Lexploria - Legal research enhanced by smart algorithms
Lexploria beta Legal research enhanced by smart algorithms
Menu
Browsing history:

MANDUGEQI AND JINGE v. POLAND

Doc ref: 35218/97 • ECHR ID: 001-3912

Document date: September 19, 1997

  • Inbound citations: 0
  • Cited paragraphs: 0
  • Outbound citations: 0

MANDUGEQI AND JINGE v. POLAND

Doc ref: 35218/97 • ECHR ID: 001-3912

Document date: September 19, 1997

Cited paragraphs only



                    Application No. 35218/97

                    by MANDUGEQI and JINGE

                    against Poland

     The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in private on

19 September 1997, the following members being present:

          Mr.  S. TRECHSEL, President

          Mrs. G.H. THUNE

          Mrs. J. LIDDY

          MM.  E. BUSUTTIL

               G. JÖRUNDSSON

               A.S. GÖZÜBÜYÜK

               A. WEITZEL

               J.-C. SOYER

               H. DANELIUS

               F. MARTINEZ

               C.L. ROZAKIS

               L. LOUCAIDES

               J.-C. GEUS

               M.P. PELLONPÄÄ

               B. MARXER

               I. CABRAL BARRETO

               B. CONFORTI

               I. BÉKÉS

               J. MUCHA

               D. SVÁBY

               A. PERENIC

               C. BÎRSAN

               P. LORENZEN

               K. HERNDL

               E. BIELIUNAS

               E.A. ALKEMA

          Mrs. M. HION

          MM.  R. NICOLINI

               A. ARABADJIEV

          Mr.  H.C. KRÜGER, Secretary to the Commission

     Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection

of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;

     Having regard to the application introduced on 7 March 1997 by

MANDUGEQI and JINGE against Poland and registered on 7 March 1997 under

file No. 35218/97;

     Having regard to:

-    the reports provided for in Rule 47 of the Rules of Procedure of

     the Commission;

-    the observations submitted by the respondent Government on 14 May

     1997 and the observations in reply submitted by the applicants

     on 20 May 1997;

-    the applicants' letter of 5 August 1997;

     Having deliberated;

     Decides as follows:

THE FACTS

     The applicants are a couple of Chinese citizens born,

respectively, in 1943 and 1954.  They are represented before the

Commission by Mr. Wojciech Hermelinski, a lawyer practising in Warsaw.

     The facts of the case, as submitted by the parties, may be

summarised as follows:

Particular circumstances of the case:

     On 24 July 1994 the Chinese Security Services issued warrants of

arrest against the applicants on charges of fraud under Article 152 of

the Chinese Act on Penalties committed by misappropriation of property

in sum of approximately 10 million juan, i.e. 2,1 million US $.

     On 10 August 1996 the applicants were apprehended by the police

at the border and arrested at the Warsaw Ok*cie International Airport

by virtue of an international warrant of arrest issued by Interpol in

November 1994 upon request of the Chinese branch of Interpol.

     On 11 August 1996 the Warsaw Regional Court remanded them in

custody with a view to extradition on suspicion of fraud.

     On 2 September 1996 the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs

submitted a request for extradition to the Polish Government.

     On 14 October 1996 the applicants were heard by the Warsaw

Regional Court within the framework of the extradition proceedings.

     On 7 February 1997 the Warsaw Regional Court pronounced an

opinion as to the admissibility of the applicants' extradition.  The

Court considered that it transpired from the documents submitted with

the request for extradition that the charges against the applicants

were punishable under the provisions of the Polish Criminal Code.

Thus, the necessary requirement for extradition, i.e. that the acts

concerned were punishable in both countries, was complied with.  The

Court went on to state that the condition of reciprocity between Poland

and China was not met as there was no treaty on extradition between

Poland and China and that there had not been any case of extradition

between these countries in recent years.  Thus it could not be

established that China would ensure reciprocity.

     The Court further considered that the applicants' extradition

would be in breach of Article 3 of the Convention.  It transpired from

the explanations given by the applicants before the Court and from the

materials submitted by Amnesty International, in particular from its

Report for 1995, that there were serious grounds for believing that,

if extradited, the persons extradited, regardless of the character of

their offence, would be subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3

of the Convention both during the investigations and during the

execution of a prison penalty.  The Court concluded that in its opinion

the applicants' extradition would not be compatible with the Polish

legal order insofar as it incorporated the international conventions

ratified by Poland and in particular the European Convention on Human

Rights.

     On 11 February 1997 the Warsaw Regional Prosecutor lodged an

appeal against the opinion.

