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Addendum to the report | Doc. 13864 Add. | 29 September 2015
Implementation of judgments of the European Court of Human Rights
Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights
1. Introduction
1. This document is an addendum
to the report on “Implementation of judgments of the European Court
of Human Rights”,
which was adopted by the Committee
on Legal Affairs and Human Rights on 23 June 2015. It is aimed at
updating the information contained in the said report, concerning
main problems in the implementation of judgments of the European
Court of Human Rights (“the Court”) against the following 10 States:
Italy, Turkey, the Russian Federation, Ukraine, Romania, Greece,
Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria and the United Kingdom. In the report,
I focused on cases that are under the enhanced supervision of the
Committee of Ministers. Due to time constraints related to the preparation
of my report, I was not able to include in it issues raised at the
1230th Committee of Ministers (DH) meeting, which took place from
9 to 11 June 2015;
these are
referred to in the present addendum. The addendum also takes into
account, to the extent possible, other recent developments. 



2. State-by-State overview
2.1. Italy
2. No major developments have
been noted concerning the implementation of the judgments against
Italy mentioned in the report. As regards excessive length of judicial
proceedings and the lack of an effective remedy in that regard,
following my visit to Rome in October 2014, the authorities sent
comprehensive information to the Committee of Ministers in July
2015.
They also provided
an action plan concerning the case of Sharifi
and Others v. Italy and Greece. 


2.2. Turkey
3. As regards the problem of repeated
imprisonment for conscientious objection revealed in the case of Ülke v. Turkey, the Turkish authorities
provided additional information on 7 May 2015 on individual measures in
the cases from this group, including Erçep and Feti Demirtaş. 

4. Concerning freedom of expression (Inçal
v. Turkey
group), the Committee of Ministers examined judgments
concerning this problem at its 1230th (DH) meeting in June 2015.
It reiterated its call on the authorities to revise Article 301
of the Criminal Code,
“noted with satisfaction
the ongoing positive trend in the manner domestic courts apply Convention
standards” (item 3), encouraged the authorities to intensify their efforts
to continue to incorporate the Court’s case law and invited the
Turkish authorities to provide statistical information to show the
decrease in the number of convictions under Article 216 of the Criminal
Code
and the anti-terrorist
legislation. It also stressed the role of the Turkish Constitutional
Court in setting precedents following the introduction of the right
to individual application before this jurisdiction. However, despite
these positive developments, it looks like the problem of freedom
of expression remains an issue of concern in Turkey, in particular
in the light of recent Assembly’s reports (see the most recent election
observation report
and
the information note of the rapporteur of the Monitoring Committee.
)




5. At its 1230th (DH) meeting, the Committee of Ministers examined
again issues concerning Cyprus (Cyprus
v. Turkey, Varnava and Others v. Turkey and the group
of cases Xenides-Arestis v. Turkey). Concerning
the issue of missing persons, the Committee of Ministers welcomed
the progress made by the Committee on Missing Persons in Cyprus
(CMP) and noted that 2014 had been a landmark year as regards the
number of persons identified. It also recalled its previous conclusions
on the necessity of adopting a proactive approach by the Turkish
authorities and took note with interest of the additional information
provided by them on the investigations into the deaths of identified
persons. The Committee of Ministers invited delegations to transmit
written questions, if they so wished, to the CMP and the Turkish
authorities through its Secretariat by the end of September 2015
and decided to resume the consideration of this aspect of the judgment
at its meeting (DH) in March 2016.
It also recalled
that the obligation to pay just satisfaction awarded by the Court
was unconditional
(in all three cases); as
regards the case Varnava and Others v. Turkey and
the group of cases Xenides-Arestis v.
Turkey, it exhorted once again the Turkish authorities
to pay without further delay the sums awarded to the applicants
and invited the Secretary General of the Council of Europe to raise
this issue in his contacts with the Turkish authorities.


6. As regards the problem of excessive force used to disperse
peaceful demonstrations (Oya Ataman group
of cases), it should be noted that the controversial security bill,
increasing the powers of police and penalties for protesters, was
adopted on 27 March 2015. 

