EUROPEAN COMMISSION
FOR DEMOCRACY THROUGH LAW
(VENICE COMMISSION)
OPINION
on
the INTERNATIONAL legal obligations
of
Council of Europe member States
in
respect of secret detention facilities
and
inter-State transport of PRISONERS
adopted by the Venice Commission
at its 66th
Plenary Session
(Venice, 17-18 March 2006)
on the basis of
comments by
Mr Iain CAMERON
(Substitute Member, Sweden)
Mr Pieter van DIJK
(Member, the Netherlands)
Mr Olivier DUTHEILLET
de LAMOTHE (Member, France)
Mr Jan HELGESEN (Member, Norway)
Mr Giorgio MALINVERNI (Member, Switzerland)
Mr Georg NOLTE
(Substitute Member, Germany)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION.. 3
SECTION I:
THE LEGAL REGIME.. 4
A. General
principles. 4
a. Regular inter-State transfers of prisoners. 4
b. Irregular inter-State transfers of prisoners. 8
c. International co-operation in the fight against terrorism.. 9
d. Some observations on State responsibility. 10
B. Human rights law.. 11
a. The rights at issue. 11
i) Liberty and security of person. 12
ii) Torture, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment 13
b. Scope of the duty of Council of Europe member States to
secure human rights. 15
c. Limitations on the competence to transfer prisoners
imposed by human rights obligations 16
d. Derogations. 17
C. International Humanitarian law.. 19
D. General principles of civil aviation. 20
E. Military bases. 25
F. Article V of the NATO Treaty. 26
SECTION II –
THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL OBLIGATIONS OF COUNCIL OF EUROPE MEMBER STATES. 27
A. Council of Europe member States’
obligations in respect of arrests by foreign authorities on their territory. 27
B. Council of Europe member States’ obligations in respect
of alleged secret detention facilities 28
C. Council of Europe member States’ obligations in respect
of inter-state transfers of prisoners 31
CONCLUSIONS. 35
1. By a letter of 15 December 2005, Mr Dick
Marty, chairperson of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights of the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, requested an opinion of the
Commission in respect of the following inter-related matters:
a)
An assessment of the legality of secret
detention centres in the light of the Council of Europe member States’
international law obligations, in particular the European Convention on Human
Rights (ECHR) and the European Convention for the Prevention of Torture. In
particular, to what extent is a State responsible if – actively or passively –
it permits illegal detention or abduction by a third State or an agent thereof?
b)
What are the legal obligations of Council of
Europe member States, under human rights and general international law,
regarding the transport of detainees by other States through their territory,
including the airspace ? What is the relationship between such obligations and
possible countervailing obligations which derive from other treaties, including
treaties concluded with non-member States ?
2. A working group was set up, which was
composed of the following members: Mr Iain Cameron, Mr Pieter van Dijk, Mr
Olivier Dutheillet de Lamothe, Mr Jan Helgesen, Mr Giorgio Malinverni and Mr
Georg Nolte. It was assisted by Ms Simona Granata-Menghini, Head of the
Constitutional Co-operation Division.
3. Two working meetings were held in Paris,on 13 January and on 27 and 28
February 2006.
4. The Working Group sought the assistance of
the NATO Legal Services and requested clarifications in relation to certain
matters of military law as well as certain documents. Regrettably, the
Commission was not provided with either of them.
5. The Working Group
availed itself of the valuable assistance of the International Civil Aviation
Organisation (ICAO), whose Legal Bureau provided documentation about the
interpretation of certain provisions of the Chicago Convention on International
Civil Aviation. The Commission wishes to express its appreciation and gratitude
for the co-operation of the ICAO.
6. The present study was discussed within the
Sub-Commissions on International Law and on Democratic Institutions in the
course of a joint meeting on 16 March 2006, and was subsequently adopted by the Commission at
its 66thPlenary Session (Venice,17-18 March 2006).
7. The present opinion does not aim, nor does it
have the ambition to assess the facts in relation to the current allegations
about the existence of secret detention facilities in Europe or about the
transport of detainees by the CIA through the territory (including the
airspace) of certain European States. This is not the task of the VeniceCommission. It is instead the object of the report that is in the process of
being prepared by the PACE Legal Affairs Committee.
8. This opinion does not aim at identifying the
pertinent internal law and practice of
the Council of Europe member-States either.On 21 November 2005, the Secretary General of the Council of Europe decided to
use his power of inquiry under Article 52 of the ECHR and invited the Council
of Europe member States to furnish an explanation of the manner in which their internal law ensures the effective
implementation of the ECHR in relation to secret detention and transport of
detainees. On 28 February 2006, the Secretary General presented his report
based on the replies submitted by all member States (See the Secretary
General’s report under Article 52 ECHR on the question of secret detention and
transport of detainees suspected of terrorist acts, notably by or at the
instigation of foreign agencies, SG/Inf (2006)5).
9. The aim of this opinion is to provide a reply
to the questions put by PACE Legal Affairs Committee, and thus to identify the
obligations of Council of Europe member States under public international law
in general and under human rights law in particular, in respect of the
irregular transport, extradition, deportation or detention of prisoners. In
order to be able to do so, the Commission deems that it is necessary to outline
at the outset the basic rules under international law, human rights law,
humanitarian law and air law (Section I) in respect of detention and
inter-State transport of prisoners. The Commission will subsequently proceed
with the identification of the specific obligations of Council of Europe member
States in these areas (Section II), and will then answer the questions put by
PACE (Conclusions).
10.
Under international law and human rights law, there are four situations
in which a State may lawfully transfer a prisoner to another State:
deportation, extradition, transit and transfer of sentenced persons for the
purposes of serving their sentence in another country.
11.
Deportation is the expulsion from a country of an alien whose
presence is unwanted or deemed prejudicial. A person against whom a deportation decision has been taken by an
administrative authority must have the possibility of applying to a competent
authority,
preferably a court.
Deportation is only possible on the specific grounds indicated by the pertinent
national law.
12.
Extradition is a formal procedure whereby an individual who is
suspected to have committed a criminal offence and is held by one State is
transferred to another State for trial or, if the suspect has already been
tried and found guilty, to serve his or her sentence.
13.
Extradition is a process to which both international and national law
apply. While extradition treaties may provide for the transfer of criminal
suspects or sentenced persons between States, domestic law determines under
what conditions and according to which procedure the person concerned is to be
surrendered in accordance with such treaties. Extradition legislation varies
significantly among the different European countries, notably as concerns the
incorporation of treaties into national law, procedural guarantees, especially
the respective role of the executive and the judiciary in the extradition
process, and the proof (and assurances) required for extradition.
14.
In Council of Europe member States, extradition laws must take into
consideration, or be interpreted in conformity with constitutional provisions
guaranteeing human rights and international human rights treaties and
humanitarian law.
15.
The 1957 European Convention on Extradition
requires, like most bilateral extradition treaties nowadays, respect for the
principles of ne bis in idem and speciality. It also forbids extradition
to a country where the death penalty would be carried out. The same is true if
the extraditing State has “substantial grounds for believing that a request for
extradition for an ordinary criminal offence has been made for the purpose of
prosecuting or punishing a person on account of his race, religion, nationality
or political opinion, or that that person’s position may be prejudiced for any
of these reasons”. In addition, the nulla
poena principle has to be respected.
16.
The 1977 European Convention on the Suppression of Terrorism
was adopted with a view to eliminating or restricting the possibility for the
requested State of invoking the political nature of an offence in order to
oppose an extradition request in respect of terrorist acts. Under this
Convention, for extradition purposes, certain specified offences shall never be
regarded as “political” (Article 1) and other specified offences may not be
regarded as such (Article 2), notwithstanding their political content or
motivation. There is no obligation, and even a prohibition to extradite,
however, if the requested State has substantial grounds for believing that the
request for extradition has been made for the purpose of prosecuting or
punishing a person on account of his race, religion, nationality or political opinion
or that the position of the person whose extradition is requested may be
prejudiced for any of these reasons.
17.
Transit is an act whereby State B provides facilities for State A
to send a prisoner through its territory.
18.
Transit is regulated by bilateral and multilateral treaties, inter
alia Article 21 of the European Convention on Extradition, which provides:
1. Transit through the territory of one of
the Contracting Parties shall be granted on submission of a request by the
means mentioned in Article 12, paragraph 1, provided that the offence concerned
is not considered by the Party requested to grant transit as an offence of a
political or purely military character having regard to Articles 3 and 4 of
this Convention.
2. Transit of a national, within the meaning
of Article 6, of a country requested to grant transit may be refused.
3. Subject to the provisions of paragraph 4
of this article, it shall be necessary to produce the documents mentioned in
Article 12, paragraph 2.
4. If air transport is used, the following
provisions shall apply:
a when
it is not intended to land, the requesting Party shall notify the Party over
whose territory the flight is to be made and shall certify that one of the
documents mentioned in Article 12, paragraph 2.a exists. In the case of an
unscheduled landing, such notification shall have the effect of a request for
provisional arrest as provided for in Article 16, and the requesting Party
shall submit a formal request for transit;
b when
it is intended to land, the requesting Party shall submit a formal request for
transit.
5. A Party may, however, at the time of
signature or of the deposit of its instrument of ratification of, or accession
to, this Convention, declare that it will only grant transit of a person on
some or all of the conditions on which it grants extradition. In that event,
reciprocity may be applied.
6. The transit of
the extradited person shall not be carried out through any territory where there
is reason to believe that his life or his freedom may be threatened by reason
of his race, religion, nationality or political opinion.
19.
