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CASE OF SADYKOV v. RUSSIA

Doc ref: 41840/02 • ECHR ID: 001-100791

Document date: October 7, 2010

  • Inbound citations: 5
  • Cited paragraphs: 2
  • Outbound citations: 20

CASE OF SADYKOV v. RUSSIA

Doc ref: 41840/02 • ECHR ID: 001-100791

Document date: October 7, 2010

Cited paragraphs only

FIRST SECTION

CASE OF SADYKOV v. RUSSIA

( Application no. 41840/02 )

JUDGMENT

STRASBOURG

7 October 2010

FINAL

21/02/2011

This judgment has become final under Article 44 § 2 (c) of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.

In the case of Sadykov v. Russia ,

The European Court of Human Rights (First Section) , sitting as a Chamber composed of:

Christos Rozakis , President, Nina Vajić , Anatoly Kovler , Elisabeth Steiner , Khanlar Hajiyev , Giorgio Malinverni , George Nicolaou , judges, and Søren Nielsen , Section Registrar ,

Having deliberated in private on 16 September 2010 ,

Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on th at date:

PROCEDURE

1 . The case originated in an application (no. 41840/02) against the Russian Federation lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a Russian national, Mr Alaudin Magomedovich Sadykov (“the applicant”), on 15 February 2001 .

2 . The applicant, who had been granted legal aid, was represented by lawyer s of the Stichti ng Russian Justice Initiative, a n NGO based in the Netherlands with a representative office in Russia . The Russian Government ( “ the Government ” ) were initially represented by Mr P. Laptev, former Representative of the Russian Federation at the European Court of Human Rights, and subsequently by their Representative, Mr G. Matyushkin .

3 . The applicant complained, in particular, that he had been severely ill-treated while in detention and that no adequate investigation had been carried out into the matter. He further complained about damage caused to his property and a lack of effective remedies in connection with those violations of his rights. The applicant relied on Articles 3 and 13 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention .

4 . On 29 August 2004 the President of the First Section decided to grant priority to the application under Rule 41 of the Rules of Court.

5 . By a decision of 22 January 2009, the Court declared the application partly admissible.

6 . The applicant and the Government each filed further wri tten observations (Rule 59 § 1).

THE FACTS

I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE

7 . The applicant was born in 1950 and lives in Grozny .

A. The facts

8 . According to the applicant, he experiences difficulties in reconstructing the events during and following his detention coherently and chronologically . On account of his ill-treatment in custody, the applicant suffers from memory lapses . He also finds it psychologically difficult to recall the details of the abusive treatment he was subjected to in detention.

9 . T he applicant owned real estate consisting of a house and outhouses at 94 Flotskaya Street , the Oktyabrskiy District of Grozny. At the material time h e lived there alone, since his relatives had left the Chech e n Republic after the renewal of hostilities in October 1999. The applicant remained in Grozny to look after the house and other possessions . The latter comprised personal belongings of the applicant and his relatives, furniture, an audio system, a satellite dish, two Subaru vehicles and an Oldsmobile car. Between late 1999 and early 2000 the applicant lived in the house only occasionally because of frequent attacks. From late January 2000 onwards he lived there permanently.

10 . At the material time the applicant, a school teacher by profession, was work ing in a “burial group” ( группа захоронения ) for the Ministry of Civil Defence and Emergency Situations of the Chechen Republic ( Министерство Чеченской Республики по делам гражданской обороны и чрезвычайным ситуация ). He was also help ing the residents of the Oktyabrskiy District of Grozny to obtain drinking water and food.

1. Events between 5 March and 24 May 2000

(a) The applicant ' s account

(i) The applicant ' s arrest

11 . On 5 March 2000, at around 10 a.m., the applicant was distributing drinking water among the residents of the Oktyabrskiy District when a group of federal servicemen in two UAZ vehicles arrived and enquired as to how they could get to a certain street. The applicant and some other residents explained to the m how to find that street, but the commander of the group asked the applicant to come with them and show them the way. The applicant agreed. The applicant submitted eyewitness statements by two residents of the Oktyabrskiy District confirm ing the above -mentioned episode.

12 . When the servicemen arrived at the street they were looking for, the applicant asked them to let him out. Instead, the military hit the applicant in the kidney s and put a bag o ver his head. They ordered him to be silent and delivered him to the Temporary Office of the Interior of the Oktyabrskiy District of Grozny (“the Oktyabrskiy VOVD”, временный отдел внутренних дел Октябрьского района г . Грозного ). According to the applicant, the officers who apprehended him could not know his identity because they did not check his identity papers.

(ii) The applicant ' s detention on 5 March 2000

13 . At the Oktyabrskiy VOVD the officers intimidated and ill-treated the applicant for several hours . In particular, they severely beat him, cut his hair and forced him to chew and swallow it, pressed a red-hot nail in to his hands, forehead, nostrils and tongue and carved a derogatory word “Chichik” on his forehead with a nail or knife.

14 . The officers also questioned the applicant , but made no written record of the interrogation. They asked the applicant where he had fought as a rebel fighter and why there was a list of names in his pocket. The applicant replied that he was a teacher, had never fought and that the list included the resident s of the Oktyabrskiy District of Grozny to whom he distributed water. It appears that the officers did not believe him. They told him that he would not leave the premises of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD alive.

15 . T he officers then took the applicant down to a basement, stood him against the wall and started shooting around him. T hey told him that he should “wait a little longer to die” and that they had not “[had] enough of mocking him yet” and took a break.

16 . Some time later they returned to the basement with several other officers and started “playing football” with the applicant. They spent about two hours knock ing him off his feet , kicking him and throwing him onto the concrete floor. From time to time the applicant lost consciousness, but the officers brought him round. According to the applicant, he lost most of his teeth and his ribs, jaw, arm and leg were broken as a result of this treatment.

(iii) Search of the applicant ' s house on 5 March 2000

17 . A t a round 5 p.m. one of the officers suggested that they go to the applicant ' s place of residence and “seize his firearms” whereupon a group of about eleven officers in two UAZ vehicles went there. The applicant was put into the boot of one of the cars.

18 . When they arrived the police ordered the applicant to unlock all the doors in the house and started searching. The search lasted for a few hours. The officers entered all the rooms, the basement and the garage and climbed up on to the roof. T he applicant maintained that he was unable to keep an eye on all the officers at the same time. At some point during the search one of the officers called the applicant into the corridor, showed him an object , which resembled a piece of soap and later turned out to be a TNT block , and asked what it was. The officer claimed that he had found the object on a shelf. The applicant replied that he was unable to identify the object, as it was the first time he had seen it.

19 . After the search the applicant was put into the boot again and escorted to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. There he was chained to a heater.

(iv) The applicant ' s detention between 6 and 10 March 2000

20 . The applicant spent the next two days chained to the heater pending the construction of a new cell.

21 . On one of th o se days the investigator , Mr P., interviewed the applicant . He enquired as to where the applicant had obtained the TNT block. The applicant denied that he had ever possessed explosives and insisted that the TNT block had been planted in his house during the search on 5 March 2000. The investigator then called two masked men , who beat the applicant until he lost consciousness. Later that day the two men returned and beat him again . The applicant said that during the next two days he coughed up blood and was unable to get up.

22 . On a round 7 March 2000 the officers twice put the applicant into the boot of a police car and drove him around for some time.

23 . On 7 March 2000 the applicant was transferred to a newly constructed cell. Some time later another detainee , Mr K., was placed in the applicant ' s cell and two detainees in the adjacent one.

24 . On 10 March 2000 an investigator informed the applicant that an expert study of the object found in his house had confirmed that it contained explosives. The investigator did not show the expert examination report to the applicant.

(v) Incident of 11 March 2000

25 . On 11 March 2000, in the evening, two servicemen approached the applicant ' s cell and ordered a guard to open it. The guard , who appeared to be afraid of the men , complied with the order. According to the applicant, the men were drunk and one of them was wearing a mask. They started beating the applicant. After a while one of the men put his foot on the applicant, who was lying on the floor, took a knife and cut off his left ear. He also declared that he would cut off the applicant ' s head and made a scratch on the applicant ' s throat. In the applicant ' s submission, the man had a horseshoe-shaped moustache. Then another man entered the cell and took pictures of the bleeding applicant and his cut ear. According to the applicant, the man who took pictures was of Uzbek origin, his first name was Andrey and he served as a guard at the Oktyabrskiy VOVD.

26 . The applicant submitted statements by his cellmate who had witnessed the applicant ' s ill-treatment. The applicant further referred to a statement of the then Mayor of Grozny , Bislan Gantamirov, who claimed in an interview with a regional weekly newspaper Groznenskiy Rabochiy (17 ‑ 24 May 2000) that he had “a witness who had seen the deputy head of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD cut off the ear of one of the Chechen detainees”.

27 . Then the officers left and entered the adjacent cell in which two other detainees were being held . According to the applicant, he heard screams and moans which became fainter and then died out. The applicant never saw those detainees again .

(vi) The applicant ' s detention between 12 and 18 March 2000

28 . Early on 12 March 2000, when the applicant and his cellmate were asleep, the guards forced them to get up, put bags o ver their heads and escorted them to a small room. Several hours later the applicant and his cellmate were returned to their cell which had been thoroughly cleaned. The applicant saw the other cell because its doors were wide open. It was also clean and there were no detainees there. In the applicant ' s opinion, the Oktyabrskiy VOVD authorities were hid ing him and other detainees from a commission that was visiting police stations to inspect the treatment of detainees.

29 . On a round 13 March 2000 an official from the Grozny prosecutor ' s office ( прокуратура г . Грозного ), Mr L . , visited the applicant and warned him not to disclose the fact that he had lost his ear in detention. Instead, the applicant was told to state that his ear had been cut off by rebel fighters.

30 . On a round 16 March 2000 a medical officer , whose first name was Gennadiy , visited the applicant. He put some ointment on the applicant ' s ear wound, but did not bandage it. Nether did he examine the applicant or treat his other injuries. According to the applicant, he was attended by medical officers on several occasions while in detention , but never underwent a medical examination or received proper treatment for his ear.

(vii) The applicant ' s detention between 19 March and 24 May 2000

31 . On a round 19 March 2000 the applicant was transferred to the basement of another building of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD , where he was kept until his release on 24 May 2000.

32 . The basement was divided into two rooms. One of them, measuring approximately 48 square metres (8 m x 6 m), was used as a torture chamber and contained various instruments, including an axe, a hammer, a sledgehammer, a shovel and scissors. According to the applicant , he was ordered to clean th e room once and noticed bloodstains even on the ceiling which was 3m high.

33 . The other room, measuring a pproximately 9 square metres (3 m x 3 m), was a cell. During the applicant ' s detention twelve to fifteen detainees were kept there. T he applicant stated that on numerous occasions the detainees were taken to the adjacent room and tortured. He could hear them screaming. Sometimes the door between the two rooms was left open and the applicant could see his cellmates being severely ill-treated. They returned to the cell severely beaten, two of them had their fingers missing and another detainee was brought back unconscious.

34 . On several occasions the investigator interrogated the applicant about the object allegedly found in his house on 5 March 2000. The applicant was forced to sign a confession stating that the object in question belonged to him. The investigator also questioned the applicant about the activities of his neighbours. No transcript of those interrogations was ever made.

35 . From time to time the guards took the applicant out of his cell to an other room for a short period of time, apparently when inspections occurred, and then brought him back.

(viii) Search for the applicant

36 . At some point in March 2000 the applicant ' s sister, Ms L . S . , and his cousin, Ms Kh . Z . , found out that the applicant had disappeared. They returned to Grozny and started searching for him.

37 . They applied in person and in writing to a military commander ' s office, the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, the local administration, the detention centre in Chernokozovo, the federal military base in Khankala and a morgue, but to no avail.

38 . Some time later the applicant ' s sister received information that he had been seen in the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. In the following weeks the applicant ' s sister and cousin unsuccessfully applied to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD with enquiries about the applicant.

39 . At some point in April 2000 the applicant ' s relatives finally managed to talk to the investigator in charge, who told them that the police had found explosives in the applicant ' s house. Ms L. S . answered that it was untrue and that her brother had never participated in military actions. The applicant ' s relatives then requested permission to see the applicant, but this was refused. However, they were allowed to send him a note and fresh clothes. The applicant ' s old clothes were returned to the applicant ' s sister, who checked them and saw blood on the shoulder and back of the applicant ' s shirt.

40 . In the following weeks the applicant ' s relatives unsuccessfully requested authorisation to see the applicant.

41 . On 12 May 2000 new police officers arrived from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region of Russia and replaced the staff of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. Several days later Ms L. S . and Ms Kh. Z . were allowed to see the applicant for ten minutes in the presence of an investigating officer. They were ordered to speak Russian only. According to them, the applicant was swollen, had lots of scars and one of his ears was missing.

(ix) The applicant ' s release

42 . On 24 May 2000 an investigator of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD issued a decision to discontinue criminal proceedings in case no. 14206/03 instituted against the applicant for unlawful possession of explosives. The decision stated that the applicant had not lived in his house on a regular basis because of the hostilities and that for some time the house had been occupied by unknown armed men who might have brought the explosives which the applicant had then unintentionally kept. Besides this , the decision stated that “having been kept in detention, the applicant ceased to pose a danger to society” and could be released. It also explained the applicant ' s right to appeal against that decision to a prosecutor or in court.

43 . Later that day the applicant was released and returned home. According to eyewitness statements, the applicant was in a very poor condition, being swollen, emaciated and pale, and with his left ear and teeth missing and his hip broken.

(b) The Government ' s account

44 . According to the Government, on 5 March 2 000 the Criminal Investigation D ivision of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD instituted criminal proceedings in case no. 14206/03 against the applicant on suspicion of having committed a criminal offence punishable under Article 222 (unlawful possession of firearms and explosives) of the Russian Criminal Code.

45 . During a search which was carried out in the applicant ' s house pursuant to an investigator ' s order of 5 March 2000 an explosive was found and seized. According to an expert report , which was communicated to the applicant , the explosive was a 200-gram TNT block.

46 . On the same date the applicant was arrested pursuant to Article 122 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.

47 . On 6 March 2000 the case was sent to another division of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD for further investigation.

48 . On 8 March 2000 the acting prosecutor of Grozny ordered the applicant to be remand ed in custody, in accordance with Article 90 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.

49 . On 15 March 2000 formal charges were brought against the applicant under Article 222 of the Russian Criminal Code . When questioned , the applicant was unable to give any explanation concerning the explosive found in his house.

50 . On 24 May 2000 the Oktyabrskiy VOVD discontinued the criminal proceedings against the applicant with reference to Article 6 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, notably because he had ceased to pose a danger to society, and released him.

51 . On 2 August 2002 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic ( прокуратура Чеченской Республики ) set aside the decision of 24 May 2000 and ordered that the criminal proceedings against the applicant be resumed.

52 . By a decision of 20 February 2006 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic terminated the criminal proceedings against the applicant on the ground that the constituent elements of a crime had not been made out . The decision stated , in particular, that the search carried out in the applicant ' s house on 5 March 2000 had not been duly authorised and had been conducted in breach of procedural law with the result that the TNT block allegedly found during that search could not be regarded as reliable evidence of the applicant ' s involvement in the imputed offence , and that therefore there had been no grounds on which to bring criminal proceedings against him .

2. Official investigation into the applicant ' s allegation of ill-treatment

(a) The applicant ' s complaints to public bodies and information received by him

53 . S hortly after his release, the applicant started complaining personally and in writing to various official bodies about his unlawful arrest and detention, ill-treatment in custody and the search of his house. Subsequently he complained to prosecutors offices at various levels of the ineffectiveness of the investigation, indicated the names of the perpetrators established during the investigation and requested that they be brought to justice. The applicant ' s efforts were supported by the SRJI and his lawyer . According to the applicant, his complaints mostly remained unanswered, or only formal responses were given by which the respective requests were forwarded to various prosecutor ' s offices “for examination”.

54 . In particular, on an unspecified date he applied in writing to the Prosecutor General ' s Office of Russia, the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic , the Minister of the Interior of the Chechen Republic and two other high-ranking officials. In his complaint the applicant described in detail the events of 5 March to 24 May 2000 and requested that those responsible be punished.

55 . On 23 October 2000 the Representative for Rights and Freedoms in Russia ( Уполномоченный по правам человека в Российской Федерации ) declined to examine the applicant ' s complaint on the ground that it was unclear and not supported by relevant documents.

56 . On 1 March 2001 the Prosecutor General ' s Office of Russia referred the applicant ' s complaint to the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic .

57 . In a letter of 22 March 2001 the military prosecutor of military unit no. 20102 ( военная прокуратура – войсковая часть 20102 ) forwarded the applicant ' s complaint, along with several other applications, to the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic .

