HAKIZIMANA v. SWEDEN
Doc ref: 37913/05 • ECHR ID: 001-85902
Document date: March 27, 2008
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THIRD SECTION
DECISION
AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application no. 37913/05 by Jean M . V . HAKIZIMANA against Sweden
The European Court of Human Rights ( Third Section), sitting on 27 March 2008 as a Chamber composed of:
Josep Casadevall , President, Elisabet Fura-Sandström , Corneliu Bîrsan , Boštjan M. Zupančič , Alvina Gyulumyan , Egbert Myjer , Luis López Guerra , judges, and Mr Santiago Quesada, Section Registrar ,
Having regard to the above application lodged on 20 October 2005,
Having regard to the decision to apply Article 29 § 3 of the Convention and examine the admissibility and merits of the case together,
Having regard to the interim measure indicated to the respondent Government under Rule 39 of the Rules of Court and the fact that this interim measure has been complied with,
Having regard to the decision to grant priority to the above application under Rule 41 of the Rules of Court ,
Having regard to the observations submitted by the respondent Government and the observations in reply submitted by the applicant,
Having deliberated, decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The applicant, Mr J ean M . V . Hakizimana , is a Rwandan national who was born in 1973 and is currently living in Sweden . He was represented before the Court by Mr P. Bergquist, a lawyer practising in Huddinge .
The Swedish Government (“the Government”) were represented by their Agent, Mr C. H. Ehrenkrona , of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs .
A. The circumstances of the case
The facts of the case, as submitted by the parties, may be summarised as follows .
1. The background and proceedings before the national authorities
On 2 December 2002 the applicant applied to the Migration Board ( Migrationsverket ) for asylum and a residence permit and, on the same day, an initial interview was held with him. The applicant claimed that he had arrived in Sweden that same day and he submitted his Rwandan identity card. However, he did not present a passport or any travel documents. He stated that he was an ethnic Hutu and had been persecuted by the Tutsis. Between 6 and 29 November 2002, he had been imprisoned in his home town, Gatore, and had been tortured. On the day of his escape from prison, he had been taken by car to Kampala airport and had left the country by plane the following day, via Nairobi and with a second stop-over at a place unknown to him.
In the context of a comprehensive asylum investigation, the applicant appeared before the Migration Board on 10 June 2004 in the presence of his legal counsel and stated, in particular, as follows. He came from Gatore, a town in the municipality of Rusumo , in the province of Kibungo . In 1994, because of the civil war, he and his family had fled to Tanzania , where they had lived in a refugee camp and he had worked as a teacher. Upon his return to Rwanda , in 1996, he had received an identity card and had worked for the United Nations World Food Programme. However, he claimed that he had been insulted and then dismissed because of his Hutu ethnicity. Between 1998 and 2002 he had studied computer engineering at a university in Madras , in India , as a United Nations scholarship holder. His wife and two daughters had remained in Rwanda and when one of the daughters had fallen ill, he had returned. On 3 November 2002 he had arrived at the airport in Rwanda where he had had to fill in an “entry form” and then his passport had been taken away from him by a man in civilian clothes. He had been told to return to collect it when he needed it, but he believed that the passport had been taken in order to prevent him from leaving the country. Three days later, when he had gone to visit his parents in Rusumo, he had been arrested by a person working for the Local Defence Forces (hereafter “the LDF”). He had been taken to a secret prison in the countryside where, almost daily, he had been insulted and hit with sticks and he had not been given anything to eat, apart from when his relatives brought him food. However, he had never been interrogated and had managed to escape after his family had bribed a guard. He had subsequently fled to Uganda , via Gatona, by hiding in a pick-up truck. Relatives in Uganda had arranged for him to travel to Sweden since he had not dared to stay in Uganda because of the presence there of high-ranking military persons of Rwandan nationality.
Moreover, the applicant stated that he had never been politically active but that the Rwandan authorities probably thought that a Hutu coming back from India could be capable of influencing other Hutus. He had thus been called to gacaca trials (see below under “relevant background material”), as had many others who had been to school. His father had also, several times, been summoned to the police station to be questioned about the applicant ’ s whereabouts and his brother-in-law had fled to Malawi . His brothers and sisters had been forced to leave Rwanda as well.
