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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Equality and Human Rights Commission v Prime Minister & Ors [2011] EWHC 2401 (Admin) (03 October 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/2401.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 2401 (Admin), [2012] 1 WLR 1389, [2011] UKHRR 1287 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KEITH
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THE EQUALITY AND HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE PRIME MINISTER THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH AFFAIRS THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR DEFENCE THE ATTORNEY GENERAL And Between: ALAA' NASSIF JASSIM AL BAZZOUNI -v- THE PRIME MINISTER THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR DEFENCE THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH AFFAIRS THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT THE ATTORNEY GENERAL |
Defendants Interested Party Claimant Defendants |
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James Eadie QC, David Perry QC, James Strachan and Sam Wordsworth (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Defendants and Interested Party
Rabinder Singh QC and Iain Steele (instructed by Public Interest Lawyers) for the Claimant
David Perry QC, James Eadie QC, James Strachan and Sam Wordsworth (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 28-30th June 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Anthony May, President of the Queen's Bench Division:
This is the judgment of the Court.
Introduction
The Guidance
"This consolidated guidance sets out the principles, consistent with UK domestic law and international law obligations, which govern the interviewing of detainees overseas and the passing and receipt of intelligence relating to detainees. This guidance must be adhered to by officers of the UK's intelligence and security agencies, members of the UK's Armed Forces and employees of the Ministry of Defence ('personnel'). Personnel whose actions are consistent with this guidance have good reason to be confident that they will not risk personal liability in the future."
Mr Emmerson emphasises that the Guidance is directory; that it proclaims that it is consistent with United Kingdom domestic law and international law so that those who act in accordance with it will not risk personal liability. He submits that if it is not consistent with the relevant law, this advice will not be correct so that the Guidance should be changed.
"When we work with countries whose practice raises questions about their compliance with international legal obligations, we ensure that our co-operation accords with our own international and domestic obligations. We take great care to assess whether there is a risk that a detainee will be subjected to mistreatment and consider whether it is possible to mitigate any such risk. In circumstances where, despite efforts to mitigate the risk, a serious risk of torture at the hands of a third party remains, our presumption would be that we will not proceed. In the case of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, this will cover a wide spectrum of conduct and different considerations and legal principles may apply depending on the circumstances and facts of each case. Our aim is to develop and promote human rights in those countries, consistent with the lead the UK has taken in international efforts to eradicate torture."
"Before interviewing or seeking intelligence from detainees in the custody of a liaison service, or before soliciting an individual's detention by a liaison service, personnel must consider whether the detainee or individual may have been or may be subjected to unacceptable standards of detention or treatment. Personnel should consider attaching conditions to any information to be passed governing the use to which it may be put (where applicable) and/or to obtaining assurances from the relevant liaison service as to the standards that have been or will be applied in relation to that detainee or individual to minimise any perceived risk in this regard. Personnel should feel free to raise any concerns with senior responsible personnel nominated personally by the head of their Agency or Department ("senior personnel")."
"1. You must not proceed and Ministers will need to be informed.
2. You should raise concerns with liaison or detaining authority to try and prevent torture occurring unless in doing so you might make the situation worse."
The second section is "[in] circumstances where you judge there is a lower than serious risk of CIDT taking place and standards of arrest and detention are lawful." In these circumstances, the officer may proceed keeping the situation under review. Both the first and second sections also apply if the serious risk of the detainee being subjected to unacceptable standards applies to past treatment see paragraphs 17 and 20 of the Guidance.
"1. You must consult senior personnel. You must not proceed unless either:
(a) senior personnel and legal advisers conclude that there is no serious risk of torture or CIDT, or;
(b) you are able to effectively mitigate the risk of mistreatment to below the threshold of a serious risk through reliable caveats or assurances.