58 . On 22 March and 16 April 2001 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic transmitted the applicant ' s complaints concerning his unlawful detention “by unidentified servicemen” t o the Grozny prosecutor ' s office.

59 . On 4 and 25 July 2001 respectively the applicant complained in writing to the A dministration of the Oktyabrskiy District of Grozny and to the Grozny prosecutor ' s office of the theft of his Oldsmobile car by police officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD.

60 . On 13 July 2001 Médecins Sans Frontières issued the applicant with a medical certificate which listed the after-effects of the injuries inflicted on him during his detention. It stated that a medical examination of the applicant on 13 July 2001 had revealed the following:

“– [The applicant] wears dentures which replace teeth 12 to 17, 22 to 27, 33 to 35, 42 to 45. The original teeth were broken during his detention.

– The bridge of the nose is crooked, suggesting a possible set fracture.

– The left ear lobe is missing, and, while the auditory canal is not obstructed, the hearing capacity of the left ear is diminished. A shiny scar is visible, which extends 6 cm from the external auditory canal towards the bottom part of the lower jaw and 5 cm towards the mastoid bone and slightly beyond.

– A star-shaped scar is present on the palm of the right hand, suggesting a non-transfixiant burn or wound. It is located opposite the 4 th metacarp al .

– At the palpation of ribs 8, 9 and 10 facing the interior arc, are located still sensitive bone calluses, likely resulting from clean rib fractures.

– At the palpation of the top of the lower 1/3 tibia of the right leg is a discrete bone callus which could be connected to a non-displaced fracture or an incomplete fracture of the tibia.”

61 . On 27 July 2001 the applicant lodged a written complaint with the Grozny prosecutor ' s office , describing the circumstances of his arrest, detention and ill-treatment , and the theft of his property , and requested that those responsible be punished.

62 . On 28 July 2001 the Grozny prosecutor ' s office forwarded the applicant ' s complaints to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD for investigation.

63 . On 8 August 2001 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic forwarded the applicant ' s complaint concerning his ill-treatment to the Grozny prosecutor ' s office for examination.

64 . On 19 December 2001 and 29 January 2002 the SRJI, acting on the applicant ' s behalf, submitted similar complaints about the events of 5 March to 24 May 2000 to the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic .

65 . In a letter of 3 January 2002, in reply to the SRJI ' s query, the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic stated that criminal proceedings had been instituted in connection with the applicant ' s allegations of ill- treatment in the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. The letter did not indicate the date o n which the criminal proceedings had been instituted or the number assigned to the criminal case file.

66 . On 13 April 2002 the applicant made a written request to the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic for copies of a number of documents from his case file. It does not appear that this request was granted.

67 . In letters of 23 August and 26 October 2005, 25 September 2006 and 22 January 2009 the applicant was informed that criminal proceedings had been instituted in cases opened in connection with his complaints (see paragraphs 137 , 139 , 145 and 153 below).

(b) Course of the investigation

68 . According to the Government, on 30 June 2000 the applicant complained to the Grozny prosecutor ' s office that he had been unlawfully apprehended on 5 March 2000, and ill-treated while in detention, by officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD.

69 . On 13 July 2000 the Grozny prosecutor ' s office instituted criminal proceedings in the above connection under Article 286 § 3 (aggravated abuse of power) of the Russian Criminal Code. The case file was given the number 12088.

70 . In the Government ' s submission, the applicant was granted victim status on 18 July 2000 and questioned on 17 July 2000, 25 August and 19 October 2001, 3 December 2003, 16 and 23 April and 1 November 2004. He confirmed his version of events and stated that he had not applied to medical institutions after his release.

71 . On 13 August 2000 the investigating authorities suspended the criminal proceedings for failure to identify those responsible.

72 . On 24 August 2001 the Grozny prosecutor ' s office ordered that the investigation be resumed.

73 . On 30 August 2001 the Grozny prosecutor ' s office instituted criminal proceedings under Article 158 § 2 (aggravated theft) of the Russian Criminal Code in connection with the theft by unidentified persons of an Oldsmobile car belonging to the applicant. The case file was assigned the number 15082 (see paragraph 97 below) .

74 . By a decision of 5 September 2001 the investigator in charge joined criminal cases nos. 12088 and 15082 under the former number (see paragraph 98 below) .

75 . Between 24 September 2001 and 18 July 2002 the criminal proceedings were stayed and resumed on eight occasions (see paragraphs 124 and 125 below). On the latter date the deputy prosecutor of Grozny ordered that criminal case no. 12088 be joined to two other criminal cases concerning abduction by officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD and the disappearance of several individuals.

76 . On 18 October 2002 the investigation was stayed for failure to identify the alleged perpetrators , and then resumed o n 15 November 2002 .

77 . By a decision of 19 May 2003 the investigator in charge brought charges under Article 293 § 2 (aggravated negligence of official duties ) of the Russian Criminal Code against Mr Z., who at the relevant time was the head of the convoy group of the temporary holding facility of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD ( “the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD” ) . On the same date the investigator ordered that Mr Z. be banned from leaving the place and put on the federal wanted list.

78 . On 20 August 2003 the investigation was stayed pending the search for Mr Z. (see paragraphs 126 - 130 below) , and then resumed on 26 November 2003 .

79 . Between 3 December 2003 and 7 February 2006 the investigation was stayed owing to the failure to establish Mr Z. ' s whereabouts and then reopened twelve times (see paragraphs 131 - 136 , 138 and 140 - 142 below).

80 . On 20 February 2006 the investigator brough t charges under Articles 283 § 3 ( c ) (aggravated abuse of power) and 111 § 3 ( aggravated deliberate infliction of serious damage on another ' s health ) of the Russian Criminal Code against Mr D . , w ho at the material time had been the deputy commander of the special fire team ( специальная огневая группа ) of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. Mr D. was banned from leaving his place of residence and put on the wanted list.

81 . On 25 February 2006, further to the decision of 19 May 2003, charges under Article 283 § 3 ( a ) and ( c ) (aggravated abuse of power) of the Russian Criminal Code were brought against Mr Z.

82 . By a decision of 2 March 2006 the investigator in charge banned M r Ya. , a suspect in the case, who at the material time had been the deputy head of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, from leaving his place of residence and put him on the wanted list. On 6 March 2006 a similar decision w as taken in respect of Mr B., a suspect in the case, who at the relevant period had been the head of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD.

83 . Between 7 March 2006 and 9 January 2007 the proceedings were suspended for failure to establish the whereabouts of the suspects and accused and resumed on four occasions (see paragraphs 143 - 148 below).

84 . According to the Government, on 16 March 2007 Mr B. was formally charged with abuse of power. On b eing questioned in that connection Mr B. denied all the charges and expressed his wish to avail himself of an A mnesty A ct , following which the criminal proceedings against him were discontinued on 20 March 2007.

85 . Between 28 May 2007 and 19 January 200 9 the investigation was stayed , for failure to establish the whereabouts of the suspects and accused , and resumed six times (see paragraphs 149 - 153 below) .

86 . On the latest occasion the investigation was stayed on 21 February 200 9 on grounds of the impossibility of continu ing the investigation in the absence of Messrs Z., D. and B. , whose whereabouts could not be established .

87 . The Government submitted that a number of investigative measures had been taken during the investigation. In particular, the authorities had interviewed a number of police officers serving in the Oktyabrskiy VOVD at the relevant time. T he Government maintained that Mr P., who had been seconded to Grozny as a senior inquiry officer, had stated that when being questioned during his detention the applicant had submitted that four or five unknown persons had cut off his ear the day before he had been apprehended. Mr P. also stated that the applicant had received the necessary medical aid during his detention (see paragraphs 184 - 186 below) . According to the Government, Mr D ub ., who had been the acting head of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD at the relevant time , gave similar oral testimony about the existence of bodily injuries on the applicant at the time when he had been apprehended (see paragraph 199 below) . Mr Kir., who had been an officer of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD at the relevant time , stated that he had learnt from the applicant that his ear had been cut off a day or two prior to his detention by unknown members of illegal armed groups in reprisal for the applicant ' s refusal to cooperate with them (see paragraph 201 below) . Similar submissions were made by Mr Ya., the then deputy head of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD (see paragraph 202 below) . According to the Government, t he latter had also been interviewed on 11 April 2007 in connection with the theft of the applicant ' s Oldsmobile car, but had denied his involvement in that offence.

88 . T he Government stated that the authorities had also questioned a number of other officers who had served in the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, and individuals who had been detained there, in 2000. They all said that they had no information concerning the alleged perpetrators. On 4 September and 9 October 2001 and on 15 November 2004 t he investigating authorities also found and interviewed Mr K., who had shared a cell with the applicant. He stated that he had seen unknown individuals enter the cell in which he and the applicant were kept and cut off the applicant ' s ear (see paragraphs 181 - 183 below) . According to the Government, when being shown photographs of the presumed perpetrators the applicant and Mr K. had identified different persons.

89 . The Government also stated, without indicating the date, that d uring the investigation the applicant had under gone a forensic medical examination. According to them, this re c or d ed the presence of bodily injuries, including the loss of hearing in the left ear, which were classified as serious damage to health, and other injuries which were classified as moderately serious damage to health.

3. The applicant ' s property

(a) Damage caused to the applicant ' s property

90 . According to the applicant, upon his return home on 24 May 2000 he saw that his dog had been shot, his house partly burnt and his property, comprising his personal belongings and those of his relatives, furniture, an audio system, a satellite dish, looted. Nothing of value remained in the house. The applicant ' s two Subaru vehicles and his Oldsmobile car were missing. Later , he found out from his neighbours that while he had been in custody, masked men driving one of his Subaru cars, an Ural tr u ck and an armoured personnel carrier had come to his house on numerous occasions and taken away his property. The men had warned the applicant ' s neighbours to stay away from his house , saying that they had mined it.

91 . On an unspecified date the applicant drew up a report listing items of property that had been stolen during his detention and indicating that the pecuniary damage sustained amounted to 1 5 8,120 United States d ollars (USD) . The report was certified by the administration of the Oktyabrskiy District of Grozny.

92 . Some time later the applicant found one of his Subaru vehicles . The minivan was parked in a street close to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. The car had been disassembled and burnt. According to the applicant, he also found his satellite dish on the territory of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, and he saw some of items of his stolen property in the possession of some officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD.

93 . Late in June 2000 the applicant found his Oldsmobile in the possession of a former officer of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, Mr Dzh. The latter claimed that he had purchased a share of the car, with several other officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD , whose names were V., Sh. a nd Sulumbek, Khimzan and Ruslan, from federal servicemen for USD 500. The officers stated that they would only return the car to the applicant in exchange for the same sum of money as they had paid for it . The applicant refused to pay and lodged complaints about the looting of his property and seizure of his Oldsmobile car with various official bodies. According to him, Mr Dzh. eventually sold the vehicle.

94 . On 11 October 2000 the applicant obtained a certificate confirming that his house and outhouses had been burnt and destroyed.

(b) Criminal proceedings

95 . In a letter of 5 January 2001 the Grozny prosecutor ' s office ordered the Oktyabrskiy VOVD to transfer to it the material s in a criminal case instituted in connection with the theft of the applicant ' s Oldsmobile vehicle for supervision by the prosecutor ' s office in the course of the investigation. The letter did not indicate the date on which the criminal case had allegedly been opened.

96 . On 15 August 2001 the deputy head of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD forwarded to the Grozny prosecutor ' s office the material concerning “the unlawful seizure by officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD of an Oldsmobile car from [the applicant]”.

97 . On 30 August 2001 the Grozny prosecutor ' s office instituted criminal proceedings under Article 158 § 2 (c) and (d) (aggravated theft) of the Russian Criminal Code in connection with the theft of the applicant ' s Oldsmobile vehicle. The case file was given the number 15082. The decision stated that “there was information to the effect that the offence had been committed by officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD.

98 . In a decision of 5 September 2001 the Grozny prosecutor ' s office joined case no. 12088 concerning the ill-treatment of the applicant and case no. 15082 concerning the theft of his car under the former number, stating that the said two offences had been committed by the same persons.

99 . In a letter of 30 August 2001 the Grozny prosecutor ' s office informed the applicant that criminal proceedings had been brought in connection with his complaint about the theft of his Oldsmobile and that the investigation was under way. The prosecutor ' s office did not specify the date o n which the criminal proceedings had been instituted or the number assigned to the criminal case.

100 . On 23 August 2005 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic instituted criminal proce edings under Article 158 § 2 (a) and (c) (aggravated theft) of the Russian Criminal Code in connection with the theft of the applicant ' s Subaru car which had been established during the investigation in case no. 12088. The decision stated that the said vehicle had been stolen from the applicant ' s courtyard in late March 2000 by an unidentified group of police officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD seconded to the Chechen Republic from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region. The case file was given the number 61856 and joined to case no. 12088 on the same date.

101 . On 23 August 2005 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic also instituted crimina l proceedings under Articles 158 § 3 (aggravated theft) and 167 § 1 (deliberate destruction of another ' s property) of the Russian Criminal Code in connection with the theft and destruction by unidentified persons of the applicant ' s possessions, including a Subaru minivan. The case file was assigned the number 61857 (see paragraphs 206 - 214 below).

102 . By a decision of 20 February 2009 the investigator ordered that the materials initially relating to cases nos. 15082 and 61856 be disjoined from case no. 12088 , stating that th ey contained evidence of offences punishable under Articles 158 § 4 (b) (aggravated theft) and 167 § 1 (deliberate destruction of another ' s property) of the Russian Criminal Code and that they were not related to the offences under investigation in case no. 12088. The decision ordered that a new set of criminal proceedings be instituted under the aforementioned Articles of the Russian Criminal Code and that the case be assigned the number 15082.

(c) The applicant ' s attempts to institute civil proceedings

(i) Claim for recovery of property

103 . On 7 October 2002 the applicant filed a claim with the Oktyabrskiy District Court of Grozny against brothers I. Dhz. and Kh. Dzh. and four officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, V., Sh., S ul . and A . He stated that two vehicles, an Oldsmobile and a Subaru, had been stolen from him during his detention between 5 March and 24 May 2000, that he had later found his Subaru vehicle disassembled in the street and that he had found his Oldsmobile car at Mr Dhz. ' s home address in Urus-Martan. According to the applicant, Mr Dhz. had stated that he and the other co-defendants had purchased two vehicles on 20 April 2004 for USD 500 from officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD and that he had been prepared to return the vehicles to the applicant for the equivalent amount. The applicant thus sought to have his Oldsmobile car returned to him and to recover the amount of USD 1,500 for the damaged Subaru vehicle. He also requested the court to issue an injunction order in respect of the Oldsmobile.

104 . On 14 October 2002 the Oktyabrskiy District Court refused to accept the applicant ' s claim for examination, stating that the facts stated by the applicant contained elements of a criminal offence punishable under Article 158 § 2 (aggravated theft) of the Russian Criminal Code and should be investigated in criminal proceedings and that the defendants resided in Urus-Martan . This decision was upheld on appeal by the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic on 29 October 2002.

105 . By a decision of 21 June 2003 the Urus-Martan Town Court refused to accept the applicant ' s claim for examination, stating that the facts submitted by the applicant contained elements of a criminal offence punishable under Article 158 § 2 of the Russian Criminal Code and should be investigated in criminal proceedings, and that in the context of such criminal proceedings the applicant could be granted the status of a civil claimant and seek compensation for the damage sustained . It does not appear that the applicant appealed against th at decision.

(ii) Claim for compensation

106 . On 7 October 2002 the applicant filed a claim with the Oktyabrskiy District Court of Grozny against the Russian Ministry of the Interior, the Russian Ministry of Finance and the Federal Treasury. He listed in detail the damage cause d to his property and sought compensation for pecuniary damage in the amount of USD 158,120 and compensation for non-pecuniary damage in the amount of USD 1,000,000.

107 . In a decision of 11 October 2002 the Oktyabrskiy District Court of Grozny refused to accept this claim for examination, stating that it should have been lodged with a court in the area of the defendants ' address in Moscow .

108 . On 29 October 2002 the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic upheld the first-instance decision on appeal.

109 . By a decision of 12 May 2003 the Presnenskiy District Court of Moscow returned the applicant ' s claim on the ground that it did not fall within the territorial limits on its jurisdiction, and stating that the applicant should file his action with any district court in the area of the defendants ' address.

110 . On 3 September 2003 the Presnenskiy District Court of Moscow again returned the applicant ' s claim , invoking the same reasons.

111 . By a decision of 2 September 2003 the Khamovnicheskiy District Court of Moscow declined to consider the applicant ' s claim and invited the applicant to indicate the defendants ' addresses by 27 November 2003. In a letter of 8 December 2003 the court returned the material s to the applicant , refer ring to his failure to rectify the shortcoming within the stated time-limit.

