Pre-trial detention: measure of restraint or punishment?
The law enforcement agencies of Belarus have drafted a
bill “On Making Addenda and Amendments to the Criminal Code, the Code of Criminal
Procedures, and the Penal Code of Belarus, as well as the Code of
Administrative Offences”, said Mrs. Natallia Andreyeva, head of the department
of procedural control over the investigation of crimes against property of the
Investigative Committee of Belarus, at a
briefing with a BelTA news agency reporter.
The importance and timeliness of the bill is beyond
dispute. It is however a
pity that the legislator seems to have ignored the humanity of the issue; when
passing the new Criminal and Criminal Procedure Codes some twelve years ago,
the Parliament then spawned thousands of “criminals”... But it is not to this
that I would like to draw attention.
The same news agency quoted the representative of the Investigative Committee: “We want to ensure that detention were an exceptional measure of punishment.”
I do not know who was wrong – head of the procedural control department or the
reporter when quoting her – but the sincerity of the slip of the tongue
deserves attention.
N.B. A Freudian slip, also
called parapraxis, is an error
in speech, memory, or physical action that is interpreted as occurring due
to the interference of some unconscious, subdued wish, conflict, or train of thought (Wikipedia).
Perhaps, any practitioner in the field of criminal law understands that in
today’s Belarus
detention is a measure of punishment amounting to torture. Or just torture.
The position on the case, as a rule, determines the use of preventive measures,
and the detention in the case of non-recognition of guilt is a usual
consequence of attempts to protect one’s rights.
The conditions of detention in the facilities of the Department of Corrections
(DC) and the Ministry of the Interior are now no secret. But the authorities do
not conceal them, considering the reference to a lack of funding and the
“natural” overcrowding in detention facilities a sufficient ground to justify
violations of the Constitution and law in Belarus, as well as the country’s
international obligations. The cells in detention center No. 1 in Minsk sometimes have to “accommodate” twice
the number of beds; the prisoners sleep, smoke, eat, and ease themselves in the
same room...
The authorities have their “secrets” – this is how a prisoner in custody is treated
by the facility’s personnel and security forces, investigators and “stool pigeons”. The content of the first
known sentence to a “stool pigeon” who tortured his cellmates, as it was
proven, at the direction of the investigator, is still a mystery. The
arbitrariness of security forces officers and personnel with respect to
prisoners of the KGB jail in December 2010 - March 2011 is not even being
investigated. Even the
victims prefer not to remember the security forces’ violent raids in the cells of
the DC’s facilities made with “education and training purpose”.
In accordance with the Code of Criminal Procedures, preventive measures can be
applied by a body conducting the criminal proceedings only when the evidence collected
in the criminal case constitutes a reasonable basis for believing that the
suspect or the accused may escape from the body of criminal prosecution and
trial; to hinder the preliminary investigation of the criminal case or its consideration by a court,
including through the exertion of illegal influence on parties involved in the
criminal process; conceal or falsify materials relevant to the case; fail to
appear without valid reasons upon summons by the body conducting criminal
proceedings; commit a socially dangerous act under the criminal
law; resist execution of the sentence. When deciding on the need for preventive measures against
the suspect or the accused it is the nature of the suspicion or allegations,
the identity of the suspect or the accused, their age and health status,
occupation, marital and property status, the presence of permanent residence
and other circumstances that must be taken into account. The custody as a
preventive measure only applies to a person suspected or accused of committing
a crime for which the law prescribes a penalty of imprisonment for a term
exceeding two years. The persons
suspected or accused of committing a grave or especially grave crime, the
measure of restraint in the form of imprisonment can be applied based on the
severity of the crime alone.
According to a general rule, during the preliminary investigation the measure of
restraint in the form of imprisonment can be applied by prosecutor or his
deputy, or the chairman of the Investigative Committee of the Republic of
Belarus, Chairman of the State Security Committee of the Republic of Belarus or
persons performing their duties, or a body of inquiry or an investigator with
the consent of the prosecutor or his deputy, and at the stage of the proceedings – by the
court.
In its Report on the monitoring of trials in Belarus (March - July 2011),the
OSCE’s Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights pointed out that
Belarus had violated the provisions of Article 9 (3) of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. “The ICCPR makes it clear
that the decision on detention should be taken by “a judge or other officer
authorized by law to exercise judicial power”.
The right to liberty is a fundamental human right and is dependent on
observance of the right to a fair trial, which is a guarantee against illegal
and arbitrary restrictions. It is highly important that the authority in charge of
taking a decision on detention, on the one hand, does not depend on the organs
of criminal prosecution or investigation, and on the other – on the executive
interference. The court must
take into account all the factual information about this particular defendant. Detention can under no
circumstances be regarded as a standard measure applied to a person suspected
of committing a criminal offense: it should be only resorted to the cases when
there is a real danger that the accused might abscond, destroy evidence or to
re-break the law.
The ODIHR recommended the Belarusian authorities to amend the Code of Criminal
Procedures in order to make the issuance of sanctions for arrest the
prerogative of the judges, not prosecutors; to amend the provisions of the CCP,
which would ensure that decisions on detention were based on reasonable
suspicion that it is this very person who committed the offense and on an
individual assessment of the possibility that the detainee may abscond, destroy
evidence, influence witnesses or repeatedly violate the law (it is necessary to a
decision on the detention of a person contained a specific explanation of the
reasons for such findings); to reverse the provisions of the Code of Criminal
Procedures, which permit detention based solely on the severity of the charges.
These amendments, of course, should apply to all persons subject to criminal
prosecution, not only to so called “economic defendants”, while work to improve
the law, including the criminal law and the law of criminal procedures, should
not look like patching holes on the urgent demand of the head of the executive power.
Pavel Sapelka