Although the wording of Article 21 § 4 a) indicates that States need to
“notify” a transit flight, State practice on this matter may vary, and indeed
some States do not appear to require notification of transit of a prisoner by
air over their territory, when no landing is planned.
20.
European Council Directive no. 2003/110/EC of 25 November 2003 on assistance in cases of transit for the
purposes of removal by air,
underlines that “member States are to implement this Directive with due respect
for human rights and fundamental freedoms” and that “in accordance with the
applicable international obligations, transit by air should be neither
requested nor granted if in the third country of destination or of transit the
third-country national faces the threat of inhumane or humiliating treatment,
torture or the death penalty, or if his life or liberty would be at risk by
reason of his/her race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular
social group or political conviction”. Pursuant to Article 4 of the Directive,
“1. The
request for escorted or unescorted transit by air and the associated assistance
measures under Article 5(1) shall be made in writing by the requesting Member State. It shall
reach the requested Member State as early
as possible, and in any case no later than two days before the transit. This time
limit may be waived in particularly urgent and duly justified cases.
2. The requested Member State shall inform the requesting Member State forthwith of its decision within two days. This time
limit may be extended in duly justified cases by a maximum of 48 hours. Transit
by air shall not be started without the approval of the requested Member State.
Where no reply is
provided by the requested Member State within the deadline referred to in the first
subparagraph, the transit operations may be started by means of a notification
by the requesting Member State.
Member States may
provide on the basis of bilateral or multilateral agreements or arrangements
that the transit operations may be started by means of a notification by the
requesting Member State.”
21.
Under this Directive, with respect to any request for transit, the
requesting member State must provide the requested member State with
information about the third-country national to whom the transit request relates,
flight details and further information about the state of health of the
person and possible public order
concerns.
22.
The text of an Agreement on Extradition between the European Union and
the USA wasfinalised in 2003; however, this agreement has, so far, not entered into force
in respect of any EU member-State.
It provides that a EU member State may authorise transportation through its
territory of a person surrendered to the USby a third State, or by the US
to a third State. A request for transit shall be made through the diplomatic
channel and shall contain a description of the person being transported and a
brief description of the facts of the case. Authorization is not required when
air transportation is used and no landing is scheduled on the territory of the
transit State (which does not change the obligations of member States of the
Council of Europe under human rights treaties, see below, para. 147) ; if an
unscheduled landing occurs, the State on whose territory the landing takes
place may require a request for transit.
23.
States may enter into agreements concerning the transfer of sentenced
persons for the purpose of serving their sentence in their country of
origin. Such procedures are not relevant for this opinion.
24. A transfer is unlawful or irregular
when the government of State B transfers a person from State B to the custody
of State A, against his or her consent, in a procedure not set out in law (i.e.
not extradition, deportation, transit or transfer with a view to
sentence-serving).
25.
The kidnapping of a person by agents of State A on the territory of State B and his or her removal
to State A or to a third State is a violation of State B’s territorial
sovereignty and therefore an internationally wrongful act which engages the
international responsibility of State A.
26.
Under general international law (see para. 37 below), in such a case State
A has to make “full reparation for the injury caused by the internationally
wrongful act” at the request of the injured State, which, in this case, would
include the return of the person in question. The rights of the person in
question vis-à-vis State A depend upon the latter’s law, on the applicable
human rights obligations.
27.
Irregular transfers may take place with the acquiescence of the
territorial government. This type of situation raises a human rights issue. For
a Rechtsstaat, it will also raise the issues of governmental
responsibility for acts of its organs and services and of parliamentary control
over government.
28.
Another form of irregular transfer happens where some section of the
public authorities in State B (police, security forces etc.) transfers a person
from State B but not in accordance with a procedure set out in law, or even
contrary to domestic law. This, in turn, may take the form of official participation
in the transfer (arresting and handing over), or facilitating a kidnapping
(actively, or passively – not preventing a kidnapping which it was known would
occur). The security/police action may occur with or without government
knowledge.
29.
If there is no legal basis for an active measure (arrest, handing over
etc) under national law, then there will be in such cases a breach of national
law on arrest, and consequently also a breach of Article 5 of the European
Convention on Human Rights. This situation also raises the issue of
governmental control over the security/police services, and parliamentary
control over the government (see below, §§ 38-43).
30.
As regards the terminology used to refer to irregular transfer and
detention of prisoners, the Venice Commission notes that the public debate
frequently uses the term “rendition”. This is not a term used in international
law. The term refers to one State obtaining custody over a person suspected of
involvement in serious crime (e.g. terrorism) in the territory of another State
and/or the transfer of such a person to custody in the first State’s territory,
or a place subject to its jurisdiction, or to a third State. “Rendition” is
thus a general term referring more to the result – obtaining of custody over a
suspected person – rather than the means. Whether a particular “rendition” is
lawful will depend upon the laws of the States concerned and on the applicable
rules of international law, in particular human rights law. Thus, even if a
particular “rendition” is in accordance with the national law of one of the
States involved (which may not forbid or even regulate extraterritorial
activities of state organs), it may still be unlawful under the national law of
the other State(s). Moreover, a “rendition” may be contrary to customary
international law and treaty or customary obligations undertaken by the
participating State(s) under human rights law and/or international humanitarian
law.
31.
The term “extraordinary rendition” appears to be used when there is
little or no doubt that the obtaining of custody over a person is not in
accordance with the existing legal procedures applying in the State where the
person was situated at the time.
32.
General international law allows States to cooperate in the transport of
detainees, provided that such transport is carried out in full respect of human
rights and other international legal obligations of the States concerned.
Numerous international treaties confirm this rule.
33.
As movement around the world becomes easier and crime takes on a larger
international dimension, it is increasingly in the interest of all nations that
terrorist crimes be prevented and that persons who are suspected of having
committed a very serious crime and are suspected to have acted from abroad or
who have fled abroad should be brought to justice. Conversely, the
establishment of safe havens for persons who are preparing terrorist crimes or
who are suspected of having committed a serious crime would not only result in
danger for the State harbouring the protected person but also tend to undermine
the foundations of extradition.
34.
The European Convention on Human Rights does not, in principle, prevent
cooperation between States, within the framework of extradition treaties or in
matters of deportation, for the purpose of bringing suspects of serious crimes
to justice, provided that it does not interfere with any of the rights or
freedoms recognised in the ECHR.
35.
The Council of Europe has produced several international instruments and
recommendations relating to the fight against terrorism, including three
international treaties dealing with suppression of terrorism,
prevention of terrorism
and money laundering and terrorist financing,
and three recommendations of the Committee of Ministers to member States
relating to special investigation techniques; protection of witnesses and
collaborators of justice; and questions of identity documents which arise in
connection with terrorism.
36.
An additional set of standards aimed specifically at safeguarding human
rights and fundamental freedoms has been produced after 2001, namely the
Guidelines on Human Rights and the Fight Against Terrorism (2002), a Policy
Recommendation on Combating Racism While Fighting Terrorism (2004), the
additional Guidelines on the Protection of Victims of Terrorist Acts (2005) and
a Declaration on Freedom of expression and information in the media in the
context of the fight against terrorism (2005).
37.
When a State commits, through its agents acting in their official
capacity, an internationally wrongful act, it incurs responsibility and “is
under an obligation to make full reparation for the injury caused by the
internationally wrongful act” at the request of the injured State (see Article
31 para. 1 of the International Law Commission (ILC)’s Articles on State
Responsibility).
38. With respect to the imputability of
an international wrong, the question arises of whether and to what extent a
State incurs responsibility when its agents have ultra vires consented
expressly or impliedly by rendering assistance, to acts of a foreign State infringing
its territorial sovereignty (see above, paras. 27 and 29).
39. Ultra vires acts usually bind the State
for the purposes of State responsibility (Article 7, ILC Articles on State
Responsibility).
40.
Consent to carry out activities which otherwise would be internationally
wrongful renders them lawful, unless these activities are contrary to jus
cogens (see para. 42 below). However, consent to an interference with
sovereignty must be validly given (Article 20, ILC Articles on State
Responsibility). In this context, Article 46 of the Vienna Convention of the
Law of Treaties is pertinent. It provides that:
1. A State may not invoke the fact
that its consent to be bound by a treaty has been expressed in violation of a
provision of its internal law regarding competence to conclude treaties as
invalidating its consent unless that violation was manifest and concerned a
rule of its internal law of fundamental importance.
2. A violation is manifest if it
would be objectively evident to any State conducting itself in the matter in
accordance with normal practice and in good faith.
41.
In the opinion of the Commission, if a public authority of a State would
give a permission to the representative of another State to arrest and/or
transfer a person against his will from the territory of that State and it is
clear that this would be outside of the ordinary (judicial, administrative)
procedures for such arrest/transfer, such permission would be a manifest
violation of a rule of internal law of fundamental importance in any State
under the rule of law. Such permission could therefore not be invoked by the
other State as valid consent.
42.
Even where such permission does not result in the conclusion of or
accession to a treaty, the Law of Treaties insofar reflects the general
principle of good faith. This principle is “one of the most basic
principles governing the creation and performance of legal obligations”.
The giving of a permission is comparable to the conclusion of a treaty insofar
as the validity of consent is concerned. In any case, the validity of any
consent as a circumstance precluding wrongfulness in international law is
limited by the rule enunciated in Article 26 of the ILC Articles on State
Responsibility:
“Nothing in
this Chapter precludes the wrongfulness of any act of a State which is not in
conformity with an obligation arising under a peremptory norm of general
international law.”
43.
A norm is of peremptory character (jus cogens) when it “is
accepted and recognized by the international community of States as a whole as
a norm from which no derogation is permitted” (Article 53 of the Vienna
Convention of the Law of Treaties). These norms include, inter alia, the prohibitions of genocide, aggression,
crimes against humanity, slavery, piracy and torture.