112 . On 4 December 2003 the applicant filed a claim against the Russian Ministry of Finance with the Khamovnicheskiy District Court of Moscow. According to the applicant, on 9 January 2004 the court returned his claim on the ground that it fell outside the territorial limits on its jurisdiction and invited the applicant to apply to a district court in the area of the defendant ' s address.

113 . On 30 August 2004 the applicant filed a claim against the Russian Ministry of the Interior and the Russian Ministry of Finance with the Khamovnicheskiy District Court of Moscow. He claims that he did not receive any reply from the court.

114 . In a letter of 6 September 2004 the Supreme Court of Russia replied to the applicant ' s complaint concerning the district courts ' refusal to accept his claim for examination. The letter stated that the applicant ' s claim had to meet the relevant requirements of procedural law and, in particular, had to be filed with a court in the area of the defendant ' s address, namely , the Basmanny District Court of Moscow, which was the court having territorial jurisdiction for the Russian Ministry of Finance. T he applicant did not pursue that claim .

115 . On 21 August 2008 the applicant filed a nother claim for compensation for his property . He stated that during the military campaign in the Chechen Republic in 1999-2002 his housing and other property ha d been destroyed during a shelling and that , in accordance with the relevant governmental decree , he had received from the State compensation in the amount of 350,000 Russian roubles ( RUB, approximately 9,000 euros, ( EUR ) ) in that connection , which, however, had been much lower than the amount of the actual damage he had suffered.

116 . By a judgment of 5 December 2008 the Staropromyslovskiy District Court of Grozny dismissed the applicant ' s claim, noting that the applicant had failed to submit any evidence to substantiate th e amount of the actual damage which he had indicated in his claim. This judgment was upheld on appeal by the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic on 27 January 2009.

B. Documents submitted by the parties

1. The Court ' s requests for the investigation files

117 . In June 2005 , at the communication stage, the Government were invited to indicate whether criminal proceedings had been instituted in respect of the applicant ' s allegations of ill-treatment and looting of his property, and, if so, which numbers had been given to the respective criminal cases . The y were also invited to produce documents pertaining to those criminal cases. Relying on the information obtained from the Prosecutor General ' s Office, the Government informed the Court that the investigation in connection with the alleged ill-treatment of the applicant and damage to his property was under way and that the case file had been assigned the number 12088. The Government refused , however, to submit any documents from the file , stating that the ir disclosure would be in violation of Article 161 of the Russian Code of Criminal Procedure because the file contained information of a military nature and personal data concerning the participants in the criminal proceedings . At the same time, the Government suggested that a Court delegation be given access to the file at the place where the preliminary investigation was being conducted, with the exception of “the documents [disclosing military information and personal data concerning the witnesses], and without the right to mak e copies of the case file and to transmi t it to others”.

118 . In November 2005 the Court reiterated its request and suggested that Rule 33 § 3 of the Rules of Court be applied. In reply, the Government submitted documents running to 76 pages but refused to produce the entire investigation file for the aforementioned reasons . The documents submitted by the Government included a list of documents in the case file , decision s to initiate criminal proceedings, a decision granting the applicant victim status, decisions to suspend and resume the investigation, various investigators ' decisions to take up the case, a decision to join cases, a decision ordering that the investigation be carried out by an investigative group and a decision extending the period of preliminary investigation.

119 . The applicant, for his part, managed , with the assistance of the Committee against Torture – a Russian NGO base d in Nizhniy Novgorod – to obtain a substantial portion of the file in criminal case no. 12088 for the period 2000-2005. He enclosed around 1,000 pages from the file , running, as can be seen , to twelve volumes with his comments on the Government ' s observations on the admissibility of the present application.

120 . On 22 January 2009 the application was declared partly admis sible. At that stage the Court invited the Government to provide information on the progress after November 2005 made in investigati ng case no. 12088 concerning the alleged ill-treatment of the applicant and the theft of his Oldsmobile and Subaru vehicles, and to produce copies of all the documents from the investigation file pertaining to the period stated . The Government were also invited to provide information on the progress made , and to produce the entire copy of the file, in investigati ng case no. 61857 concerning the theft and destruction of the applicant ' s possessions, including his Subaru minivan.

121 . In March 2009 the Government produced several documents running to 95 pages from the files in criminal cases nos. 12088 and 61857 , including decisions to suspend and resume criminal proceedings, decision s to disjoin a criminal case concerning the theft of the applicant ' s property, a decision granting the applicant victim status in case no. 61857 , a transcript of the applicant ' s witness interview, investigators ' decisions to take up the case, a decision ordering that the investigation be carried out by an investigative group, a decision extending the period of the preliminary investigation, and decisions to transfer the case from one investigator to another. The Government refused to produce any other materials , refer ring to Article 161 of the Russian Code of Criminal Procedure.

122 . The documents submitted by the parties , in so far as relevant, may be summarised as follows.

2. Documents from the investigation file in case no. 12088

(a) Documents relating to the conduct of the investigation and informing the applicant of its progress

123 . By a decision of 13 July 2000 the Grozny prosecutor ' s office instituted criminal proceedings under Article 286 § 3 (a) (aggravated abuse of power) of the Russian Criminal Code in connection with the applicant ' s allegations of his unlawful detention and ill-treatment by officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD in his complaint of 30 June 2000. The case file was given the number 12088.

124 . By similar decisions of 13 August 2000, 24 September , 6 November and 19 December 2001 and 30 January 2002 the investigation in case no. 12088 was suspended. The very succinct decisions stated that it had been impossible to identify those responsible and instructed the Criminal Investigation Division of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD (eventually the Oktyabrskiy District Office of the Interior – “the Oktyabrskiy ROVD”) to “take measures ” to identify the alleged perpetrators.

125 . In similar decision s of 24 August, 6 October , 19 November and 30 December 2001 and 18 July 2002 supervising prosecutors set aside the decision s of 13 August 2000 , 24 September , 6 November and 19 December 2001 and 30 January 2002 respectively , stating that the investigation had been incomplete , that the circumstances of the incident had not been established fully and objectively and that a number of necessary investigative measures had not been taken. The decision s ordered that the proceedings be resumed and listed the requisite investigative measures . The decision s of 19 November and 30 December 2001 and 18 July 2002 also stated that the investigating authorities had failed to comply with the prosecutors ' earlier instructions and had not performed a number of investigative measures listed in the previous decisions.

126 . A decision of 20 August 2003 ordered that the investigation be suspended. It listed in detail the investigative measures that had been performed, including questioning the applicant and granting him victim status, questioning a number of officials who at the relevant time had been serving at the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, Messrs P., D ub ., S., B., Ya., A., Sh., V. and Z. being among thei r number, questioning Mr K. – the applicant ' s cellmate, seiz ing photographs of officers of the Khanty-Mansiysk Regional Department of the Interior seconded for the relevant period to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD and identification – from their photographs – by the applicant and Mr K. of the officers involved .

127 . The decision further stated that queries had been sent to competent bodies with a view to finding the cars stolen from the applicant and locating Mr Dzh., who had possibly been involved in stealing them. The decision went on to say that Mr Z., who m the applicant had identified from a photograph, had confirmed that he had let into the applicant ' s cell officers from the special fire group of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD , who had cut off the applicant ' s ear. It further stated that charges of aggravated negligence of official duties had been brought against Mr Z., who had been put on the federal wanted list as he had abscond ed from the investigating authorities with the result that it had so far not been possible to show him photographs for identification of the officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD allegedly involved .

128 . The decision went on to state that the applicant and Mr K. had also identified Mr Ab. as the person who had inflicted physical violence on detainees and photographed the applicant after his ear had been cut off. According to the decision, the investigator seconded to the Khanty-Maniysk Region had been unable to interview Mr Ab., as t he latter had been on annual leave in the Republic of Uzbekistan .

129 . The decision also mentioned that the applicant had identified , from a photograph , Mr N. as one of the people who had inflicted bodily injuries on him and Mr D. as one of the people who had also participated in inflicting bodily injuries on him, and that Mr K. h ad identified , from a photograph , Mr N. as a person resembling the one who had cut off the applicant ' s ear.

130 . The decision went on to note that, when carrying out investigative measures within the territory of the Khanty-Mansiysk Region, the investigator had encountered reluctance on the part of a number of high-ranking officials of Khanty-Mansiysk Regional Department of the Interior to allow him to have contact with their subordinates , with the result that he had been unable to interview a number of officers from the Khanty-Mansiysk Regional Department of the Interior who , under various pretexts , had ignored his summons to appear for questioning. The decision indicated that it was essential for the establishment of the circumstances of the case to organise confrontations between the applicant, Mr K. and officers N., D. and Ab. , who had been summoned to appear at the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic by 10 November 2003. The decision concluded that all investigative measures which could have been carried out in the absence of the aforementioned officers had been performed and that therefore the proceedings should be suspended pending their arrival in Grozny and until Mr Z. ' s whereabouts were established .

131 . A decision of 13 April 2004 ordered that the investigation in case no. 12088, which had most recently been suspended on 3 December 2003, be resumed. It stated that the decision to suspend the proceedings had been unlawful as the investigating authorities had not performed all investigative measures that could have been carried out in the absence of those responsible and, in particular, had failed to comply with the investigator ' s instructions and with super vising prosecutors ' orders .

132 . D ecision s of 13 May and 26 November 2004 ordered that the proceedings in case no. 12088 be stayed. The decision s were similar to that of 20 August 2003. In particular, they referred to the same measures carried out during the investigation as those listed in the decision of 20 August 2003 . They also stated that, in reply to their relevant queries, the investigating authorities had received information to the effect that Mr Dhz. had died on 6 January 2002; they contained no indication , however, as to whether the actions prescribed by the decision of 20 August 2003 , such as confrontations between the applicant, Mr K. and officers N., Deg. and Ab. (see paragraph 130 above) had been performed, nor did they indicate whether, and if so which, measures had been taken with a view to establishing Mr Z. ' s whereabouts. The decision s concluded that all possible investigative measures had been performed and that it was impossible, in the absence of Mr Z., whose whereabouts remained unknown, to take measures to identify the persons who had inflicted bodily injuries on the applicant.

133 . A decision of 20 October 2004 set aside the decision of 13 May 2004 and ordered that the investigation be resumed. According to th at decision, the investigating authorities had not performed all investigative measures that could have been carried out in the absence of those responsible . It pointed out, in particular, that a number of the investigator ' s instructions had not been complied with , the identities of witnesses of the theft of the applicant ' s property had not been established and the relevant individuals interviewed . The decision stated that all other necessary investigative measures should be taken. It was signed by the investigator to the effect that “the interested persons” had been apprised of it on 26 October 2004.

134 . A decision of 26 May 2005 quashed the decision of 26 November 2004 and ordered that the investigation be resumed. It then ordered that a number of investigative measures be carried out, and in particular, that the measures indicated in the decisions of 13 April and 20 October 2004 be complied with in full, that the search for Mr Z. be conducted more actively, that additional evidence be searched for to confirm the involvement of M r N., Mr D. and Mr Ab. in the incident of 11 March 2000 and, if such evidence was obtained, that relevant charges be brought against those responsible , that the applicant ' s arguments advanced in his complaints of 17 August and 22 September 2004 be investigated, and that other necessary steps be taken.

135 . A decision of 4 July 2005 ordered the suspension of the criminal proceedings . It was similar to the decisions of 13 May and 26 November 2004 and listed the same investigative measures that had been carried out. Th e decision added that during an additional investigation Mr Z. ' s whereabouts had been established at the address of his permanent place of residence; however, given that “a preventive measure in the form of an undertaking not to leave his place of residence had been applied to him, it had been impossible to deliver him to Grozny ”. The decision concluded that all investigative measures that could have been conducted in the absence of Mr Z. had been performed and that the preliminary investigation should be stayed “ until there was a real possibility of participation in the criminal proceedings of the accused Z. ” The decision was signed by the investigator to the effect that the accused Z. and the applicant had been apprised of it.

136 . A decision of 17 August 2005 set aside the decision of 4 July 2005 as unlawful and unfounded stating that a number of essenti al steps had not been taken, and, in particular, that no legal classification had been given to the actions of Mr D., Mr N. and Mr Ab. , identified by the applicant as those involved in the incident of 11 March 2000, that the theft of the applicant ' s property and Mr Ya. ' s possible involvement in that offen c e had not been duly investigated, that an additional forensic medical examination of the applicant – necessary in view of the presence in the case file of two conflicting reports on medical examinations conducted earlier – had not been performed, and that other necessary measures had not been taken. The decision thus ordered that the proceedings be resumed.

137 . In a letter of 30 August 2005 the investigator inform ed the applicant and his lawyer that on 13 July 2000 criminal proceedings in case no. 12088 had been instituted in connection with the infliction of bodily injuries on the applicant by unidentified police officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, that on 30 August 2001 criminal proceedings in case no. 15082 had been instituted in connection with the theft of the applicant ' s Oldsmobile vehicle presumably by officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, that on 5 September 2001 those two cases had been joined under number 12088, and that on 23 August 2005 criminal proceedings had been instituted in case no. 61856 in connection with the theft of the applicant ' s Subaru vehicle by unidentified police officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD seconded to the Chechen Republic from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region. The letter went on to say that during the period of the applicant ' s detention between 5 March and 24 May 2000 a group of unidentified persons had broken into his hous e and stolen his property including a Subaru minivan , causing him pecuniary damage amounting to USD 148,620 and that during the same period unidentified persons had deliberately destroyed the applicant ' s property – his house and outhouses – causing him considerable pecuniary damage. The letter stated that criminal proceedings had been bro ught in that connection and that the new case had been disjoined from case no. 12088 and given the number 61857. Lastly, the letter stated that the investigation in case no. 12088 had been resumed and was in progress.

138 . A decision of 30 September 2005 ordered that the proceedings in case no. 12088 be suspended as all investigative measures that it had been possible to perform in the absence of the accused had been carried out. It stated , briefly , that during an additional investigation Mr Z. ' s whereabouts had been established at his home address; however, Mr Z. had then fled from the investigating authorities and , at present , hi s whereabouts remained unknown.

139 . In a letter of 26 October 2005 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic informed the applicant ' s lawyer of the criminal cases opened into the applicant ' s allegations of ill-treatment and theft of his property and stated that at present the proceedings in case no. 12088 had been stayed pending the search for the accused.

140 . A decision of 21 November 2005 set aside the decision of 30 September 2005 as premature and ordered the resumption of the investigation. It stated, in particular, that although the case file contained evidence implicating officers N. and Ya. in the offences against the applicant , no procedural decision had yet been taken in their re gard . It also noted that the investigating authorities had not yet decided on the question of whether to bring proceedings against Mr Z. separate ly .

141 . By a decision of 24 December 2005 the investigation was suspended owing to the failure to establish Mr Z. ' s whereabouts. The decision restated the circumstances of the offence imputed to Mr Z. and indicated that charges of aggravated negligence of official duties had been brought against him, that he had been banned from leaving his place of residence and eventually put on the wanted list in view of the fact that he had repeatedly failed to appear at the prosecutor ' s office and had been absent from his place of residence for a long period. The decision concluded that it was impossible to continue the investigation in the absence of the accused and ordered the Criminal Investigation Division of the Oktyabrskiy R OVD to organise a search for him.

142 . In a decision of 7 February 2006 a supervising prosecutor quashed the decision of 24 December 2005 and ordered that the investigation be resumed. The decision of 7 February 2006 was similar to that of 21 November 2005 and stated, in particular, that until that time no procedural decisions had been taken against police officers N. and Ya. despite the evidence of their involvement in the offences against the applicant .

143 . By a decision of 7 March 2006 the investigator in charge stayed the proceedings . The decision was similar to that of 24 December 2005 and stated, in addition, that charges had been brought against M r D. and that he and Mr B. and Mr Ya. had been banned from leaving their place of residence and put on the wanted list (see paragraphs 80 and 82 above). It went on to say that it was impossible to continue the investigation in the absence of Mr Z., Mr D., Mr Ya. A nd Mr B. , whose whereabouts were unknown, and instructed the Criminal Investigation Division of the Oktyabrskiy ROVD to organise a search for them.

144 . A decision of 21 August 2006 set aside the decision of 7 March 2006 as unlawful and unfounded and ordered that the proceedings be reopened. It stated, in particular, that the investigat ing authorities had not performed all investigative measures which could be carried out in the absence of Mr Z., Mr D., Mr Ya. A nd Mr B. , and that no steps had been taken with a view to establishing the ir whereabouts . The decision noted that , although the case file contained in formation regarding the identity and the duty station of the aforementioned four officers, the investigation had failed to interview their relatives, neighbours and colleagues, or to conduct searches at the places of their service or residence with a view to find ing relevant evidence and locat ing them.