2. If neither of the two preceding approaches apply, Ministers must be consulted."
i) procedures for interviewing detainees overseas in the custody of a liaison service (paragraphs 16 to 22);ii) seeking intelligence from a detainee in the custody of a foreign liaison service (paragraphs 23 to 24). This concerns feeding questions to a foreign service;
iii) soliciting detention by a foreign liaison service (paragraphs 25 to 26).
iv) receiving unsolicited information obtained from a detainee in the custody of a foreign liaison service (paragraphs 26 to 28). Here the source of the information will usually not be disclosed, but if unsolicited information is received which is known or believed to be from a detainee believed to have been subjected to unacceptable standards, senior personnel must be informed, who must notify Ministers if the senior personnel believe the concerns to be valid. Action may be required to avoid the liaison service believing that continued receipt of information is an encouragement of the methods used to achieve it (paragraph 28);
v) procedures for interviewing detainees held in UK custody.
Points of relevance in these paragraphs include that the expression "serious risk" is repeatedly used (e.g. paragraphs 17, 20, 21, 24, 26); there is reference to attaching conditions or obtaining assurances as to treatment, so that, if the assurances are believed to be reliable, the proposed interview may take place (paragraphs 16, 17, 21, 23, 25); and that personnel must withdraw if they become aware of a serious risk of unacceptable standards or if the detainee makes specific complaints considered to be credible (paragraph 20).
"Individuals may be detained and questioned by UK forces overseas in accordance with the rules of engagement for the specific operation. Interviewing of detainees for intelligence purposes may only be undertaken by authorised personnel. All detainees held by UK Armed Forces must be treated humanely at all times, in accordance with international law and any UK law that may be applicable. Guidance on the handling of detainees is published by MOD in Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10. All UK facilities for the holding of detainees are subject to inspection by Provost Marshal Army, and by the International Committee of the Red Cross."
Since detainees held overseas in UK custody cannot be detained by the Agencies, this paragraph applies in the first instance to the UK Armed Forces, so that reference to the Joint Doctrine Publication is understandable. We say in parenthesis that, contrary to Mr Singh's submission on behalf of Mr Al Bazzouni, we do not read this paragraph as directing Armed Forces personnel to the Annex see below.
"Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CIDT) is a term which is used in some international treaties but is not defined in UK law. In the context of this guidance, the UK Government considers that the following practices, which is not an exhaustive list, could constitute cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment:
(i) use of stress positions;
(ii) sleep deprivation;
(iii) methods of obscuring vision or hooding (except where these do not pose a risk to the detainee's physical or mental health and is necessary for security reasons during arrest or transit);
(iv) physical abuse or punishment of any sort;
(v) withdrawal of food, water or medical help;
(vi) degrading treatment (sexual embarrassment, religious taunting etc); and
(vii) deliberate use of 'white' or other noise."
Mr Al Bazzouni's case is that the exception (in brackets) in (iii) is unlawful in so far as it embraces hooding. In short, his case is that hooding should without exception be forbidden.
"The decision can be more complicated in relation to other forms of mistreatment. The reality is that the term cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment covers a spectrum of conduct. At the lower end some have argued that this can include certain conditions of detention that are commonplace in many of the countries with which we must work if we are to effectively protect British lives. While the UK is at the forefront of efforts to try to tackle unacceptable treatment of detainees we recognise, for example, that it is unrealistic to expect that prisons in these countries will be built to the standards we expect in this country."
"We will consider a number of factors, including but not limited to: the credible and mitigating steps that can be taken, if necessary through our personal involvement, to reduce the risk of mistreatment; the range of UK action proposed and whether it would increase or decrease the likelihood of mistreatment taking place; whether there is an overwhelming imperative for the UK to take action of some sort, e.g. to save life; and, above all, whether there is a legal basis for taking action. These are extremely difficult decisions and it is right that Ministers ought to bear responsibility for them."
The Joint Doctrine Publication
"Restriction of Vision. In order to maintain operational security, it might in some cases be necessary to obscure the vision of captured or detained persons (e.g. when transiting through or past militarily sensitive sites or activity). Ordinarily, this can be easily achieved by travelling in enclosed vehicles, or vehicles with opaque glass. Where this is not practicable, a captured or detained person may be required to wear blacked out goggles specifically issued for that purpose, but only for the time and extent necessary to preserve operational security. The practice of hooding any captured or detained person is prohibited."