44.
In order to be considered wrongful, an act must be inconsistent with an
international obligation of the State which commits it. For Council of Europe
member States, in the present context, the obligation in question stems
directly from the European Convention on Human Rights, namely from the
obligation not to expose anyone to the risk of treatment contrary to Article 3,
the obligation to prevent any detention in breach of Article 5 and the
obligation to investigate into any substantiated claim that an individual has
been taken into unacknowledged custody. These obligations may be breached by a
State also by merely but knowingly letting its territory be used by a third
State in order to commit a breach of international law.
45.
For a State knowingly to provide transit facilities to another State may
amount to providing assistance to the latter in committing a wrongful act, if
the former State is aware of the wrongful character of the act concerned. Under
general international law (see Article 16 ILC Articles on State Responsibility)
“a State which aids or assists another State in the commission of an
internationally wrongful act by the latter is internationally responsible for
doing so if: (a) that State does so with knowledge of the circumstances of the
internationally wrongful act; and (b) the act would be internationally wrongful
if committed by that State.”
46.
The consequences of irregular transfers and secret detentions from the
viewpoint of human rights law for Council of Europe member States will be
examined below (see paras. 137-153).
47.
Council of Europe member States are committed to respecting fundamental
rights, as defined by a number of international treaties, both at the universal
level (including the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(“ICCPR”), and the 1987 UN Convention
against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment;
and at the European level, in primis the European Convention on Human
Rights, but also the European Convention for the Prevention of Torture and
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment).
48.
With respect to the matters which form the object of the present
opinion, the fundamental rights which are at issue are primarily the right to
liberty and security of person and the ban on torture and other inhuman or
degrading treatments or punishments.
i)
Liberty
and security of person
49. Article 5 ECHR protects the
right to liberty and security of person.
Although this right is not absolute (see the authorized deprivations of
liberty under paragraph 1 a) to f) of Article 5), a person may only be detained
on the basis of and according to procedures set out by the law, and the law in
question must be consistent with recognised European standards, that is inter alia with the (other) provisions of the ECHR. In
addition, paragraph 4 of Article 5 provides for all forms of deprivation of
liberty allowed under that article, that the detainee “shall be entitled to
take proceedings by which the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided
speedily by a court and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful” (habeas corpus).
50.
Detention must be lawful and in accordance with a procedure prescribed
by law: in the European Court of Human Rights’ view, the requirement of
lawfulness means that both domestic law and the ECHR must be respected. The
possible reasons for detention are exhaustively enumerated in Article 5 (1)
ECHR. Paragraph 1 (c ) of Article 5 permits “the lawful arrest or detention of
a person effected for the purpose of having committed an offence or when it is
reasonably considered necessary to prevent his committing an offence or fleeing
after having done so”, while paragraph (f) of Article 5 permits “the lawful
arrest or detention of a person to prevent his effecting an unauthorised entry
into the country or of a person against whom action is being taken with a view
to deportation or extradition.” A detention for any reason other than those
listed in Article 5 § 1 is unlawful and thus a violation of a human right.
51.
As regards extradition arrangements between States, when one is a party
to the ECHR and the other is not, the rules established by an extradition
treaty or, in the absence of any such treaty, the cooperation between the
States concerned are also relevant factors to be taken into account for
determining whether the arrest was lawful. The fact that a person has been
handed over as a result of cooperation between States does not in itself make
the arrest unlawful or give rise to an issue under Article 5. However, for the
member States of the Council of Europe the provisions of the extradition treaty
or the practice of cooperation cannot justify any deviation of their obligations
under the ECHR; for those States the decisive factor is whether the extradition
is according to domestic law and respects the State’s obligations under the
ECHR.
52.
The ECHR contains no provisions concerning the exact circumstances in
which extradition may be granted, or the procedure to be followed before
extradition may be granted. Subject to its being the result of cooperation
between the States concerned and provided that the legal basis for the order
for the suspect’s arrest is an arrest warrant issued by the authorities of the
suspect's State of origin, even an atypical extradition cannot as such be
regarded as being contrary to the ECHR.
This being said, it has also to be stressed that several rights and freedoms
protected by the ECHR, may be relevant in the case of extradition and will have
to be respected, the most important being Articles 2 and 3, and in some circumstances
Articles 5 and 6.
53.
Article 5 must be seen as requiring the authorities of the territorial
State to take effective measures to safeguard against the risk of disappearance
and to conduct a prompt effective investigation into a substantiated claim that
a person has been taken into custody and has not been seen since.
54.
Torture is prohibited by Article 3 ECHR, Article 7 ICCPR, the European
Convention for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment and the UN Convention against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment. It is defined as “any act by which severe
pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a
person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or
a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is
suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third
person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain
or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or
acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official
capacity. It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in
or incidental to lawful sanctions.”
55.
The crucial distinction between “torture”, “inhuman treatment” and
“degrading treatment” lies in the degree of suffering caused.
56.
“Inhuman treatment” is such treatment which causes severe suffering,
mental or physical, which, in the particular situation, is unjustifiable.
Unlike torture, inhuman treatment does not need to be intended to cause
suffering.
In its judgment in Irelandv. United Kingdom,
the European Court of Human Rights held that the so-called “five techniques”
were inhuman treatment. This decision has sometimes been misunderstood to mean that the same or similar techniques
would not amount to torture. However, in the Selmouni case the Court
later clarified that, since the Convention is a “living instrument which must
be interpreted in the light of present-day conditions”, acts which were
classified in the past as “inhuman and degrading treatment” could be classified
as torture in future.
The Court stated that “the increasingly high standard being required in the
area of the protection of human rights and fundamental liberties
correspondingly and inevitably requires greater firmness in assessing breaches
of the fundamental values of democratic societies.”
57.
“Degrading treatment” is treatment which grossly humiliates or debases a
person before others or drives him to act against his will or conscience.
Although causing less suffering than torture or inhuman treatment, it must attain
a minimum level.
It too does not need to be intended to cause suffering.
58. The prohibition of torture and
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment enshrines one of the most
fundamental values of democratic societies. As the European Court of Human
Rights has stated on many occasions, even in the most difficult circumstances,
such as the fight against terrorism and organised crime, the ECHR prohibits in
absolute terms torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Unlike
most of the substantive clauses of the ECHR and of Protocols Nos. 1 and 4,
Article 3 makes no provision for limitations and no derogation from it is
permissible under Article 15 § 2, not even in the event of a public emergency
threatening the life of the nation.
59.
Article 2, paragraph 2, of the UN Convention against Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (“the UN Convention against
Torture”) expressly States that “No
exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether a State of war or a threat of
war, internal political instability or any other public emergency, may be
invoked as a justification of torture.”
60.
The European
Convention for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman and Degrading Treatment (“ECPT”)
establishes the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment (“CPT”) which, “by means of visits, examines
the treatment of persons deprived of their liberty with a view to
strengthening, if necessary, the protection of such persons from torture and
from inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.” Pursuant to Article 2 of
this Convention, CPT can visit any place on the territory of member States where a person is deprived
of their liberty (i.e. including military bases, non-official detention centres
such as the offices of the intelligence service or a particular police
department - drugs, anti-terrorism - if CPT believes that persons are being
held/interviewed in these offices).
61.
Member Statesof the ECHR not only have the obligation not to torture but also the duty to
prevent torture.
In addition they have an obligation of investigation. Under this obligation Member States must assure an efficient,
effective and impartial investigation.
As soon as the authorities receive substantiated information giving rise to the
suspicion that torture or inhuman or degrading treatment has been committed, a
duty to investigate arises whether and in which circumstances torture has been
committed.
62.
Under Article 1 of the ECHR, “The High Contracting Parties shall secure
to everyone within their jurisdiction the rights and freedoms defined in
Section I of this Convention”.
According to the European Court of Human Rights, the notion of “jurisdiction”
is primarily territorial. It does, however, exceptionally extend to certain
other cases, such as acts of public authority performed abroad by diplomatic or
consular representatives of the State, or by an occupying force; acts performed
on board vessels flying the State flag or on aircraft or spacecraft registered
there.
63.
There is a presumption that jurisdiction is exercised by the State
throughout its territory. States may also be held accountable for human rights
violations occurring outside their territory in certain situations.
64.
Article 2 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
provides that a State Party undertakes to “respect and to ensure to all
individuals within its territory and subject to its jurisdiction the rights
recognized in the present Covenant.”
65. The term “jurisdiction” under the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights is comparable to the same term under the
European Convention on Human Rights. It is also not limited to territorial
jurisdiction. The Human Rights Committee has held, for example, that communications
by persons who were kidnapped by agents in a neighbouring States are
admissible, reasoning that States Parties are responsible for the actions of
their agents on foreign territory.
The Human Rights Committee also clarified in its General Comment no. 31 that “a State Party must respect and ensure the rights laid down
in the Covenant to anyone within the power or effective control of that State
Party, even if not situated within the territory of the State Party.”
66.
The duty of State parties under Article 1 ECHR to “secure” to everyone
within their jurisdiction “the rights and freedoms … of this Convention” is not
limited to the duty of state organs not to violate these rights themselves.
This duty also includes positive obligations to protect individuals against
infringements of their rights by third parties, be they private individuals or
organs of third States operating within the jurisdiction of the State party
concerned (see para. 146 below). The European Court of Human Rights has, in
particular, recognized positive obligations which flow from the prohibition of
torture and inhuman treatment, the right
to life, and the right to freedom and
security. Such positive obligations include
duties to investigate, especially in the case of disappeared persons, and to provide for effective remedies.