In a written submission to the Migration Board, the applicant, who had been given the opportunity to comment on the investigation, made certain clarifications and additions. However, he first complained that he had spent more than six hours on a train to get to the meeting with the Board and for this reason he had been tired and unable to prepare himself sufficiently for the interview. He then stated that the prison to which he had been taken had in fact been a normal house, belonging to a businessman. Moreover, he had been arrested when he had got off a bus to visit his brother, who since 1996 had been held in the local “Prison Central”. He had never been informed of the reason for his arrest but he had been ill-treated and threatened and had also seen other persons who had been tortured and had died from their injuries. The applicant further added that, while in Tanzania , he had married his wife and their first child had been born there. In 1996 they, together with all other Hutus in the country, had been forced by the Tanzanian military to return to Rwanda . However, he claimed that they had been too afraid to settle in their home town since his family ’ s property had been confiscated by the authorities and they had therefore settled in the county town of Kibungo. He had nevertheless made a claim to the mayor of the municipality of Rusumo to have the family ’ s property returned. The applicant alleged that the mayor had understood the demand to mean that he was against the regime and had issued an order for his arrest. Although the mayor had left office in 1997, the applicant had remained afraid of returning because of the arrest order. Furthermore, the fact that he was a Hutu and well-educated had increased the risk of his being considered as a danger to the regime and arrested. This was particularly so because he had openly expressed his discontent with the Rwandan regime while he had been in India and he was convinced that two other Rwandan students there had been informers of the regime and had reported him to the Rwandan Embassy in New Delhi . The applicant further submitted that he had been in contact with one of his brothers who had recently fled to Uganda and had reported that their father had been battered and interrogated about the applicant ’ s whereabouts by the same persons who had arrested him. Thus, if forced to return to Rwanda , the applicant was convinced that he would be killed, seriously ill-treated or persecuted because he was a Hutu with higher education who had demanded to have his family ’ s property returned and who had escaped from a local prison. He was afraid of being sentenced by the gacaca courts. Although their task was to consider charges against people suspected of genocide, he was certain that they also convicted innocent persons whom the Government suspected of being a threat to security or of belonging to the opposition.
On 14 July 2004 the Migration Board rejected the application. It first noted that the Special Representative of the European Union in the Great Lakes Region had reported that conditions in the region had developed in a positive way. Freedom of expression and political rights were respected to a larger extent and the death squads in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo were no longer considered a threat to the internal security of Rwanda . Moreover, because it was still commonplace for people in Rwanda to be accused of having taken part in the genocide, whether they actually had or not, the Government had created the gacaca courts, a community-based justice system. On the basis of this, the Board found that the general conditions in Rwanda were not such as to grant a right to asylum. Turning to the applicant ’ s personal circumstances, the Board observed that he had not been politically active and therefore considered that it was unlikely that the Rwandan authorities would suspect him of being a security risk or of working against them. If the Rwandan embassy in India had had such suspicions, he would probably have been arrested already upon his arrival at Kigali airport. In view of this, it considered that the fact that his passport had been taken from him at the airport did not raise an issue. Turning to the applicant ’ s arrest, the Board found that he had probably been arrested because the LDF wanted to make money, since he had neither been interrogated nor accused of any offence. It further considered that the applicant ’ s allegations that the mayor of Rusumo had ordered his arrest because he had demanded to have his family ’ s property returned, were not credible as he had added it at a late stage of the proceedings. In any event, the Board was of the opinion that it was not probable that his arrest in 2002 was connected to the mayor ’ s arrest order in 1996. If such an order had been issued, it was remarkable that he had not been arrested earlier, since he had not been in hiding but had been working and moving freely before travelling to India. Moreover, as regards the applicant ’ s fear that he would be convicted by the gacaca courts, the Board noted that there were no reports about these courts sentencing innocent people only because the regime suspected them of being a security risk or of belonging to the opposition. However, even if there were such a risk, the Board considered that the applicant would not face a real risk of being convicted by the gacaca courts since he was not a security risk or politically active against the regime. Lastly, having regard to the fact that he had been living in Rwanda between 1996 and 1998 without having any problems and that the Rwandan Government was working very hard to prevent harassment attributable to the genocide, the Board concluded that the applicant would not risk persecution upon his return to Rwanda . The Board thus concluded that the applicant could neither be granted asylum in Sweden nor granted leave to remain on humanitarian grounds.
The applicant appealed against the decision to the Aliens Appeals Board ( Utlänningsnämnden ), maintaining his claims and adducing, inter alia , the following clarifications and additional comments. When he was arrested on 6 November 2002, the arrest had been made in his home town by a person belonging to the LDF and who knew that he was Hutu and had a higher education. Moreover, his family had bribed a prison guard (i.e. not a member of the LDF) to release him. It was therefore probable that the LDF were still looking for him and that they had beaten his father as revenge and also threatened his brother and sister so that they had felt forced to flee to Uganda . Those two siblings had been registered as refugees by the UNHCR in Uganda . In this respect, the applicant also claimed that another brother of his had recently died following ten years ’ imprisonment only because of his Hutu ethnicity. A document was submitted in support of the alleged death. The applicant further alleged that everyone had to carry an identity card in Rwanda , especially Hutus, as otherwise they would be considered to belong to a rebel group or an opposition party. Furthermore, as regards his passport, he had obtained it through payment of bribes and, since he was not in the RUHARWA ’ s register (the register containing the names of persons suspected of having participated in the genocide), his name was not on any lists at airports or embassies and he had therefore been able to travel to India .
