge.
- On
27 December 2006 the Korenica Social Welfare Centre submitted their
report to the Gospić County Court on the applicant’s
personal circumstances. The report stated that the applicant and his
family, who had left Croatia during the Homeland War, had returned to
Croatia in 2001 and since then had lived in their own house in
Korenica. Before his arrest the applicant had been employed as a
driver in Rijeka, Croatia. On the same day the Ministry of Justice
informed the Gospić County Court that the applicant had been
fined twice for minor offences related to road safety and customs
regulations. He had no criminal record.
- On
3 and 17 January 2007 the investigation judge heard evidence from
four and fifteen witnesses respectively. A voluminous case file was
compiled containing evidence from witnesses and a large amount of
documentary evidence.
(b) Criminal trial
- On
31 January 2007 the applicant and another defendant were indicted
before the Gospić County Court for war crimes against prisoners
of war, an offence under section 122 of the Croatian Criminal Code.
The applicant was accused of inflicting exceptionally brutal
treatment on prisoners of war on several occasions, consisting of
beatings with wooden rods and chains, kicking, administering electric
shocks, death threats and forcing schoolchildren to urinate on the
prisoners.
- On
15 February 2007 the applicant lodged an objection to the indictment
(prigovor protiv optuZnice). His co-defendant also lodged an
objection.
- On
1 March 2007 the President of the Gospić County Court asked the
Supreme Court to transfer jurisdiction to another court. This was
refused on 8 March 2007.
- On
19 March 2007 the objections to the indictment were dismissed by the
Gospić County Court and the indictment became final.
- On
4 April 2007 the President of the Gospić County Court again
asked the Supreme Court to transfer jurisdiction to another court.
On 26 April 2007 the Supreme Court transferred jurisdiction
to the Rijeka County Court (Zupanijski sud u Rijeci) and the
proceedings continued before that court.
- A
hearing scheduled for 12 July 2007 was adjourned owing to the absence
of the parties.
- On
18 July 2007 the applicant appointed new counsel, who asked the
County Court to adjourn the trial in order to allow him sufficient
time to consult the case file and prepare the applicant’s
defence. For that reason on 20 July 2007 the Rijeka County Court
adjourned the hearings already scheduled for 24, 25, 26 and 27 July
2007. The hearings were scheduled for 3, 4, 5 and 6 September 2007.
- At
a hearing held on 3 September 2007 the County Court dismissed a
number of procedural objections put forward by the defence and heard
evidence from one witness. A hearing scheduled for 4 September 2007
was adjourned because the defence counsel of both defendants refused
to continue to represent them. On 5 September 2007 the County Court
appointed legal-aid counsel for the applicant. On 7 September 2007
the appointed counsel asked to be relieved of his duties. On 10
September 2007 the County Court accepted this request and on 12
September 2007 it appointed new legal-aid counsel for the applicant.
On 21 September 2007 that lawyer also sought to be relieved of her
duties. On 25 September 2007 the County Court refused this request.
On 10 and 11 October counsel again sought to be relieved of her
duties, on different grounds from those given in her previous
request. This request was accepted on 11 October 2007 and on 15
October 2007 new legal-aid defence counsel was appointed.
- A
hearing scheduled for 22 October 2007 was adjourned because the
applicant’s counsel did not appear. A hearing scheduled for
10 December 2007 was adjourned because the case file had
been forwarded to the Supreme Court upon the applicant’s appeal
against a decision extending his detention (see below, § 39).
- At
a hearing held on 8 January 2008 the County Court heard evidence from
eight witnesses, on 9 January 2008 three witnesses and on 10 January
2008 also three witnesses. On the latter date the County Court
commissioned an expert report from a medical expert. On 3 March 2008
the expert submitted her report.
- At
a hearing held on 10 March 2008 the County Court heard evidence from
the medical expert and at a hearing held on 11 March 2008 it heard
evidence from seven witnesses.
- A
hearing scheduled for 8 May 2008 was adjourned on account of the
applicant’s inability to attend owing to his post-surgery state
of health (see below, §§ 60 and 61).
- At
a hearing held on 30 June 2008 the Rijeka County Court heard the
applicant’s evidence as to his health and decided to commission
a report by a medical expert concerning the applicant’s health.
The report was submitted on 14 July 2008. The expert stated that the
applicant’s health was not incompatible with his ability to
attend and follow the criminal trial against him (see below, §
63).
- At
a hearing held on 16 September 2008 the records of the identification
parade (see above, § 10) were read and three witnesses gave
evidence.
- At
a hearing held on 19 September 2008 the Rijeka County Court decided
on a number of procedural objections put forward by the defence. At a
hearing on 2 October 2008 two witnesses and both defendants gave
evidence and the parties gave their closing arguments.
- On
3 October 2008 the Rijeka County Court found the applicant guilty of
war crimes against prisoners of war and sentenced him to four years’
imprisonment. At the same time it lifted the applicant’s
detention.
- On
11 and 19 February 2009 respectively the applicant and the other
defendant lodged their appeals. The appeal proceedings are currently
pending before the Supreme Court.
3. Decisions concerning the applicant’s detention
- On
4 December 2006 the investigation judge of the Gospić County
Court remanded the applicant in custody for forty-eight hours. On the
same day the investigation judge heard evidence from the applicant in
the presence of a defence counsel. The applicant denied the charges
against him. On the same day the investigation judge heard evidence
from two other suspects.
- On
5 December 2006 the investigation judge remanded the applicant in
custody for one month on the grounds that there was a danger of
absconding and that the offences allegedly committed by the applicant
were serious ones. The relevant part of the decision reads:
“This court finds that the grounds for detention
under Article 102 § 1(1 and 4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure
apply ...
