BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Shumba & Ors v Public Prosecutor In Nanterre County Court, France & Ors [2018] EWHC 3130 (Admin) (16 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/3130.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3130 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE CARR DBE
____________________
EMANUEL SHUMBA ROBIN BECHIAN CIPRIAN HENTA |
Appellants |
|
- and – |
||
PUBLIC PROSECUTOR IN NANTERRE COUNTY COURT, FRANCE PUBLIC PROSECUTOR OF BOBIGNY COUNTY COURT, FRANCE FIRST INSTANCE COURT OF BOBIGNY, FRANCE |
Respondents |
____________________
Ms Alison Macdonald QC and Ms Emilie Pottle (instructed by McMillan Williams Solicitors Ltd) for the Second Appellant
Ms Alison Macdonald QC and Ms Emilie Pottle (instructed by National Legal Service) for the Third Appellant
Mr Ben Lloyd and Mr Richard Evans (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 13 November 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Singh and Mrs Justice Carr:
Introduction
i) In which part of which institution or institutions will [the Appellant] be detained if he is returned to France?ii) Will [the Appellant] be accommodated in a cell which provides him with at least 3m2 of personal space (excluding any in-cell sanitary facility) at all times throughout his detention? If the answer is Yes, will he have between 3m2 and 4m2?
iii) Will the overall surface of the cell allow [the Appellant] to move freely between the furniture items in the cell at all times throughout his detention?
iv) What will the other detention conditions be for [the Appellant] throughout his detention, including whether he will be accommodated in a cell where he or someone he is sharing with is sleeping on a mattress on the floor, what the sanitary facilities there will be and whether the toilet will be fully partitioned from the rest of the cell, how many hours a day he will be allowed out of his cell, what meals he will receive and whether there remains a serious problem with rats and bedbugs at the prison?
Response from the French Ministry of Justice ("the MoJ")
i) People handed over from the UK are almost invariably escorted by air. The entry point into France for the Appellants would be Orly (relevant court: Créteil) or Roissy (relevant court: Bobigny);
ii) If the prosecution to which the EAW relates took place or will take place in a court more than 200km from the point of entry into France, the extradited person will be detained, except in special circumstances, in either Villepinte or Fresnes for a maximum of 6 days. If in a court less than 200km from the point of entry, the extradited person will be detained in either Fleury, Nanterre or Fresnes;
iii) If the EAW is issued for the purposes of serving a final sentence, the person is presented on arrival to the Bobigny or Créteil courts, which have control over Villepinte and Fresnes respectively. If the case in question involved a decision made in absentia, the person handed over will be detained in either Villepinte or Fresnes for the appeal or objection period (10 days);
iv) All of the Appellants would spend at least their first few days either in Fresnes or Villepinte;
v) The likelihood of transfers depends on their penal status (as remand prisoners or those receiving a final sentence). Transfer is compulsory for convicts whose remaining prison term is more than two years;
vi) Following a decree of 4 May 2017, which we are told was an executive order, the choice of institution for accommodating prisoners is influenced by the prison occupancy levels of the short-stay prisons. The distribution of prisoners now follows rules offering more flexibility. Additionally, since early 2018 a "drawing-rights mechanism" has been strengthened through a simplified and accelerated procedure used to reduce the overpopulation of Paris' prison institutions by distribution to prisons in other regions;
vii) A renovated prison at Paris La- Santé is opening at the beginning of 2019 which will help reduce numbers at Fresnes and Fleury-Mérogis;
viii) The occupancy level of the prisons are as follows:
- Fleury-Mérogis: 142%
- Fresnes: 192%
- Nanterre: 174%
- Villepinte: 184%;
ix) In terms of cell sizes and individual space, two people are often accommodated in single cells (using bunk beds) and three people in double cells (using triple bunk beds or mattresses on the floor). Specifically,:
- Fresnes: smaller single cells (8 to 9m2) (excluding sanitary facilities) have space for one or two detainees, leaving a minimum of 4m2 per person. As of 23 July 2018, the 386 larger single cells (10m2) accommodated three detainees, i.e. 3m2 per person (excluding sanitary facilities);
- Nanterre: there are 415 single cells measuring 8 to 9m2 excluding sanitary facilities, meaning that there is a minimum of 4m2 for the one to two detainees. The double cells measure from 10 to 11m2 excluding sanitary facilities i.e. 5m2 per person. The 57 cells (as of 27 August 2018) with three detainees have at least 3m2 per prisoner;