The applicant stated that torture still occurred in Rwanda and that, during his imprisonment, he had been tortured as had many others, some of whom had died from their injuries. He gave the names of several of these persons. He was certain that his arrest had been motivated solely by his ethnicity. Moreover, in June 2004, his father had been very severely battered by the police and had had to be hospitalised. He had not been able to report what had happened since the police, the prosecutors and the members of the judiciary were all Tutsis. In the applicant ’ s view, although the Tutsis made up only 14% of the population, they were governing the country and seeking to “tutsify” it. He further questioned the sources referred to by the Migration Board, alleging that the elections in Rwanda in 2003 had not been fair and that the country was not at all safe for Hutus. The gacaca courts did not reunify the people but only created more conflicts. He invoked various reports in support of the general, poor human rights situation in Rwanda . He was convinced that he would be arrested upon return to his home country and the fact that he had applied for asylum abroad increased this risk even further.
On 29 September 2005 the Aliens Appeals Board rejected the appeal, subscribing to the reasons given by the Migration Board. It also added, inter alia , that the applicant could not be considered to have been the victim of State-sanctioned persecution in Rwanda because of his ethnicity, noting that he had been able to live in Rwanda for two years prior to his journey to India and that he had been able to return to his home country without being arrested. The Board further found it improbable that the Rwandan authorities would have a special interest in him only because he had applied for asylum in Sweden . In the Board ’ s opinion, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, the applicant was not in need of protection in Sweden and could not be granted leave to remain on humanitarian grounds. He was ordered to leave the country within two weeks from the date of the decision.
2. Application of Rule 39 of the Rules of Court and further developments in the case
On 20 October 2005 the applicant requested the Court to indicate to the Swedish Government under Rule 39 of the Rules of Court a suspension of his deportation to Rwanda . He alleged that he would face a real risk of being imprisoned, tortured and possibly even killed if forced to return to his home country. Moreover, he submitted two letters. The first one, dated 27 February 2005, was from the coordinator of the Refugee Sponsorship Program of the Diocese of Thunder Bay, Canada, and stated that the Diocese was willing to offer him support to resettle in Canada , provided that his case was formally referred to them by the UNHCR. The second letter, dated 4 October 2005, was from the Religious of Jesus-Mary, Montreal , Canada , and stated that they promised to provide the applicant with sponsorship as a priority for the beginning of October 2005. They had an agreement with the Government of Quebec which permitted them to sign commitments under which they retained responsibility for refugees during their first year in Canada .
On 24 October 2005 the Court decided to apply Rule 39 and to suspend the deportation until the applicant had received an answer concerning the possibilities for him to go to Canada . On the following day, the Migration Board stayed the deportation of the applicant until further notice. The Migration Board ’ s decision is still in force.
On 5 January 2006 the Court adjourned the case at the request of the Swedish Government following the enactment of an interim amendment to the Swedish Aliens Act, on the basis of which the applicant ’ s case would be reviewed.
On 14 June 2006, after having received several submissions from the applicant, the Migration Board decided not to grant him a residence permit in Sweden on the basis of the interim amendment to the Aliens Act. The Board concluded that the applicant was not in need of protection in Sweden and that there were no other grounds on which to grant him leave to remain in the country.
By letters of 20 June 2006 and 11 September 2006, the Court requested the applicant to inform it whether he had obtained permission to go to Canada .
In a reply which arrived to the Court on 9 October 2006, the applicant stated that he would inform the Court about the outcome of the Canadian proceedings within two months.
The applicant then made a new request to the Migration Board for a residence permit in Sweden or, in the alternative, a student visa for one year. He claimed that, if he was allowed to remain one year in Sweden to study, it would heal him mentally and he could then return to live and work in Africa .
On 20 November 2006 the Migration Board rejected the request as it considered that these were no new circumstances which could constitute an impediment to the enforcement of the deportation in accordance with the Aliens Act.