The case file shows that the first, second and third
suspects lived in Serbia for a long time and therefore the
circumstances indicated a danger of absconding because they might
leave the territory of Croatia and thus impede the conduct of these
criminal proceedings.
Also, what is at issue is a crime against humanity and
international law – a war crime against prisoners of war,
liable to twenty years’ imprisonment, which was committed under
particularly grave circumstances shown by a reasonable suspicion that
the suspects brutally tortured the prisoners, and the injuries thus
inflicted caused grave bodily impairments to the majority of the
victims, resulting in their permanent grave disability.”
This
decision was upheld by a three-judge panel of the Gospić County
Court on 13 December 2006 which endorsed the reasoning of the
investigation judge.
- On
3 January 2007 the investigation judge extended the applicant’s
detention for a further two months on the same grounds as before. The
applicant did not lodge an appeal.
- On
14 February 2007 a three-judge panel of the Gospić County Court
extended the applicant’s detention on the same grounds (danger
of absconding and gravity of offences). This decision was upheld by
the Supreme Court on 26 February 2007. The relevant part of the
decision reads:
“This court finds that the fact that the
defendants lived abroad for a long time and are charged with a grave
criminal offence liable to a lengthy prison term show that if
released, they might abscond. Thus, the extension of their detention
on the ground under Article 102 § 1(1) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure is justified.
The Supreme Court ... accepts the first-instance court’s
findings that the conduct of the defendants amounted to an offence
committed under particularly grave circumstances, which necessitate
their further detention on the ground under Article 102 § 1(4)
of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The defendants are charged with
particularly brutal conduct consisting of beatings with wooden
sticks, rods and chains, administering electric shocks, throwing cold
water over and psychologically torturing war prisoners N.N., M.L. and
P.B. on many occasions in cells, halls and the courtyard of the
building where they were detained, which caused grave bodily injuries
to the victims.”
- On
12 April 2007 the Gospić County Court extended the applicant’s
detention on the same grounds.
- On
7 May 2007 the Supreme Court quashed the decision of 12 April 2007
on formal grounds, namely the absence of the applicant’s
defence counsel from a panel meeting concerning his detention.
- On
11 May 2007 the Gospić County Court extended the applicant’s
detention on the same grounds. The applicant did not lodge an appeal.
- On
12 July and 19 September 2007 the Rijeka County Court extended the
applicant’s detention on the same grounds. The applicant did
not lodge appeals.
- On
23 November 2007 the Rijeka County Court extended the applicant’s
detention solely on account of the gravity of the offences. The
relevant part of the decision reads:
“This panel finds that the grounds for detention
under Article 102 § 1(4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure in
respect of the first defendant Zeljko Šuput still apply on
account of the manner in which he had allegedly committed the
criminal offences held against him. The factual basis of the criminal
offence shows exceptional cruelty and brutality which, in the opinion
of this panel, represent an offence committed under exceptionally
grave circumstances and that therefore detention is necessary under
Article 102 § 1(4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The record of the hearing held on 3 September 2007 shows
that the first defendant Zeljko Šuput is a citizen of Croatia,
that he was employed as a driver before his arrest, that he owns half
a house in Korenica, and that he is married and the father of two
children. These circumstances show that he has a connection with the
Republic of Croatia and that, despite these criminal proceedings and
a risk of imprisonment, the grounds for detention under Article 102
§ 1(1) of the Code of Criminal Procedure have not been
fulfilled, namely that there are no circumstances indicating a danger
of absconding.”
On 10
December 2007 the Supreme Court upheld this decision, endorsing the
County Court’s reasons. The applicant lodged a constitutional
complaint.
- On
29 January 2008 the applicant asked for his detention to be lifted.
- On
8 February 2008 the Rijeka County Court dismissed the applicant’s
request and extended the applicant’s detention on account of
the gravity of the charges. On 27 February 2008 the Supreme Court
upheld this decision, endorsing the County Court’s reasoning.
- At
the hearing held on 11 March 2008 the applicant’s counsel asked
for the detention to be lifted on the ground that he needed medical
assistance outside prison, including surgery on his spine. The Rijeka
County Court dismissed the request, finding that it was premature,
since no surgery had yet been performed on the applicant. On 29 March
2008 the applicant was admitted to Zagreb Prison Hospital (Bolnica
za osobe lišene slobode, “the ZPH”). On 9
April 2008 he was transferred to a civil hospital, where surgery on
his spine was carried out on 14 April 2008.
- On
15 April 2008 the applicant again asked for his detention to be
lifted on health grounds. This was refused by the Rijeka County Court
on 25 May 2008 and the applicant’s detention was extended
for a further two months. The relevant part of that decision reads as
follows:
“This court finds that the ground for ordering the
applicant’s detention under Article 102 paragraph 1(4) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure still exists because of ... a suspicion
that in the period between 15 October 1991 and the end of April 1992
the first defendant, Zeljko Šuput, as a member of the
intervention brigade of the Militia of the so-called Krajina
Autonomous Region, on several occasions brutally ill-treated
prisoners of war in the cells, corridor and courtyard of the Korenica
Militia building by beating them with wooden sticks, rods and chains,
kicking them and administering electric shocks until they lost
consciousness.
These circumstances indicate utterly cruel and inhuman
treatment of the prisoners of war, which significantly exceeded the
basic features of the crime in question ... which represent an
offence committed under particularly grave circumstances, which
clearly warrant that the defendant remain in custody on the grounds
under Article 102 paragraph 1(4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure.”
