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Bataliny v. Russia

Doc ref: 10060/07 • ECHR ID: 002-10666

Document date: July 23, 2015

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Bataliny v. Russia

Doc ref: 10060/07 • ECHR ID: 002-10666

Document date: July 23, 2015

Cited paragraphs only

Information Note on the Court’s case-law 187

July 2015

Bataliny v. Russia - 10060/07

Judgment 23.7.2015 [Section I]

Article 3

Degrading treatment

Inhuman treatment

Involuntary psychiatric treatment including scientific research: violation

Facts – The first applicant was diagnosed with neurocirculatory dystonia and suffered from tachycardia and severe headaches. On 25 May 2005 he attempted suicide and was ta ken to a psychiatric hospital. His parents, the second and third applicants, were not allowed to take him home. The first applicant alleged that he had been beaten one night by nurses and patients. He further claimed that he was included in scientific rese arch entailing treatment with a new antipsychotic medication and was not allowed to have any contact with the outside world. He was discharged from hospital on 9 June 2005. Criminal proceedings regarding the alleged beatings were opened in November 2006 an d suspended on four occasions. The proceedings were still pending when the European Court delivered its judgment. From March 2007 onwards the investigation concerning the first applicant’s involuntary placement in the psychiatric hospital was discontinued and resumed on several occasions before the applicants were informed in 2012 that the proceedings had become time-barred. In April 2008 a forensic psychiatric examination concluded that the first applicant’s involuntary hospitalisation had been justified b ut not his subsequent stay in the hospital.

Law – Article 3 ( substantive aspect ): The first applicant complained that his forced psychiatric treatment in the absence of an established medical need and in the framework of scientific research amounted to tre atment prohibited by Article 3. According to the forensic medical examination 2008, while his initial involuntary hospitalisation had been justified in view of his attempted suicide, his mental state in the following period did not fall under the definitio n of a “severe” mental disorder or any other acute mental condition and did not require involuntary psychiatric treatment. Since no evidence proving otherwise was produced by the Government, the Court considered that the medical necessity for the first app licant’s involuntary psychiatric treatment had not been convincingly shown. Furthermore, the first applicant had been included in involuntary scientific research of a new drug and was denied all contact with the outside. All of the foregoing must have arou sed in him feelings of fear, anguish, and inferiority capable of humiliating and debasing him.

Conclusion : violation (unanimously).

The Court also found a violation of Article 5 § 1 on account of the first applicant’s involuntary confinement in the psychia tric hospital, Article 5 § 4 on account of his inability to challenge the lawfulness of his continued detention and Article 3 (under both the substantive and procedural aspects) for his alleged ill-treatment in the psychiatric hospital and the failure to c onduct an effective investigation into those allegations.

Article 41: EUR 26,000 to the first applicant in respect of non-pecuniary damage; claim in respect of pecuniary damage dismissed.

(See also Gorobet v. Moldova , 30951/10 , 11 October 2011; and the Factsheet on Detention and mental health )

© Council of Europe/European Court of Human Rights This summary by the Registry does not bind the Court.

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