145 . By a decision of 25 September 2006, similar to that of 7 March 2006, the investigation was again suspended. The applicant was informed of that decision by a letter of the same date.

146 . In a letter of 5 October 2006 the applicant complained to the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic about the decision of 25 September 2006 and requested the prosecutor ' s office to resume the investigation. He indicated the addresses of the individuals whose whereabouts, according to the decision of 25 September 2006, could not be established.

147 . In a letter of 12 October 2006 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic informed the applicant that his complaint of 5 October 2006 had been examined and disallowed . The letter did not elaborate on the reasons.

148 . A decision of 9 January 2007 quashed t he decision of 25 September 2006 as unlawful and unfounded. It was noted that the investigat ing authorities had not performed all investigative measures which could be carried out in the absence of the suspects and accused, and that no measures had been taken with a view to establishing the whereabouts of Mr Z., Mr D., Mr Ya. a nd Mr B. and delivering them to the Chechen Republic for investigative action although in the case file there was information concerning the place of their service and residence.

149 . A decision of 28 May 2007 ordered that the criminal proceedings be stayed. It listed investigative measures similar to those mentioned in the decisions of 7 March and 25 September 2006 taken in respect of Mr D., Mr Z. and Mr B. and concluded that it was impossible to continue the investigation in the absence of those three officers.

150 . A decision of 29 May 2007 ordered that the criminal proceedings be resumed , with reference to the necessity to complete a forensic examination ordered on 29 April 2007.

151 . D ecision s of 29 June 2007 , 25 December 2008 and 21 February 2009 , similar to that of 28 May 2007, ordered that the investigation be suspended pending the search for Mr D., Mr Z. and Mr B. , whose whereabouts remained unknown.

152 . A decision of 24 November 2008 ordered that the criminal proceedings be resumed. It stated that the decision of 29 June 2007 was unlawful and unfounded , as all versions of the incidents under investigation had not been checked and it was necessary to intensify the search for Mr Z. and Mr D.

153 . A decision of 19 January 2009 set aside the decision of 25 December 2008 as unlawful and unfounded , stating that the investigat ing authorities had not taken all possible measures. It ordered, inter alia , identification by the applicant of Mr M. (see paragraph 161 below) , an interview of Mr M. as a witness in connection with the circumstances of the case and, in particular, determination as to whether he had participated in inflicting bodily injuries on the applicant, an examin ation of the question whether the materials concerning the theft of the applicant ' s property should be examined separately , as it had not been proven during the preliminary investigation that the offence in question had been committed by the same individuals who had inflicted bodily injuries on the applicant , an examin ation of the question whether to discontinue the prosecution of Mr B. , w ho had expressed his intention to avail himself of an A mnesty A ct of 22 September 2006 that had been passed in respect of perpetrators of criminal offences during counter - terrorist operations within the territory of the Southern Federal Circuit, and the perform ance of other investigative measures . The applicant was informed of the decision of 19 January 2009 by a letter of 22 January 2009.

(b) Reports on the results of the applicant ' s forensic medical examinations

154 . The materials in the Court ' s possession reveal that during the investigation th e applicant underwent forensic medical examinations on at least three occasions. It appears that the applicant was first examined by experts on 7 September 2001. The results of th e examination are unclear because the relevant report is missing.

155 . The case file contain s a report on the applicant ' s forensic medical examination dated 4 April 2003. The results of that examination are unclear because the relevant part of the document is illegi ble. The report referred , however, to the forensic medical examination which the applicant had undergone earlier. It state d , in particular:

“A forensic medical examination was ordered on 7 September 2001 in order to establish the degree of damage inflicted on the applicant ' s health by unlawful actions of the VOVD officers. According to expert report no. 192 of 7 September 2001, it was established that [the applicant] had lost his hearing capacity, had a scar on his left ear, and had eleven teeth missing from his upper jaw. The report does not indicate [the applicant ' s] other injuries , nor does it evaluate the degree of damage caused to his health. It is therefore necessary at present to conduct an additional forensic medical examination in order to establish and evaluate all injuries inflicted on [the applicant] by unlawful actions of police officers.”

156 . A report of 30 June 2005 attested to the closed fracture of the applicant ' s four ribs on the right side, the amputation of his left ear and the complete loss of hearing in the left ear, scars on the left side of the lower jaw and traumatic extraction of eleven teeth from the upper jaw. The report indicated that the applicant ' s ear could have been amputated by a sharp tool such as a knife or similar object and that the other injuries could have been sustained as a result of the repeated application of hard blunt object(s) , possibly during the period and in the circumstances described by the applicant. It then stated that the total deafness i n the left ear had entailed a considerable and lasting disability and that the ablation of the left ear had led to a facial defect necessitating plastic surgery. The report also mentioned that at present the applicant complained of deafness in his left ear and of discomfort caused by the absence of his left ear and that he was wearing his hair long in an attempt to hide his defect and avoided other people, including his friends and relatives , as he felt embarrassed about his appearance.

(c) Documents relating to investigative measures

157 . By a n investigator ' s decision of 18 July 2000 the applicant was granted victim status. The decision d id not refer to any case number and was signed by the applicant to the effect that he had been info rmed of that decision on the same date and his procedural rights had been explained to him.

158 . The materials in the Court ' s possession reveal that in the period between November 2001 and August 2003 the investigating authorities sent a number of queries and requests to law-enforcements bodies in the Chechen Republic and in the Khanty-Mansiysk Region. In particular, they sought and obtained a list of police officers of the Khanty-Mansiysk Regional Department of the Interior seconded to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD in 2000-2001, photographs and transcripts of witness interviews of a number of those officers.

159 . On an unspecified date the applicant id entified Mr Z. from a photograph as the guard of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD who had let into the applicant ' s cell two individuals who had cut off his ear. On 10 February and 13 May 2003 Mr K. also identified Mr Z. , stating that the latter had guarded the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD in March 2000 and that it was h e who had let in two individuals, one of whom had then cut off the applicant ' s ear.

160 . On 26 November 2002 the applicant identified Mr B. from a photograph as the officer who , upon the applicant ' s delivery to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD on 5 March 2000 , had beaten him, along with other officers, with an automatic rifle butt and then pressed a red-hot metal bar in to the palm of his right hand , his face, forehead and tongue, and had cut the applicant ' s hair and forced him to chew it. On 28 November 2002 Mr K. also identified Mr B. from a photograph , stating that he had heard the latter , in the office of the head of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD , order one of his subordinate s to smash detainees ' fingers with a sledgehammer. Mr K. also stated that Mr B. had been aware of all unlawful actions that had taken place in the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD.

161 . On 4 April 2003 the applicant identified Mr M. from a photograph as the officer who , at the relevant period , had been seconded from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region as head of the Criminal Investigation Division of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD and who , according to a relevant decision, had committed suicide on 12 October 2001 . The applicant stated that Mr M. had never committed any form of physical violence against him. On 13 May 2003 Mr K. identified Mr M. from a photograph as an officer of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD and stated that the latter had not been involved in any incidents with him.

162 . On 8 May 2003 the applicant and Mr K. identified Mr Ab. from a photograph as the guard at the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD who had photographed the applicant immediately after his ear had been cut off (see paragraph 25 above) .

163 . The decision of 19 May 2003 by which Mr Z. was charged under Article 293 § 2 of the Russian Criminal Code (see paragraph 77 above) stated that, on 11 March 2000, the latter had neglected his duties as a guard of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD because , in breach of the relevant regulations, he had opened the applicant ' s cell and let in unidentified officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, one of whom had then cut off the applicant ' s ear thus causing severe damage to the applicant ' s health . The report went on to say that Mr Z. had further neglected his official duties by fail ing to report the incident to his superiors.

164 . Two decisions of 19 May 2003 stated that Mr Z. had failed to appear at the requests of the investigating authorities and that his whereabouts were unknown. On e of the decisions accordingly banned Mr Z. from leaving his place of residence and another one ordered that a search for him be organised.

165 . On 20 May 2003 the applicant identified Mr D. from a photograph a s the person who had cut off his ear at the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD on the night of 11 March 2000. The applicant stated that he had never seen that individual before the incident of 11 March 2000 and that he was certain that it was th e man who had inflicted the said injury on him. The applicant added that at the time of the incident the identified person ' s face had been thinner.

166 . In a decision of 23 May 2003 the investigator requested a prosecutor to authorise an extension of the period of the preliminary investigation. The decision listed the investigative measures that had been taken, including questioning the applicant and granting him victim status, questioning a number of officials of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, including Mr P., Mr D ub ., Mr S., Mr B., Mr Ya., Mr A., Mr Sh., Mr V. and Mr Z., questioning Mr K., seiz ing photographs of officers of the Khanty-Mansiysk Regional Department of the Interior seconded for the relevant period to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD and identification by the applicant and Mr K. from photographs of officers allegedly implicated in the offence . The decision stated that given that the officers who had been serving at the Oktyabrskiy VOVD during the relevant period lived in the Khanty-Mansiysk Region, in April 2003 the investigator had been seconded there and had obtained evidence of the involvement of a number of those officers in the alleged offence. In particular, Mr Z., who had been identified by the applicant from a photograph , and Mr K. had confirmed that Mr Z. had let officers from the special fire group of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD into the applicant ' s cell and that the officers had then cut off the applicant ' s ear. The decision went on to say that charges o f aggravated negligence of official duties had been brought against Mr Z., who was at present on the federal wanted list as he was absconding from the investigating authorities. According to the decision, it had so far been impossible to interview Mr Ab., identified by the applicant from a photograph, and Mr K., as he had been on annual leave in the Republic of Uzbekistan . The decision also mentioned that the applicant had identified Mr D. from a photograph as the person who had cut off his ear and stated that measures were being taken with a view to establishing Mr D. ' s whereabouts and bringing charges against him. The decision then listed the investigative measures which should be taken, including , in particular, questioning Mr D., Mr Ab., Mr B. and carrying out an additional forensic medical examination of the applicant as the results of the previous two examinations had been conflicting.

167 . In a letter of 22 July 2003 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic requested the Ministry of the Interior of the Chechen Republic to investigate the alleged involvement of officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD in the theft of the applicant ' s property, including three foreign-made cars, as during the investigation in case no. 12088 one of the cars had been found in Urus-Martan at the home address of Mr Dhz., a former officer of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, and another car had been found in Grozny at the temporary address of Mr A., Mr V., Mr Sh. a nd Mr Sul., officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. In a letter of 3 June 2004 the Ministry of the Interior of the Chechen Republic replied to the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic saying that an internal check carried out upon the latter ' s request had established that the aforementioned officers had never lived at the address indicated . According to the letter, the implication of those officers in the theft of the applicant ' s cars had therefore not been established .

168 . On 15 August 2003 the applicant identified Mr N. from a photograph as the person who had cut off his ear at the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD on 11 March 2000. On 20 August 2003 Mr K. also identified Mr N. from a photograph , stating that he resembled the person who had cut off the applicant ' s ear and that at the time of the incident th e person had had a thinner face and shorter hair.

169 . By a summons of 9 September 200 3 the investigator ordered Mr D., Mr N. and Mr Ab., all residing in the Khanty-Mansiysk Region, to appear at the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic for questioning as witnesses. In a letter of the same date the investigator requested the head of the Khanty-Mansiysk Regional Department of the Interior to secure the appearance of the aforementioned three officers at the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic .

170 . By two similar decisions of 26 November 2003 the investigator ordered officers N. and Ya. to be compulsorily brought in for questioning on the same date . The decisions stated that on 26 November 2003 Mr N. and Mr Ya. had been summoned as suspects in the applicant ' s case; however, during the investigative measures in their regard both suspects had left the investigator ' s officer under a far - fetched pretext , with the result that it had been im possible to complete the investigative measures .

171 . In a letter of 18 August 2004 the Criminal Investigation Division of the Khanty-Mansiysk Regional Department of the Interior informed the Oktyabrskiy ROVD that Mr Z. was registered and lived at his home address in Khanty-Mansiysk, that at present he was on leave outside the territory of Khanty-Mansiysk and that his wife had refused to disclose his current whereabouts with reference to her constitutional right not to testify against her relatives.

172 . In a letter of 18 November 2004 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic inquired of the Oktyabrskiy R OVD whether their instruction of 29 October 2004 to activ ate the search for Mr Z. had been complied with. In a letter of 3 December 2004 the Oktyabrskiy R OVD replied that, in an attempt to locate Mr Z., the Oktyabrskiy R OVD had made en qu i ries at his place of residence and duty station , sent a description of his appearance to places where he might be and had verif ied the relevant records to check whether he had ever bought railway tickets. The letter stated that , to date , Mr Z. ' s whereabouts had not been established .

173 . In a letter of 14 January 2005 the Oktyabrskiy R OVD informed the investigator that they had established the whereabouts of Mr Z. who was resid ing at his home address in Khanty-Mansiysk; however, it was impossible to deliver Mr Z. to the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic because he was under an undertaking not to leave his place of residence pending the criminal proceedings against him in the present case . In a letter of 18 June 2005 the Oktyabrskiy R OVD further informed the investigating authorities that Mr Z. had been removed from the federal wanted list because his permanent place of residence had been established.

174 . By a decision of 29 June 2005 the investigator, upon a request by the applicant ' s lawyer, ordered an additional forensic medical examination of the applicant, stating that the report of 7 September 2001 (see paragraphs 154 and 155 above) had been incomplete and had not addressed one of the questions by the investigating authorities.

175 . By a decision of 17 September 2006 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic rejected a complaint by the applicant ' s lawyer about the investigator ' s refusal to grant the applicant and his counsel full access to the criminal investigation file. The decision stated that the investigator had allowed the applicant and his lawyer to study, without making copies, reports on investigative measures in which the applicant had taken part and decisions ordering expert examinations and reports on the results there of, and to receive copies of decisions to institute and suspend criminal proceedings and a decision to declare the applicant a victim in the case. The decision went on to say that , under the relevant legal provision, a victim could have full access to the file and make copies of the materials only upon the completion of the investigation and that, given that the investigation in case no. 12088 was still in progress, the investigator had rightly refused the applicant and his lawyer access to any other materials in the file.

176 . In a decision of 9 January 2007 the investigator requested a prosecutor to authorise the extension of the period of the preliminary investigation. The decision stated, in particular:

“The preliminary investigation in the present case has established the following :-

“Mr B., performing the duties of head of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD ... , on 5 March 2000 ... clearly in excess of his authority, along with other unidentified persons, beat and kicked [the applicant] on various parts of his body, burnt the palm [ of the applicant ' s hand ] with a metal bar, cut [the applicant ' s ] hair and forced the latter to eat it.

Mr Z., performing the duties of head of the convoy group..., when on duty in the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD ... , on 11 March 2000 at around midnight let into a cell of the IVS Mr D. – the deputy head of the special fire group – and other unidentified persons. Mr D., being in the state of alcohol intoxication and having a knife, along with other unidentified persons, entered the cell where [the applicant] and Mr K. were held, and , acting deliberately ... in clear excess of his authority , knocked [the applicant] down and started kicking him in various parts of his body. Thereafter an unidentified person held the applicant down whilst Mr D., using his knife, cut off [the applicant ' s] left ear.

Mr Ya., performing the duties of deputy head of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD ..., in the period from 5 March until 24 May 2000, ... along with other unidentified persons stole from the applicant ' s house ... an Oldsmobile car belonging to [the applicant] and sold it for USD 500 to Mr Dzh. ”

The decision thus stated that the preliminary investigation should be extended because it was necessary to carry out numerous investigative measures and, in particular, to arrest Mr Z., Mr D., Mr B. and Mr Ya. and to seek authorisation from court to place them in detention, bring charges against them and question them, conduct searches at their places of residence, organise, if necessary, confrontations between the four individuals in question and the applicant and Mr K., prepare a bill of indictment, and so forth .

177 . In a n application of 16 February 2007 the applicant requested the investigator to interview Mr Kh. Dzh., Mr R. Dhz. a nd Mr I. Dzh. – brother s of the deceased Mr Dzh. – in connection with the circumstances of the theft of his property, including his cars, stating that they, together with officers from the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, had been implicated in that offence, which could be confirmed by numerous eyewitness statements.

178 . In a letter of 20 February 2007 the investigator inform ed the applicant that his application of 16 February 2007 had been granted and invited him to appear at the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic for questioning. T he applicant states that he is unaware whether the aforementioned three persons were questioned.

(d ) Transcripts of witness interviews

(i) Statements by the applicant

179 . The case file contain s transcripts of the applicant ' s interviews of 1 and 5 September 2005 in which he described the circumstances of his arrest by the police and submitted that during his detention his property had been stolen from him, including his cars in respect of which he had kept the papers .

(ii) Statements by Mr K.