- As
to the applicant’s request that his detention be lifted, the
County Court held:
“This court finds the first defendant’s
request for his detention to be lifted unfounded. The purpose of
placing the first defendant Zeljko Šuput in Zagreb Prison
Hospital is precisely to be able to administer adequate medical care
appropriate to his needs and state of health. [The Hospital] is able
to provide continuous monitoring and urgent medical interventions.
There it is possible to administer the medical assistance the
defendant needs, identical to that which he would receive in any
other situation, irrespective of whether or not he is in detention.”
This
decision was upheld by the Supreme Court on 21 May 2008. The relevant
part of the decision reads:
“... the finding of the first-instance court that
the ground for further detention of the defendant Zeljko Šuput
under 102 paragraph 1(4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure still
applied is correct.
The indictment shows a relevant degree of reasonable
suspicion that the defendant Zeljko Šuput committed the
criminal offence under Article 122 of the Criminal Code, by which a
general statutory condition under Article 102 paragraph 1 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure for extending detention has been fulfilled.
The factual background of the indictment shows that the
defendant Zeljko Šuput, in his capacity as a member of the
intervention squad of the so-called Krajina A[utonomous] R[egion]
Militia, in the period from 15 October 1991 to the end of April 1992,
together with other members of that militia, on many occasions, in
cells, hall and courtyard of the building [where they were detained]
kicked prisoners and beat them with wooden sticks, rods and chains on
the head and body and administered electric shocks until they lost
consciousness, all of which resulted in numerous and grave injuries.
The above-described manner in which the offences were
committed shows an exceptionally high degree of brutality,
ruthlessness, unscrupulousness and cruelty, which surpasses by far
the usual manner of committing such crimes and represents an offence
committed under particularly grave circumstances which necessitates
the defendants’ remaining in custody under Article 102
paragraph 1(4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, as correctly found
and explained by the first-instance court in the decision referred
to.
The defendant’s arguments that there was no proof
that he had committed the criminal offences at issue are not decisive
for deciding on his further detention, because for such a decision
the relevant degree of reasonable suspicion suffices, and that
suspicion is shown in the indictment.
In considering [the reasons for] detention, this panel
does not assess evidence and its probative value – that
assessment is made by the trial court at the end of the trial.
Contrary to the allegations of the appeal, the extension
of his detention on the grounds under Article 102 paragraph 1(4) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure contravenes neither the Croatian
Constitution nor the Convention. Unlike the aim of the grounds for
detention under Article 102 paragraph 1(1,2 and 3) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, the aim of the ground for detention under Article
102 paragraph 1(4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure is not to remove
threats to the efficient and unobstructed conduct of the criminal
proceedings but is preventive, intended to prevent the release of
individuals who have committed criminal offences such that their
release would diminish the reputation of and trust in the justice
system by the public. Article 5 of the Convention gives only examples
of the grounds for detention (exempli gratia) and these
grounds are not exclusive (numerus clausus). Therefore,
Article 102 paragraph 1(4) does not contravene the said provision of
the Convention. Other security measures under Article 90 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, in view of their essence and character, could
not fulfil the same purpose as detention.
The applicant’s needs as regards medical care may
be satisfied with medical treatment in prison, in view of the nature
of his illness, and exceptionally by out-patient treatment.”
- On
27 May 2008 the applicant again asked for his detention to be lifted
on health grounds.
- On
29 May 2008 the Constitutional Court declared the applicant’s
constitutional complaint against the Supreme Court’s decision
of 10 December 2007 inadmissible on the grounds that meanwhile a
fresh decision extending the applicant’s detention had been
adopted by the Rijeka County Court on 8 February 2008 and that
therefore the original decision was no longer in effect.
- On
10 June 2008 the applicant’s request of 27 May 2008 was
dismissed by the Rijeka County Court on the grounds that the
applicant’s health did not require treatment outside prison.
The relevant part of the decision reads:
“As regards the health of the first defendant
Zeljko Šuput ... this panel finds that for now the treatment
it requires is not incompatible with his detention. The medical
documentation of 29 May 2007 shows that a haematoma which developed
... in the brain, is slowly diminishing. The neurosurgeons did not
recommend surgery but only further supervision and rest. The next
examination ... is scheduled for the end of June. His health is
expected to become stable.”
- On
18 July 2008 the Rijeka County Court extended the applicant’s
detention on the grounds of the gravity of the charges.
- On
3 October 2008, after finding the applicant guilty of war crimes
against prisoners of war, the Rijeka County Court lifted his
detention. The applicant was released the same day. A security
measure of withdrawal of his passport and prohibition on leaving his
place of residence was applied. The relevant part of the decision
lifting the applicant’s detention reads:
“ ... there is no ground for further detention of
the defendant because the same purpose may be achieved by the use of
a preventive measure of prohibition on leaving his place of residence
and obligation to report periodically to the Korenica Police Station
as well as temporary seizure of his passport.”
4. The applicant’s medical treatment during his
detention
- The
applicant’s medical record shows that before his arrest he was
suffering from discopathy of the lumbar spinal area.
- He
was seen by the prison doctor on 10 August 2007 for severe pain in
the lumbar area of the spine and the left leg. He was diagnosed with
lumboischialgia (chronic neck pain), and prescribed painkillers and
rest. At his next examination on 27 August 2007 the doctor noted
that the pain was decreasing and the same therapy was prescribed. On
further examinations by the prison doctor on 30 August, 18, 19, 20,
21 24 and 28 September 2007 it was noted that the applicant was
still suffering pain and he was prescribed various painkillers.