Subsequently, the applicant submitted several “testimonies” and letters from named Rwandans in confirmation of the poor human rights situation in the country, in particular for Hutus and intellectuals. One of the persons stated that he had been asked to falsely accuse the applicant of having assaulted him and another person and alleged that the applicant had been summoned by the police on 13 December 2005. This person affirmed that he had been instructed to accuse all former teachers in Rwanda of having taught “ethnism” and “divisionism”. Furthermore, two persons testified that they had spent time with the applicant in prison, that they had been battered and that many people had died from the ill-treatment. Another two persons claimed that they had been asked, but had refused, to give false testimony against the applicant by stating that he had taken part in the genocide. However, they alleged that many other people had given false testimonies and that, therefore, the applicant would risk being accused and convicted by the gacaca courts. One more person, who was a Rwandan asylum-seeker in France , stated that, in May 2004, he had heard people mentioning that the applicant was on the Rwandan authorities ’ list of people who were considered politically dangerous and who should be arrested. He also confirmed that the applicant had been detained without a trial.
B. Relevant domestic law and practice
The basic provisions, applied in the present case, concerning the right of aliens to enter and to remain in Sweden were laid down in the 1989 Aliens Act ( U tlänningslagen , 1989:529 – hereinafter referred to as “the 1989 Act” ) . However, the 1989 Act was superseded on 31 March 2006 by a new Aliens Act ( Utlänningslag , 2005:716 – hereinafter referred to as “the 2005 Act”). Both the 1989 and 2005 Acts define the conditions under which an alien can be deported or expelled from the country, as well as the procedures relating to the enforcement of such decisions.
Chapter 1, Section 4, of the 1989 Act provided that an alien staying in Sweden for more than three months should have a residence permit. Such a permit could be issued, inter alia , to an alien who, for humanitarian reasons, should be allowed to settle in Sweden (Chapter 2, Section 4). For example, serious physical or mental illness could, in exceptional cases, constitute humanitarian reasons for the grant of a residence permit if it was a life-threatening illness for which no treatment could be provided in the alien ’ s home country.
Further, under the 1989 Act, an alien who was considered to be a refugee or otherwise in need of protection was, with certain exceptions, entitled to residence in Sweden (Chapter 3, Section 4). The term “refugee” referred to an alien who was outside the country of his nationality owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or religious or political opinion, and who was unable or, owing to such fear, unwilling to avail himself or herself of the protection of that country. This applied irrespective of whether the persecution was at the hands of the authorities of the country or if those authorities could not be expected to offer protection against persecution by private individuals (Chapter 3, Section 2). By “an alien otherwise in need of protection” was meant, inter alia , a person who had left the country of his or her nationality because of a well-founded fear of being sentenced to death or receiving corporal punishment, or of being subjected to torture or other inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment (Chapter 3, Section 3).
An alien who was to be refused entry, deported or expelled, in accordance with a decision that had gained legal force, could be granted a residence permit if he or she filed a new application based on circumstances which had not previously been examined, and if the alien was entitled to a residence permit under Chapter 3, Section 4, or if it would be contrary to the requirements of humanity to enforce such a decision (Chapter 2, Section 5 b). Regard could also be had to serious illness under this provision. Such new applications were filed with and examined by the Aliens Appeals Board (Chapter 7, Section 7).
As regards the enforcement of a refusal of entry, deportation or expulsion, account had to be taken of the risk of capital punishment or torture and other inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. According to a special provision on impediments to enforcement, an alien could not be sent to a country where there were reasonable grounds for believing that he or she would be in danger of suffering capital or corporal punishment or of being subjected to torture or other inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment (Chapter 8, Section 1).
In essence, the 2005 Act did not substantially amend the above provisions, except for the following.
Under the 2005 Act, the Aliens Appeals Board has been replaced by the Migration Court and the Migration Court of Appeal (Chapter 14, Section 3). Moreover, it is no longer possible to renew applications but, instead, the Migration Board determines, on its own initiative, whether there is any impediment to the deportation or expulsion (Chapter 12, Section 18).
Furthermore, on 15 November 2005 certain interim amendments to the 1989 Act entered into force, according to which the Migration Board, upon application by an alien or on its own initiative, could re-determine final decisions already taken by the Aliens Appeals Board. The object of these temporary amendments was to grant residence permits to aliens who, inter alia , had been in Sweden for a very long time or where there existed “urgent humanitarian interests” ( humanitärt angeläget ). Special consideration was given to the situation of children. The temporary provisions remained in force until the new Aliens Act entered into force on 31 March 2006. The Migration Board continued, however, to examine applications which it had received before that date but had not yet determined .