67. The international condemnation of torture has
a clear impact on extradition and deportation. Article 3 of the UN Convention against Torture prevents States
Parties from “expelling, returning (“refouler”) or extraditing a person to
another State where there are substantial grounds for believing that he would
be in danger of being subjected to torture”.
68. The ECHR does not guarantee a right not to be
extradited or deported. Nor is there a right to political asylum. Extradition
and deportation are not per se in breach of Article 3 of the ECHR.
Nonetheless, extradition or deportation may run counter to provisions of the
ECHR. According to the Soering
doctrine of the European Court of Human Rights, a State may be held responsible
for a violation of Articles 2 and 3, in flagrant cases also of possible
violations of Articles 5 and 6 ECHR, if its decision, permission or other
action has created a real risk of a violation of these rights by the State to
which the prisoner is to be transferred.
It is of no relevance in such case whether the State on whose territory the
violation will or could ultimately take place is also bound by the ECHR.
69.
Under what circumstances a State may be deemed to have known about a
“real risk of a violation” is to be determined in each separate case. Indeed,
the establishment of the responsibility of a State in respect of an extradition
or deportation inevitably involves an assessment of conditions in the
requesting or receiving country against the standards of Article 3 ECHR.
Nonetheless, the responsibility of the requesting or receiving country, whether
under general international law, under the ECHR or otherwise, is not decisive
for the liability of the extraditing State under the ECHR. Such liability may
have been incurred by the latter member State by reason of its having taken
action which has as a direct consequence the exposure of an individual to
ill-treatment prohibited by Article 3 ECHR.
70.
In the Agiza case, the UN Committee against Torture found a violation of
article 3, as Sweden, at the time of the complainant’s removal to Egypt, knew or should have known
that Egypt resorted to consistent and widespread use of torture against prisoners,
and therefore that the complainant was at a real risk of torture. In the
opinion of the Committee, the procurement of diplomatic assurances, which,
moreover, had no effective mechanism for enforcement, did not suffice to
protect against this risk.
71.
In the Mamatkulov case, the European Court of Human Rights accepted that
assurances leading to extradition/deportation can take away the real risk of
torture, even when the follow-up procedures were not extensive. However, the assessment of diplomatic assurances
in this case should not be overestimated. The Court merely took “formal cognizance of the diplomatic
notes from the Uzbek authorities that have been produced by the Turkish
Government”.
Moreover, there was no substantiated evidence in the individual case that the
people in question had in fact been tortured. Finally, according to the
European Court of Human Rights, the existence of the risk must be
assessed “primarily with reference to those facts which were known or ought to
have been known to the Contracting Stateat the time of the expulsion.”
72.
Under Article 15 ECHR, a Contracting State may derogate from certain of
its obligations under the ECHR “in time of war or other public emergency
threatening the life of the nation. Among these “derogable” obligations are
also those laid down in Articles 5 and 6; but, under paragraph 2 of Article 15,
not those laid down in Articles 2, except in respect of deaths resulting from
lawful acts of war, or from Articles 3, 4 (paragraph 1) and 7.
However, a State may apply Article 15 only if and to the extent that a war or
other public emergency threatening the life of the nation presents itself in
that very same State, and the derogating measures are “strictly required by the
exigencies of the situation” and “are not inconsistent with its other
obligations under international law”. When such a situation pertains, it is
imperative for the State in question to make a formal derogation under Article
15 ECHR.
Moreover, in case of such derogation, the third paragraph of Article 15
requires that the State concerned keep the Secretary General of the Council of
Europe fully informed of the measures that it has taken and the reasons
therefore.
73.
Article 4(1) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
is expressed in terms very similar to those of article 15(1).
74.
In its Resolution 1271, adopted on 24 January 2002, the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe resolved (para 9) that: “In their fight
against terrorism, Council of Europe members should not provide for any
derogations to the European Convention on Human Rights”. It also called on all
member States (para 12) to “refrain from using Article 15 to limit the rights
and liberties guaranteed under its Article 5.”
75.
In its 2002 Guidelines on human rights and the fight against terrorism,
the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe reiterated that member
States “may never, and whatever the acts of the person suspected of terrorist
activities, or convicted of such activities, derogate from the right to life as
guaranteed by these international instruments, from the prohibition against
torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, from the principle of
legality of sentences and of measures, nor from the ban on the retrospective
effect of criminal law.”
76.
In its General Comment no 29/2001 on Article 4 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the UN Human Rights Committee observed (in para 3) that “On a number of
occasions the Committee has expressed its concern over States parties that
appear to have derogated from rights protected by the Covenant, or whose domestic
law appears to allow such derogation, in situations not covered by article 4.”
77.
In the era of “global terrorism” it has been put to debate whether
fundamental human rights as they are discussed in this opinion or the extent of
possible derogations from them should be reinterpreted. Recent decisions by
several domestic courts in Europe and beyond, however,have confirmed that the existing rights and standards are, in principle,
appropriate for the current situation of the fight against global terror.
It is also the Commission’s opinion that no such reinterpretation is necessary
or warranted.
78.
At present, International Humanitarian Law has only limited relevance
for the question of the law applicable to extraordinary transfers of prisoners
and secret detention on the territory or through the airspace of member States
of the Council of Europe. International Humanitarian Law applies during “armed
conflict” and it distinguishes between international and non-international
armed conflicts. “Armed conflict” in the sense of International Humanitarian
Law refers to protracted armed violence between States or between governmental
authorities and/or organised armed groups within a State.
“State practice indicates that banditry, criminal activity, riots, sporadic
outbreaks of violence and acts of terrorism do not amount to an armed
conflict.”
This means, for example, that the organised hostilities in Afghanistanbefore and after 2001 have been an “armed conflict” which was at first a
non-international armed conflict, and later became an international armed
conflict after the involvement of US troops. On the other hand, sporadic
bombings and other violent acts which terrorist networks perpetrate in
different places around the globe and the ensuing counter-terrorism measures,
even if they are occasionally undertaken by military units, cannot be said to
amount to an “armed conflict” in the sense that they trigger the applicability
of International Humanitarian Law.
79.
The Venice Commission considers that counter-terrorist measures which
are part of what has sometimes been called “war on terror” are not part of an
“armed conflict” in the sense of making the regime of International
Humanitarian Law applicable to them. It considers that further reflection is
necessary to consider whether any additional instrument may be needed in the
future to meet or anticipate the novel threats to international peace and
security.
80.
International Humanitarian Law thus only applies to such transports of
prisoners through the territory and/or airspace of the member States of the
Council of Europe if such prisoners have been arrested/captured in the context
of an “armed conflict” as explained above. This would be the case, for example,
if a prisoner was captured in an area of Afghanistanin which organized fighting takes place at the time of the arrest. In this case
his or her transfer or detention would be covered by International Humanitarian
Law irrespective of where he or she is transferred to or detained in Europe.If, on the other hand, persons are transported or detained who have been
arrested in the territory of a State where no armed conflict takes place, or in
an area in which no armed conflict takes place, International Humanitarian Law
does not apply. In such cases human rights law fully applies.
81.
Even in those limited cases in which International Humanitarian Law
applies (in the context of extraordinary transport of prisoners) this body of
law does not apply exclusively. As a general rule, human rights law applies at
all times, whether in times of peace or concurrently in situations of armed
conflict, to all persons subject to a State’s authority and control
(“jurisdiction”). However, once an armed conflict has begun, human rights law
is normally partly superseded by International Humanitarian Law, which contains
rules specifically regulating the behaviour of parties to an armed conflict.
For example, human rights law does not specifically take account of the regime
of belligerent occupation. This means that the rules of the Hague Regulations and the Fourth Geneva Convention of
1949 largely serve as lex specialis. However, as the Commission has
previously pointed out,
human rights law’s non-derogable rules and those rules which have not been
derogated from in accordance with the derogation mechanism provided for under
the relevant treaty instrument are also applicable in situations of armed
conflict.
82.
Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, persons who are arrested by a power
in the course of an international armed conflict are protected either as
prisoners of war (hereinafter “POW”) (Article 4 GCIII) or as other “protected
persons” (all persons, in particular civilians, who are not nationals of the
detaining Power or are not protected by other Conventions, Article 4 GCIV). The
plain wording of Article 4 (1) and (4) GC IV makes it clear that there should
be no category of persons that would remain unprotected. As the Commission has
pointed out before, even those persons who do not fulfil the nationality
requirements of Article 4 GC IV are protected by customary international humanitarian
law, as it has been given expression in Article 75 of the First Additional
Protocol of 1977 to the Geneva Conventions.
83.
Persons who are suspected to be members of an international terrorist
network, such as Al-Qaeda, and who have been arrested in connection with an
armed conflict, will fall either into the category of other “protected persons”
or into the category of POWs.
84.
As far as the Fourth Geneva Convention, the First Additional Protocol and
customary international humanitarian law apply, all protected persons,
including terrorist suspects, must be treated according to the rules laid down
in Articles 27-78 GCIV and the minimum requirements of Article 75 of the First
Additional Protocol. This has been confirmed in recent years by national
courts.
85.
In the case that suspected members of international terrorist networks
qualify as POWs, their transfer would be regulated by the Third Geneva
Convention (see in particular Articles 12 and 46-48).
86.
International air law has a codified framework in the Convention on
International Civil Aviation (commonly
referred to as the “Chicago Convention”), signed in Chicagoon 7 December 1944.
87.
The Chicago Convention sets out in Article 1 the principle that every
State has complete and exclusive sovereignty over the airspace above its
territory, that is to say above the land areas and territorial waters adjacent
thereto.
88.