- On
3 October 2007 the doctor recommended that the applicant be seen by
an orthopedic specialist. On 10 October 2007 the applicant stated
that he wanted to see a specialist at his own expense at a hospital
of his choice. On 11 October 2007 a trial judge in the applicant’s
case before the Rijeka County Court allowed the request and a visit
to a clinic was scheduled for 16 October 2007.
- At
the beginning of November 2007 the applicant was sent for an X ray
examination of his spine.
- On
21 January 2008 the applicant asked permission to undergo a computer
tomography of his spine in a private clinic. The request was allowed
on 21 January 2008 by the trial judge and the visit to the clinic was
scheduled for 25 January 2008.
- On
8 February 2008 the trial judge allowed the applicant a specialist
examination at the expense of the Rijeka County Court.
- On
11 February 2008 the trial judge allowed the applicant’s
treatment in the Zagreb Prison Hospital (ZPH) at the expense of the
Rijeka County Court. The applicant stayed in the ZPH from 22 February
to 6 March 2002. He was diagnosed with disc protrusion and
surgery on his spine was scheduled for 28 March 2008.
- On
10 March 2008 the Rijeka Prison doctor submitted a report on the
applicant’s health to the Rijeka County Court. She stated that
he was suffering from disc protrusion and that surgery was scheduled
for 2 April 2008 at a civilian hospital - the Dubrava
Hospital in Zagreb (Klinički bolnički centar Dubrava).
She further noted that he had been taking painkillers for a long time
and recommended that he rest every hour because he was not able to
sit for a long period in the same position.
- At
a hearing held in the Rijeka County Court on 10 March 2008 an
independent medical expert recommended that a fifteen-minute break be
taken every hour during the hearing on account of the applicant’s
health problems.
- On
26 March 2008 the trial judge allowed the applicant’s
hospitalisation in the Dubrava Hospital in Zagreb for him to undergo
surgery on his spine on 1 April 2008.
- On
29 March 2008 the applicant was admitted to the ZPH. On 9 April
2008 he was transferred to Dubrava Hospital where he underwent
surgery on his spine on 14 April 2008. On 17 April he was returned to
the ZPH.
- After
the surgery the applicant developed a haematoma in the cerebellum. He
underwent physiotherapy. A number of laboratory tests were carried
out as well as several brain nuclear magnetic resonances, computer
tomography of his spine and head, X-ray of his mouth cavity and
electrocardiography. He was seen by an oral surgeon, neurologist,
physiologist, ophthalmologist and a psychologist. A neurosurgeon
examined him on 19 and 23 May 10 and 11 June 2008.
- On
27 June 2008 he was returned to Rijeka Prison.
- At
a hearing held on 30 June 2008 in the Rijeka County Court, the trial
judge asked for an opinion from a medical expert. On 14 July 2008 an
independent medical expert, who saw the applicant on 10 July 2008,
submitted his opinion, stating that the applicant’s health was
not incompatible with his ability to attend and follow the criminal
trial against him. He further recommended a brain examination at the
end of July or beginning of August, an examination by a neurosurgeon
and physiotherapy.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
- Section
122 of the Basic Criminal Code (Osnovni krivični zakon,
Official Gazette no. 31/1993) reads as follows:
War Crimes against Prisoners of War
Whoever, in violation of the rules of international law,
orders the killing, torture or inhuman treatment of prisoners of war,
including biological, medical or other scientific experiments, the
removal of tissue or organs for transplantation, or the causing of
great suffering or injury to their physical integrity or health; or
compels a prisoner of war to serve in the forces of a hostile power,
or deprives a prisoner of war of the right to a fair trial; or
commits any of the foregoing acts, shall be sentenced to not less
than five years’ imprisonment or up to twenty years’
imprisonment.
- The
relevant part of the Code of Criminal Procedure (Zakon o kaznenom
postupku, Official Gazette nos. 110/1997, 27/1998, 58/1999,
112/1999, 58/2002, 143/2002 and 62/2003) provides as follows:
Preventive Measures
Article 90
“(1) Where the conditions for ordering detention
under Article 102 of this Code have been fulfilled, and where the
same purpose may be achieved by other preventive measures under this
Article, the court shall order that one or more preventive measures
are to be applied ...
(2) Preventive measures are:
1) prohibition on leaving one’s place of
residence;
2) prohibition on being in a certain place or area;
3) obligation on the defendant to report periodically to
a certain person or a State body;
4) prohibition on access to a certain person or on
establishing or maintaining contact with a certain person;
5) prohibition on undertaking a certain business
activity;
6) temporary seizure of a passport or other document
necessary for crossing the State border;
7) temporary seizure of a driving licence.
...”
8. General Provisions on Detention
Section 101
“(1) Detention may be imposed only if the same
purpose cannot be achieved by another [preventive] measure.
(2) Detention shall be lifted and the detainee released
as soon as the grounds for detention cease to exist.
(3) When deciding on detention, in particular its
duration, a court shall take into consideration the proportionality
between the gravity of the offence, the sentence which ... may be
expected to be imposed, and the need to order and determine the
duration of detention.
(4) Judicial authorities conducting criminal proceedings
shall proceed with particular urgency when the defendant is in
detention and shall review ex officio whether the grounds and
legal conditions for detention have ceased to exist, in which case
detention shall immediately be lifted.”
9. Grounds for Ordering Detention
Section 102
“(1) Where a reasonable suspicion exists that a
person has committed an offence, that person may be placed in
detention:
1. where there are circumstances which show that there
is a risk hat [the defendant] will abscond [is in hiding or his or
her identity cannot be established etc.);
...
4. where the charges relate to murder, robbery, rape,
terrorism, kidnapping, abuse of narcotic drugs, extortion or any
other offence carrying a sentence of at least twelve years’
imprisonment, or where detention is justified by the modus
operandi or other especially grave circumstances of the offence.”