2.3. Russian Federation
7. At its 1230th meeting (DH),
the Committee of Ministers examined again the cases from the Garabayev group (concerning risk
of ill treatment in cases of extradition/expulsion, disregard of
interim measures of the European Court of Human Rights under Rule
39 of the Rules of the Court and illegal abductions and forcible transfers)
on the basis of the updated action plan provided by the authorities
in April 2015. The Committee of Ministers noted with concern, as
regards the situation of the applicants remaining on the Russian
territory, that a number of applicants might remain in detention
pending expulsion notwithstanding the fact that such removal was
not possible having been found by the Court to be in breach of Article
3. Thus the Committee of Ministers invited the authorities to provide
information on the current situation of these applicants. As regards
the situation of the applicants removed to Tajikistan and Uzbekistan
in violation of the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No.
5), the Committee of Ministers noted the information regarding the
requests for up-to-date submitted by the Russian authorities to
the Tajik and Uzbek authorities; however, it found that this measure
alone was not sufficient and reiterated its call for further initiatives
to obtain regular access, for monitoring purposes, to the detained
applicants in Tajikistan and Uzbekistan either by Russian diplomatic personnel
or by representatives of reputable and independent national and
international organisations. While welcoming the information that
some applicants had been found alive, the Committee of Ministers
reiterated its grave concern that the fate of other applicants still
remained unknown. As regards general measures, the Committee of
Ministers noted information on measures concerning automatic protection
against unlawful or irregular removal from the Russian territory,
but considered that the effectiveness of the measures taken remained
to be seen. Thus, it encouraged the Russian authorities to provide
regular updates concerning the holding of meetings between the competent
authorities and applicants, the lodging of any complaints by the persons
concerned regarding perceived risks of abduction, forcible removal
or to their health/life, and the authorities’ response to such complaints.
8. The Committee of Ministers also examined the case Alekseyev v. Russia (concerning
repeated bans on the holding of gay rights marches and pickets)
on the basis of the updated action plan of April 2015. The Committee
of Ministers noted the judgment of the Constitutional Court of 23
September 2014, which examined the Federal Law prohibiting “propaganda
of non-traditional sexual relations”. It found that administrative sanctions
in respect of such propaganda, which should not be interpreted broadly,
complied with the Constitution. However, the prohibition of such
propaganda should not be interpreted as a ban imposed on “non-traditional
sexual relations”. Thus, the Committee of Ministers invited the
Russian authorities to clarify the impact of the said judgment on
the decisions of local authorities to accept or to reject a request
made to hold a public event. Moreover, the Committee of Ministers
expressed serious concern that the local authorities continued to
reject most of the requests made to hold public events similar to
those in the Alekseyev judgment, including
on the basis of the Federal Law prohibiting “propaganda of non-traditional
sexual relations”, and therefore urged the authorities to take concrete
measures to ensure that such requests would be accepted unless there
were well-grounded reasons justifying their rejection in compliance
with Convention standards. The Committee of Ministers invited the
Russian authorities to provide a comprehensive action plan, outlining measures,
including awareness-raising measures, to ensure the exercise of
the right to assembly and concrete information on how judicial practice
had been developing. It further invited the Russian authorities
to provide detailed information on all requests to hold public events
similar to the one in the Alekseyev judgment
between 1 October 2014 and 30 September 2015 in Moscow and St Petersburg,
and in the Kostroma, Arkhangelsk, Murmansk and Tyumen regions. As
regards the issue of effective remedy, the Committee of Ministers
noted with satisfaction the adoption, on 8 March 2015, of the Code
of Administrative Procedure, which provided for a legally binding
time frame so that any dispute concerning public events could be
decided before the planned date of the public event.
9. As regards more recent issues, the Committee of Ministers
examined the Catan and Others case (violation
of the right to education of children and parents from Moldovan/Romanian
language schools in the Transdniestrian region of the Republic of
Moldova). Once again, it deplored
the absence of information on the payment of just satisfaction and
of any other measure to implement the Court’s judgment and expressed concern
about a continuous violation of the applicant’s right to education,
resulting from acts of intimidation and pressure affecting the functioning
of the Latin script schools in the Transdniestrian region.
10. The Committee of Ministers is also examining the implementation
of the judgment OAO Neftyanaya Kompaniya
YUKOS,
in
which the Court found various violations of the Convention (mainly
of its Article 6 and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 (ETS No. 9) concerning
tax and enforcement proceedings brought against the applicant oil
company, leading to its liquidation in 2007. On
31 July 2014, the Court delivered a judgment on just satisfaction
in this case and awarded a total of €1 866 104 634 to the applicant
company’s shareholders and their legal successors and heirs. The
judgment became final on 15 December 2014. It also indicated that the
Russian authorities were to produce by 15 June 2015, in co-operation
with the Committee of Ministers, a comprehensive action plan, including
a binding time frame, for the distribution of the just satisfaction
awarded in respect of pecuniary damage. As the Russian authorities
had given no indication as to the drawing up of the said action
plan, at their 1230th meeting (DH) the Committee of Ministers urged
them to deploy all their efforts, in close co-operation with its
Secretariat, to respect the relevant operative part of the judgment
of the European Court of Human Rights.
On 16 June 2015, the
Russian authorities informed the Committee of Ministers that on
11 June 2015 members of the State Duma had submitted a request to
the Constitutional Court and that the outcome of that request would
be “determinative for the procedure and possibility of execution”
of the said judgments. 