Article 4 of the Chicago Convention provides that: “Each contracting
State agrees not to use civil aviation for any purpose inconsistent with the
aims of this Convention”.
89.
The Chicago Convention sets out the regime for civil aircraft and civil
aviation. According to Article 3 (a), such regime does not apply to State
aircraft.
90.
Under the Convention, aircraft “used in military, customs and police
services” are deemed to be state aircraft (Article 3(b)). This presumption,
however, is not irrebuttable.
Moreover, aircraft engaged in other state activities such as coast guard and
search and rescue could also be either state aircraft or civil aircraft in the
sense of the Convention.
91.
It has generally been admitted
that, in case of doubt, the status of an airplane as “civil aircraft” or “state
aircraft” will be determined by the function it actually performs at a given
time.
As a general rule, “aircraft are recognised as state aircraft when they are
under the control of the State and used exclusively by the State for state
intended purposes”.
Accordingly, the same airplane can be considered to be “civil aircraft” and
“state aircraft” on different occasions.
92.
Civil aircraft that are not engaged in scheduled international air
services of a State party to the Chicago Convention
are entitled to make flights into or in transit non-stop across the territory
of another State party and to make stops for non-traffic purposes without the
necessity of obtaining prior permission and subject to the right of the State
flown over to require landing. The authorities of each State party have the right,
without unreasonable delay, to search aircraft of the other State party on
landing or departure, and to inspect the certificates and other documents
prescribed by the Chicago Convention (Article 16).
93.
State aircraft do not enjoy the overflight rights of civil aircraft.
According to Article 3 (c), state aircraft are not permitted to fly over or
land in foreign sovereign territory otherwise than with express authorisation
of the State concerned, and in harmony with the terms of such authorisation.
Such authorisation must be given by special agreement “or otherwise”; the
practice of States indicates that the preferred form is a bilateral or
multilateral agreement between the States concerned, valid for a given period
of time, one year for example, or general permissions, or “ad hoc” permissions
properly obtained through the diplomatic channels. In the latter case, the
diplomatic notes are to be submitted to the competent authorities - to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, for example - prior to the operation of the flight
and usually contain inter alia the name of the foreign air operator, the
type of aircraft and its registration and identification, the proposed flight
routing (including last point of departure outside the State, the first point
of entry, the date and time of arrival, the place of embarkation or
disembarkation abroad of passengers or freight), the purpose of the flight
(number of passengers and their names).
94.
If “state aircraft” enter the foreign sovereign air space without a
proper authorisation, they may be :
- intercepted
for purposes of identification;
- directed to
leave the violated air space;
- directed to
land for the purpose of further investigation/prosecution;
- forced to
land for further investigation/prosecution.
95.
Under customary international law,
state aircraft enjoy immunity from foreign jurisdiction in respect of search
and inspection. Accordingly, they cannot be boarded, searched or inspected by
foreign authorities, including host State’s authorities, without the captain’s
consent. However, because state aircraft need authorisation to enter another
State’s airspace, the extent of their immunity is conditioned on such an
authorisation pursuant to Article 3 (c) of the Chicago Convention.
96.
A mere operational air traffic control clearance for the flight is not
sufficient to satisfy the requirement for permission under Article 3 (c),
unless this corresponds to an accepted practice.
97.
Article 3bis para. b) of the Chicago Convention provides that:
[E]very
State, in the exercise of its sovereignty, is entitled to require the landing
at some designated airport of a civil aircraft flying above its territory
without authority or if there are reasonable grounds to conclude that it is
being used for any purpose inconsistent with the aims of this Convention; it
may also give such aircraft any other instructions to put an end to such
violations. For this purpose, the contracting States may resort to any
appropriate means consistent with relevant rules of international law,
including the relevant provisions of this Convention, specifically paragraph a)
of this Article.
Each contracting State agrees to publish its regulations in force regarding the
interception of civil aircraft.
98.
The flag State of the violating aircraft is internationally responsible
for the infraction; the consequences of such responsibility would impact on the
overall relations of the States concerned and can range from the duty to
apologise, a promise to penalise the individuals responsible, a promise not to
repeat the infraction and so on, to more severe sanctions.
99. Pursuant
to Article 54 of the Chicago Convention, any action which may be considered as
an infraction, breach, violation or infringement of the Convention is
potentially subject to action by the Council of the International Civil
Aviation Organisation (ICAO) under Article 54 (j) or (k). For example, a
contracting State which by its action contravenes the principle in Article 1
that every State has complete and exclusive sovereignty over the airspace above
its territory, can be considered committing an infraction of the Convention. A
similar conclusion could be drawn in respect of a State which by its action
disregards the scope of “territory” given in Article 2; or whose regulations
for State aircraft do not show “due regard for the safety of navigation of civil
aircraft” (Article 3 (d)); or which uses weapons against civil aircraft in
flight contrary to Article 3 bis; or which uses civil aviation for any purpose inconsistent with the
aims of the Chicago Convention (Article 4). Infractions may be brought before the
Council by a Contracting State or a group of Contracting States.
100.
As long as an airplane is in the air and not on the ground,
persons on board are subject to the concurrent jurisdiction of both the
national State of the airplane and the territorial State. In this context, it should be noted that
Article 4 of the Convention on Offences and Certain other Acts Committed on
Board Aircraft (the Tokyo Convention)
, to which practically all Council of Europe member States are party, provides
that:
“A
Contracting State which is not the State of registration may not interfere with
an aircraft in flight in order to exercise its criminal jurisdiction over an
offence committed on board except in the following cases:
(a) the
offence has effect on the territory of such State;
(b) the
offence has been committed by or against a national or permanent resident of
such State;
(c) the
offence is against the security of such State;
(d) the
offence consists of a breach of any rules or regulations relating to the flight
or manoeuvre of aircraft in force in such State;
(e) the
exercise of jurisdiction is necessary to ensure the observance of any
obligation of such State under a multilateral international agreement.”
101.
This provision does not limit the jurisdiction of the territorial State
but only the exercise of its right to interfere with an aircraft in flight. In
the first place, serious offences of abduction, torture etc. certainly have
“effect” on the territorial state. Where the conditions of a prisoner on a
plane do not in themselves constitute inhuman or degrading treatment, all acts
involved in transferring by air a prisoner to a place where he or she runs a
real risk of being tortured may not necessarily be criminal offences in the
territorial State. This will depend upon how the relevant offences and inchoate
offences (preparation, conspiracy etc.) are formulated in the law in the
territorial State (e.g. whether the acts in question constitute a continuing
offence of abduction) and that State’s rules on extraterritorial crime, in
particular, whether the deliberate handing over of a person to extraterritorial
torture is an offence. It should be stressed however that the obligations of a
Council of Europe member State to ensure protection of human rights (see above,
paras. 62-67, and below para. 146) are not limited simply to enforcing its
criminal law. Thus, it is not decisive that, in a particular case, a
territorial State may not, in fact, make all acts involved in transfer
punishable, or exercise jurisdiction over these. In addition, according to
subparagraph (e) of Article 4 of the Tokyo Convention, the limitation of the
exercise of the right of the territorial State to interfere with an aircraft
in flight does not apply when “the exercise of jurisdiction is necessary to
ensure the observance of any obligation of such State under a multilateral
international agreement”, such as the European Convention of Human Rights.
Therefore, if the positive obligations arising under the ECHR require a member State of the Council of Europe to
investigate possible violations of human rights committed in an aircraft in
flight through its airspace, this member State is not barred by the Tokyo
Convention to interfere with this aircraft in flight.
102. The question arises in this context
of what would be the status of an airplane registered in the flag State as
civil aircraft but carrying out “State functions” (such as special missions for
the transport of prisoners) which entered the airspace of another State without
seeking a specific authorisation or without following the applicable procedures
for State aircraft.
103.
In the opinion of the Venice Commission, state aircraft can only claim
immunity inasmuch as they make their state function known to the territorial
State through the appropriate channels. If the public purpose was not declared
in order to circumvent the requirement of obtaining the necessary permission(s),
then the State will be estopped from claiming State aircraft status
and the airplane will be deemed to be civil and thus falling within the scope
of application of the Chicago Convention, including its Article 16 providing
for the territorial State’s right to search and inspection. The territorial
State could request the airplane to land and could proceed to search and
inspection and take the necessary measures to put an end to possible violations
it might identify.
In addition, the flag State would face international responsibility for the breach of Article 4 of the Chicago
Convention and of customary international law.
104.
The relations between air law
and human rights law will be analysed below
(see paras 144-152).
105.
The lawfulness of the presence of the armed forces of one State on the
territory of another State in peacetime is contingent on the consent of the
host State. The initial decision to admit the force may take the form of a
bilateral or multilateral treaty, often defence agreements. There follows a
decision by the receiving State granting the use of facilities on its soil,
which is normally done through a further agreement.
106.
A State does not abandon its sovereignty when it consents to the
presence of foreign armed forces on its territory. It guarantees the enjoyment
of the privilege of user of its territory accorded to the sending State; it
retains however the right to regulate this privilege within the framework of
the applicable treaties and agreements. It follows that the sending State
acquires various powers pertaining to the operation of its defence forces on a
territory that remains subject to the sovereignty of the host State. The
sending State may lawfully claim in or over the territory of the receiving
State, only those rights and powers that are connected directly with the
establishment and operation of, and access to, the sites at which the foreign
forces and installations are located. The principle of sovereignty dictates
that any further rights and powers can derive only from an express grant by the
receiving States. In particular, the extent of the right for the receiving
State to search a foreign military base on its territory depends on the terms
of the defence agreement or of the “Status-of-forces agreement” (SOFA).
107.