- The
relevant provisions of the Enforcement of Prison Sentences Act (Zakon
o izvršavanju kazne zatvora, Official Gazette
nos. 128/1999 and 190/2003) read as follows:
COMPLAINTS
Section 15
“(1) Inmates shall have the right to complain
about an act or decision of a prison employee.
(2) Complaints shall be lodged orally or in writing with
a prison governor, a judge responsible for the execution of sentences
or the Head Office of the Prison Administration. Written complaints
addressed to a judge responsible for the execution of sentences or
the Head Office of the Prison Administration shall be submitted in an
envelope which the prison authorities may not open ...”
HEALTH PROTECTION
Section 103
“(1) Inmates shall be provided with medical
treatment and proper care of their physical and mental health...”
OBLIGATORY MEDICAL EXAMINATION
Section 104
“...
(2) A doctor shall examine a sick or injured inmate ...
and undertake all measures necessary to prevent or cure the illness
and to prevent deterioration of the inmate’s health.”
SPECIALIST EXAMINATION
Section 107
“(1) An inmate has the right to seek a specialist
examination if such an examination has not been ordered by a prison
doctor.
...”
TEMPORARY RELEASE
Grounds for temporary release
...
(2) Temporary release may be allowed on the following
grounds:
1) to an inmate suffering from a serious acute illness
or whose chronic illness worsens and where his or her medical
treatment is not possible in prison.
...”
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained of the conditions of his detention and in
particular that he had not received adequate medical care in prison.
He
relied on Article 3 of the Convention, which reads:
Article 3
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
- The
Government argued that the applicant had failed to exhaust all
available domestic remedies because he had not specifically
complained to a judge responsible for the execution of sentences of a
lack of adequate medical care in prison.
- They
further argued that the applicant had received adequate medical
treatment and that all recommendations by various specialists had
been followed.
- The
applicant claimed that he had not received adequate medical care
while in detention.
- The
Court does not have to address all issues raised by the Government,
since the application is in any event inadmissible for the following
reasons.
- The
Court notes firstly that the applicant, who was detained from
December 2006 to October 2008, indeed suffered from various
conditions, such as discopathy of the lumbar spinal area, back and
neck pain and disc protrusion. However, detention in such conditions
does not in itself constitute treatment contrary to Article 3.
- The Court has consistently stressed that the suffering
and humiliation involved must in any event go beyond that inevitable
element of suffering or humiliation connected with a given form of
legitimate treatment or punishment. Measures depriving a person of
his liberty may often involve such an element. Yet it cannot be said
that detention in itself raises an issue under Article 3 of the
Convention. Nor can that Article be interpreted as laying down a
general obligation to release a detainee on health grounds or to
place him in a civil hospital to enable him to obtain specific
medical treatment. Under this provision the State must ensure that a
person is detained in conditions which are compatible with respect
for his human dignity, that the manner and method of the execution of
the measure do not subject him to distress or hardship of an
intensity exceeding the unavoidable level of suffering inherent in
detention and that, given the practical demands of imprisonment, his
health and well-being are adequately secured (see Kudła v.
Poland [GC], no. 30210/96, §§ 93-94, ECHR 2000-XI;
Kalashnikov v. Russia, no. 47095/99, § 95, ECHR 2002 VI;
and Mathew v. the Netherlands, no. 24919/03, § 175, ECHR
2005 IX).
- As
to the present case the Court notes that the applicant complained
that while incarcerated he had not been provided with adequate
medical care, and had sought release on health grounds. However, in
his submissions to the Court he did not specify what treatment had
been denied him and what precisely was the treatment he needed.
- The
documents submitted show that the applicant’s health was
continuously monitored by a prison doctor and that his requests to be
examined by a specialist in a private clinic were allowed. Further to
this, he was hospitalised in the ZPH whenever recommended. Surgery on
his spine was carried out in a regular hospital, namely the Dubrava
General Hospital in Zagreb, after which the applicant underwent
physiotherapy and was monitored by various specialists, such as a
neurologist, neurosurgeon and orthopediologist. All recommendations
by specialist physicians were followed. Further to this, the
independent medical experts who examined the applicant for the
purposes of the criminal trial against him found that his health was
not incompatible with detention.
- In
these circumstances the Court finds that the applicant was provided
with adequate medical treatment during his detention.
- It
follows that this part of the application is manifestly ill-founded
and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 §§ 3(a)
and 4 of the Convention.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 3 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant further complained of the duration of his detention and
submitted that the reasons relied on by the national courts for
ordering and extending his detention had been insufficient and
inadequate throughout his detention. He relied on Article 5 § 3
of the Convention which reads:
Article 5 § 3
“Everyone arrested or detained in accordance with
the provisions of paragraph 1 (c) of this Article shall be
... entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to release pending
trial. Release may be conditioned by guarantees to appear for trial.”
A. Admissibility
- The
Government invited the Court to reject the application on the ground
that the applicant had failed to exhaust domestic remedies as
required under Article 35 § 1 of the Convention.
- The
Government submitted that the applicant had not lodged another
constitutional complaint to the Constitutional Court. They observed
that he had previously lodged such a complaint against the decision
by the Supreme Court of 27 February 2008 upholding the Rijeka County
Court decision of 8 February 2008, which had extended the
applicant’s detention. However, the applicant’s
detention had been extended by further decisions of the Rijeka County
Court, in respect of which the applicant should have lodged another
constitutional complaint.
- Having
regard to the fact that the applicant’s detention continued
after the Constitutional Court’s decision of 29 May 2008,
lodging another constitutional complaint would have had reasonable
prospects of success since it would have enabled the Constitutional
Court to examine the length of the applicant’s further
detention.