C. Relevant background material [1]
Rwanda is a constitutional Republic dominated by a strong presidency and with a population of 8.4 million (an estimated 88% Hutus, 11% Tutsis and 1% Twa pygmies). In April 1994, the Hutu-dominated national army and its armed youth militia (the Interahamwe ), under the direction of the Hutu-dominated government, began a massacre directed primarily against the minority Tutsi ethnic group, but also against those from the Hutu majority who opposed the killing or had been active in the pro-democracy movement. The genocide, which left close to one million people dead, ended in July 1994 when the predominantly Tutsi Rwandan Patriotic Front (the RPF) overthrew the government and took power. It formed a government of National Unity that functioned until 2003 when, in largely peaceful but seriously marred elections, the RPF won the majority of the seats in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate.
Prior to the genocide, all Rwandans were required to carry identity cards that indicated ethnicity, a practice that had been instituted during the Belgian colonial administration. Following the genocide, the government banned all identity card references to ethnic affiliation and called for national reconciliation. They also eliminated all references to ethnicity in written and non-written official discourse as well as ethnic quotas for education, training, or government employment. The constitution provides for the eradication of ethnic, regional, and other divisions and the promotion of national unity. While some organisations and individuals have continued to accuse the government of favouring Tutsis in government employment, admission to professional schooling, and other matters, the government have denied this charge and there is no evidence to suggest that the government practises ethnic favouritism.
The law prohibits “ any propaganda of ethnic, regional, racial, or divisive character or based on any other form of divisionism ” , and public incitement to “ divisionism ” is punishable by up to five years in prison, heavy fines, or both. Individuals c an critici s e the government publicly and privately on most topics but the law discourage s citizens from expressing viewpoints unacceptable to the government on sensitive subjects , as such viewpoints sometimes result in imprisonment, harassment, or intimidation under the pretext of “divisionis m ”.
In 2006 Rwanda received some positive comment by a peer review team of the New Economic Partnership for Africa (NEPAD) but was criticized for restricting political space and not recognizing diversity.
There were reports that security forces had committed extrajudicial killings and torture, abused suspects with impunity and arbitrarily arrested and detained persons, including street children and members of other vulnerable groups. Local officials had briefly detained some individuals who disagreed publicly with government decisions or policies. Such individuals had not usually been charged and had been released after a day in detention. Furthermore, there were reports of secret detention centres being run by security officials where individuals were detained illegally, abused and deprived of food and water. The government and police denied this but, in 2006, the Senate opened an investigation into the matter.
Members of local communities chose community volunteers to serve in the Local Defence Forces (the LDF), a statutorily established law-enforcement organisation under the Ministry of Local Government that assisted police. The national police exercised tactical control of the LDF while locally appointed officials had responsibility for the operational oversight. LDF members performed basic security guard duties throughout the country, including maintaining a presence at gacaca trials, and they were ordinarily unpaid and received less training than the national police.
Police officers and LDF members allegedly committed several unlawful killings but the g overnment investigated these killings and reports generally indicated that the LDF members accused of killings had been arrested and charged. In 2006 there were fewer reports of police officers abusing suspects at the time of arrest, and authorities dismissed or disciplined some police officers for excessive use of force.
The government took significant steps in 2006 to address human rights deficiencies and institute reforms, such as forming a unit in the National Police to investigate citizens ’ reports of official abuse and corruption. Moreover, the judiciary has demonstrated increased independence in its growing willingness to rule against the executive branch, its release of some political prisoners, and in its use of the Judicial Council to conduct investigations into judicial corruption.
A traditional, community-based gacaca system of tribunals was established in 2002 to try people suspected of crimes during the 1994 genocide , in order to resolve the enormous caseload of such crimes (however, not the most serious, so-called “category I” crimes, which are still tried in the ordinary courts) . The government ’ s stated goal for the gacaca system was to ensure that those who had participated in the genocide were brought to trial, furthering the ends of justice, ending impunity and promoting national unity. The gacaca law provides for reduced sentences including community service, for cooperation, and credit for time served.
After a pilot phase when approximately 700,000 individuals were identified for prosecution for having par ticipated in the genocide, the gacaca courts began trials nationwide in July 2006. The trials have been public but there have been c oncerns about the ir fairness , among other things because of a perceived lack of impartiality and reports that defendants have not been given the opportunity to defend themselves. In addition, s ome courts have spen t onl y a few hours hearing each case and p oorly qualified, ill-trained and corrupt gacaca judges in certain districts have fuelled widespread distrust of the gacaca system. There have been reports of local gacaca officials and citizens abusing the process to pursue personal matters and settle grudges unrelated to the genocide, including making false accusations in order to acquire land. However, i n some reported cases where judges had acted inappropriately, gacaca officials intervened and held that the procedure had been illegal. Moreover, “Lawyers without Borders” has offered training to gacaca judges. The e stablishment of section-level appeal courts has lagged behind, limiting the possibility of recourse for those who fe el wrongly judged.