SOFAs between the host State and a State stationing military forces in
the host State define the legal status of the sending State’s personnel and
property in the territory of the host State. They are usually an integral part
of the overall military bases agreements that allow the sending State’s
military forces to operate within the host State.
108. Foreign armed forces whose admission has been
consented to by the receiving State are, as a rule, not subject to the normal
immigration controls and entry formalities applicable to foreign nationals. The
NATO-SOFA agreement provides that “members of a force shall be exempted from
passport and visa regulations and immigration inspection on entering or leaving
the territory of a receiving State. They shall also be exempt from the
regulations of the receiving State on the registration and control of aliens”.
This waiver of entry procedures is counter-balanced by the requirement for
members of the force, to present on demand, whether on entry or at any time
thereafter, identification and an individual or collective movement order
certifying the status of the individual as a member of a force.
The receiving State has a discretion whether to require a movement order to be
countersigned by its authorised representatives. Exemption from entry
formalities is made conditional on compliance with the formalities established
by the receiving State relating to the entry and departure of a force or the
members thereof.
109.
The sending State must have access to the base and, where it has more
than one base on the territory of the same State, it must be allowed movement
between them. To deny access would amount to a derogation from the grant made by the host State. It is therefore
common for military base agreements to authorise the sending State to have access
to its forces and to the ports or airfields which it has been accorded in the
host State. This authorisation is essential, as in relation to public vessels
and aircraft there is no right of access under customary international law. It
is, however, often the practice in bilateral treaties for entry to the ports of
the receiving State to be subject to “appropriate notification under normal
conditions” made to the authorities of the latter.
110.
The sending State does not benefit from an unrestricted freedom of
movement within, and overflight of, the receiving State, unless such rights are
expressly granted in a base agreement. In any case, the national and
international law that is applicable to military bases cannot, and does not
claim to, diminish the obligations and responsibilities of the member States of
the Council of Europe under human rights treaties.
111.
Article V is the core clause of the Washington Treaty, NATO’s founding
charter. It states that an armed attack against one Ally shall be considered an
attack against them all. In response to an invocation of Article 5, each Ally
determines, in consultation with other Allies, how it can best contribute to
any action deemed necessary to restore and maintain the security of the North Atlantic area, including by the use of armed force.
112.
Article V was first invoked on 12 September 2001 immediately following the 11 September terrorist
attacks against the United States.The invocation was initially provisional, pending determination that the
attacks were directed from abroad. This was confirmed on 2 October 2001, after US officials presented
findings on investigations into the attacks to the North Atlantic Council,
concluding that the Al-Qaeda terrorist network was responsible.
113.
On 4 October 2001,the Allies agreed on a series of measures to assist the US-led campaign against
Al-Qaeda and related terrorism.
These include enhanced intelligence sharing and cooperation, blanket
over-flight clearances in accordance with the necessary air traffic
arrangements and national procedures, and access to ports and airfields for US
and other Allied craft for operations against terrorism.
114.
In application of this agreement, certain NATO member-States granted US
(and NATO member States’) aircraft either blanket over-flight clearances for
certain time-periods, or overflight rights upon request.
115.
Article V of the North Atlantic Treaty does not contain an obligation
for member States of the Council of Europe to allow irregular transfers of
prisoners or to grant blanket overflight rights, for the purposes of fighting
against terrorism. That treaty provision at most contains an obligation to take
measures, including cooperation and consent, into consideration; but leaves any
decision as to concrete measures to the appreciation of the State concerned of
the necessity of such measures in order to restore and maintain security. In
addition, neither Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty nor any Agreements in
execution thereof can, or claim to, diminish the obligations and
responsibilities of member States of the Council of Europe under human rights
treaties.
A.
Council of Europe member States’ obligations
in respect of arrests by foreign authorities on their territory
116.
A State party to the European Convention on Human Rights is presumed to
exercise its jurisdiction over its whole
territory. Any arrest of a person by foreign authorities on the territory of a
Council of Europe member State without the agreement of this member State is a violation of its sovereignty and is therefore
contrary to international law. In addition, the now defunct European Commission
of Human Rights has stated that “an arrest made by the authorities of one State
on the territory of another State, without the prior consent of the State
concerned, does not only involve the State responsibility vis-à-vis the other
State, but also affects that person’s individual right to security under Article 5 § 1”.
117.
The European Court of Human Rights has clearly expressed how the
responsibility of a Council of Europe member State is engaged in relation to the
arrest of an individual on its territory by foreign authorities: irrespective
of whether the arrest amounts to a violation of the law of the State in which
the suspect has been arrested, the responsibility of the host State is engaged
unless it can be proved that the authorities of the State to which the
applicant has been transferred have acted extra-territorially and without
consent, and consequently in a manner that is inconsistent with the sovereignty
of the host State.
118.
Any form of involvement of the Council of Europe member State or receipt
of information prior to the arrest taking place entails responsibility under
Articles 1 and 5 ECHR (and possibly Article 3 in respect of the modalities of
the arrest). A State must thus prevent the arrest from taking place, unless the
arrest is effected by the foreign authorities in the exercise of their
jurisdiction under the terms of an applicable SOFA (see footnote 68 above).
119.
The responsibility of the Council of Europe member States is engaged
also in the case that some section of its public authorities (police, security
forces etc.) has co-operated with the foreign authorities or has not prevented
an arrest without government knowledge. This situation raises the
question of governmental control over the security/police services, and
possibly, if the applicable national law so foresees, of parliamentary control
over the government.
120.
Different European States exercise different systems for political
insight into, and control over, the operations of the security and intelligence
services, depending upon constitutional structure, historical factors etc.
Different mechanisms exist for ensuring that particularly sensitive operations
are subject to approval and/or adequate control. Meaningful government
accountability to the legislature is obviously conditioned upon meaningful
governmental control over the security and intelligence services. Where
the law provides for governmental control, but this control does not exist in
practice, the security and intelligence services risk becoming a “State within
a State”. Where, on the other hand, the law provides for a degree of distance
between government ministers and officials and the day-to-day operations of the
security and intelligence services, but government ministers in fact exercise
influence or even control over these operations, then the phenomenon of
“deniability” can arise. In such a case, the exercise of power is concealed,
and there is no proper accountability. The Statute of the Council of Europe and
the ECHR require respect for the rule of law which in turn requires
accountability for all exercises of
public power. Independently of how a
State chooses to regulate political control over security and intelligence
agencies, in any case effective oversight and control mechanisms must exist to
avoid these two problems.
121.
The term “secrecy” can have different meanings. In the context of the
present opinion, the problematic aspect of the secrecy of detention lies in the
first place in the impact which such secrecy has on the prisoner’s defence
rights under Articles 5
and 6 ECHR. In addition, prolonged
secret detention may impinge on Article 3
and on other aspects of Article 6 ECHR.
122.
For a State to provide facilities to another State to conduct voluntary
interviews with suspects on its territory is, in principle, not in violation of
international law. On the contrary, it is a feature of most modern Mutual
Assistance Treaties. It depends upon the territorial States’ constitutional and
administrative rules on the exercise of public power whether this can go so far
as involuntary interrogation. Some States will not allow any but their own
officials to exercise public power on their territory. Others make exceptions
by treaty rules.
123.
The territorial State retains its full jurisdiction within the meaning
of Article 1 ECHR over any place on its territory where such interviews take
place, including any ad hoc detention facilities: : that State is therefore
responsible for any infringement of the ECHR in relation to any suspect treated
in violation of Articles 3 and 5, e.g. any prisoners who may be held
incomunicado there. The modalities of the interrogation and detention, and of
treatment given, need to comply with the standards of the European Convention
on Human Rights.
124. Incomunicado detention, that is detention
without the possibility of contacting one’s lawyer and of applying to a court,
is clearly not “in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law” of any of the
member States of the Council of Europe, if alone because the detention is not
subject to judicial review. For the detainee, it is not possible to exercise
his entitlement to habeas corpus guaranteed by Article 5, paragraph
4. The unlike possibility that such a
detention is “in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law” under the law
of the foreign State by whose authorities the detention was ordered and
executed, is irrelevant for the issue of the responsibility under the European
Convention on Human Rights of the State on whose territory it takes place.
125.
If and in so far as incomunicado detention takes place, is made
possible or is continued on the territory of a member State of the Council of Europe, in
view of its secret character that detention is by definition in violation of
the European Convention on Human Rights
and the applicable domestic law of that State.
126.
Active and passive co-operation by a Council of Europe member State in
imposing and executing secret detentions engages its responsibility under the European
Convention on Human Rights. The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that
“the acquiescence or connivance of the authorities of a Contracting State in the acts of private
individuals which violate the Convention rights of other individuals within its
jurisdiction may engage the State’s responsibility under the Convention”.
This is even more true in respect of acts of agents of foreign States.
127.
While no such responsibility applies if the detention is carried out by
foreign authorities without the territorial State actually knowing it, the
territorial State must take effective measures to safeguard against the risk of
disappearance and must conduct a prompt and effective investigation into a
substantiated claim that a person has been taken into unacknowledged custody.
128.
The possible obligation by a Council of Europe member State under
bilateral or multilateral treaties to co-operate in prosecution measures does
not affect or diminish this State’s obligation not to allow or contribute to
secret detention on its territory.
129.
As the European Court of Human Rights has pointed out, the opinion of the State under whose
authority the detention is decided and executed concerning the issue of whether
the detention is in violation of fundamental rights is not conclusive for the
question of whether cooperation engages
responsibility of a member State of the Council of Europe under the European
Convention on Human Rights; only the relevant provisions of the latter
Convention, as interpreted by the European Court of Human Rights, are decisive.