- The
applicant contested that argument. He argued that it was not
justified to demand another constitutional complaint when his
previous complaint had been declared inadmissible.
- The
Court reiterates that under Article 35 § 1 of the
Convention it may only deal with a matter after all domestic remedies
have been exhausted. The purpose of the exhaustion rule is to afford
the Contracting States the opportunity of preventing or putting right
the violations alleged against them before those allegations are
submitted to it (see, among many other authorities,
Selmouni v. France [GC], no. 25803/94, § 74,
ECHR 1999-IV). The obligation to exhaust domestic remedies requires
an applicant to make normal use of remedies which are effective,
sufficient and accessible in respect of his Convention grievances.
- The
Court accepts that in principle a constitutional complaint under
section 62 of the Constitutional Court Act is an effective remedy in
respect of decisions ordering and extending detention, which has to
be used in the context of complaints about the length of detention.
- In
the present case, the applicant made normal use of this remedy
against the decision of the Supreme Court of 10 December 2007. The
Constitutional Court declared this complaint inadmissible on the
grounds that meanwhile a fresh decision on the applicant’s
detention had been adopted.
- It
follows that the applicant has raised the issue of the length of and
grounds for his detention before the competent domestic authorities,
thereby offering them the opportunity of preventing or putting right
the violation alleged.
- However,
seeing that his constitutional complaint had failed, the Court
considers it understandable that the applicant did not lodge a
further constitutional complaint, as this would overstretch the
duties incumbent on an applicant pursuant to Article 35 § 1 of
the Convention (see, mutatis mutandis, Unión
Alimentaria Sanders S.A. v. Spain, judgment of 7 July 1989,
Series A no. 157, p. 13-14, § 35; Ullrich v. Austria,
no. 66956/01, § 29, 21 October 2004; and
Antonić-Tomasović v. Croatia, no. 5208/03, §
33, 10 November 2005).
- The
Court, therefore, concludes that the applicant has complied with his
obligation to exhaust domestic remedies. The Government’s
objection must therefore be dismissed.
- The
Court further notes that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded
within the meaning of Article 35 § 3(a) of the Convention. It
also notes that it is not inadmissible on any other grounds. It must
therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
1. The parties’ arguments
- The
applicant argued that the grounds for ordering and extending his
detention had been insufficient.
- The
Government argued that the reasons relied on by the national courts
for ordering and extending the applicant’s detention –
the danger of absconding and the gravity of the charges - had been
relevant and sufficient.
- The
Government also argued that, owing to the gravity of the charges
against the applicant, his release could have caused public disorder.
They explained that the applicant had been charged with war crimes
against the civilian population and prisoners of war allegedly
committed in Korenica, the town where he had lived prior to his
arrest and that the case had been very sensitive for the population
of that town.
- They
submitted further that the criminal proceedings against the applicant
had been very complex since they had concerned a number of
allegations of criminal activity on the part of two defendants and
that the national authorities had displayed due diligence in their
conduct of the proceedings.
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) Grounds for detention
- The
Court has repeatedly held that under the second limb of Article 5
§ 3, a person charged with an offence must always be released
pending trial unless the State can show that there are “relevant
and sufficient” reasons to justify his continuing detention
(see Yağcı and Sargın v. Turkey, 8 June 1995, §
52, Series A no. 319-A). Moreover, the domestic courts “must
examine all the facts arguing for or against the existence of a
genuine requirement of public interest justifying, with due regard to
the principle of the presumption of innocence, a departure from the
rule of respect for individual liberty and set them out in their
decisions on the applications for release” (see Letellier
v. France, 26 June 1991, § 35, Series A no. 207).
- The
Court notes that the applicant in the present case was detained
between 4 December 2006 and 3 October 2008. His detention thus lasted
one year, nine months and twenty-nine days.
(i) Period between 4 December 2006 and 23
November 2007
- In
the period between 4 December 2006 and 23 November 2007, during
investigation and the initial stages of the trial, the national
courts, in addition to the nature of the crimes allegedly committed,
justified the applicant’s detention by a reasonable suspicion
that he had committed the criminal offences and the danger of
absconding.
(α) Reasonable suspicion that the
applicant had committed a criminal offence
- According
to the Court’s settled case-law, the persistence of a
reasonable suspicion that the person arrested has committed an
offence is a condition sine qua non for the lawfulness of the
continued detention, but after a certain lapse of time it no longer
suffices. In such cases, the Court must establish whether the other
grounds given by the authorities continued to justify the deprivation
of liberty (see, among many other authorities, Bochev v. Bulgarie,
no. 73481/01, § 55, 13 November 2008).
- In
the present case the Court accepts that the applicant’s arrest
and his initial detention were justified by a reasonable suspicion
that he committed the criminal offence of war crimes against the
civilian population.
(β) Danger of absconding
- The
Court reiterates that such a danger cannot be gauged solely on the
basis of the severity of the sentence risked. It must be assessed
with reference to a number of other relevant factors which may either
confirm the existence of a danger of absconding or make it appear so
slight that it cannot justify detention pending trial (see Neumeister
v. Austria, 27 June 1968, p. 39, § 10, Series A no. 8,
and Letellier, cited above, § 43).
- In
the present case the national courts gave reasons why in their
opinion there was a danger of absconding. They explained that the
applicant, after having allegedly committed the crimes he was
indicted for, had lived for a long time in Serbia and had connections
in that State. In view of the background of the criminal proceedings
against the applicant, and that they concerned allegations of war
crimes against prisoners of war in which both States were implicated,
the Court accepts that the danger of absconding was a relevant and
sufficient reason for ordering and extending the applicant’s
detention in the period from 5 December 2006 to 23 November
2007.