11. On 14 July 2015, the Constitutional Court issued a statement
in which it said that “the participation of the Russian Federation
in any international treaty does not mean giving up national sovereignty.
Neither the European Convention on Human Rights, nor the legal positions
of the European Court of Human Rights based on it, can cancel the
priority of the Constitution. Their practical implementation in
the Russian legal system is only possible through recognition of
the supremacy of the Constitution’s legal force”.
In her statement of 16 July
2015, the President of the Assembly, Ms Anne Brasseur, expressed
concern about this position of the Constitutional Court, stressing,
amongst others, that it should not lead to a selective implementation
of the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights. 


12. As regards other groups of cases examined in the Appendix
to my report, the Russian authorities have provided new information
concerning the case of Gerasimov and
Others (on non-enforcement of domestic final judgments),
the group of cases Ananyev (on
poor prison conditions)
as well as the group of
cases Khashiyev and Akayeva (on
actions of the security forces in the Chechen Republic),
which
is now being examined by the Committee of Ministers.



2.4. Ukraine
13. As regards the non-enforcement
of domestic judicial decisions (cases from the Zhovner group), in their latest
action plan of 10 April 2015,
the Ukrainian authorities provided
information on a number of general measures adopted and/or envisaged.
In particular, they indicated that they were developing a new alternative mechanism
of enforcement of judicial decisions, which consisted in the transformation
of debts under the non-enforced judicial decisions, the enforcement
of which was guaranteed by the State and the Court’s judgments, accrued
as of 1 January 2015 (totalling up to 7 544 562 370 UAH), into treasury
bonds payable up to seven years. It was envisaged that only a small
part of the debt would be paid in cash (up to 10%), within the limit
of the funds provided to this end by the Law “On the 2015 State
Budget”.

14. The Committee of Ministers, at its 1230th (DH) meeting, took
note of this information and expressed its concern that the said
scheme, if not carefully designed, could run contrary to the authorities’
efforts to introduce an effective remedy and requested further information
on the details of it. It also stressed that the envisaged scheme
could not, in any case, be applied to the payment of the just satisfaction
awarded by the Court, which should be done exclusively according
to the terms and during the time-limits set by the Court.
It also noted with
concern that the remedy introduced in 2013 appeared not to have
solved the problem at stake, which persisted for more than a decade,
notwithstanding the guidance given by the Committee of Ministers
(including its five interim resolutions) and the Court over the
years. The Committee of Ministers pointed out that the European
Court of Human Rights continued to communicate similar cases to
the Government of Ukraine. On 9 July 2015, the authorities submitted
an updated action plan to the Committee of Ministers. 


15. As regards the problem of impartiality and independence of
judges revealed in the judgment Oleksandr Volkov
v. Ukraine,
the
authorities provided an updated action plan in April 2015,
detailing their analysis
of the issues at stake as well as the recently adopted law “On Ensuring
the Right to Fair Trial”. The Committee of Ministers assessed this
information at its 1230th meeting (DH). It stressed that the reform
of the Constitution was “essential to a full execution of the present
judgment in order to restructure the institutional basis of the system
of judicial discipline” and encouraged the authorities to accelerate
the constitutional reform.
On 24 July 2015, the European
Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission) published
its preliminary opinion on the amendments to the Constitution relating
to the judiciary, proposed by the competent Working Group of the
Constitutional Commission. 




2.5. Romania
16. No major developments have
been noted concerning the implementation of the judgments against Romania
mentioned in my report. The authorities provided new information
concerning the group of cases Strain
v. Romania and Maria Atanasiu
and Others v. Romania (failure to restore or compensate
for nationalised property)
and Bragadireanu
v. Romania (poor conditions of detention). 


2.6. Greece
17. At its 1230th meeting (DH),
the Committee of Ministers examined the cases from the M.S.S. v. Belgium and Greece and Rahimi v. Greece groups focusing
on the situation of unaccompanied minor asylum seekers.
It took note of the
measures taken, welcomed the commitment of the Greek authorities
to treat this problem as a matter of priority and encouraged them
to pursue their efforts to create an effective and sustainable system of
guardianship for such minors. The Committee of Ministers also examined
the cases from the group Nisiotis v.
Greece concerning prison overcrowding.
It recalled the structural character of
this problem and considered that, despite the measures taken by
the Greek authorities, according to the statistics received, this
remained a matter of serious concern. Thus the Committee of Ministers
again urged the Greek authorities to enhance their efforts to draw
up a comprehensive strategy to solve this problem with the help
of the relevant Council of Europe bodies.


18. Furthermore, the authorities provided new information on the
implementation of judgments concerning excessive length of proceedings
before administrative courts and lack of an effective remedy (the Manios group)
as well as those concerning
the use of lethal force and ill treatment by law-enforcement officials
and lack of effective investigation into such abuses (Makaratzis v. Greece). 


