Case
No.: CH/02/8679, CH/02/8689, CH/02/8690 and CH/02/8691
Applicant: Hadž BOUDELLAA, Boumediene LAKHDAR,
Mohamed NECHLE and Saber LAHMAR
Respondent Party: Bosnia and Herzegovina and the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Date Delivered: 11 October 2002
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
The applicants
Boudellaa, Lakhdar, and Nechle obtained citizenship of Bosnia
and Herzegovina and of the Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina on 2 January 1995, 20 December 1997, and 25 August
1995, respectively. The applicant Lahmar was granted a permit
for permanent residence in Bosnia and Herzegovina on 4 April
1997. In October 2001 the applicants were arrested and taken
into custody on the suspicion of having planned a terrorist
attack on the Embassies of the United States and the United
Kingdom in Sarajevo. In November 2001 the Federal Ministry of
Interior issued decisions revoking the citizenship of Bosnia
and Herzegovina and of the Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina of the applicants Boudellaa, Lakhdar and Nechle.
They initiated an administrative dispute before the Supreme
Court of the Federation against these decisions. The
proceedings were still pending at the time of adoption of the
Chamber's decisions. Also in November 2001 the Ministry of
Human Rights and Refugees issued a decision terminating the
permit for permanent residence of the applicant Lahmar in
Bosnia and Herzegovina and banishing him from the country for
a period of ten years. The applicant Lahmar appealed against
this decision. The appeal was still pending at the time of
adoption of the Chamber's decision. On 17 January 2002 the
applicants were ordered to be released from pre-trial
detention. However, instead of being released, they were
immediately taken into the custody of the Federation Police,
and the following day they were handed over to the military
forces of the United States of America based in Bosnia and
Herzegovina as part of the NATO led Stabilization Forces ("SFOR").
At that time, the applicants Boudellaa, Lakhdar and Nechle
received decisions on "refusal of entry" ordering them to
leave the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina immediately.
Within hours, they were transferred to the U.S. military
detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
The expulsion of the applicants raised issues under Article 1
of Protocol No. 7 to the European Convention on Human Rights,
which provides for procedural safeguards in relation to the
expulsion of aliens. In case that the applicants were still to
be considered citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina the cases
raise issues under Article 3 of Protocol No. 4 to the
Convention which prohibits the expulsion of nationals. The
cases also raised issues under Article 5 and 8 of the
Convention.
The delivery of the applicants to U.S. authorities and their
subsequent detention in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, might give rise
to a violation of Article 3, the prohibition of torture or
inhuman or degrading treatment, to a violation of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 6 to the Convention which contains the abolition
of the death penalty, and to a violation of Article 6 of the
Convention as the applicants claimed that any trial that they
may face by U.S. authorities might not be a fair trial.
Admissibility
Bosnia and Herzegovina raised the objection that it could not
be considered a respondent Party as the applications were
directed solely against the Federation and that it could not
be held responsible for possible violations in the present
cases. The Chamber held that in accordance with its previous
jurisprudence, recalling Zahirovic v. Bosnia and Herzegovina
and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, it was not
precluded from examining the potential responsibility of
Bosnia and Herzegovina for the events complained of, as it is
not restricted by the applicants' choice of respondent Party.
As regards exhaustion of domestic remedies, the Chamber held
that the applicants had complied with their requirement to
make normal use of effective domestic remedies. However, as
regards the applicants' complaints concerning the right to
have one's status as a citizen determined within a reasonable
time, the Chamber declared this complaint inadmissible ratione
materiae as it is not a right which is included among the
rights and freedoms guaranteed under the Agreement.
The Chamber declared the remainder of the applications
admissible.
Merits
Article 1 of Protocol No. 7 to the Convention
The Chamber found with respect to the expulsion of all four
applicants that both respondent Parties failed to act in
accordance with the domestic laws of Bosnia and Herzegovina
and of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina governing the
expulsion of aliens. Although the Chamber did not decide
whether the applicants were still citizens at the time of
their expulsion, it found that by not acting in accordance
with the law both respondent Parties violated Article 1 of
Protocol No. 7 to the Convention which provides for procedural
safeguards in relation to the expulsion of aliens.
Article 5 paragraph 1 of the Convention
The Chamber found that both respondent Parties violated the
rights of the applicants protected by Article 5 paragraph 1 of
the Convention with regard to the period from the entry into
force of the decision of the Supreme Court of the Federation
of Bosnia and Herzegovina to release the applicants on 17
January 2002 until the hand-over of the applicants to U.S.
forces.
Article 6 paragraph 2 of the Convention.
The Chamber also found that the decisions withdrawing the
citizenship, violated the right of the applicants Boudellaa,
Lakhdar and Nechle to be presumed innocent until proven guilty
according to law as guaranteed by Article 6 paragraph 2 of the
Convention.
Article 1 of Protocol No. 6 to the Convention
The Chamber further examined the obligations of the respondent
Parties in handing over the applicants to U.S. forces, which
lead to their present detention at Camp X-Ray in Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba. Taking into consideration the possibility that U.S.
authorities might seek and potentially impose the death
penalty against the applicants, the Chamber found that the
respondent Parties should have sought assurances from the
United States prior to handing over the applicants to U.S.
forces that the death penalty would not be imposed upon them;
failing to do so constituted a violation of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 6 to the Convention.