     On 7 March 1997 the Warsaw Court of Appeal quashed the opinion

of 7 February 1997 and pronounced an opinion to the effect that the

applicants' extradition would be admissible.

     The Court observed that in the request for extradition it had

been stated that from 1987 to 1993 the applicants had run a commercial

company in China as its board director and executive director,

respectively.  They had defrauded numerous banks, companies and private

persons for a sum equivalent to approximately 2 million US $ by taking

various loans on which the same property served as a collateral, by

accepting payments for merchandise which they had subsequently not

delivered, by failing to pay for merchandise and for taking loans which

had not been repaid.  The Court further had regard to the information

submitted in the extradition request, i.e. that criminal proceedings

had been instituted against the applicants in which the public

prosecutor had conducted a "thorough investigation as to the frauds

committed" by them, and to the summary of facts, supported by evidence,

as to the offences with which the applicants had been charged which had

been annexed to the extradition request.  The Court also noted that in

the course of the appellate proceedings before it the Chinese Ministry

of Foreign Affairs had submitted a further assurance that no more

severe penalty would be imposed on the applicants than that foreseen

for an identical offence in the Polish Criminal Code.

     The Court finally concluded that, having regard to the evidence

submitted by the Chinese authorities in the extradition request and to

the applicants' submissions before the Regional Public Prosecutor and

before the Warsaw Regional Court, there were no sufficient grounds for

believing that, if extradited, they would run a risk of treatment

contrary to the Convention.  It was true that in the past Mr. Manduqegi

had been convicted of attempted illegal crossing of the border and had

served a prison sentence.  However, at a hearing before the Warsaw

Regional Court on 14 October 1996 he had stated that the issues

relating to his conviction had been settled between him and the

authorities and that, as a result, he could subsequently become a civil

servant.  Mr. Manduqegi had presented to the Regional Court his large-

scale business activities in a detailed manner and stated that certain

of his undertakings had no precedent in communist China.  He had made

it clear that his business success had not been impeded in any way by

the Chinese authorities as shown by, inter alia, a letter of the

Chinese Civil Aviation Committee of 11 March 1993 in which certain

deference in respect of his business projects was shown.  Mr. Manduqegi

had also acknowledged that he had been an informant of the secret

police for the last seventeen years and that his wife's cooperation

with the police was only slightly shorter.  It was, inter alia, due to

this cooperation that they could have obtained passports and left China

in 1993.  In the light of these considerations the Court concluded that

neither the applicants' actual social position nor the character of the

charges against them, which were far from being of a political

character, would justify the conclusion that they ran a risk of being

subjected to such an extreme form of discrimination as to fall within

the scope of Article 3 of the Convention.

     The Court of Appeal further observed that it had not disregarded

the arguments submitted by the applicants, based on the reports of

Amnesty International.  It was true that it transpired from these

documents that the Chinese administration of justice was particularly

oppressive in that, inter alia, there were a very large number of

capital penalties being imposed and executed, that unacceptable methods

were being applied with regard to persons against whom criminal

proceedings were instituted and that the deprivation of liberty was

being imposed without a judicial decision.  However, the Court noted

that it should be borne in mind that in the present case the Chinese

authorities had undertaken that the applicants' case would be examined

by a court, that capital punishment would not be imposed and that no

penalties would be imposed which would be more severe than those

imposed for the same offences under Polish law.  Therefore the opinion

of the Regional Court as to the risk of treatment contrary to Article

3 of the Convention was not justified as the Court had based it only

on generalisation of findings made by Amnesty International in relation

to all criminal proceedings conducted in China.  The Regional Court had

failed to indicate specific characteristics of the applicants' case

from which it would necessarily follow that their human rights would

be breached in the criminal proceedings against them in China.

Moreover, the Regional Court had entirely disregarded the undertakings

as to the applicants' fate made by the Chinese authorities in the

extradition request.  The Court concluded that there were no legal

obstacles to the applicants' extradition.

     On 18 March 1997 the Warsaw Court of Appeal prolonged the

applicants' detention pending extradition until 20 July 1997.

     On 13 April 1997 the applicants lodged an appeal in cassation

with the Supreme Court.

     On 29 July 1997 the Supreme Court rendered a decision in the

cassation proceedings.  The Court considered, inter alia, that under

Article 1 of the Convention the States Parties were obliged to secure

to everyone within their jurisdiction the rights and freedoms set out

in the Convention. Article 3 of the Convention prohibited torture,

inhuman and degrading treatment.  Thus, a decision by a Contracting

State to extradite a fugitive might give rise to an issue under Article

3 of the Convention.  It was not necessary to have established with

certainty that the extradited person would be subject to treatment

contrary to this provision.  It was sufficient that there was a

probability ("prawdopodobienstwo") that such treatment might occur.