This means, for instance, that the opinion which has been put forward in
certain quarters with respect to the US Government that “cruel and unusual
punishment”, if applied outside US territory, does not violate the US
Constitution, is of no relevance whatsoever for the question of responsibility
of member States under the European Convention on Human Rights. It also means
that the individual opinion of specific Governments, or of certain public
persons, about possible limits to the absolute character of the scope of the
prohibition of torture are not relevant either. In addition to the
interpretation given by the European Court of Human Rights concerning the
absolute character of the prohibition of torture, Article 2, paragraph 2, of
the UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment expressly states that there is no room whatsoever and
under any circumstances to justify torture
130.
If a State is informed or has reasonable grounds to suspect that any persons
are held incomunicado at foreign military bases on its territory,
despite its limited jurisdiction over foreign military bases, its
responsibility under the European Convention on Human Rights is still engaged, unless it takes all measures
which are within its power in order for this irregular situation to end.
131.
As a rule, a State cannot search foreign military bases on its territory
unless this is allowed under the relevant treaties or unless the host State is
authorised by the sending State to do so. However, the right to detain
non-military personnel does not fall under the ordinary rights and powers that are connected directly with the establishment
and operation of the sites at which the foreign forces and installations are
located (see para. 106 above), unless the site falls under the jurisdiction of
the sending State under the applicable SOFA, such as the NATO-SOFA (see
footnote 68 above).
132.
The host State is therefore entitled and even obliged to prevent, and
react to such abuse of its territory. It could exercise its powers in respect
of registration and control of aliens, and demand identification and movement
orders of those present on the military base in question. Access to such
military bases, assuming that it had been freely granted under the military
base agreement, would require notification under normal conditions. In
addition, appropriate diplomatic channels can be used in order to protest
against such practice.
133.
The case might arise that some section of the public authorities
of the Council of Europe member State (police, security forces etc.) is
informed and tolerates, or fails to prevent or even co-operates in the maintenance
of secret detentions without government knowledge. While this situation raises
the already mentioned constitutional issue of control over security forces, the
State remains responsible under the European Convention on Human Rights.
134.
States which have ratified the European Convention for the Prevention of
Torture have the obligation to co-operate with the Committee for the Prevention
of Torture and to provide it with a list of all the detention centres which are
present on their territory. CPT must have access to all and any of these
detention centres. Failure by a State to inform CPT of any detention facility
can be seen as a lack of co-operation within the meaning of Article 3 ECPT,
which, if not clarified appropriately, can result in procedures towards a
public statement under Art 10(2).
135.
As concerns international humanitarian law, the Geneva Conventions
(Articles 126 of GCIII and 143 GCIV) grant the International Committee of the
Red Cross “permission to go to all places where prisoners of war or protected
persons may be, particularly to places of internment, imprisonment and labour”,
and “access to all premises occupied by” them, including “the places of
departure, passage and arrival of prisoners who are being transferred”.
Responsibility could arise in this respect too.
136.
Insofar as detention can be “secret” vis-à-vis the national authorities,
the Commission considers that a State is exempted from responsibility only if
and as long as it does not have any knowledge of a detention carried out by
foreign agents in breach of its territorial sovereignty. However, if any branch
of the State is involved in or informed about the detention, irrespective of
their acting ultra vires, the responsibility of the State as a subject
of international law is engaged (see paras. 38-43 above).
137.
There are only four legal ways of transferring a prisoner to foreign
authorities: deportation, extradition, transit and transfers of sentenced
persons for the purpose of their serving the sentence in their country of
origin.
138. Extradition and deportation
proceedings must be specified by the applicable law, and the prisoners must be
given access to the competent authorities. In addition, extradition and
deportation proceedings cannot be carried out where substantial grounds have
been shown for believing that the person in question, if expelled, would face a
real risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 of the ECHR and
of the UN Convention against Torture in the receiving country. In these
circumstances, Article 3 implies the obligation not to expel the person in
question to such a country.
139.
In this context, it is worth underlining that Council of Europe member
States are under an obligation to prevent prisoners’ exposure to the risk of
torture: the violation does not depend on whether the prisoner is eventually
subjected to torture.
140.
The assessment of the reality of the risk must be carried out very
rigorously. The risk assessment will
depend upon the circumstances, meaning both the rights which risk being
violated and the situation in the receiving State. The diplomatic assurances
which are usually provided by the requesting State in order to exclude human
rights breaches in its territory after the extradition or deportation is
carried out may be appropriate as concerns risks of application of the death
penalty
or for fair trial violations, because such risks can in most instances be
monitored satisfactorily. On the other hand, as regards the risk of torture,
monitoring is impracticable in the vast majority of conceivable cases,
especially bearing in mind the fact that, even after conviction in a criminal
case, a State may torture a prisoner for the purpose of obtaining information.
At the same time, it is impracticable to have a “life-long” responsibility for
people who are removed out of the country.
141.
This situation raises the question of the value of diplomatic assurances.
In the Venice Commission’s view, the acceptance of such assurances is in
principle the expression of the necessary good faith and mutual trust between
friendly States, although, as far as assurances may be regarded as acceptable
in principle (see para. 142 below), the terms of the diplomatic assurances need
to be unequivocal (for instance, a reference to “torture” or to “inhuman or
degrading treatment” should be interpreted within the meaning given to these
terms by the ECtHR, the CAT and the HR Committee) and need to reflect the scope
of the obligation by which the State which issues them is legally bound.
142.
However, this general mutual trust must not prevail over the accurate
examination of each specific situation, particularly if there are precedents or
even patterns of violation of previously accepted assurances.
For example, an important difference between the situation in the Mamatkulov
case (see para. 71 above) and later ones is that recent experience has shown
that the risk of torture seems to be greater than what was known before,
despite assurances. In the Commission’s view, under these circumstances the
room for accepting guarantees against torture is reduced significantly. Where
there is substantial evidence that a country practices or permits torture in
respect of certain categories of prisoners, guarantees may not satisfactorily
reduce this risk in cases of requests for extradition of prisoners belonging to
those categories.
143.
The requirement of not exposing any prisoner to the real risk of
ill-treatment also applies in respect of the transit of prisoners through the territory of Council of Europe member States:
member States should therefore refuse to allow transit of prisoners in
circumstances where there is such a risk.
144.
The situation may arise that a Council of Europe member State has
serious reasons to believe that the mission of an airplane crossing its
airspace is to carry prisoners with the intention of transferring them to countries
where they would face ill-treatment.
145.
If such an airplane does not require landing, as long as the plane is in
the air, all persons on board are subject to the jurisdiction of both the flag
State and the territorial State. In the
Commission’s view, Council of Europe member States’ responsibility under the European
Convention on Human Rights is engaged if they do not take the preventive
measures which are within their powers. In addition, their responsibility for
aiding another State to commit an unlawful act would be at issue. It follows,
in the Commission’s view, that the territorial State is entitled to, and must
take all possible measures in order to prevent the commission of human rights
violations in its territory, including in its air space.
146.
There are obviously practical difficulties involved in securing the
effective enjoyment of Convention rights in aircraft transiting a Council of
Europe member State’s airspace or military base for foreign forces on its
territory. Without prejudice to the wider question of how such difficulties can
affect the scope of a State’s obligations to secure generally the rights under
the Convention, the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights makes it
clear that the State’s duty to secure the most elementary rights at issue in
the present case (right to security of person; freedom from torture and right
to life) continues to apply, regardless of acquiescence or connivance.
147.
The territorial State possesses a different course of action in respect
of the suspect airplane, depending on its status.
148.
If the state airplane in question has presented itself as if it were a
civil plane, that is to say it has not duly sought prior authorisation pursuant
to Article 3 c) of the Chicago Convention, it is in breach of the Chicago
Convention : the territorial State may therefore require landing. The airplane having failed to declare its
State functions, it will not be entitled to claim State aircraft status and
subsequently not be entitled to immunity : the territorial State will therefore
be entitled to search the plane pursuant to Article 16 of the Chicago
Convention and take all necessary measures to secure human rights. In addition,
it will be entitled to protest through appropriate diplomatic channels.
149.
If the plane has presented itself as a State plane and has obtained
overflight permission without however disclosing its mission, the territorial
State can contend that the flag State has violated its international
obligations. The flag State could thus face international responsibility. The
airplane however will, in principle, be entitled to immunity according to
general international law and to the applicable treaties: the territorial State
will therefore be unable to search the plane, unless the captain consents.
150.
However, the territorial State may refuse further overflight clearances
in favour of the flag State or impose, as a condition therefore, a duty to
submit to searches. If the overflight permission derives from a bilateral
treaty or a SOFA or a military base agreement, the terms of such treaty might
be questioned if and to the extent that they do not allow for any control in
order to ensure respect for human rights, or their abuse might be advanced. In
this respect, the Venice Commission recalls that the legal framework concerning
foreign military bases on the territory of Council of Europe member States
must enable the latter to exercise sufficient powers to fulfil their human
rights obligations.
151.
While mutual trust and economic and military co-operation amongst
friendly States need to be encouraged, in granting foreign state aircraft
authorisation for overflight, Council of Europe member States must secure
respect for their human rights obligations. This means that they may have to
consider whether it is necessary to insert new clauses, including the right to
search, as a condition for diplomatic clearances in favour of State planes
carrying prisoners. If there are reasonable grounds to believe that, in certain
categories of cases, the human rights of certain passengers risk being
violated, States must indeed make overflight permission conditional upon
respect of express human rights clauses. Compliance with the procedures for
obtaining diplomatic clearance must be strictly monitored; requests for
overflight authorisation should provide sufficient information as to allow effective
monitoring (for example, the identity
and status (voluntary or involuntary passenger) of all persons on board and the
destination of the flight as well as the final destination of each passenger).
