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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Charles v Mugla Chief Public Prosecution Office Republic of Turkey [2017] EWHC 952 (Admin) (04 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/952.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 952 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GARNHAM
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ROSSLEE CHARLES |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MUGLA CHIEF PUBLIC PROSECUTION OFFICE REPUBLIC OF TURKEY |
Respondent |
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Saoirse Townshend (instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service Extradition Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 4 April 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Irwin :
Introduction
The Decision of SDJ Riddle
"He says there is a real risk of inhuman and degrading treatment in a Turkish prison because he is of mixed race, Christian, foreign, and a homosexual prisoner convicted of raping a Turkish male."
"He told me that because he is gay both prison guards and other prisoners assaulted him physically and emotionally. He was called names and beaten because he was deemed to be unclean and sinful. He was called derogatory terms in Turkish and people would shout "homosexual" at him. He gave an example of an occasion when he was given a toothbrush to clean the floor, and while doing so he was kicked and punched and called "gay, homo, girl". He was attacked almost every day by guards and privileged prisoners. He was locked outside his cell on four occasions and forced to sleep in a small yard outside the cell. The nature of the allegation against him was known to prison guards and they passed it on to other prisoners. Apart from the daily assaults, food was taken away from him. He was given contaminated food. Cleaning materials caused burns to his hands and knees. He slept in a toilet for three months. He then provided details of a forced conversion to Islam. He was required to read Arabic writing with a transliteration next to it. He was beaten by a guard with a stick if he made a mistake and made to repeat again and again. He received quite significant injuries – two black eyes and bruising to his shoulder, knees and face. A fellow prisoner said that conversion meant that he was no longer a dirty and was officially Muslim. Other people were cheering.
Racist name-calling started on his arrival at the prison. He was kicked and punched to the floor. Prison guards, soldiers and other inmates were all responsible. He heard "monkey noises" and was called "capra goat" and was told that as he was filthy he had to do filthy work."
"All in all, Ross Charles was a sympathetic and credible witness. He is clearly intelligent and has an air of vulnerability. I believed his accounts that he was beaten in prison and regularly abused by staff and other prisoners. I believed his account of the rather bizarre religious ceremony, apparently a conversion. I believe he was humiliated and hungry and in extremely crowded conditions. His evidence was moving and affecting. It was corroborated by the contemporaneous account he gave in letters to his friend."
Against that background, SDJ Riddle went on to consider the report of Professor Morgan.
"He doesn't speak Turkish, he is Christian not Muslim, he is black, he is avowedly gay and he stands convicted of male rape. That is, he is about as not run of the mill as can be imagined."
Professor Morgan reported that ill-treatment as described by the Appellant was consistent with the findings from the most recent inspection by the CPT.
"… all the evidence made available to me suggests that LGBT prisoners at Maltepe are treated properly by prison staff and that the prison is safe – that is, that LGBT and prisoners generally are not at risk of serious harm from fellow prisoners."
Developments since the Extradition Hearing
"…a day room and, along the entrance corridor within the ward, three cells each with two bunk beds, thereby offering accommodation for six prisoners. Each cell has an entirely closed off hole-in-the-floor lavatory on one side of the ablutions cubicle, a wash-basin in the middle and a shower area on the other side. The entrance to the ablutions cubicle has a curtain. The ablutions cubicle provides hot and cold water, though I was told by the prisoners that the plumbing of the prison was very irregular and on many days there was no hot water. The supply of hot water was allegedly dependant on the use of hot water in other parts of the prison."
"[The day room] is Spartan in the extreme, the only furniture comprising a small square plastic table in the middle of the room and two plastic chairs. Along one wall is a sink for washing, eating utensils and clothes. A clothes line had been strung up across the room for drying clothes. There was no evidence of other provisions (games, books, exercise equipment, etc) in the day room though each cell contained a television and all the prisoners appeared to have a fairly large array of personal possessions, all of which they kept in the cells."
"This is a space allocation too physically restrictive for prisoners subject to such social restrictions."
"5.8 I am not certain that the CPT, were the Committee to inspect the Maltepe No 3 Unit, would describe the restricted space and impoverished regime in the main ward as inhuman or degrading. I have no doubt that the Committee would be sharply critical of the arrangements but I can think of no exact precedent with which to compare the Maltepe Unit and the Committee's findings. Were the CPT to employ the term inhuman or degrading it would almost certainly be in relation to the three prisoners currently held in isolation whose regime and lack of contacts is not dissimilar to that of some life or long-term prisoners held in other jurisdictions which the CPT has described as inhuman and degrading.