(ii) Period between 23 November 2007 and 3
October 2008
- The
Court notes that in their decisions extending the applicant’s
detention for a period of ten months and ten days between
23 November 2007 and 3 October 2008 when the applicant was
released, the national courts cited only the gravity and nature of
the offences and the severity of the likely penalty.
- At
this juncture the Court reiterates that a court decision extending
detention on such grounds requires a more solid basis to show not
only that there was genuinely “a reasonable suspicion”,
but also that there were other serious public-interest considerations
which, notwithstanding the presumption of innocence, outweighed the
right to liberty (see, among other authorities, I.A. v. France,
23 September 1998, § 102, Reports 1998-VII). The Court
will now examine whether in the particular circumstances of the
present case there existed serious public interests considerations
which outweighed the right to liberty.
- The
Court’s assessment in that respect shall as a starting point
have the statutory ground for the applicant’s detention under
the relevant domestic law. The national courts relied on the ground
under Article 102 § 1(4) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. That provision allows for detention where a reasonable
suspicion exists that the defendant has committed a criminal offence
carrying a sentence of at least twelve years’ imprisonment and
where detention is justified by the modalities of the crime or other
particularly serious circumstances of the offence.
- The
Court has held that any system of mandatory detention is per se
incompatible with Article 5 § 3 of the Convention, it being
incumbent on the domestic authorities to establish and demonstrate
the existence of specific circumstances outweighing the rule of
respect for individual liberty (see Ilijkov, no. 33977/96,
§ 84, 26 July 2001; and Rokhlina v. Russia, no. 54071/00,
§ 67, 7 April 2005.)
- As
regards the statutory ground for the applicant’s detention the
Court notes that the relevant domestic legislation does not provide
for mandatory detention and was not applied in that manner in respect
of the applicant. The applicant was charged with a number of very
serious individual offences, amounting to war crimes against the
civilian population. It was alleged that on many occasions in the
period between 15 October 1991 and end of April 1992 he had
inflicted various forms of ill treatment on prisoners of war,
who were all civilians, by, for example, kicking them, beating them
with wooden sticks, rods and chains on the head and body, and also by
administering electric shocks until they lost consciousness, all of
which resulted in numerous and grave injuries. These specific
elements of the charges held against the applicant together with the
fact that the criminal offence of war crimes against the civilian
population is liable to up to twenty years’ imprisonment, in
the view of the national courts justified the application of the
ground under Article 102 § 1(4) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure.
- The
Court has held that although the gravity of the offence and the
severity of the sentence faced are relevant elements in the
assessment of the need of detention, such need to continue the
deprivation of liberty cannot be assessed from a purely abstract
point of view (see Ilijkov, cited above, § 81; Khudoyorov
v. Russia, no. 6847/02, § 180, ECHR 2005 X; and
Belevitskiy v. Russia, no. 72967/01, § 101,
1 March 2007).
- In
this respect the Court reiterates that the ground for his extended
detention, relied on by the national courts, was not the gravity of
the offence in abstracto, but the particular gravity of the
specific circumstances in the case at issue, as explained by the
decisions of the national authorities ordering and extending the
applicant’s detention and in particular the decisions of the
Supreme Court of 26 February 2007 and 21 May 2008. The national
courts, when extending the applicant’s detention did not use
some pre-existing template or formalistic and abstract language (see,
a contrario, Fırat v.
Turkey, no. 37291/04, § 15, 30
June 2009). They explained in detail what were the exact charges held
against the applicant and repeatedly stressed the nature of the
offences, namely war crimes against the prisoners of war, allegedly
committed in a prolonged period of time and causing severe and
lasting consequences to the victims. In this connection the Court
cannot completely ignore the argument put forward by the Government
that the majority of the alleged victims lived in the same place as
the applicant.
- Therefore,
taking into account the particular circumstances of the instant case,
the Court considers that the severity of the anticipated penalty,
taken in conjunction with the nature of the charges held against the
applicant, relied on by the authorities, in the specific
circumstances of the present case, had a particular relevance (see,
by way of comparison, Dudek v. Poland, no. 633/03, §
38, 4 May 2006; and Getoš Magdić v. Croatia,
no. 56305/08, § 86, 2 December 2010).
- The
Court reiterates in this respect also the case of Miernicki
(see Miernicki v. Poland,
no. 10847/02, § 62, 27 October 2009) where it found that
the applicant’s detention lasting two years, six months and
thirteen days was not excessive. It held:
“62. The applicant was charged with
numerous counts of drug smuggling committed in an organised and armed
criminal group (see paragraph 12 above).
In the Court’s view, the fact that the case
concerned a member of such a criminal group should be taken into
account in assessing compliance with Article 5 § 3 (see Bąk
v. Poland, no. 7870/04, § 57, 16 January 2007).”
Likewise,
in the present case the Court considers that the fact that the
applicant was charged with war crimes against the civilian population
he had allegedly committed over a longer period of time in an
exceptionally cruel manner bears significance.
- In
view of the fact that the applicant’s detention, on the grounds
of the particularly grave manner in which the alleged offences had
been committed and the severity of the anticipated sentence, lasted
about ten months and the fact that charges against the applicant
concerned the criminal offence of war crimes against the civilian
population, and included very serious allegations of inflicting cruel
forms of ill-treatment on a number of civilians taken as prisoners,
the Court considers that the particular seriousness discloses the
presence of such public interest considerations that it could
accepted as a relevant and sufficient ground for the applicant’s
detention in the period from 23 November 2007 to 3 October 2008 (see,
by way of comparison the above-cited Dudek judgment, §§
37 and 38; and Getoš-Magdić, cited above,
§ 91).