180 . It can be ascertained from the case - file materials that Mr K. , the applicant ' s cellmate (see paragraph 23 above), was questioned on several occasions .

181 . When questioned on an unspecified date in 2000 , Mr K. stated that he had seen unknown military officers enter the cell in which he and the applicant had been kept and cut off the applicant ' s ear. Mr K. also described the officer who had done it and stated that he would be able to recognise him .

182 . During a witness interview of 4 September 2001 , Mr K. mad e similar statements. In particular, he submitted that he had been apprehended on 10 March 2000 and placed in the applicant ' s cell. Mr K. ' s s tated that he had not noticed any visible injuries on the applicant. He further stated that one or two days later two unknown individuals of Russian ethnic origin had entered the cell ; they had been inebriated and one of them had had a moustache . He confirmed that he would be able to recognize th e person in question . According to Mr K., the IVS guard had told th e intruders that they should not touch Mr K., but that they could do what they wanted with the applicant . The man with the moustache had ordered Mr K. to step aside and turn his back ; the latter had slightly turned his head , however, and had been able to see one of the intruders knock the applicant down and h o ld him down whilst t he man with the moustache took a knife and cut off the applicant ' s ear. The latter had been shouting very loudly and b oth intruders had been cursing. They had then left. Mr K. added that over the following days various officers had entered the cell and had severely beaten him and the applicant . Among those who had beaten them, Mr K. remembered two officers seconded from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region.

183 . In an interview of 15 November 2004 Mr K. gave oral evidence similar to that of 4 September 2001. In reply to the investigator ' s question he also stated that Mr N. , whom he had previously identified from a photograph (see paragraph 168 above) , resembled the person who had cut off the applicant ' s ear ; however, he could not affirm that it had definitely been th e same person as the incident had taken place long before.

( i ii) Statements by Mr P.

184 . Mr P. , who from February until May 2000 was seconded from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region as a senior inquiry officer at the Oktyabrskiy VOVD , stated during an interview of 14 August 2000 that he had been investigating a criminal case against the applicant , that the latter ' s head had been bandaged and that, when b eing questioned in th e latter respect , the applicant had submitted that four or five unknown persons had cut off his ear the day before he had been apprehended by officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD . Mr P. also stated that neither the applicant nor he had known who had cut off the applicant ' s ear and that the applicant had received the necessary medical aid during his detention.

185 . During an interview of 21 March 2002 Mr P. stated that he did not remember what the applicant had looked like, whether the applicant had had any bodily injuries, whether his hea d had been bandaged, whether he had made any complaints about beatings in the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD and whether he had been provided with any medical assistance. According to Mr P., he had heard that somebody had cut off the applicant ' s ear; however, he did not remember who had told him about that incident and he did not know who could have done it .

186 . In an interview of 9 September 2002 Mr P. stated that he did not know wh ich of the police officers could have inflicted bodily injuries on the applicant and denied stealing any items of the applicant ' s property.

(i v ) Statements by Mr B.

187 . Mr B., who between February and May 2000 was seconded from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region to the Chechen Republic as the head of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, stated during questioning o n 6 September 2002 that , in practice , he had performed his duties as head of the IVS starting from late March – early April 2000 , as prior to that date the IVS had not existed , in the absence of necessary documentation. According to Mr B., when the applicant had been placed in the newly created IVS, he had had a fresh wound sustained as a result of amputation of his ear , which , as the applicant had s aid to Mr B. , had been performed by an unknown man dressed in camouflage uniform. Mr B. denied having known or seen the applicant before, or having known those who had cut off his ear or having let anyone into the applicant ' s cell. He stated that he had reported the incident to the Grozny prosecutor ' s office , which had conducted an inquiry in that connection and had refused to institute criminal proceedings . He also stated that he had been told by someone that the applicant had explained that his ear had been cut off a day or two prior to his detention , by unknown members of illegal armed groups , for the applicant ' s refusal to cooperate with them.

188 . In an interview of 26 November 2003 Mr B. stated that he had found out about the incident of 11 March 2000 the next day. In particular, he had been told that during that night seve ral men , who had been drunk, had entered the applicant ' s cell and that one of them had cut off his ear. According to Mr B., th ey had probably been officers of the special fire group of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. Mr B. stated that he did not know why there had been no internal inquiry in the Oktyabrskiy VOVD in connection with the infliction of injuries on the applicant. He insisted that he had performed his duties in strict compliance with the relevant regulations and had never used any form of physical violence against detainees or received any information that any violence had been used by his subordinates.

(v) Statements by Mr Z.

189 . In a witness interview of 28 March 2003 Mr Z. confirmed that on several occasions he had been on duty as a guard of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. However, he denied knowing the applicant ' s sur name or the circumstance s of the latter ' s arrest. Mr Z. also stated that he did not remember whether he had been on duty on any date between 9 and 11 March 2000, whether he had let anyone into the cell s , and whether “anyone ' s ear [had been] cut off in the cell”. Mr Z. also stated that initially visits to the IVS had not been registered at all, and that subsequently they had been noted down in a notebook.

190 . During questioning o n 28 April 2003 Mr Z. stated that he had a clear memory of the applicant who had been detained for having kept a TNT block and had been held in same cell as Mr K. Mr Z. then stated that on the date – which he no longer remembered – when he had been on duty , a group of officers from the special fire group of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD had entered the IVS. According to Mr Z., the officers had been drunk and told him to let them into the applicant ' s cell as they intended to talk with the detainees. Mr Z. had obeyed. He maintained that he had not watched what had been going on in the cell; however, some time later he had heard a moan and looked into the cell. Mr Z. had seen the applicant on his haunches with one of his ears missing. There had been a lot of blood on the floor. The officers of the special fire group had also been there ; however, Mr Z. could not remember wh ich of them had been holding a knife or who had cut off the applicant ' s ear. According to Mr Z., he had “expressed his discontent” , following which the officers had left. Thereafter Mr Z. and another guard had provided the applicant with medical assistance. Mr Z. also confirmed that an officer of Uzbek origin whose surname was A b . had served in the Oktyabrskiy VOVD at that time, but he did not remember whether Mr A b . had been in the cell when the applicant ' s ear had been cut off or whether Mr A b . had had a photographic camera.

191 . In a witness interview of 4 May 2003 Mr Z. made statements similar to those of 28 April 2003.

( v i ) Statements by Messrs Dzh., A., Sh. and V.

192 . In a witness interview of 12 October 2001 Mr Dzh. , who between February and May 2000 had been an officer of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, submitted that in late March or early April 200 0 Mr A., a driver at the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, had told him that he had bought for USD 200 two cars from police officers seconded from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region. According to Mr Dzh., one of the cars had been left in Grozny and the other one had been conveyed to Urus-Martan and left in the courtyard of Mr Dzh. ' s house where it had remained for about a year. Mr Dhz. further stated that at some point the applicant, who had come to Urus-Martan, had requested him to return the car , claiming to be its owner; the applicant had allegedly also accused Mr Dhz. of stealing his other property. Mr Dhz. stated that on two occasions he had proposed that the applicant take the car but that the latter had refused stating that Mr Dhz. should also pay for the other stolen property. According to Mr Dhz., the car had then been taken away by federal servicemen.

193 . Mr A. stated during a witness interview of 13 October 2001 that in late February or early March 2000 he, along with two other police officers – Mr Sh. a nd Mr Sul. – had met a group of servicemen in camouflage uniform in an Ural truck and an armoured personnel carrier who had been towing two foreign-made cars. According to Mr A., the officer in command of the convoy had said that the y were officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD and then offered to purchase the two cars from them for RUB 2,000. The three men had agreed to buy the cars, although, in Mr A. ' s submission, they had not known where the cars had been taken from, and who had been their owner. Mr A. further stated that he and Mr Sh. a nd Mr Sul. h ad hidden one of the cars in a nearby courtyard and taken the other one to their place of residence and then , three months later , to Mr Dhz. ' s courtyard in Urus-Martan . According to Mr A. , approximately four months later the applicant had expressed his intention to retrieve his cars and Mr A. had told him that one of the vehicles was in Urus-Martan, but the applicant had not taken it ; however, he had taken the one that had remained in Grozny . Mr A. added that the applicant had not refunded them the money which they had paid for the cars. He also stated that he would be able to recognise the police officers who had sold them the vehicles.

194 . In a witness interview of 13 October 2001 Mr Sh. made statements similar to those of Mr A.

195 . Mr V. stated during questioning o n 13 October 2001 that at some point he had noticed a car in the courtyard of the house in which he had lived with Mr A., Sh. a nd Mr Sul. and that the y had explained to him that they had purchased th e vehicle from federal servicemen . According to Mr V., a month later the car had been taken to the courtyard of Mr Dhz. ' s house in Urus-Martan, and some time later, upon Mr Dhz. ' s request, Mr V. had told the applicant that he could retrieve the car. Mr V. claimed that the applicant had not taken th e car but had re trieved another one that had remained in Grozny .

196 . The transcript of a witness interview on 13 October 2001 with Mr Sul. is illegible.

197 . During questioning of 15 January 2003 Mr A. retracted his statements of 13 October 2001 and stated that he had never participated in the purchase of the cars. He also submitted that he had heard from Mr Dzh. that the latter had purchased the cars from Mr Ya., the deputy head of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD .

198 . In witness interviews of 14 May 2003 Mr A., Mr Sh. A nd Mr V. made statements somewhat similar to those of 13 October 2001. In particular, they stated that around late winter 2000 they and Mr Dhz. had met a convoy of an Ural vehicle and an armoured personnel carrier escorting two foreign-made cars and that Mr Dzh. had purchased th e cars and taken one of them to Urus-Martan and left the other one in the courtyard of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. According to the three men, the applicant had visited Mr Dhz. in Urus-Martan several months later and attempted to re trieve the car but Mr Dzh. h ad stated that he would return the car in exchange for money equal to the amount he had paid for it.

(vii) Statements by other persons

199 . Mr D ub ., who between February and May 2000 was seconded from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region to the Chechen Republic as head of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD , stated during questioning on 15 March 2002 that he remembered a detainee with an amputated ear who had been delivered to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. Mr D ub . insisted that none of the police officers had cut off the detainee ' s ear and that the Grozny prosecutor ' s office had carried out an inquiry into the incident and had decided to dispense with criminal proceedings. Mr D ub . s tated that the applicant had told him in conversation that his ear had been cut off before the detention and that it had been done by one of several persons in camouflage uniform who had broken into the applicant ' s house. In a witness interview of 12 May 2003 Mr D ub . made similar statements. He also added that during the entire period of his secondment there had been no foreign-made cars or satellite dishes on the territory of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD.

200 . During questioning o n 3 September 2002 Mr S., an officer who had carried out a search in the applicant ' s house on 5 March 2000, denied seizing or stealing any items of the applicant ' s property.

201 . In a witness interview of 6 September 2002, Mr Kir. , seconded between February and May 2000 from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region to the Chechen Republic as an officer of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD , submitted that he had heard from his colleagues that the applicant had been delivered to the IVS with his ear cut off . According to Mr Kir. , none of the police officers had inflicted any injuries on the applicant in his presence and th e latter had received regular medical assistance in respect of his ablated ear. Mr Kir. also stated that had learnt from the applicant that his ear had been cut off two or three days prior to his detention.

202 . Mr Ya., who between February and May 2000 had been seconded from the Khanty-Mansiysk Region to the Chechen Republic as the deputy head of Oktyarbskiy VOVD, stated during a witness interview of 29 April 2003 that he did not know how the applicant had received severe bodily injuries and that he had not conducted a n inquiry in that respect as it had not fallen within his competence. Mr Ya. added that he had heard from other officers that the applicant ' s ear had been cut off by unknown members of illegal armed groups in revenge for the applicant ' s cooperation with federal forces. Mr Ya. denied stealing any property from the applicant or selling to anyone any cars belonging to the applicant. He said that he did not know Mr A. or Mr Dzh. and could not explain why they had indicated that they had purchased the applicant ' s cars from him. Mr Ya. also added that Mr S. (see paragraph 200 above) had informed him of the seizure during the search of 5 March 2000 of the applicant ' s satellite dish.

203 . Mr S. , when questioned on 4 May 2003 , again denied having seized any of the applicant ' s property during the search and stated that it was unclear to him why Mr Ya. had made a statement to that effect . Mr S. added that there had been a garage in the courtyard of the applicant ' s house but it had been empty and that he had not seen any cars in the courtyard either. Mr S. also explained that the search of the applicant ' s house had been carried out on the basis of operati onal information received from the Federal Security Service to the effect that the applicant had provided food and water to illegal armed groups.

204 . Mr D., identified by the applicant as the officer of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD who had cut off his ear (see paragraph 165 above), submitted during a witness interview of 26 May 2003 that the applicant ' s surname was unfamiliar to him . He stated, however, that the applicant might have been the person whom he had a rrested in March 2000 following operational information received by the law-enforcement authorities to the effect that the applicant, who had been assisting the Ministry for Civil Defence and Emergency Situations of the Chechen Republic in distributing food and water to local residents, had given some of the provisions to illegal fighters. According to Mr D., a group of police officers , in two vehicles , had arrived at the place where the applicant had been working that day , and the decision had been taken to arrest the applicant without attracting the attention of local residents . Mr D. had approached the applicant and asked him to show the officers a certain street . After the applicant had got into one of the vehicles, he had been delivered to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD and left there. Mr D. stated that at the time of his arrest the applicant had had no visible injuries. He added that he had never met the applicant again and strongly denied inflicting any injuries on him. Mr D. stated that could not expla i n why the applicant ha d identified him as the person who had cut off his ear.

205 . The case file also contains transcripts of witness interviews of a number of police officers who had participated in the search of the applicant ' s house on 5 March 200 0 and officers who had served in the Oktyabrskiy VOVD during the relevant period . They all denied taking any property from the applicant ' s house, including any vehicles , or know ledge of the origin of the applicant ' s bodily injuries .

3. Documents from the investigation file in case no. 61857

206 . By a decision of 23 August 2005 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic instituted criminal proceedings under Articles 158 § 3 (aggravated theft) and 167 § 1 (deliberate destruction of another ' s property) of the Russian Criminal Code in connection with the theft of the applicant ' s Subaru minivan and property from his house and the destruction of his house and outhouses , which had been established during the investigation in case no. 12088. The decision stated that the applicant ' s aforementioned property had been stolen and destroyed during his detention in the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD . It went on to say in that, so far as these offences were concerned , there was no objective evidence that they had been committed by officers from the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. Accordingly, t he decision ordered that the relevant mater ials be disjoined from case no. 12088 .

207 . In a letter of 29 September 2005 the prosecutor ' s office of the Oktyabrskiy District forwarded the case file to the Oktyabrskiy ROVD for investigation.

208 . By a decision of 2 October 2005 an investigator of the Oktyabrskiy ROVD took up the case.

209 . By a decision of 10 October 2005 the applicant was granted victim status. The decision was signed by the applicant to the effect that he had been apprised of it on the same date.

210 . In an interview of 10 October 2005 the applicant made statements similar to his submissions to the Court (see paragraphs 90 - 93 above). He also claimed that a number of officers from the Oktyabrs kiy VOVD, including Mr Dzh., Mr Ya. a nd M r Ab. , had been involved in looting his property.

211 . In two similar decisions of 23 October 2005 and 10 January 2006 the investigation in case no. 61857 was suspended. The very succinct decisions stated that it had been impossible to identify those responsible although “all possible investigative measures had been carried out” and instructed the Criminal Investigation Division of the Oktyabrskiy ROVD to search for the alleged perpetrators. The decisions did not indicate which measures had been taken during the investigation.

212 . A decision of 23 November 2005 set aside the decision of 23 October 2005 as unlawful and unfounded and ordered that the investigation be recommenced. The decision pointed out that it was necessary to obtain, from the materials in case no. 12088, copies of relevant witness interviews with a view to taking necessary procedural decisions and carrying out other indispensable investigative measures .

213 . By a decision of 10 December 2005 the investigator took up the case.

214 . In a letter of 26 December 2005 the investigator requested the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic to sen d him copies of witness interviews relating to the alleged looting of the applicant ' s property.

215 . No documents concerning the period after December 2005 have been submitted to the Court. According to the Government, the investigation in case no. 61857 was most recently suspended on 10 January 2006 ; and on 3 March 2009 the prosecutor ' s office of the Chechen Republic ordered that the proceedings be resumed.

II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW

216 . Until 1 July 2002 criminal-law matters were governed by the 1960 Code of Criminal Procedure of the RSFSR. On 1 July 2002 the old Code was replaced by the Code of Criminal Proce dure of the Russian Federation .

217 . Article 125 of the new Code provides that the decision of an investigator or prosecutor to dispense with criminal proceedings or to terminate criminal proceedings, and other decisions and acts or omissions which are liable to infringe the constitutional rights and freedoms of the parties to criminal proceedings or to impede citizens ' access to justice may be appealed against to a district court, which is empowered to check the lawfulness and grounds of the impugned decisions.