Whenever necessary, the right to search civil planes must be exercised.
152.
With a view to discouraging repetition of abuse, any violations of civil
aviation principles in relation to irregular transport of prisoners should be
denounced, and brought to the attention of the competent authorities and
eventually of the public. Council of Europe member States could bring possible
breaches of the Chicago Convention before the Council of the International Civil Aviation
Organisation pursuant to Article 54 of the Chicago Convention.
153.
As regards the treaty obligations of Council of Europe member States,
the Commission considers that there is no international obligation for them to
allow irregular transfers of prisoners to or to grant unconditional overflight
rights, for the purposes of fighting terrorism. In the Commission’s opinion,
therefore, States must interpret and perform their treaty obligations,
including those deriving from the NATO treaty and from military base agreements
and SOFAs, where these are applicable, in a manner compatible with their human
rights obligations. As regards notably the NATO treaty, the Commission stresses
that this principle is expressed in Article 7 according to which “[t]his Treaty
does not affect, and shall not be interpreted as affecting in any way the
rights and obligations under the Charter [of the United Nations] of the Parties
which are members of the United Nations.” Even if NATO member states have
undertaken obligations concerning irregular transfer or unconditional overflight,
the Commission recalls that if the breach of a treaty obligation is determined
by the need to comply with a peremptory norm (jus cogens), it does not
give rise to an internationally wrongful act. As underlined above (para. 43),
the prohibition of torture is a peremptory norm.
154.
Council of Europe member States are under an obligation to fight
terrorism, but in doing so they must safeguard human rights.
155.
Council of Europe member States are under an international legal
obligation to secure that everyone within their jurisdiction (see para. 146
above) enjoy internationally agreed fundamental rights, including and notably
that they are not unlawfully deprived of their personal freedom and are not subjected
to torture and inhuman and degrading treatment, including in breach of the prohibition
to extradite or deport where there exists a risk of torture or ill-treatment.
This obligation may also be violated by acquiescence or connivance in the
conduct of foreign agents. There exists in particular a positive duty to
investigate into substantiated claims of breaches of fundamental rights by
foreign agents, particularly in case of allegations of torture or
unacknowledged detention.
156.
Council of Europe member States are bound by numerous multilateral and
bilateral treaties in different fields, such as collective self-defence,
international civil aviation and military bases. The obligations arising out of
these treaties do not prevent States from complying with their human rights
obligations. These treaties must be interpreted and applied in a manner
consistent with the Parties’ human rights obligations. Indeed, an implied
condition of any agreement is that, in carrying it out, the States will act in
conformity with international law, in particular human rights law.
157.
The Venice Commission considers that there is room to interpret and
apply the different applicable treaties in a manner that is compatible with the
principle of respect for fundamental rights. Council of Europe member States
must do so. For example, the search of a state airplane which has presented
itself as a civil aircraft is allowed under the Chicago Convention and must be
effected whenever there are reasonable grounds to suspect that the plane may be
used to commit human rights breaches. The relevant inter-state practice must be
changed and adapted to this obligation, without however frustrating the
legitimate aims pursued by the treaties in question. Diplomatic measures may
also need to be taken.
158.
To the extent that this due interpretation and application of the
existing treaties in the light of human rights obligations is not possible,
Council of Europe member States must take all the necessary measures to
renegotiate and amend the treaty provisions to this effect.
159.
In reply to the questions put by the Legal Affairs Committee of the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, the Venice Commission has
reached the conclusions listed below:
As regards arrest and secret
detention
a)
Any form of involvement of a Council of Europe member
State or receipt of information prior to an arrest within its jurisdiction by
foreign agents entails accountability under Articles 1 and 5 of the European
Convention on Human Rights (and possibly Article 3 in respect of the modalities
of the arrest). A State must thus prevent the arrest from taking place. If the
arrest is effected by foreign authorities in the exercise of their jurisdiction
under the terms of an applicable Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), the Council
of Europe member State concerned may remain accountable under the European
Convention on Human Rights, as it is obliged to give priority to its jus cogens obligations, such as they
ensue from Article 3.
b)
Active and passive co-operation by a Council of Europe
member State in imposing and executing secret detentions engages its
responsibility under the European Convention on Human Rights. While no such
responsibility applies if the detention is carried out by foreign authorities
without the territorial State actually knowing it, the latter must take
effective measures to safeguard against the risk of disappearance and must
conduct a prompt and effective investigation into a substantiated claim that a
person has been taken into unacknowledged custody.
c)
The Council of Europe member State’s responsibility is
engaged also in the case where its agents (police, security forces etc.)
co-operate with the foreign authorities or do not prevent an arrest or
unacknowledged detention without
government knowledge, acting ultra
vires. The Statute of the Council
of Europe and the European Convention on Human Rights require respect for the
rule of law, which in turn requires accountability for all form of exercise of public power. Regardless of how a State
chooses to regulate political control over security and intelligence agencies,
in any event effective oversight and control mechanisms must exist.
d)
If a State is informed or has reasonable suspicions
that any persons are held incomunicado at foreign military bases on its
territory, its responsibility under the European Convention on Human Rights is
engaged, unless it takes all measures which are within its power in order for this
irregular situation to end.
e)
Council of Europe member States which have ratified the
European Convention for the Prevention of Torture must inform the European
Committee for the Prevention of Torture of any detention facility on their
territory and must allow it to access such facilities. Insofar as international
humanitarian law may be applicable, States must grant the International
Committee of the Red Cross permission to visit these facilities.
As regards inter-state transfers
of prisoners
f)
There are only four legal ways for Council of Europe
member States to transfer a prisoner to foreign authorities: deportation,
extradition, transit and transfer of sentenced persons for the purpose of their
serving the sentence in another country.
Extradition and deportation proceedings must be defined by the
applicable law, and the prisoners must be provided appropriate legal guarantees
and access to competent authorities. The prohibition to extradite or deport to
a country where there exists a risk of torture or ill-treatment must be
respected.
g)
Diplomatic assurances must be legally binding on the
issuing State and must be unequivocal in terms; when there is substantial
evidence that a country practices or permits torture in respect of certain
categories of prisoners, Council of Europe member States must refuse the
assurances in cases of requests for extradition of prisoners belonging to those
categories.
h)
The prohibition to transfer to a country where there
exists a risk of torture or ill-treatment also applies in respect of the
transit of prisoners through the territory of Council of Europe member States:
they must therefore refuse to allow transit of prisoners in circumstances where
there is such a risk.
As regards overflight
i)
If a Council of
Europe member State has serious reasons to believe that an airplane crossing
its airspace carries prisoners with the intention of transferring them to
countries where they would face ill-treatment in violation of Article 3 of the
European Convention on Human Rights, it must take all the necessary measures in
order to prevent this from taking place.
j)
If the state airplane in question has presented itself
as a civil plane, that is to say it has not duly sought prior authorisation
pursuant to Article 3 c) of the Chicago Convention, the territorial State must
require landing and must search it. In addition, it must protest through
appropriate diplomatic channels.
k)
If the plane has presented itself as a state plane and
has obtained overflight permission without however disclosing its mission, the
territorial State cannot search it unless the captain consents. However, the
territorial State can refuse further overflight clearances in favour of the
flag State or impose, as a condition therefor, the duty to submit to searches;
if the overflight permission derives from a bilateral treaty or a Status of
Forces Agreement or a military base agreement, the terms of such a treaty
should be questioned if and to the extent that they do not allow for any
control in order to ensure respect for human rights.
l)
In granting foreign state aircraft authorisation for
overflight, Council of Europe member States must secure respect for their human
rights obligations. This means that they may have to consider whether it is
necessary to insert new clauses, including the right to search, as a condition
for diplomatic clearances in favour of State planes carrying prisoners. If
there are reasonable grounds to believe that, in certain categories of cases,
the human rights of certain passengers risk being violated, States must indeed
make overflight permission conditional upon respect of express human rights
clauses. Compliance with the procedures for obtaining diplomatic clearance must
be strictly monitored; requests for overflight authorisation should provide
sufficient information as to allow effective monitoring (for example, the identity and status
(voluntary or involuntary passenger) of all persons on board and the
destination of the flight as well as the final destination of each passenger).
Whenever necessary, the right to search civil planes must be exercised.
m)
With a view to discouraging repetition of abuse, any
violations of civil aviation principles in relation to irregular transport of
prisoners should be denounced, and brought to the attention of the competent
authorities and eventually of the public. Council of Europe member States could
bring possible breaches of the Chicago Convention before the Council of the
International Civil Aviation Organisation pursuant to Article 54 of the Chicago
Convention.
n)
As regards the treaty obligations of Council of Europe
member States, the Commission considers that there is no international
obligation for them to allow irregular transfers of prisoners or to grant
unconditional overflight rights, for the purposes of combating terrorism. The
Commission recalls that if the breach of a treaty obligation is determined by
the need to comply with a peremptory norm (jus
cogens), it does not give rise to an internationally wrongful act, and the
prohibition of torture is a peremptory norm. In the Commission’s opinion,
therefore, States must interpret and perform their treaty obligations,
including those deriving from the NATO treaty and from military base agreements
and Status of Forces Agreements, in a manner compatible with their human rights
obligations.
160.
The Venice Commission hopes that this opinion will assist the Committee
on Legal Affairs and Human Rights of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe in the completion of the inquiry into these matters. The Commission
also hopes that this opinion will assist the Secretary General of the Council
of Europe in his ongoing inquiry under Article 52 of the European Convention on
Human Rights. The Commission is ready to pursue its reflection on
these matters, if so requested.