M any Rwandans have not trust ed the gacaca courts and have either boycott ed the sessions or have attend ed under duress. In 2006, when the trials began, some fled to neighbouring countries in fear of being prosecuted but most of them returned to Rwanda later the same year.
A variety of international NGOs and more than six domestic human rights groups have been operating in the country. One of these, LIPRODOHR, employed some of its 600 members to conduct field investigations into alleged abuses, published its findings and discussed them with government officials. It raised concerns about false accusations in gacaca trials.
In 2006, more than 17,000 asylum seekers returned to Rwanda from Burundi . There were no reports that these repatriates were mistreated upon their return. Also in 2006, Tanzania expelled more that 13,000 Rwandans. The Rwandan government worked with UNHCR and other aid organisations to assist the returnees, who were resettled, and government mediators handled land disputes resulting from the number of returnees.
It was reported that Rwandan nationals had not encounter ed any particular problems in obtain ing identity cards or passports, either to leave the country or to retu rn following exile. Corruption wa s not considered a problem for obtaining passports but it was expensive, thus creating an obstacle for many.
According to the UNHCR 2004 Guidelines on Rwandan asylum seekers [2] , the mere assertion of having been deprived of property before or during exile, by itself, was not sufficient to establish a refugee claim. The Rwandan Government had undertaken to ensure the resolution of such cases, and some properties which had been taken by those who returned in 1994 had been restored to their rightful owners. However, persons who illegally took or seized other peoples ’ properties in Rwanda are known to have falsely accused the rightful owners of involvement in the genocide when the latter have attempted to assert their property rights.
COMPLAINT
The applicant complained under Article s 2 and 3 of the Convention , and also under Article 1 of Protocol No. 13 to the Convention, that he would face a real risk of being arrested, tortured and/or killed if he was forced to return to Rwanda .
THE LAW
The applicant claimed that his deportation from Sweden to Rwanda would expose him to a real risk of being tortured or killed. He invoked Articles 2 and the 3 of the Convention together with Article 1 of Protocol No. 13 to the Convention. The relevant parts of those provisions read as follows:
Article 2 (right to life)
“1. Everyone ’ s right to life shall be protected by law. No one shall be deprived of his life intentionally save in the execution of a sentence of a court following his conviction of a crime for which this penalty is provided by law.
...”
Article 3 (prohibition of torture)
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
Article 1 of Protocol 13 (abolition of the death penalty)
“The death penalty shall be abolished. No one shall be condemned to such penalty or executed.”
The Government submitted that the application should be declared manifestly ill-founded.
They did not wish to underestimate the concerns which could legitimately be expressed with respect to the current human rights situation in Rwanda but the Government considered that these could not, in themselves, suffice to establish that the forced return of the applicant to his home country would entail a violation of Articles 2 or 3 of the Convention. It had to be shown that the applicant would be personally at risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to the said provisions.
The Government stressed that great weight had to be attached to the opinions of the Swedish migration authorities since they had met with the applicant in person and interviewed him. The Government therefore relied on the decisions of the Migration Board and the Aliens Appeals Board. In addition, they considered that the applicant ’ s story was rather vague and lacking in detail on many points. They noted, inter alia , that he had failed to provide significant details about his detention and the ill-treatment he claimed to have been subjected to in prison, nor had he adduced any evidence, such as a medical certificate, to substantiate these claims. He had also failed to produce any official document, for example a warrant for his arrest, indicating that he was still wanted by the Rwandan authorities or that they would otherwise be interested in him upon his return.
In the Government ’ s view, the applicant had also failed to provide any acceptable explanation for his statement that he would be of interest to the authorities, including the gacaca courts, if deported to Rwanda . Above all, he had given no details regarding the content of his criticism of the Rwandan regime during his stay in India and in what way the regime would have had reason to feel threatened by his criticism and therefore consider him a security risk. If the applicant had been of interest to the authorities owing to his activities in India , the Government found it peculiar that he had neither been arrested at the airport when he had returned to Rwanda in November 2002 nor interrogated about his criticism/activities during his detention. However, even if he had been detained by the LDF in November 2002 and ill-treated, the Government questioned whether he would be at any risk if he returned. They observed that members of the LDF had become better educated and that LDF members accused of human rights abuses were generally arrested and charged. Thus the Rwandan authorities should be able to afford appropriate protection to the applicant.
Furthermore, as regards his demand to have the family ’ s property returned in 1996, and the alleged arrest order issued by the municipality ’ s mayor in response, the Government noted that the mayor had resigned in 1997 and that the applicant had not been arrested because of it before he left for India in 1998.