218 . Article 161 of the new C ode enshrines the rule that data from the preliminary investigation may not be disclosed. Par agraph 3 of the same Article provides that information from the investigation file may be divulged with the permission of a prosecutor or investigator but only in so far as it does not infringe the rights and lawful interests of the participants in the criminal proceedings and does not prejudice the investigation. It is prohibited to divulge information about the private life of the participants in criminal proceedings without their permission.

219 . Article 209 of the new Code states , in its relevant part, that no investigative measures shall be taken after the suspension of the preliminary investigation.

THE LAW

I. THE GOVERNMENT ' S PRELIMINARY OBJECTION

220 . In their observations on the admissibility and merits of the present case, t he Government argued that the application should be declared inadmissible as the applicant had failed to exhaust the domestic remedies available to him. In reply to the Court ' s questions concerning the existence of effective domestic remedies in respect of his complaints under Article 3 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 , the Government submitted , in their post-admissibility memorial , that the applicant had been declared a victim in criminal case s nos. 12088 and 61857 opened into his allegations of ill-treatment and the alleged theft and destruction of his property and that his procedural rights had been explained to him. According to the Government, the applicant , by virtue of his victim status , could have actively participated in the investigation and rendered significant assistance to the investigating authorities by filing applications and submitting evidence, thus contributing to the establishment of the facts of the offence and the identity of those responsible. The Government also stated that, under Article 125 of the Russian Code of Criminal Procedure, the applicant was free to appeal in court against any decision, action or omission of the investigating authorities which he considered detrimental to his procedural rights. In support of their argument , they referred to court decisions delivered in three sets of proceedings unrelated to the present case, namely , to a decision of the Urus-Martan Town Court dated 6 August 2004 which had ordered the Urus-Martan prosecutor ' s office to resume the investigation into the disappearance of a claimant ' s son, a decision of the Shali Town Court dated 13 March 2006 and a decision of the Urus-Martan City Court dated 1 August 2005 by which the claimants had been allowed access to criminal investigation files.

221 . The applicant contended that the ongoing investigation into his allegations of ill-treatment and the theft of his property could not be deemed effective as it had been repeatedly suspended and reopened , had dragged on for several years and had produced no tangible results so far. He further argued that , in the absence of any meaningful findings made in the criminal investigation, he had no chance of succeed ing with any of his claims in civil proceedings. In th e latter respect he referred to his attempts to lodge a civil claim for recovery of his property which had proved to be futile as the courts had refused to examine his claim in civil proceedings (see paragraphs 104 - 105 above) .

222 . The Court considers that the Government ' s preliminary objection raises issues which are closely linked to the question of the effectiveness of the investigation into the applicant ' s allegations of ill-treatment and the theft and destruction of his property , and it would therefore be appropriate to address the matter in the examination of the merits of the applicant ' s complaints under Article 3 of the Convention and Article 13, taken in conjunction with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 .

II . ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION

223 . The applicant complained that he had been subjected to inhuman and degrading treatment and torture while in detention, referring to the methods of ill-treatment inflicted on him by the police officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. He also complained that no effective investigation had been conducted into his relevant allegations . The applicant referred to Article 3 of the Convention , which reads as follows:

“No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”

A. Submissions by the parties

224 . The app licant maintained his complaint under Article 3 in its substantive aspect. He further contended that the criminal investigation into his allegations of ill-treatment was inadequate. The applicant pointed out that the investigation, which had been suspended and resumed on numerous occasions and plagued with long periods of inactivity, had been pending for many years but had not yielded any visible results. Notwithstanding the applicant ' s complaints in which he had indicated the addresses of the alleged perpetrators, it did not appear that anything had been done to check that information and the investigation had been repeatedly suspended for failure to establi sh their whereabouts. Moreover, the applicant submitted that he and his representative had been denied full access to the criminal investigation file and that he had not been properly informed of the course of the investigation .

225 . The Government stated , with reference to information provided by the Prosecutor General ' s Office , that “the investigation had established the fact that bodily injuries had been inflicted on the applicant”, but argued that before all the circumstances of the offence had been established there were no grounds to hold the State responsible for the alleged ill-treatment of the applicant. The Government also insisted that the investigation in the present case had not breached the requirements of Article 3 of the Convention , given that the applicant had been granted victim status and could have participated in the criminal proceedings .

B. The Court ' s assessment

1. Alleged ill-treatment at the hands of the authorities

226 . The Court has observed on many occasions that Article 3 of the Convention enshrines one of the fundamental values of democratic societies and as such prohibits in absolute terms torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment (see, for example, Aksoy v. Turkey , 18 December 1996, § 62 , Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-VI , and Aydın v. Turkey , 25 September 1997, § 81 , Reports 1997 ‑ VI ). The Court further indicates, as it has held on many occasions, that the authorities have an obligation to protect the physical integrity of persons in detention . W here an individual is taken into police custody in good health but is found to be injured at the time of release , it is incumbent on the State to provide a plausible explanation of how those injuries were caused . Otherwise, torture or ill-treatment may be presumed in favour of the claimant and an issue may arise under Article 3 of the Convention (see Tomasi v. France , 27 August 1992, § § 108-11 , Series A no. 241 - A , and Selmouni v. France [GC], no. 25803/94, § 87 , ECHR 1999 ‑ V ).

227 . I n assessing evidence , the Court has generally applied the standard of proof “beyond reasonable doubt” (see Ireland v. the United Kingdom , 18 January 1978, § 161 , Series A no. 25 ). S uch proof may follow from the coexistence of sufficiently strong, clear and concordant inferences or of similar unrebutted presumptions of fact. Where the events in issue lie wholly, or in large part, within the exclusive knowledge of the authorities, as in the case of persons within their control in custody, strong presumptions of fact will arise in respect of injuries occurring during such detention. Indeed, the burden of proof may be regarded as resting on the authorities to provide a satisfactory and convincing explanation (see Ribitsch v. Austria , 4 December 1995, § 34 , Series A no. 336 , and Salman v. Turkey [GC], no. 21986/93, § 100, EC HR 2000 - VII).

228 . In the present case, while denying the State ' s responsibility for the alleged ill-treatment of the applicant, the Government acknowledged the specific facts underlying his version of events. Firstly, it is not in dispute that the applicant was held in detention between 5 March and 24 May 2000. Furthermore, medical documents issued in the period after the applicant ' s release attested to his various bodily injuries and indicated , in particular, that the applicant ' s left ear was missing (see paragraphs 60 , 155 and 156 above). It was never alleged by the Government that those injuries – except for the amputation of the left ear – had been inflicted on the applicant either before he had been apprehended or after he had been released. In so far as the amputation of the applicant ' s ear was concerned, the Government seem to have suggested, with reference to the witness statements of four officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, that this injury was inflicted on him by unknown rebel fighters shortly before he was a rrested by the police (see paragraph 87 above).

229 . The Court does not consider the explanation advance d by the Government to be plausible . It notes , firstly , that the statements referred to by the Government do not appear reliable. Indeed, i t was only Mr Dub., the then head of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, who, according to him, remembered a detainee having been delivered to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD with his ear missing (see paragraph 199 above). The other three officers referred to by th e Government – Mr P., Mr Kir. a nd Mr Ya. –never stated that they had seen the applicant at the time of his arrest or immediately upon his delivery to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD . They submitted , rather, that they had heard from their colleagues that the applicant had been delivered to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD with his ear cut off (see paragraphs 184 , 201 and 202 above). Moreover, in a nother witness interview officer P. denied remembering what the applicant had looked like during detention, whether his head had been bandaged, and whether he had had any bodily injuries (see paragraph 185 above).

230 . The Court further notes that the statements quoted by the Government clea rly contradict the statements of Mr K., the applicant ' s cellmate, and Mr Z., a guard of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, who both , on several occasions , consistently described the circumstances of the incident when the applicant ' s ear had been cut off by an officer of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD during the applicant ' s detention (see paragraphs 181 ‑ 183 and 190 - 191 above), and the findings to that end made by the domestic criminal investigation (see paragraph 176 above).

231 . Lastly , and most importantly , the Government did not corroborate the aforementioned four officers ' statements with any medical evidence attesting to the state of the applicant ' s health upon his delivery at the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, and at the end of his detention there . Indeed, it does not appear that the applicant under went any medical examination at any time during his detention in the Oktyabrskiy VOVD, whereas it falls to the State to organise a system for the medical examination of persons in police custody (see, mutatis mutandis , Salmanoğlu and Polattaş v. Turkey , no. 15828/03, § 79 , 17 March 2009 ) .

232 . On the basis of the materials before it and , in particular, having regard to the consistency of the applicant ' s submissions both at the domestic level and before the Court, the abundant evidence adduced by him in support of his allegations and the absence of any plausible explanation on the part of the Government as to the origin of the applicant ' s injuries, the Court concludes that the Government have not satisfactorily demonstrated that those injuries were caused otherwise than – entirely, mainly or partly – by the treatment the applicant underwent while in detention (see Ribitsch , cited above, § 34) . It thus accepts the applicant ' s account of events.

233 . As to the seriousness of the acts of ill-treatment complained of , the Court reiterates that in order to determine whether a particular form of ill-treatment should be characterised as torture, it must have regard to the distinction, embodied in Article 3, between this notion and that of inhuman or degrading treatment. It appears that it was the intention that the Convention should, by means of this distinction, attach a special stigma to deliberate inhuman treatment causing very serious and cruel suffering. The Court has previously had before it cases in which it has found that there has been treatment which could only be described as torture (see Aksoy , cited above, § 64; Aydın , cited above, §§ 83-84 and 86; Selmouni , cited above, § 105; Dikme v. Turkey , no . 20869/92, §§ 94-96, ECHR 2000 - VIII; and Batı and Others v. Turkey , nos. 330 97/96 and 57834/00, § 116, ECHR 2004 ‑ IV (extracts)).

234 . Furthermore, t he Court reiterates its well-established case-law that in respect of a person deprived of his liberty, any recourse to physical force which has not been made strictly necessary by his own conduct diminishes human dignity and is in principle an infringement of the right enshrined in Article 3 of the Convention. It observes that the requirements of an investigation and the undeniable difficulties inherent in the fight against crime cannot justify placing limits on the protection to be afforded in respect of the physical integrity of individuals (see Tomasi , cite d above, § 115 , and Ribitsch , cited above, §§ 38-40).

235 . In the present case , the applicant indicated that police officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD had subjected him to various forms of ill-treatment. In particular, they had punched, kicked and beaten him with automatic rifle butts and had burnt various parts of his body with a red-hot metal bar . The intensity of the abusive treatment inflicted on the applicant is attested by the medical documents , listing a number of serious after-effects of that treatment, including traumatic extraction of at least eleven teeth, fracture of at least four ribs , scars on the left side of the lower jaw (see paragraphs 155 ‑ 156 above), possible fracture of the bridge of the nose, possible fracture of the right leg and a scar on the palm of the right hand (see paragraph 60 above) . The Court has no doubt that the aforementioned forms of ill ‑ treatment caused the applicant severe physical pain and suffering , and that they were inflicted on him intentionally, in particular with a view to obtaining from him a confession or information about the offence of which he had been suspected .

236 . The Court is particularly struck by the incident of 11 March 2000, when a police officer of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD cut off the applicant ' s left ear . It finds this to be a n especially grave and abhorrent form of ill-treatment inflicted on the applicant which not only caused him acute physical pain but also le d to his mutilation and disability – the complete loss of hearing in the left ear – and entailed long-lasting negative psychological effects (see paragraph 156 above) . This method of ill-treatment was undoubtedly applied to the applicant intentionally, its only aim being to intimidat e , humiliat e and debas e him and possibly break his physical and moral resistance . The Court finds it shocking that such a horrid act of violence was committed by a police officer who was, further more, a representative of the State seconded to the Chechen Republic to maintain constitutional order in the region and called upon to protect the interests of civilians .

237 . Against this background, t he Court is convinced that the applicant was kept in a permanent state of physical pain and anxiety owing to his uncertainty about his fate and to the level of violence to which he was intentionally subjected by agents of the State throughout the period of his detention at the Oktyabrskiy VOVD . It is therefore satisfied that the accumulation of acts of violence inflicted on the applicant and the exceptionally cruel act of amputation of his left ear amounted to torture within the meaning of Article 3 of the Convention . Indeed, the Court would have reached this conclusion on either of these grounds taken separately .

238 . Accordingly, there has been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention on that account .

2. Alleged inadequacy of the investigation

239 . Where an individual raises an arguable claim that he or she has been seriously ill-treated by the police in breach of Article 3, that provision, read in conjunction with the State ' s general duty under Article 1 of the Convention to “secure to everyone within their jurisdiction the rights and freedoms defined in ... [the] Convention”, requires by implication that there should be an effective official investigation. This investigation should be capable of leading to the identification and punishment of those responsible (see Assenov and Others v. Bulgaria , 28 October 1998, § 102 , Reports 1998 ‑ VIII , and Labita v. Italy [GC], no. 26772/95, § 131, ECHR 2000 – IV). The minimum standards as to effectiveness defined by the Court ' s case - law also include the requirements that the investigation must be independent, impartial and subject to public scrutiny , and that the competent authorities must act with exemplary diligence and promptness (see, for example, Chitayev and Chitayev v. Russia , no. 59334/00, § 163 , 18 January 2007 ).

240 . In the instant case, the Court observes that some degree of investigation was carried out into the applicant ' s allegations of ill-treatment. It must assess whether that investigation met the requirements of Article 3 of the Convention.

241 . Having regard to the materials in its possession, the Court notes that once the investigation had been commenced on 13 July 2000 it was protracted and plagued with inexplicable shortcomings and delays in taking the most trivial steps. Indeed, it appears that for a period of over a year , from the beginning of the investigation , the authorities did no more than interview the applicant on 17 July 2000 – on the assumption that the Government ' s statement to that effect is accurate ( see paragraph 70 above) – and grant him victim status on 18 July 2000 (see paragraph 157 above) and interview Mr P. on 14 August 2000 (see paragraph 184 above). The admissibility of this latter witness interview in the domestic proceedings is open to doubt, given that it was conducted the day after the investigation was suspended (see paragraphs 71 and 124 above) whereas under national law no investigative measures can be taken following the suspension of criminal proceedings (see paragraph 219 above) .

242 . Despite the apparent seriousness of the applicant ' s allegations, the authorities do not appear to have made any attempts to inspect the scene of the incident, whereas the applicant ' s forensic medical examination was not carried out until 7 September 2001, which is more than a year after the beginning of the investigation. Moreover, it does not appear that this examination was thoroughly conducted , with the result that additional expert examinations were necessary (see paragraphs 155 , 166 and 174 above) . The Court also notes that th e se were not ordered and performed until 2003 and 2005.

243 . Furthermore, it does not appear that any attempts to establish the identity of the police officers who had served at the Oktyabrskiy VOVD during the relevant period were made before November 2001, when the investigating authorities started sending queries to various law-enforcement bodies in the Chechen Re public and the Khanty-Mansiysk R egion with a view to obtain ing a list of police officers of the Khanty-Mansiysk Regional Department of the Interior seconded to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD in 2000 ‑ 2001, their photographs and transcripts of their witness interviews (see paragraph 158 above).

244 . The Court also finds unacceptable the conduct of the authorities of the Khanty-Mansiysk Region and , more specifically , high-ranking officials of the Khanty-Mansiysk Regional Department of the Interior who impeded the investigation by their opposition to contacts between the investigator seconded to that region and their subordinates, which made it possible for the latter to ignore the investigator ' s summons to appear for questioning (see paragraph 130 above).

245 . The Court further observes that in the period between November 2002 and August 2003 the applicant and Mr K., his cellmate, identified from photographs a number of police officers as those implicated in the offences complained of by the applicant ( see paragraphs 159 , 160 , 162 165 and 168 above) . The investigating authorities ' flagrant failure for years to take any practical measures aimed at investigating any further the possible involvement of those officers in the offences against the applicant , and, more specifically, to search for additional evidence of those officers ' involvement in the offences, to organise confrontations with the participation of those officers, the applicant and Mr K., to provide a legal definition of those officers ' actions and to take relevant procedural decisions in their re gard , including bringing charges against them, applying a preventive measure to them, and preparing a bill of indictment, is attested by decisions of supervising prosecutors who on numerous occasions set aside decisions to suspend the investigation as unlawful and premature and indicated that the relevant orders had not been complied with ( see paragraphs 131 , 133 , 134 , 136 , 140 and 142 above ). I t was not until 20 February 2006 that charges were finally brought against Mr D. , who had been identified by the applicant on 20 May 2003 as the officer who had cut off his ear (see paragraph 165 above) , and it was only on 16 March 2007 that charges were brought against Mr B. – on the assumption that the Government ' s assertion to that end is accurate – identified by the applicant on 26 November 2002 as the officer who had tortured him upon his delivery to the Oktyabrskiy VOVD (see paragraph 160 above) . Moreover, it does not appear that any meaningful efforts were made to take investigative measures in respect of Mr N. and Mr Ab., who were also identified by the applicant and Mr K. as th os e involved in the incident involving the applicant ' s ear . The materials in the Court ' s possession reveal that the investigating authorities attempted to summon Mr Ab. for questioning but were unsuccessful because he was on his annual leave (see paragraphs 128 and 130 above ) and that they attempted, also unsuccessfully, to interview Mr N. , who had left during questioning and had not returned ( see paragraph 170 above ). However, there is no evidence that any further investigative activities took place in r espect of those two individuals .