The Commission's case
"A public official or person acting in an official capacity, whatever his nationality, commits the offence of torture if in the United Kingdom or elsewhere he intentionally inflicts severe pain or suffering on another in the performance or purported performance of his official duties."
This in the context under discussion would be the offence of the principal, that is a person acting in an official capacity in a liaison state. Subsection (2) refers to third party actors and is not directly relevant. Subsection (4) provides that it is a defence to prove that there was lawful authority, justification or excuse, whose meaning includes in relation to pain and suffering inflicted outside the United Kingdom, lawful authority, justification or excuse under the law of the place where it was inflicted, not being the law of the United Kingdom. Although this might raise the theoretical possibility of an individual officer defending a personal criminal charge of torture as a secondary party by seeking to establish that the principal's torture was lawful under the law of the place where it was committed we express no view as to the academic viability of such a defence it could scarcely alone support a general instruction to individual UK officers which was otherwise wrong in law.
"Rook is, in our view, authority for the proposition that it is not necessary to show that the secondary party intended the commission of the principal offence and that it is sufficient if the secondary party at the time of his actions relied on as lending assistance or encouragement contemplates the commission of the offence, that is knows that it will be committed or realises that it is a real possibility that it will be committed." (emphasis added)
"We are of the view that, outside the Powell and English situation (violence beyond the level anticipated in the course of a joint criminal enterprise), where a defendant, D, is charged as the secondary party to an offence committed by P in reliance on acts which have assisted steps taken by P in the preliminary stages of a crime later committed by P in the absence of D, it is necessary for the Crown to prove intentional assistance by D in the sense of an intention to assist (and not to hinder or obstruct) P in acts which D knows are steps taken by P towards the commission of the offence. Without such intention the mens rea will be absent sufficient for D to be liable on the basis of 'common purpose' or 'joint enterprise'. Thus, the prosecution must prove:
(a) an act done by D which in fact assisted the later commission of the offence,
(b) that D did the act deliberately realising that it was capable of assisting the offence,
(c) that D at the time of doing the act contemplated the commission of the offence by A, i.e. he foresaw it as a 'real or substantial risk' or 'real possibility' and,
(d) that D when doing the act intended to assist A in what he was doing."
The Government's case
"Two matters have become clear in the subsequent development of the case law. First, this positive obligation arises only when the risk is "real and immediate". The wording of this test has been the subject of some critical discussion, but its meaning has been aptly summarised in Northern Ireland by Weatherup J in In re W's Application [2004] NIQB 67, at [17], where he said that "a real risk is one that is objectively verified and an immediate risk is one that is present and continuing". It is in my opinion clear that the criterion is and should be one that is not readily satisfied: in other words, the threshold is high."
In Van Colle v Chief Constable of Hertfordshire Police [2009] 1 AC 225, where the issue was whether there had been a violation of Article 2 by reason of an alleged police failure of protection, Lord Bingham (paragraph 30) and Lord Hope (paragraph 66) in effect said that Officer L had not qualified or glossed the real and immediate test in Osman v UK (1998) 29 EHRR 245.
"In Bryce the Court of Appeal said that it suffices if D "contemplates" the commission of the principal offence in the sense of realising that "it is a real possibility that it will be committed". This was stated as a general proposition applying to both non-joint criminal ventures and joint criminal ventures. However, the Court of Appeal relied on Rook which was a case of joint criminal venture. Further, the judgment of the Court wrongly cites Bainbridge as authority for the proposition that D aids P to commit an offence if D provides P with assistance realising that "there is a real possibility" that it will be used to commit an offence of a particular type."
"Complicity liability is notoriously difficult, both doctrinally and conceptually, in part because its underlying principles are themselves in tension."
Discussion
International Law
"For the purposes of this Convention, the term "torture" means any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity. It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions."
Decision
Mr Al Bazzouni's case
" (except where these do not pose a risk to the detainee's physical or mental health and is necessary for security reasons during arrest or transit)"
Discussion