In the present case the factual findings of the courts in this respect

did not differ:  the Regional Court had concluded that there were

sufficient grounds for believing that, if extradited, the applicants

would run the risk of treatment contrary to Article 3 of the

Convention, whereas the Court of Appeal had, on the basis of the same

materials,  concluded that it had not been shown that the applicants

could be exposed to such treatment.  In the light of the evidence

before that Court, the interpretation of the applicable substantive

law, i.e. Article 3 of the Convention, could not lead to any conclusion

other than that the conclusion that the applicants' extradition would

have been unlawful.

Relevant domestic law

     Under Article 152 of the Chinese Criminal Code the offence of

aggravated fraud is liable to not less than five years and not more

than ten years of a fixed-term imprisonment; in especially serious

cases, the sentence is to be not less than ten years of fixed-term

imprisonment or life imprisonment, and the offender's property may in

addition be confiscated.

     Under Chapter 56 of the Polish Code of Criminal Procedure it is

the General Prosecutor (Minister of Justice) who is competent to take

a decision on extradition.  Before this decision is taken, the Regional

Court rules on the admissibility of extradition.  An appeal lies

against its opinion with the Court of Appeal.  If the opinion on the

admissibility is negative, the General Prosecutor is bound by it.  If

the court states that there are no legal impediments to extradition,

the final decision lies within the discretionary powers of the General

Prosecutor.

     Under Article 534 para. 1 of the Code of Criminal Procedure the

request for extradition shall be refused if the person concerned is

a Polish citizen or has been granted asylum in Poland.

     Under Article 534 para. 2 the extradition may be refused if the

criminal offence was committed within the territorial jurisdiction of

Poland; if criminal proceedings concerning the same act committed by

the same person are pending, were pending or ended by a final decision

in Poland; if under the law of the requesting State the offence

concerned is subject to a penalty not exceeding one year or to a lesser

penalty, or the penalty imposed does not exceed this period; if

pursuant to Polish law the offence is subject to private prosecution;

and if the requesting State does not guarantee reciprocity.

COMPLAINTS

     The applicants complain under Article 3 of the Convention that

their extradition to China would expose them to a risk of being

subjected within the framework of the criminal proceedings against them

to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment as the Chinese system

of criminal procedure does not offer any relevant safeguards.  They

submit that inhuman or degrading punishment would be inflicted on them

when they are convicted.  They submit that their case should be

assessed against the general background of the human rights situation

in China with regard to criminal proceedings and execution of

penalties.

     The applicants complain under Article 6 of the Convention that

the extradition proceedings were unfair in that the additional

submissions of the Public Prosecutor to the Court of Appeal in reply

to the applicants' observations to the Court were not communicated to

them.  Consequently, they did not have an opportunity to submit any

relevant comments.

PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION

     The application was introduced and registered on 7 March 1997.

     On 7 March 1997 the Commission's President decided to apply

Rule 36 of the Commission's Rules of Procedure and to communicate the

case to the respondent Government under Article 3 of the Convention.

     The Government submitted their observations on 14 May 1997.  The

applicants replied on 20 May 1997.

     In a letter of 5 August 1997 the applicants informed the

Commission that in view of the Supreme Court's decision of 29 July 1997

they wished to withdraw their case.

REASONS FOR THE DECISION

     The Commission notes that in view of the Supreme Court's decision

to the effect that the extradition of the applicants' to China would

have been unlawful the applicants have informed the Commission that

they wish to withdraw their case.

     In these circumstances, the Commission concludes pursuant to

Article 30 para. 1 (a) and (c) of the Convention that the applicants

do not intend to pursue their application and that it is, therefore,

no longer justified to continue the examination of the petition.

Moreover, there are no reasons of a general character affecting respect

for Human Rights as defined in this Convention which require the

further examination of the application by virtue of Article 30 para.

1 in fine of the Convention.

     For these reasons, the Commission, unanimously,

     DECIDES TO STRIKE THE APPLICATION OUT OF ITS LIST OF CASES.

        H.C. KRÜGER                         S. TRECHSEL

         Secretary                            President

     to the Commission                    of the Commission

© European Union, https://eur-lex.europa.eu, 1998 - 2024
Active Products: EUCJ + ECHR Data Package + Citation Analytics • Documents in DB: 393980 • Paragraphs parsed: 42814632 • Citations processed 3216094