Case
No.: CH/98/1335, CH/98/1370, CH/99/1505, CH/99/2805 and
CH/00/4371
Applicant:
Zuhdija RIZVIĆ, Sead HUSKIĆ, Almir
ŠABANČEVIĆ, Ahmet SEFIĆ and Ismet GRAČANIN
Respondent Party: Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Date Delivered: 8 March 2002 (partial decision on
admissibility and decision on the merits)
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
On 27 September
1993 Fikret Abdic proclaimed the "Autonomous Province of
Western Bosnia" (the "Autonomy") on the territory of the
Velika Kladuša and Cazin municipalities. The applicants Rizvic,
Huskic, Šabancevic and Gracanin, all of Bosniak descent, were
members of the armed forces of the Autonomy. The applicant
Sefic, also of Bosniak descent, was detained in the Serb run
concentration camp "Sana Keran" in the Una-Sana Canton. After
the victory of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina over the
armed forces of the Autonomy, the applicants were arrested,
indicted and convicted either for having committed war crimes
or for multiple counts of murder.
Admissibility (separate decisions of 3 July, 12 October and
7 November 2001, respectively, and partial decision of 5 March
2002)
The Chamber declared all the applications admissible as to the
claims of the right to fair trial and the non-compliance of
the respondent Party with the Rules of the Road. For some of
the applicants, the Chamber also found admissible claims of
maltreatment during police custody, or custody in the district
prison, lack of investigation by the investigative judge and
double jeopardy.
Merits
Article 3 of the Convention
The Chamber noted that in order to fall within the scope of
Article 3, the treatment complained of must have attained a
minimal amount of severity. The Chamber paid particular
attention to the vulnerability of the applicants during police
custody, duration of custody, and their inability to protect
themselves during beating incidents. Reviewing the evidence,
the Chamber found that applicants Huskic, Šabancevic and
Gracanin could not protect themselves against the police
officers punching, kicking and beating their bodies, heads and
foot soles with baseball bats and rubber truncheons for days
on end. The Chamber found that this amounted to inhuman and
degrading treatment in violation of Article 3. The Chamber
found that there had been no violation of Article 3 in the
case of the applicant Rizvic, since that applicant's
allegations of ill-treatment in the Bihac District Prison were
unsubstantiated.
Article 5 of the Convention
The Chamber found that the respondent Party did not comply
with the Rules of the Road in any of the cases, thereby
violating Article 5, paragraph 1 rights of all the applicants.
The Chamber noted that the Rules of the Road became law on 18
February 1996 and that even for applicants arrested very
shortly afterwards, the respondent Party had an obligation to
comply with the Rules during the applicants' subsequent
custody. In response to the Federation's claim that the Bihac
courts were not aware of the Rules of the Road, the Chamber
observed that it was the respondent Party's duty to make the
courts aware of the Rules and that failure to do so was a
violation of the Convention.
Article 6 of the Convention
As to the right to a fair trial, guaranteed by Article 6
paragraph 1, the Chamber concluded that there had been no
violation in the cases of the applicants Sefic and Gracanin.
In the cases of the applicants Huskic, Rizvic, and Šabancevic
however, the Chamber did establish violations of this right.
The Chamber found that Huskic was not informed sufficiently of
the accusation against him and not given adequate opportunity
to prepare his defence. In addition, the Chamber noted that
under domestic law, there was no possibility for the applicant
to appeal against his conviction on the ground that he was
found guilty of an offence different from the one he was
charged with. The violations in the cases of Šabancevic and
Rizvic concerned their rights to examine and call witnesses.
The Chamber did not find the amount of witnesses heard on
proposal of the prosecution and on proposal of the defence
necessarily disproportionate. However, in combination with the
fact that the testimony of one of the refused witnesses
appeared to have possibly been of significant importance to
the outcome of the proceedings, and the importance of
confronting witnesses with the fact that their testimony was
contradictory on decisive points, the Chamber was of the
opinion that the court's reasoning in rejecting the defence's
request that there had been enough hearings and testimony in
the case in order for the court to reach a decision, was
insufficient and not consistent with the concept of a fair
trial.
Article 4 of Protocol No. 7 to the Convention
The Chamber found that there had been no violation of the
right of the applicant Gracanin not to be tried or punished
for the same crime twice as guaranteed under Article 4 of
Protocol No. 7 to the Convention.
Remedies
The Chamber ordered the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
to pay to the applicants Huskic, Šabancevic and Gracanin the
sum of KM 3,000 by way of compensation for the maltreatment
suffered while in custody of the Bihac police. The Chamber
further ordered that the applicant Huskic be released from
detention at the latest when the Chamber's decision becomes
final and binding in accordance with its Rules of Procedure.
The Chamber ordered the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
to pay to the applicant Gracanin the sum of KM 2,000 by way of
compensation for his unlawful detention. Finally, the Chamber
ordered the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina to take all
necessary steps to re-try the criminal cases against the
applicants Rizvic, Huskic and Šabancevic.
Decision adopted 5 March 2002
Decision delivered 8 March 2002
DECISION ON REQUEST FOR REVIEW
In his request for review, the applicant, Ahmet Sefic, case
no. CH/99/2805, argued that (a) the Chamber in finding no
violation of Article 6 of the Convention, had failed to
consider the fact that he did not have adequate time to
prepare his defence after his indictment had been changed from
charging him with war crimes to charging him with ordinary
murder, which the applicant only learned on the day of the
trial; (b) that the Chamber in finding no violation of Article
6 of the Convention, did not adequately consider his
allegation that witnesses proposed by him were not heard; and
(c) that although in both his case and the case of the
applicant Gracanin a violation of Article 5 paragraph 1 was
found, and although the applicant was held in unlawful
detention for almost seven months, the Chamber did not award
him any compensation, whereas it awarded the applicant
Gracanin KM 2,000. The Chamber decided that with respect to
all the issues raised in the request for review, it could not
be said that they raised "a serious question affecting the
interpretation or application of the Agreement or a serious
issue of general importance", as required by Rule 64 paragraph
2(b) of its Rules of Procedure. Therefore the Chamber decided
to reject the request for review.
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