5.9 I come to the same conclusion as that above regarding the likely response of the ECtHR were the Court asked to adjudicate on the arrangements at Maltepe No 3.
5.10 I am not a medical expert and therefore not in a position to judge how well Ross Charles would cope, were he extradited, with conditions in the Maltepe No 3 Unit, either that in the ward or in the isolation cells. However, my lay conclusion, in the light of Professor Katona's past and most recent assessment of Ross Charles is that were he extradited to Turkey and held in the Maltepe No 3 Unit, his existing, adverse mental health condition would be greatly exacerbated. He would be both physically and socially isolated. He would be the only British prisoner and English speaker in the Unit. He would not receive tuition in Turkish. And he would be very unlikely to receive the support he would need within the Unit. What care and support he would receive if transferred to the Maltepe Prison Hospital or an outside, closed, state psychiatric hospital I am not in a position to say. However, prisoner D's distressed psychological condition and the apparent lack of support provided for her is relevant here. There is no psychiatrically qualified mental health team within Maltepe No 3 prison and prisoner D is being held in isolation in the prison: she has not been transferred to either the Maltepe Prison Hospital or an outside psychiatric hospital despite her distressed state.
5.11 Finally, once allocated to the Maltepe NO 3 LGTBI Unit Ross Charles would effectively be physically and reputationally trapped. It was made very clear to me that once known as an LGBTI Unit occupant he could not subsequently be transferred to "straight" Maltepe No 3 Prison accommodation. It would not be judged by the authorities to be compatible with security. Prisoner C's experience is relevant here: he is now trapped within the Unit having previously lived in a standard male prisoner dormitory in the same prison."
The Psychiatric and Psychological Evidence
"a. Professor Morgan's report provides further justification for the concerns expressed in my original report on Mr Charles and in my subsequent addendum report.
b. I share Prof Morgan's concern that being 'physically and socially isolated' (as Prof Morgan concludes Mr Charles would be), is likely to have a significant adverse effect on his mental health. The lack of 'facilities or means of occupation' and in particular of 'access to all occupational, educational and recreational activities, other than half an hour each week in an outdoor sports arena' would be likely to worsen Mr Charles' depressive symptoms considerably.
c. Prolonged periods of solitary confinement would be likely to aggravate Mr Charles's PTSD symptoms.
d. I also share Prof Morgan's concern at the apparent lack of a 'psychiatrically qualified mental health team' able to meet Mr Charles's complex mental health needs. This is particularly crucial in the context of the mental deterioration (and associated escalation in suicide risk) that he is likely to experience."
The Key Issues
"The Undertaking that Ross Charles will be housed in the Maltepe No 3 LGBTI Unit
4.10 I understand that the Turkish authorities have given a new undertaking that, if extradited, Ross Charles will be accommodated in the Maltepe No 3 LGBTI Unit. Was there, I asked Judge SIK and the Public Prosecutor, a clear undertaking to that effect?
4.11 A somewhat "angels on the head of a pin" type discussion followed in which the judge, a psychologist and the Public Prosecutor for Maltepe participated. It was explained to me that following his receipt in Turkey, Ross Charles would be taken to Maltepe No 3 Prison and would there be assessed by the Maltepe No 3 medical and psychology team, it would be a psycho-social assessment. The assessment team would determine whether he was gay and, if gay, whether he wished to be known as gay and allocated accordingly. It would also be assessed whether he would be comfortable living in the LGBTI Unit and, most importantly, whether his presence would be acceptable to the other prisoners living in the LGBTI Unit.
4.12 I suggested that this position represented a change from the undertaking given in 2015, when Ross Charles' allocation to the Maltepe No 2 LGBTI Unit was apparently guaranteed. The undertaking now appeared to be conditional. Judge SIK and the Public Prosecutor were adamant that this was not so. The undertaking was not "conditional". Ross Charles was a very unusual case (given his personal characteristics). What they had been describing was "normal procedure". Ross Charles would be certain to go to the LGBTI Unit. "Security", the Public Prosecutor emphasised, was the Turkish authorities' first priority. An openly "gay" prisoner could not be allocated within the "straight" population: it would be prejudicial to security."
Conditions in Maltepe No 3 LGBTI Unit and Article 3
Ground Three – Oppression and Section 91 of the Extradition Act 2003
Discrimination and Section 81 of the Extradition Act 2003
Conclusion
Mr Justice Garnham