246 . Furthermore, the investigation can only be described as manifestly , if not intentionally , incompetent when it came to establishing the whereabouts of the officers identified by the applicant and his cellmate as the perpetrators. In particular, Mr Z., an officer identified by the applicant and Mr K. as the guard of the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD who had let into their cell the off ic ers who had then cut off the applicant ' s ear, was put on the federal wanted list on 19 May 2003 . However , it was not until almost two years later – during which period the investigation was adjourned three times for failure to find Mr Z. – that the investigating authorities finally established that he was living at his permanent address (see paragraph 173 above). The Government advanced no explanation as to why it had taken the authorities so long to find the accused at his home address, which he does not appear to have ever changed .

247 . The Court further finds it astonishing that, after Mr Z. ' s whereabouts had been established, the investigation was suspended once again with reference to the absence of “a real possibility ” of Mr Z. ' s participation in the criminal proceedings given his undertaking not to leave his place of residence , which allegedly prevented him from being delivered to Grozny (see paragraph 135 above) . The Court notes that, as a general rule, a preventive measure is applied in order to prevent those responsible from flee ing from justice and obstructing the invest igation. It is absurd that , in the present case, the undertaking , which was presumably imposed on Mr Z. with a view to securing his participation in the investigation into the offences imputed to him , impeded in practice the conduct of the very same investigation. In any event, assuming that Mr Z. was indeed unable to travel to Grozny, it is unclear, and the Government have advanced no explanation in th is respect, why the investigator could not be , and was not , seconded to the Kh anty-Mansiysk Region to carry o ut the necessary investigative measures with Mr Z. on the spot.

248 . The Court cannot but attribute such a remarkable shortcoming to extreme unprofessionalism on the part of the investigating authorities and their evident unwillingness to investigate the offences against the applicant and to bring those responsible to justice. Against this background, it is not surprising that, shortly after Mr Z. ' s whereabouts had been established, he appears to have absconded from the investigation again (see paragraph 138 above) . It does not appear that any further attempts were made to establish his whereabouts or to locate the other officers implicated in the offence , the investigators ' manifest failure to act being attested by supervising prosecutors (see paragraphs 144 and 148 above).

249 . The inadequacy and ineffectiveness of the investigation became more than palpable with the passage of time . It does not appear that the investigator s and supervising prosecutors taking up the case in the most recent period made an effort even to study the case file. Indeed , in the period between 28 May 2007 and 21 February 2009 the investigation was stayed four times pending the search for, among others, Mr B. (see paragraphs 149 and 151 above), whereas , according to the Government , the criminal proceedings against him had already been discontinued on 20 March 2007, following his application for an amnesty under an Amnesty A ct ( see paragraph 84 above). Moreover, a decision of 19 January 2009 ordered a further investigation in order to conduct an identification by the applicant of a certain Mr M. and to interview the latter with a view to establishing whether he had inflicted bodily injuries on the applicant , despite the presence in the case file of a decision stating that Mr M. had committed suicide in 2001 and in spite of the fact that on 4 April 2003 the applicant had identified Mr M. from a photograph as an officer who had never inflicted any violence on him ( see paragraphs 153 and 161 above) . In this latter respect, t he Court cannot but regard such conduct of the authorities as an attempt to shift the responsibility from the police officers identified by the applicant as the perpetrators to a deceased person.

250 . Lastly, the Court observes that the investigation in the present case was pending for at least eight years and seven months, from 13 July 2000, the date on which it was opened, until 21 February 2009, when it was last suspended during which period it was stayed and reopened on thirty-seven occasions and was plagued with long inexplicable periods of inactivity. It appears that throughout the investigation the applicant, who was granted victim status on 18 July 2000, was informed of the progress in the investigation only occasionally and fragmentarily, and was denied full access to the case file (see paragraph 175 above).

251 . Against this background , it is clear that the authorities failed to act with exemplary diligence and promptness and, more generally, given the omissions and shortcomings in the investigation process, it is questionable whether the investigation was at all capable of leading to the identification and punishment of those responsible. Therefore, in so far as t he Government ' s argument concerning the possibility for the applicant to appeal to a court against the actions o r omission of the investigators, under Article 125 of the Russian Code of Criminal Procedure, is concerned, the Court notes that the Government did not indicate which particular actions or omissions of the investigators the applicant should have challenged before a court. It further observes that the legal instrument referred to by the Government became operative on 1 July 2002 and that the applicant was clearly unable to have recourse to this remedy prior to that date. As regards the period thereafter, the Court considers that in a situation where the effectiveness of the investigation was undermined from a very early stage by the authorities ' failure to take the necessary investigative measures, where the investigation was repeatedly suspended and reopened, where the applicant had no full access to the case file and was only informed of the conduct of the investigation occasionally, it is highly doubtful that the remedy invoked by the Government would have had any prospect of success . Moreover, the Governmen t have not demonstrated that this remedy would have been capable of providing redress in the applicant ' s situation – in other words, that it would have rectified the shortcomings in the investigation and would have led to the identification and pun ishment of those responsible . The Court thus considers that in the circumstances of the case it has not been established with sufficient certainty that the remedy advanced by the Government would have been effective within the meaning of the Convention. It f inds that the applicant w as not obliged to pursue that remedy, and that the Government ' s preliminary objection should therefore be dismissed.

252 . In the light of the foregoing, the Court further concludes that the authorities failed in their obligation to carry out a thorough and effective investigation into the applicant ' s arguable allegations of ill-treatment while in detention. It accordingly holds that there has been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention on that account.

III . ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL NO. 1 TO THE CONVENTION

253 . The applicant complained that his property had been looted and destroyed by State agents while he was in detention. He relied on Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 , which provides as follows:

“Every natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of international law.

The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other contributions or penalties.”

A. Submissions by the parties

254 . The applicant argued, first of all, that the payment to him of RUB 3 5 0,000 (approximately EUR 9,000) in compensation for his lost property had not deprived him of his victim status as regards his complaint under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. He submitted in that connection that the said compensation had been of an extra - judicial nature and, in accordance with the relevant governmental decree, had been paid to all individuals permanently residing in the Chechen Republic who had lost their home and property during the hostilities in the region, without taking into account the circumstances in which that property had been lost , namely , whether State agents had been responsible, and its value. The applicant stated that, in so far as his property complaint was concerned, he sought to have the State ' s responsibility for the theft and destruction of his property established at the domestic level and in the proceedings before the Court.

255 . The applicant further submitted that the Government did not appear to have disputed his title to three vehicles which had been stolen from him and a house which had been ruined. As regards his other possessions, the applicant referred to a report listing his items of lost property and indicating its value which had been certified by the administration of the Oktyabrskiy District of Grozny (see paragraph 91 above) and stated that he had been unable to adduce any other documentary evidence in that respect, as all relevant documents had been burnt in the house. The applicant insisted that the Court should accept his relevant submissions, given that the Government had not provided the Court with any evidence that conflicted with his version of events. The applicant further contended that the fact that his property had been looted by State agents had been confirmed by a number of eyewitnesses – his neighbours – whose names he had communicated to the investigating authorities , and that this interference with his prop erty rights had not been justified under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.

256 . The Government stated that the authorities had established that the applicant ' s property had been stolen by unknown persons and indicated that an investigation was being carried out in that connection. They argued, with reference to the findings of the domestic investigation , that there was no evidence that the applicant ' s rights guar anteed by Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention had been violated by representatives of the State.

B. The Court ' s assessment

257 . The Court observes at the outset that the applicant received by way of extra-judicial compensation the amount of RUB 350,000 (approximately EUR 9,000) for his house and other property lost during the conflict in the Chechen Republic in 1999-2002. The question arises whether, in accordance with Article 34 of the Convention, the applicant can still claim to be a “victim” of the alleged violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. In this connection, t he Court reiterates that an applicant is deprived of his or her status as a victim if the national authorities have acknowledged, either expressly or in substance, and then afforded appropriate and sufficient redress for, a breach of the Convention (see, for example, Scordino v. Italy (no. 1) [GC], no. 36813/97, § § 178-93 , ECHR 2006 ‑ V ). In the present case, even assuming that the payment in question could be regarded as redress for the violation alleged, there is no evidence that the authorities at any point acknowledged that violation, given that , as pointed out by the applicant, under the relevant governmental decree the authorities paid identical amounts to all permanent resid ent s of the Chechen Republic who had lost their homes and property during the hostilities in the region, irrespective of whether State agents had been responsible for the destruction , and without taking into account its value . Moreover, no such acknowledgement was made in the criminal proceedings instituted in connection with the theft and destruction of the applicant ' s possessions (see paragraphs 97 and 100 above) or in the civil proceedings which the applicant brought in an attempt to challenge the amount of extra-judicial compensation ( see paragraph 116 above). The Court is therefore satisfied that the applicant retains his victim status, within the meaning of Article 34 of the Convention, in so far as his complaint under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 is concerned.

258 . The Court further observes that the applicant complained that during his detention his house had been burnt and that the contents of the house as well as his three vehicles had been stolen. The Government did not dispute the applicant ' s property title to any of the items of property indicated by the applicant, or that the property had been looted. They denied , however, that the damage in question had been caused by representatives of the State. The Court therefore has to establish whether the acts complained of are imputable to the State.

1. A lleged destruction and looting of the applicant ' s house and contents , outhouses and Subaru minivan

259 . In so far as the applicant ' s house and contents , outhouses, and Subaru minivan were concerned, the Court notes that on 23 August 2005 criminal proceedings in case no. 61857 were brought in connection with the destruction and theft of the aforementioned property duri n g the period of the applicant ' s detention in the IVS of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. The relevant decision stated that there was no objective evidence that the offences in question had been committed by officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD. It does not appear that any evidence to that end was obtained at any stage of the i nvestigation in case no. 61857.

260 . Moreover, in the civil proceedings concerning compensation for his lost property, the applicant submitted that his house and other possessions had been destroyed during a shelling rather than damaged or stolen by police officers (see paragraph 115 above). In this latter respect, the Court reiterates its findings made previously in similar cases that , in view of the general situation prevailing in the region at the material time, when violent confrontations took place between the federal armed forces and rebel fighters , particularly in late 1999 – early 2000, this two-sided violence ensuing from the acts of both parties to the conflict and resulting in destruction of the property of many residents of Chechnya, it cannot be said that the State may or should be presumed responsible for any damage inflicted during military attacks , or that the State ' s responsibility is engaged by the mere fact that the appl icant ' s property was destroyed (see Umarov v. Russia (dec.), no. 30788/02, 18 May 2006 , and Trapeznikova v. Russia , no. 21539/02, § § 108-110 , 11 December 2008 ) .

261 . In the light of the foregoing and having regard to the materials in its possession, the Court is unable to establish that the alleged interference with the applicant ' s rights in respect of the aforementioned prope rty is imputable to the State. Accordingly, there has been no violation of Article 1 of P rotocol No. 1 on that account.

2. Alleged theft of the applicant ' s Oldsmobile car and Subaru car

262 . As regards the applicant ' s Oldsmobile car and Subaru car, the Court notes that on 30 August 2001 and 23 August 2005 respectively criminal proceedings in cases nos. 15082 and 61856 were brought in connection with the theft of those two vehicles by “officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD” (see paragraphs 97 and 100 above ). Both cases were joined to case no. 12088 concerning ill-treatment of the applicant on the ground that all th e offences had been committed by the same officers (see paragraph 98 above).

263 . I t is clear from the documentary evidence before the Court that in the course of the investigation the said two vehicles were found in the possession of Mr Dhz., Mr A., Mr Sh., Mr Sul. and Mr V. – police officers of the Oktyabrskiy VOVD (see paragraph 167 above) . When questioned in that connection, officers Dhz., A., Sh. and V. made statements incriminating police officers of the Oktyabrski y VOVD seconded from the Khanty ‑ Mansiysk Region , and in particular Mr Ya. ( see paragraphs 192 - 198 above ). Furthermore, it appears that at least at some period during the investigation Mr Ya. ' s involvement in stealing the applicant ' s Oldsmobile car was regarded by the investigating authorities as an established fact (see paragraph 176 above).

264 . It is true that by a decision of 20 February 2009 the investigator the proceedings concerning the theft and destruction of the applicant ' s property, including his Oldsmobile car and Subaru car (see paragraph 102 above). The Court does not consider th at decision as conclusive , however, as it did not refer to any findings made during the investigation or explain in any detail the reasons for disjoining the cases, apart from stating briefly that the offences concerning the property were not related to those being investigated in case no. 12088.

265 . The Court further notes that from 30 August 2001 and 23 August 2005 respectively until 20 February 2009 the authorities investigated the theft of the applicant ' s Oldsmobile car and Subaru car in the context of the criminal proceedings in case no. 12088, which the Court has found above to be ineffective. It appears that, like their failure to carry out an adequate investigation into the applicant ' s allegations of ill-treatment, the authorities took no practical measures, such as, for example, organising confrontations between officers A., V., Sh., Sul., Dhz. – when the latter was alive – and Ya., with a view to investigat ing in any meaningful way the theft of the applicant ' s two vehicles. The materials in the Court ' s possession reveal that the only step taken by the authorities was to check the address at which Mr A., Mr V., Mr Sh. a nd Mr Sul. had allegedly lived when the applicant ' s cars had been stolen ( see paragraph 167 above ) .

266 . Against this background, the Court cannot accept the Government ' s argument that no evidence of State agents ' involvement in the theft of the applicant ' s two vehicles was obtained during the investigation. It finds that it has sufficient grounds to consider it established that the Oldsmobile car and Subaru car belonging to the applicant were taken from him by State agents, and that there has therefore been an interference with the applicant ' s rights under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 on that account.

267 . The Court further notes the absence of any justification on the part of the State for its agents ' actions in that regard. It accordingly finds that there has been a violation of the applicant ' s property right s under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 , in so far as the theft of his Oldsmobile car and Subaru car was concerned.

IV . ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 13 OF THE CONVENTION

268 . T he applic ant allege d that he had had no effective remedies in respect of his complaints under Article 3 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, contrary to Article 13 of the Convention, which provides as follows:

“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”

A. Submissions by the parties

269 . The applicant argue d that the only potentially effective remedy for his ill-treatment and property complaints would be a criminal investigation, which could in principle lead to the perpetrators being identified and brought to justice and therefore afford him the possibility of obtain ing compensation for pecuniary and non-pecuniary damage. The applicant insisted, however, that the investigation in his case fell foul of the Convention requirement of effectiveness.

270 . As regards civil - law remedies, the applicant pointed out that according to the Court ' s well-established case-law such remedies were clearly inadequate for his complaints under Article 3 of the Convention. In so far as his c omplaint under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 was concerned, the applicant stated that his situation was similar to that in the case of Ayubov v. Russia ( no. 7654/02, § 100 , 12 February 2009 ) and stated, more specifically , that in the absence of any meaningful findings of the investigation into his property complaints, a ny court claim in civil proceedings would have no prospects of success. In this latter respect he referred to the decision of 14 October 2002 by which the Oktyabrskiy District Court declined to examine the applicant ' s claim for recovery of his property from ad verse possession (see paragraph 104 above).

271 . The Government argued that the applicant had had effective domestic remedies at his disposal in respect of the alleged violations of his rights, and that the Russian authorities had not prevented him from using those remedies. In particular, the applicant had been granted victim status in criminal cases nos. 21088 and 61857 ope ned into his allegations of ill ‑ treatment and the theft and destruction of his property respectively and could have availed himself of his procedural rights which had been explained to him. Acc ording to the Government, the applicant had received reasoned replies to all his queries in the context of the criminal proceedings , and therefore had had effective domestic remedies as regards his complaints under Article 3 of the Convention .