2.7. Poland
19. The Polish authorities provided
new information concerning the measures taken and/or envisaged to deal
with the excessive length of proceedings and the lack of an effective
remedy (group cases Fuchs v. Poland,
Kudła
v. Poland and Podbielski v.
Poland
). However,
on 7 July 2015, the Court delivered a pilot judgment in the case
of Rutkowski and Others,
in which
it found a violation of Article 6.1 of the Convention due to the
excessively lengthy proceedings in the applicants’ criminal and
civil cases and a violation of Article 13, due to the low level
of domestic compensation, which was due to the “fragmentation of
proceedings”, a principle being applied by Polish courts in examining
complaints about protracted proceedings. The Court noted that about
650 similar cases were pending before it at different stages of
procedure and decided to communicate to the Polish Government all
new applications, giving it a two-year time limit for processing
those cases and affording redress to all victims.



20. The authorities also provided the Committee of Ministers with
information on the implementation of the judgment Bączkowski and Others v. Poland concerning
freedom of assembly,
giving details about work
on a new Act on Assemblies being prepared by the Ministry of Administration
and Digitilisation. The law in question, providing for a judiciary
control of local authorities’ bans on marches, was initially adopted
by the Sejm on 24 July 2015, and is now again pending before it,
following the amendments proposed by the Senate.
Moreover, the
authorities provided new information on the implementation measures
for the group of cases Kaprykowski
(concerning lack
of adequate health care in prisons).



21. At its 1230th meeting (DH), the Committee of Ministers examined
the cases of Al Nashiri and Husayn (Abu Zubaydah) concerning
secret rendition and detention by the CIA, in Poland, of the applicants
who were suspected of terrorist acts. The Committee of Ministers
“noted with satisfaction the prompt action of the Polish authorities
with a view to requesting from United States authorities diplomatic
assurances that Mr Al Nashiri would not be subjected to the death
penalty, and that neither applicant would be exposed to a flagrant
denial of justice” and strongly encouraged them to follow up these
requests.
In August 2015, the Polish authorities provided
further information on the implementation of this judgment. 


22. Moreover, the Committee of Ministers also examined the Horych group of cases concerning
“dangerous detainees”. It noted with interest, amongst others, the
legislative amendments under way which would eliminate automatic
classification of certain categories of detainees under the regime
and invited the authorities to submit the outstanding information
regarding the timetable for these amendments.
2.8. Hungary
23. Concerning the excessive length
of proceedings and the lack of an effective remedy in this respect (cases
from the Timár group), on
16 July 2015, the Court delivered a pilot judgment concerning this
problem.
According
to the European Court of Human Rights, the violations of Articles
6.1 and 13 originated from a practice incompatible with the Convention,
namely Hungary’s recurrent failure to ensure that civil proceedings were
completed within a reasonable time. It pointed out that 400 similar
cases were pending before it, held that Hungary had to introduce,
at the latest within one year from the date on which the judgment
became final, an effective domestic remedy and decided to adjourn
for one year the examination of any similar new cases.

24. As regards overcrowding in detention facilities (group of
cases István Gábor Kovács v. Hungary),
the Hungarian authorities provided an action plan on 3 July 2015.
They also provided an action
plan for the case Horváth and Kiss v.
Hungary concerning discriminatory assignment of Roma
children to special schools for children with mental disabilities. 


2.9. Bulgaria
25. No major developments have
been noted concerning the implementation of judgments against Bulgaria. In
June 2015, the Bulgarian authorities provided new information concerning
the issue of excessive length of civil and criminal proceedings
and the lack of an effective remedy,
foreigners’ expulsion cases
and poor conditions of detention. 



2.10. United Kingdom
26. As regards the cases concerning
the blanket ban on voting for prisoners (Hirst
v. the United Kingdom (No. 2) and Greens
and M.T. v. the United Kingdom), the Committee of Ministers
will examine them at its 1236th meeting (DH) (22-24 September 2015).
In a letter of 6 August sent to the Director of the Directorate
of Human Rights, the United Kingdom’s deputy permanent representative
in Strasbourg indicated that they were awaiting the judgment of
the Court of Justice of the European Union in the French prisoner
voting case, Delvigne, addressing the same issues as the European
Court of Human Rights judgments. She also pointed out that “it is
clear following the result of the General Election in the United
Kingdom that there remains widespread hostility in Parliament to
giving prisoners the vote”. 

27. As concerns the implementation of the judgment S. and Marper v. the United Kingdom (concerning
the retention of DNA profiles and fingerprints), in August 2015,
the authorities provided an action report, containing an update
on the situation in Northern Ireland. 