Articles 3, 6 and 8 of the Convention
The Chamber concluded that the respondent Parties did not
violate their obligation under Article 3 of the Convention to
protect the applicants from torture or inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment by handing them over to U.S. forces
and further concluded that it was not necessary to separately
examine their complaints under Articles 6 and 8 of the
Convention.
Remedies
The Chamber ordered Bosnia and Herzegovina to take all
necessary steps to annul the decisions on refusal of entry
issued in respect of three of the applicants on 10 January
2002, to take all necessary steps to decide, as a matter of
urgency, on the appeal of the applicant Lahmar against his
expulsion order, to take all necessary steps to ensure that
the administrative dispute before the Supreme Court of the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina concerning the decisions
revoking the citizenship of the applicants Boudellaa, Nechle,
and Lakhdar is decided, to use diplomatic channels in order to
protect the basic rights of the applicants and to take all
possible steps to establish contacts with the applicants and
to provide them with consular support. Bosnia and Herzegovina
was further ordered to take all possible steps to prevent the
death penalty from being pronounced against and executed on
the applicants, including seeking assurances from the United
States via diplomatic contacts that the applicants will not be
subjected to the death penalty. Both respondent Parties were
ordered to retain lawyers authorised and admitted to practice
in the relevant jurisdictions and before the relevant courts,
tribunals or other authoritative bodies in order to take all
necessary action to protect the applicants' rights while in
U.S. custody and in case of possible military, criminal or
other proceedings involving the applicants, each of the
respondent Parties bearing half the cost of the attorney fees
and expenses.
The Chamber further ordered the respondent Parties to
compensate each applicant in the amount of 10,000 KM for their
suffering arising from the violations found. The respondent
Parties were ordered pay this compensation to the applicants'
families in Bosnia and Herzegovina if they do not return
within a year. Both respondent Parties were also ordered to
report to the Chamber no later than 11 November 2002, and
thereafter periodically every two months until full
implementation of the Chamber's decision is achieved, on all
steps taken by the respondent Parties to implement the
decision
Dissenting Opinions
Mme. Michele Picard attached a partly dissenting opinion in
which she disagreed that it was not necessary to examine the
applications separately under Article 6 of the Convention. The
European Court of Human Rights did not exclude that a decision
on extradition could exceptionally raise a problem under
Article 6, where there is a risk that the applicant would
suffer "a flagrant denial of justice" in the receiving State.
While there are considerable doubts whether the applicants
will face the death penalty, there seems to be no doubt that
the risk of suffering a flagrant denial of justice exists.
Considering the rules of criminal proceedings in force in the
American legal system, that is an "accusatory" system, which
relies to a great extent on the equality of arms between the
defence and the prosecution, the absence of these guarantees
might lead to a totally unfair trial.
Mr. Dietrich Rauschning attached a partly dissenting opinion
in which he disagreed with the finding that the applicants
were in real risk of facing the death penalty and therefore
there was no obligation to seek assurances that the death
penalty would not be imposed or carried out. Additionally, Mr.
Rauschning also disagreed with the finding that the applicants
were handed over into illegal detention by U.S. forces as
insufficient consideration had been given to the armed
conflict with international terrorism and claims that the U.S.
is entitled to detain members of the enemy's forces according
to international law. Finally, Mr. Rauschning disagreed with
the finding of a violation of the presumption of innocence on
the basis that the presumption of innocence does not forbid
that decisions in administrative matters may be based on other
evidence, such as a decision of the prosecutor to open a
criminal investigation. The presumption of innocence, which
aims to protect the fairness of criminal proceedings, cannot
be interpreted so widely as to forbid that.
Mr. Viktor Masenko-Mavi, joined by Mr. Giovanni Grasso,
attached a partly dissenting opinion arguing that there was a
serious reason to believe that the applicants' rights secured
by Articles 3 and 6 of the Convention might be violated. The
legal uncertainty created by the U.S. President's Military
Order of 13 November 2001 should have prompted the authorities
of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Federation to carefully
consider the issues covered by Articles 3 and 6 of the
Convention. The rights secured by Articles 3 and 6 of the
Convention are of extreme importance, and in cases where there
is a real risk of their flagrant violation, the extraditing or
expelling State is bound either to take measures aimed at
securing the guarantees enshrined in them or to refuse the
extradition or expulsion.
Mr. Mato Tadic, joined by Mr. Miodrag Pajic, argued in a
dissenting opinion, firstly, that the applications were
inadmissible for failure to exhaust domestic remedies. The
applicants failed to request postponement of enforcement of
the procedural decisions of 16 and 20 November 2001, thus
allowing the domestic authorities to continue the proceedings.
The defence statement that a positive outcome could not be
expected is unacceptable. Secondly, The respondent Parties
have accepted the United Nations Security Council Resolution
1373 and joined the fight against all forms of terrorism,
aiming to prevent the actions of potential perpetrators or
conspirators; thereby, they obliged themselves to take
appropriate steps. Certainly, that fight against terrorism
does not imply human rights violations. At the same time,
however, Bosnia and Herzegovina, being an infant State in
transition and under a special kind of protectorate, should
not be expected to meet such highly demanding standards which
would hardly even be complied with by some countries with
highly established legal systems and the rule of law.
Decision adopted 3 September 2002
Decision delivered 11 October 2002
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