(b) Conduct of the proceedings
- It
remains to be ascertained whether the national authorities displayed
“special diligence” in the conduct of the proceedings. In
this regard, the Court firstly observes that the criminal case at
issue was a complex one. The Court takes note of the seriousness of
the charges brought against the applicant. A large amount of evidence
had to be examined in the course of the proceedings. The complexity
of the case thus undoubtedly prolonged its examination and
contributed to the length of the applicant’s detention (see, by
way of comparison, Dudek, cited above, § 36).
- The
Court notes that the investigation commenced on 4 December 2006
and was concluded by the end of January 2007, thus lasting for less
than two months, in which period the investigation judge heard
evidence from a large number of witnesses and compiled a voluminous
case file. The applicant was committed to trial on 31 January 2007
and the trial ended with his conviction on 3 October 2008, when the
applicant was also released. The actual trial thus lasted one year,
eight months and four days.
- The
Court further notes that the first hearings were scheduled for July
2007. The Court accepts that a certain amount of time was necessary
for the trial court to prepare the trial. In view of the volume of
the case file and the large number of relevant documents in it, the
Court accepts that the fact that the first hearings were scheduled
for July 2007, about five months after the indictment had been
lodged, appears reasonable in the circumstances. These hearings were
adjourned at the request of the applicant’s defence counsel,
since the applicant had appointed new defence counsel shortly before
the beginning of the hearings. The Court therefore accepts that the
adjournment of the July hearings was attributable to the applicant
and benefited his defence rights.
- The
first hearings were held at the beginning of September 2007 and after
that further hearings were held at regular intervals (in January,
March, July, September and October 2008). The Court also accepts that
certain delays in the trial proceedings were caused by the
applicant’s illness and surgery in April 2008 which, apart from
the surgery itself, also included preparation for the surgery and
post-surgical treatment in the period between 8 March and 16
September 2008 (see above, paragraphs 24-26).
- In
the Court’s view, the conduct of the criminal proceedings by
the national authorities complied with the requirements of
efficiency, and therefore the domestic authorities cannot be
criticised for failure to observe “special diligence” in
the handling of the applicant’s case.
- In
sum, the Court considers that there has been no violation of Article
5 § 3 of the Convention.
III. OTHER ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant further complained under Articles 6 and 13 of the
Convention that the criminal proceedings against him had been unfair
and that there was no effective remedy in that connection.
- The
Court notes that the criminal proceedings against the applicant are
still pending and that therefore any complaint as to their unfairness
as well as to the existence of an effective remedy in that respect is
premature.
- It
follows that the complaint under Article 6 of the Convention must be
rejected under Article 35 §§ 1 and 4 of the
Convention for non exhaustion of domestic remedies and that the
complaint under Article 13 of the Convention is manifestly
ill-founded and must be rejected pursuant to Article 35 §§
3(a) and 4 of the Convention.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
- Declares unanimously the complaint concerning
the grounds for and duration of the applicant’s detention
admissible and the remainder of the application inadmissible;
- Holds by six votes to one that there has been no
violation of Article 5 § 3 of the Convention;
Done in English, and notified in writing on 31 May 2011, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren
Nielsen Anatoly Kovler
Registrar President
In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74
§ 2 of the Rules of Court, the separate opinion of Judge
Nicolaou is annexed to this judgment.
A.K.
S.N.
DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGE NICOLAOU
I
very much regret that I am unable to share the view taken by my
learned colleagues that there has been no violation of Article 5 §
3.
The
legal issue in the present case is essentially whether Article 102 §
1 (4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure could provide sufficient
legal basis for detention during the pre-trial period. An affirmative
answer was given by a majority judgment in the case of Getoš-Magdić
v. Croatia, no. 56305/08, §§ 80-96, 2 December
2010, where it was accordingly found that there was no violation of
Article 5 § 3 of the Convention. A separate dissenting opinion
of judges Rozakis, Malinverni and Nicolaou found otherwise, on the
ground that detention on the stated basis was inconsistent with the
Court’s case-law. The main part of the reasoning is contained
in the following excerpt (at p.30):
“The nature and the actual seriousness of the
offences or the gravity of the charges brought, as well as the
severity of the penalty that may imposed, are obviously relevant
factors which may indicate, especially when the prosecution evidence
is strong, that there is a risk of absconding or reoffending. In such
a situation it is incumbent on the national judicial authorities to
ascertain and evaluate the various elements and factors involved, to
explain their conclusions and to give reasons for their decision to
detain, or for their decision to grant bail on terms that exceed what
may normally be expected. In doing so, they are expected to balance
the recognized requirements of public interest that may justify
detention against respect for individual liberty, which at that stage
is reflected in the presumption of innocence. The constant case-law
of the Court leaves no doubt that the seriousness of the offence,
whatever form the offence may actually have taken, and the probable
severity of sentence do not of themselves, without more, justify
detention, at least after the initial period. Article 102 § 1
(4) does not, on the face of it, seem to require more. Accordingly,
it cannot constitute a valid basis for detention”.
While,
therefore, precedent must be respected, there is a choice to be made
when one is confronted with divergence. In my opinion the case of
Getoš-Magdić v. Croatia (cited above) in no way
diminishes the force of a mass of case-law going in the opposite
direction; and it is to the principles it establishes that I must
adhere. This, in my view, can only be expressed by a dissenting
opinion, not a concurring one which would imply acceptance of
Getoš-Magdić v. Croatia as binding authority.