According to the Government, the applicant ’ s story had escalated during the course of the asylum investigation in a way that contributed to undermining his general credibility. Moreover, they stressed that there was nothing to indicate that the applicant would risk persecution upon return to Rwanda solely on the grounds of being a well-educated Hutu, as he had claimed before the Swedish migration authorities. Thus they concluded that there was nothing to support the applicant ’ s submissions that he would risk treatment contrary to Articles 2 or 3 of the Convention.
The applicant maintained that he faced a real risk of being arrested, tortured and possibly killed if he was forced to return to Rwanda . Firstly, he considered that the national proceedings had been flawed as there had been no proper oral hearing and the decision-maker at the Migration Board had never met him in person. Therefore, it could not be assumed that the Migration Board and the Aliens Appeals Board had been in a good position to assess his credibility. In this respect, the applicant stressed that, during the second interview, he had told the investigating officer that he had been hit with sticks during his detention and that the officer had not asked any supplementary questions on this matter. Since it was very difficult for him to talk about this, he could not have been expected by the authorities to explain openly how he had been tortured. In any event, it could not be considered to imply a lack of credibility on his part. Moreover, since the ill-treatment had not left any visible mark, only a constant back-pain, it would have been practically impossible to have his injuries documented.
As regards the lack of documentation to prove his deprivation of liberty, the applicant claimed that this was due to the current human rights situation in Rwanda where people were often detained arbitrarily without any proper documentation such as an arrest warrant. He had also clearly explained to the Swedish authorities that he was of interest to the Rwandan authorities because of his ethnicity, his social status and his stay abroad. In his view, this had been confirmed by the fact that the Rwandan authorities had taken his passport already at the airport on his arrival from India .
The applicant further contested the Government ’ s views concerning his family ’ s property. In his opinion, this dispute was still on-going since the family had not yet recovered the property and the risk of persecution on this ground therefore remained. He referred to the UNHCR 2004 Guidelines which, in his view, confirmed that Rwandan citizens who tried to reclaim their properties suffered a particularly high risk of being persecuted by the authorities and of being falsely accused by those who occupied their land.
Thus, in conclusion, he submitted that there was no reason to question his credibility simply because he had used his right to invoke, and expand, his grounds for asylum during the national proceedings and that he had shown that he would face a real risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Articles 2 and 3 of the Convention if he returned to Rwanda.
The Court first observes that Contracting States have the right, as a matter of well-established international law and subject to their treaty obligations, including the Convention, to control the entry, residence and expulsion of aliens. However, the expulsion of an alien by a Contracting State may give rise to an issue under Article 3, and hence engage the responsibility of that State under the Convention, where substantial grounds have been shown for believing that the person in question, if deported, would face a real risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 in the receiving country. In these circumstances, Article 3 implies the obligation not to deport the person in question to that country (see, among other authorities, H.L.R. v. France , judgment of 29 April 1997 , Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1997-III, p. 757, §§ 33-34).
Moreover, the Court does not exclude that analogous considerations might apply to Article 2 of the Convention and to Article 1 of Protocol No. 13 where the return of an alien puts his or her life in danger, as a result of the imposition of the death penalty or otherwise (see, among other authorities, Bahaddar v. the Netherlands judgment of 19 February 1998, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1998-I, opinion of the Commission, p. 270-71, §§ 75-78, and Sinnarajah v. Switzerland (dec.), no. 45187/99, 11 May 1999, unpublished).
The Court finds that the issues under Articles 2 and 3 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 13, by which Sweden is bound, are indissociable and will therefore examine them together.
To begin with, the Court observes that the interim measure under Rule 39 of the Rules of Court was applied in order for the applicant to find out whether he could go to Canada . However, despite repeated requests by the Court, the applicant has not informed it of the outcome of those proceedings. The Court finds this lack of co-operation on the part of the applicant to be unsatisfactory and it will proceed on the assumption that this opportunity is no longer open to him.
Whilst being aware of the reports of human rights violations in Rwanda, as set out above, the Court does not find them to be of such a nature as to show, on their own, that there would be a violation of the Convention if the applicant were to return to that country. The Court has to establish whether the applicant ’ s personal situation is such that his return to Rwanda would contravene the relevant provisions of the Convention.
The Court notes that the applicant has invoked several grounds for his fear of returning to his home country, including his ethnicity, his social status, his demand to have the family ’ s property returned and the risk of being convicted by the gacaca courts.