272 . Moreover, in so far as the applicant ' s property complaint was concerned, the Government pointed out that the applicant had had at his disposal two avenues capable of providing redress for his lost property. Firstly, under a governmental decree establish ing a mechanism enabling individuals who had lost their houses, flats, personal belongings and other property as a result of the conflict in the Chechen Republic, the applicant had obtained RUB 300,000 (approximately EUR 7,700) for his house and RUB 50,000 (approximately EUR 1,300) for the other property , those being the maximum possible amounts under the decree . Secondly, having availed himself of his right to extra-judicial compensation, the applicant was also free to seek recovery of his alleged losses in civil proceedings if he considered that the amount of the extra-judicial compensation was lower tha n the pecuniary damage actually sustained. The Government pointed out that the applicant had used this opportunity and had had his claim examined in civil proceedings; the fact that he had been unsuccessful owing to his failure to substantiate his claim had not rendered that remedy ineffective. The Government thus insisted that the applicant had had effective domestic remedies for his complaint under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.

B. The Court ' s assessment

273 . The Court reiterates that Article 13 of the Convention guarantees the availability at national level of a remedy to enforce the substance of the Convention rights and freedoms in whatever form they m ay happen to be secured in the domestic legal order. The effect of Article 13 is thus to require the provision of a domestic remedy to deal with the substance of an “arguable complaint” under the Convention and to grant appropriate relief, although Contracting States are afforded some discretion as to the manner in which they comply with their Convention obligations under this provision. The scope of the obligation under Article 13 varies depending on the nature of the applicant ' s complaint under the Convention. Nevertheless, the remedy required by Article 13 must be “effective” in practice as well as in law, in particular in the sense that its exercise must not be unjustifiably hindered by acts or omissions by the authorities of the respondent State (see Aydin , cited above, § 103).

274 . Where an individual has an arguable claim that he has b een ill ‑ treated in breach of Article 3 of the Convention, the notion of an effective remedy entails, in addition to a thorough and effective investigation of the kind also required by Article 3, effective access for the complainant to the investigation procedure and the payment of compensation where appropriate (see Aksoy , cited above, §§ 95 and 98 , and Assenov and O thers , cited above, § 117).

275 . The Court reiterates its above findings that the applicant has an arguable claim that he was ill-treated at the hands of the authorities and that the domestic investigation into that matter was inadequate . Consequently, any other remedy available to the applicant , including a claim for damages, had limited chances of success. While the civil courts have the capacity to make an independent assessment of fact, in practice the weight attached to preliminary criminal i nquir ies is so important that even the most convincing evidence to the contrary furnished by a plaintiff would often be dis missed as “irrelevant” (see Menesheva v. Russia , no. 59261/00, § 73, 9 March 2006 , and Chitayev and Chitayev , cited above, § 202 ). The Court therefore finds that the applicant ha s been denied an effective domestic remedy in respect of the ill-treatment by the police. Accordingly , there has been a violation of Article 13 in con junction with Article 3 of the Convention.

276 . A s regards the applicant ' s complaint under Article 13 in conjunction with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 in so far as the theft of his two cars is concerned, the Court accepts his argument that the only potentially effective domestic remedy in the circumstances would be an adequate criminal investigation . In this respect it refers to its above finding regarding the ineffectiveness of the investigation into the applicant ' s allegations of ill ‑ treatment in case no. 12088. The Court finds that this is also true as regards the investigation into the theft of the Oldsmobile and Subaru cars, given that for several years all those offences were investigated within the s ame set of criminal proceedings .

277 . It further considers that, similarly to its above finding made in paragraph 275 above as regards the existence of effective domestic remedies in respect of the applicant ' s complaints of ill-treatment , in the absence of any meaningful results of the investigation into the theft , his civil claim for damages for his stolen vehicles would hardly have had any prospects of success given , in particular , that State officials denied their involvement in th e offence . With this in mind, the Court rejects the Government ' s argument that the applicant was afforded an opportunity to file a civil claim for compensation , as this latter right was illusory and devoid of substance . As regards the Government ' s argument that the applicant was paid extra ‑ judicial compe nsation for his lost property, the Court has noted above that the compensation in question was paid without regard to the particular circumstances in which the property had been lost. Moreover, the value of the lost property was not taken into account either, since the amount paid for any lost possessions other than housing could not exceed RUB 50,000 (approximately EUR 1,300) . In such circumstances, the Court is not persuaded that the compensation referred to by the Government can be regarded as an effective remedy for the violation alleged.

278 . The Court therefore rejects the Government ' s preliminary objection in its relevant part and finds that, in so far as the theft of the applicant ' s two cars is concerned, he did not have any effective domestic remedies in respect of the alleged violation of his rights secured by Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. Accordingly, there has been a violation of Article 13 on that account.

V. COMPLIANCE WITH ARTICLE 38 OF THE CONVENTION

279 . The applicant stated that the State ' s failure to submit the criminal investigation files was in violation of their obligation under A rticle 38 § 1 (a) of the Convention , which in its wording prior to 1 June 2010 in its relevant part read as follows:

“1. If the Court declares the application admissible, it shall

(a) pursue the examination of the case, together with the representatives of the parties, and if need be, undertake an investigation, for the effective conduct of which the States concerned shall furnish all necessary facilities;

...”

280 . The Government argued that under Article 161 of the Russian Code of Criminal Procedure , disclosure of the documents was contrary to the interests of the investigation and could entail a breach of the rights of the participants in the criminal proceedings. They also submitted that they had taken into account the possibility of requesting confidentiality under Rule 33 of the Rules of Court, but noted that the Court provided no guarantees that once in receipt of the investigation file, the applicant or his representatives, some of them not being Russian nationals and residing outside Russia ' s territory, would not disclose these materials to the public. According to the Government, in the absence of any sanctions against the applicant for the disclosure of confidential information and materials, there were no guarantees concerning compliance by him with the Convention and the Rules of Court.

281 . The Court reiterates that it is of the utmost importance for the effective operation of the system of individual petition instituted under Article 34 of the Convention that States should furnish all necessary facilities to make possible a proper and effective examination of applications (see Tanrıkulu v. Turkey [GC], no. 23763/94, § 70 , ECHR 1999 ‑ IV ). This obligation requires the Contracting States to furnish all necessary facilities to the Court, whether it is conducting a fact-finding investigation or performing its general duties as regards the examination of applications. F ailure on a Government ' s part to submit such information which is in their hands , without a satisfactory explanation , may not only give rise to the drawing of inferences as to the well-foundedness of the applicant ' s allegations, but may also reflect negatively on the level of compliance by a respondent State with its obligations und er Article 38 of the Convention (see TimurtaÅŸ v. Turkey , no. 3531/94, § 66, ECHR 2000 ‑ VI) . In a case where the application raises issues concerning the effectiveness of an investigation, the documents from the criminal investigation are fundamental to the establishment of the facts and their absence may prejudice the Court ' s proper examination of the complaint both at the admissibility stage and at the merits stage (see Tanrıkulu , cited above, § 70).

282 . The Court observes that , after the present application was declared partly admissible, it requested the Government , inter alia , to provide information on the progress after November 2005 in the investigation in case no. 12088 concerning the ill-treatment of the applicant and the theft of his Oldsmobile and Subaru vehicles, and to produce copies of all the documents from the investigation file pertaining to the period indicated . The evidence contained in those materials was regarded by the Court as crucial to the establishment of the facts in the present case. The Government only produced several documents ( see paragraph 121 above). Relying on Article 161 of the Russian Code of Criminal Procedure, the y refused to submit any other materials from the criminal investigation file.

283 . The Court further notes that the Government did not req uest the application of Rule 33 § 2 of the Rules of Court, which permits a restriction on the principle of the public character of the documents deposited with the Court for legitimate purposes, such as the protection of national security and the private life of the parties, and the interests of justice. The Court observes that the provisions of Article 161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, to which the Government refer red , do not preclude disclosure of the documents from the file of a n ongoing investigation, but rather set out the procedure for and limits to such disclosure. The Government failed to specify the nature of the documents and the grounds on which they could not be disclosed (see, for similar conclusions, Mikheyev v. Russia , no. 77617/01, § 104, 26 January 2006). The Court also notes that in a number of comparable cases that have been reviewed by the Court, the Government submitted documents from the investigation files without reference to Article 161 (see, for example, Khashiyev and Akayeva v. Russia , nos. 57942/00 and 57945/00, § 46, 24 February 2005 , or Magomadov and Magomadov v. Russia , no. 68004/01, § § 36 and 82 , 12 July 2007 ), or agreed to produce documents from the investigation files even though they had initially invoked Article 161 (see Khatsiyeva and Others v. Russia , no. 5108/02, § § 62-63 , 17 January 2008 ) . For these reasons, the Court considers the Government ' s explanations concerning disclosure of the case file insufficient to justify withholding the key information requested by the Court.

284 . Having regard to the importance of cooperation by the respondent G overnment in Convention proceedings and the difficulties associated with the establishment of the facts in cases such as the present one, the Court finds that the Russian Government fell short of their obligations under Article 38 of the Convention on account of their failure to submit copies of the documents requested in respect of the ill-treatment of the applicant and the theft of his two cars .

V I . APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION

285 . Article 41 of the Convention provides:

“If the Court finds that there has been a violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford just satisfaction to the injured party.”

A. Damage

286 . As regards pecuniary damage, t he applicant submitted that , as a result of the ill-treatment in police custody, his health , and in particular his hearing, had considerably deteriorated with the result that h e had incurred significant expenses in connection with medical treatment for the sustained injuries. According to the applicant, he would moreover need special medical care in the future, particularly with regard to his hearing problem. The applicant stated that he had not retain ed any documents indicating the amount of his medical expenses; he referred , however, to medical certificates attesting the state of his health and , in particular , to medical documents indicating that he had undergone ultrasound and X-ray examinations , and that he had applied for medical assistance in respect of the palm of his right hand . He therefore claimed EUR 7,000 as compensation for his past and future medical expenses. The applicant further sought RUB 11,393,408.82 ( approximately EUR 300,000 ) for the pecuniary losses he had suffered as a result of the theft and destruction of his property, stating that this amount comprise d the approximate value of his lost belongings . As for non-pecuniary damage, t he applicant sought EUR 1,000,000 for the traumatic experience he had suffered as a result of the ill-treatment by the police and the loss of his property .

287 . The Government disputed the applicant ' s claim for pecuniary damage as unsubstantiated and unsupported by any reliable documents. They further argued that his claim for non-pecuniary damage was excessive, stating that a finding of a violation would be adequate just satisfaction for the applicant.

288 . The Court reiterates that there must be a clear causal connection between the pecuniary damage claimed by the applicant and the violation of the Convention (see, among other authorities, Çakıcı v. Turkey [GC], no. 23657/94, § 127 , ECHR 1999 ‑ IV ). In this connection the Court notes first of all its above finding of a violation of Article 3 of the Convention on account of the torture which the applicant sustained in detention. It further has regard to the medical documents submitted by the applicant confirming the poor state of hi s health and attesting to the fact that he had recourse to medical assistance in connection with his injuries. The Court agrees that the applicant must have borne some costs of medical treatment, and finds that there is a clear causal connection between the medical treatment for the injuries sustained by him and the violation of Article 3 of the Convention found above. In the absence of any conclusive evidence as to the applicant ' s claims for the medical expenses and on the basis of the principles of equity, the Court considers it reasonable to award him EUR 5,000 in this respect (see, in a similar context, Makhauri v. Russia , no. 58701/00, § § 138-39 , 4 October 2007 ) .

289 . The Court also observes that it has found a violation of Article 1 of P rotocol No. 1 on account of the theft by police officers of the applicant ' s two vehicles – the Oldsmobile and the Subaru. The applicant is therefore justified in seeking compensation for this violation. The Court further notes that , in support of his claim , the applicant submitted documents from which it can be ascertained that both cars had been manufactured in the year 1989, and the report certified by the administration of the Oktyabrskiy District of Gr ozny (see paragraph 91 above ). In t h at report the applicant indicated that the value of the Oldsmobile vehicle was equal to USD 12,000 and the value of the Subaru car to USD 7,500. The Court considers these amounts to be excessive, given that at the time of the theft the cars were eleven years old and that the applicant produced no documents objectively confirming the value of the cars at the material time . Nor does it overlook the fact that the applicant received at domestic level RUB 50,000 (approximately EUR 1,300) as extra-judicial compensation for his lost belongings ( see paragraph 115 above ). Against this background, and judging on an equitable basis, the Court considers it reasonable to award the applicant EUR 4,000 in so far as this part of his claim in respect of pecuniary damage is concerned.

290 . Overall, the Court awards the applicant EUR 9,000 as compensation for pecuniary damage sustained as a result of the violations found, plus any tax that may be chargeable on this amount.

291 . As regards the applicant ' s claim in respect of non-pecuniary damage, the Court reiterates its above findings of a violation of Articles 3 and 13 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 on account of the torture by the authorities and the lack of an adequate investigation into the matter, the breach of his property rights as a result of the theft of his two vehicles, and the absence of effective remedies to secure domestic redress for those violations. It has also found a violation of Article 38 of the Convention on account of the Government ' s failure to submit the materials requested by the Court. The applicant must have suffered considerable anguish and distress from all these circumstances , particularly given that the torture at the hands of the authorities resulted in his mutilation and the complete loss of hearing in his left ear. In the light of the above considerations , the Court awards the applicant, on an equitable bas is, EUR 70 ,000 for non-pecuniary damage , plus any tax that may be chargeable on th is amount .

B. Costs and expenses

292 . The applicant was represented by lawyers from the SRJI. He submit ted a detailed invoice of costs and expenses that included research , interviews and obtaining documentary evidence in Ingushetia and Moscow , at a rate of EUR 50 per hour , the drafting of legal documents submitted to the domestic authorities , at a rate of EUR 50 per hour for the SRJI lawyers and EUR 150 per hour for the SRJI experts, and the drafting of legal documents submitted to the Court , at a rate of EUR 1 50 per hour . The aggregate claim in respect of the costs and expenses related to the applicant ' s legal representation amounted to EUR 9,226.54, compris ing EUR 8, 530.50 for 64 hours spent by the SRJI staff on preparing and representing the applicants ' case, EUR 98.90 for international co urier post to the Court and EUR 597.14 for administrative costs (7% of legal fees).

293 . The Government pointed out that the applicant was only entitled to reimbursement of costs and expenses that had actually been incurred and were reasonable.

294 . The Court reiterates that costs and expenses will not be awarded under Article 41 unless it is established that they were actually and necessarily incurred, and were also reasonable as to quantum (see Iatridis v. Greece (just satisfaction) [GC], no. 31107/96, § 54, ECHR 2000 - XI). The Court, having regard to the documents submitted by the applicant, is satisfied that his claim was substantiated. It further notes that the present case has been rather complex , has required a certain amount of research work and involved a large number of documents . Having regard to the amount of research and preparation claimed by the applicant ' s representative, the Court does not find this claim excessive.

295 . In these circumstances, the Court awards the applicant the overall amount of EUR 9,226.54, less EUR 850 already received by way of legal aid from the Council of Europe, together with any tax that may be chargeable to the applicant. The amount awarded in respect of costs and expenses shall be payable to the representative directly.

C. Default interest

296 . The Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to which should be added three percentage points.

FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY

1. Dismisses the Government ' s preliminary objection;

2 . Holds that there has been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention on account of the treatment suffered by the applicant ;

3 . Holds that there has been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention as regards the absence of an effective investigation into the applicant ' s allegations of ill-treatment ;

4 . Holds that there has been no violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 as regar ds the alleged destruction and looting of the applicant ' s house and contents , outhouses and Subaru minivan ;

5 . Holds that there has been a violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention as regards the theft of the applicant ' s Oldsmobile car and Subaru car ;

6 . Holds that there has been a violation of Article 13 of the Convention , in conjunction with Article 3 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention , in so far as the theft of the applicant ' s Oldsmobile car and Subaru car was concerned ;

7 . Holds that there has been a failure to comply with Article 38 of the Convention in that the Government refused to submit the documents requested by the Court ;

8 . Holds

(a) that the respondent State is to pay the applicant , within three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final in accordance with Article 44 § 2 of the Convention , the following amounts, all of which, save for those payable into the bank in the Netherlands, are to be converted into Russian roubles at the rate applicable at the date of settlement :

(i) EUR 9,000 ( nine thousand euros) , plus any tax that may be chargeable, in respect of pecuniary damage;

(ii) EUR 70,000 ( seventy thousand euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable , in respect of non-pecuniary damage;

(iii) EUR 8,375.54 ( eight thousand three hundred seventy-five euros and fifty-four cents ) , plus any tax that may be chargeable to the applicant , in respect of costs and expenses;

(b) that from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement simple interest shall be payable on the above amount s at a rate equal to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the default period plus three percentage points;

9 . Dismisses the remainder of the applicant ' s claim for just satisfaction.

Done in English, and notified in writing on 7 October 2010 , pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.

Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis Registrar President

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