- Villepinte: there are 480 single cells measuring 9 to 10m2 including sanitary facilities, meaning that there is 8 to 9m2 of space, i.e. a minimum of 4m2 for the one to two detainees. The double cells measure from 11m2 to 12m2 including sanitary facilities i.e. 5m2 per person. The 40 cells (as of 27 August 2018) with three detainees have at least 3m2 per prisoner. Less than 10% of Villepinte's prisoners have less than 4m2 floorspace, the other 90% have more than 4m2;
- Fleury-Mérogis: there are 2,150 single cells measuring from 9 to10m2, including sanitary facilities, meaning there is at least 4m2 per detainee when two share the cell. The 60 double cells measure 14 to 19 m2, giving at least 6m2 per detainee;
- as of 1 October 2018 there were no mattresses on the ground in Fresnes and Fleury-Merogis, 9 in Nanterre and 28 at Villepinte (but only in double cells with a surface area of 11 to 12m2, not including the sanitary area, so providing an individual cell area of more than 3m2);
x) In all of these institutions, prisoners are able to move freely between furniture placed against each wall, either side of the door and window, and have a sanitary area separated from the rest of the cell by a low wall or partition;
xi) In terms of conditions, meals are served twice a day. Prisoners are, on average, confined to their cells on average for 15 to 16 hours a day, and are offered a minimum of 5 hours of activity per day (in workshops, general maintenance work, training and education, walks), not including time spent at the healthcare unit or visitors' sessions. They have daily walks. In these four prisons there are cultural programmes which include music, reading and writing workshops, and sports facilities and equipment with organised sports events;
xii) Bed bugs in Villepinte have been eradicated for several months now, with a new rapid disinfection protocol put in place. There have been no recent bed bug infestations at Fleur-Merogis. In Fresnes permanent eradication of bed bugs is a priority action, with regular "disinsectization" operations two or three times a week and whenever a specific report is made. In Nanterre only 21 cases of bed bugs were detected in 2018, all of which were the subject of immediate treatment. The MoJ stated that bedbugs were now a "marginal phenomenon" in the French prison estate, in particular in the Paris region;
xiii) All institutions have contracts for rodent control to tackle vermin which provide for regular intervention. In decisions made between October 2016 and April 2017, the Administrative Tribunal of Melun has directed the Fresnes administration to continue its efforts to combat pests by blocking the sewers and by maximising the level of rat extermination. The prisons accordingly took the measures of: placing new grating systems to ban the spraying of food outside; installing new bins in cells, with daily pick up of bags; carrying out poster campaigns; implementing a protocol for the control of bed bugs; recapping identified holes and fitting plates on sewers; concretising the yards; intensifying cleaning and extermination efforts with a new company attending 3 times a week (instead of twice a month) from November 2016 to March 2017, the purchase of new cleaning equipment and the creation of new general service jobs.
The Appellants' position in response to the further material
i) The further information shows that each Appellant will have at best a bare 3m2. There is serious concern that for some of their imprisonment their space will fall short of this threshold;ii) The MOJ's statement that detainees can move freely between the furniture items is no more than assertion and is inconsistent with other evidence, including evidence that cells of 9m2 with 3 detainees inside, together with furniture, can be used;
iii) Alternatively, if the Court concludes that the Appellants would be given between 3 to 4m2 of personal space, the strong presumption of breach remains, given the other material conditions. The suggestion that prisoners receive a minimum of 5 hours of activities per day, have daily walks and are confined for 15 to 16 hours a day is contradicted by the range of evidence as to the reality. The toilets are not fully partitioned and reports suggest deplorable hygiene, an issue that has gone unaddressed, as have issues of humidity, call systems, quality of food and violence. The MoJ does not say that the issue of rats has been resolved and it is clear that the measures taken so far are not working.
Discussion
"In all these [Fresnes, Nanterre, Villepinte and Fleury-Mérogis] institutions, prisoners are able to move freely between furniture placed against each wall, either side of the door and window, and have a sanitary area separated from the rest of the cell by a low wall or partition (2008:implementation of the European Prison Rules).
So, in this particular case, Messrs Shumba, Bechian and Henta, who will have to be detained at Fresnes or Villepinte first, will each have a floor space of at least 3m2 and be able to move around their cells without difficulty."
Conclusion