It acknowledges that, owing to the special situation in which asylum seekers often find themselves, it is frequently necessary to give them the benefit of the doubt when it comes to assessing the credibility of their statements and the documents submitted in support thereof. However, when information is presented which gives strong reasons to question the veracity of an asylum seeker ’ s submissions, the individual must provide a satisfactory explanation for the alleged inaccuracies in those submissions (see, among other authorities , Collins and Akasiebie v. Sweden (dec.), no. 23944/05, 8 March 2007 , and Matsiukhina and Matsiukhin v. Sweden (dec.), no. 31260/04, 21 June 2005).
In the case before it, the Court first considers that the applicant ’ s ethnicity and social status cannot, either on their own or in combination, be considered sufficient to show that he would face a real risk of being persecuted, or arrested, upon his return to Rwanda. In reaching this conclusion, the Court has regard to the information available to it from which it appears that the Rwandan government are working towards national reconciliation and that there is no evidence to suggest that the government are practising ethnic favouritism.
Moreover, as regards his claim that he was arrested, detained and ill-treated for 23 days in November 2002, the Court observes that he has stated that it was by the LDF and that he was kept in a normal house without being charged. Even if the Court were to accept the applicant ’ s statements in this respect, it finds that these abuses were not condoned by the authorities but rather carried out by a few members of the LDF and that there is therefore no concrete risk that it would happen again. Furthermore, secret detention centres are not accepted by the Rwandan government and are being investigated by the Senate. Abuses carried out by the LDF are regularly investigated by the government as well as by a special unit within the National Police which examines reports by individuals of official abuse. In these circumstances, the Court considers that the applicant would be able to benefit from the protection of the national authorities in the unlikely event that he was harassed by the LDF.
In this connection, the Court also takes into consideration that the applicant has never been politically active or an outspoken critic of the regime. His claim that, while in India , he expressed his personal views about the Rwandan regime, cannot, in the Court ’ s opinion and given that he has not specified the content of these views, be found to have attracted the attention of the Rwandan government or placed him in need of protection. This is particularly apparent since he was able to enter Rwanda upon his return to the country in 2002 without being arrested or interrogated on arrival.
Turning to the applicant ’ s allegation that he would risk being arrested or put on trial in the gacaca courts because, in 1996, he had demanded that the family ’ s property be returned to them, the Court firstly notes that the applicant did not raise this point at either the first or second interview with the Migration Board. For the Court, it seems unlikely that someone would forget such an important issue, even if he was tired after travelling. In any event, the Court observes that the applicant lived and worked in Rwanda for two years without problems following the demand. Moreover, the demand was made more than ten years ago and the applicant has not claimed that any other member of his family has been arrested or prosecuted in the gacaca courts because of the property dispute. Although false accusations against the rightful property owners by those who have occupied the land do occur, the applicant has adduced no evidence to show that he would face such a risk.
In relation to this, the Court further finds that the applicant ’ s fear of being convicted by the gacaca courts for having taken part in the genocide simply because of his ethnicity and education has not been substantiated by him. Although the gacaca courts have been criticised for not always being fair and impartial, there is some supervision by higher gacaca officials and both international and local NGOs follow the trials.
At this point the Court wishes to highlight that the applicant ’ s wife and two daughters have remained in Rwanda all along without any apparent problems. The applicant has at no point mentioned them or indicated that they have been questioned or otherwise inconvenienced by the authorities because of the applicant, the property dispute or their ethnicity.
Lastly, the Court observes that if the applicant has a fear of being persecuted by the local authorities in his home region, he could settle in another part of the country.
Having regard to all of the above, the Court concludes that the applicant has not established that there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be exposed to a real risk of being ill-treated, arrested or killed, contrary to Articles 2 or 3 of the Convention or Article 1 of Protocol No. 13 to the Convention, if he were to be deported to Rwanda. It follows that the application is manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the Convention.
Accordingly, it is appropriate to discontinue the application of Article 29 § 3 of the Convention and of Rule 39 of the Rules of Court, and to reject the application pursuant to Article 35 § 4 of the Convention.
For these reasons, the Cou rt unanimously
Declares the application inadmissible.
Santiago Quesada Josep Casadevall Registrar President
[1] The US Department of State, Rwanda, Country Reports on Human Rights Practises , 2006; GlobalSecurity.org at http://www.globalsecurity.org/m i litary/world/war/rwanda.htm page last modified 27 April 2005; Amnesty International Report 2007, Republic of Rwanda ; Human Rights Watch, Country Report, Rwanda , January 2007; The Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Mänskliga rättigheter i Rwanda 2006.
[2] The UNHCR, International Protection Considerations in Respect of Rwandan Asylum-Seekers and Other Categories of Persons of Concern in Continued Need of International Protection , Geneva , January 2004.
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