|
[Embargoed for: 23
November 2004] |
Public |
amnesty international
Lebanon
Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri: Torture and unfair trial
|
November 2004 |
Summary |
AI Index: MDE 18/003/2004 |
Political prisoners, Samir
Gea’gea and Jirjis al-Khouri are serving life sentences for their
alleged involvement in politically-motivated killings. They have been
held since 1994 at the Ministry of Defence Detention Centre (MDDC) in
solitary confinement mostly in cruel, inhuman and degrading
conditions, following unfair trials.
This report describes Amnesty International’s
concerns about the pre-trial detention, the cruel, inhuman and
degrading treatment and unfair trials of Samir Gea’gea’ (leader of the
banned Lebanese Forces (LF)) and Jirjis al-Khouri, a member of the
LF. In 1994 they were arrested along with scores of LF members after
the bombing of the Sayidat al-Najat (Lady of Deliverance)
church in Junieh, in February 1994, in which 10 people died.
Both men suffered serious violations and
irregularities in pre-trial detention at the MDDC, which, at the time
of their arrest, was an unlawful detention centre in violation of
Lebanese law and international standards governing detention. Jirjis
al-Khouri told the judge at his trial that he was tortured to
“confess” during his interrogation, by members of the military
intelligence. Both men were held incommunicado, without access to
lawyers or family members, during interrogation; they were not brought
promptly before a judge to review the lawfulness of their detention.
Their trials fell far short of international standards. In violation
of international standards for fair trial, Jirjis al-Khouri’s
“confession” was accepted as the main evidence against him. Amnesty
International believes that any statement made involuntarily or
extracted under torture or ill-treatment should be excluded as
evidence in judicial or other proceedings, except where it is evidence
against a person accused of perpetrating torture.
Amnesty International is concerned that Samir
Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri continue to be subjected to
ill-treatment in detention. Over ten years after their arrest, they
remain in solitary confinement at the MDDC. They are not allowed to
communicate with other detainees, are denied access to newspapers,
radio, TV and any literature of a political nature. They receive
visits from their families on specified days of the week which are
restricted and subject to prior approval by the Public Prosecutor, and
are conducted in the presence of military intelligence officers.
Cut off from the outside world the two political
prisoners have apparently suffered physically and mentally.
Samir Gea’gea’ suffers from, among other things, osteomalacia, a
disease of the bones possibly due to a lack of exposure to regular and
adequate sunlight. In September 2004 the authorities announced that
he had been moved to a new cell, apparently with improved conditions.
Amnesty International is calling on the Lebanese
authorities to release Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri
immediately, or promptly give them a
retrial before an ordinary independent criminal court, in proceedings
which adhere to international standards for fair trial; and to ensure
that all allegations of torture and ill-treatment be investigated
independently. The organization is also urging the authorities to:
ensure the justice system undergoes reformation, including the
abolition of the single-tier courts and the death penalty; implement
all relevant international treaties and standards; improve detention
conditions in the MDDC including by ensuring that they are brought in
line with international standards. In particular the authorities
should take immediate steps to ensure that detainees are well-treated
and not subjected to any form of torture and cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment.

This report
summarizes a
13 page document (6,214 words), Lebanon
Samir Gea’gea and Jirjis al-Khouri: Torture and unfair trial
(AI Index: MDE 18/003/2004) issued by Amnesty International in
November 2004. Anyone wishing for further
details or to take action on this issue should consult the full
document. An extensive range of our materials is available at http://www.amnesty.org
and Amnesty International news releases can be received by email:
http://www.amnesty.org/email/email_updates.html
INTERNATIONAL SECRETARIAT, 1 EASTON STREET,
LONDON WC1X 0DW, UNITED KINGDOM
[EMBARGOED FOR: 23 November 2004
] Public

amnesty international

Lebanon
Samir Gea'gea' and Jirjis al-Khouri: Torture and unfair trial
 |
 |
|
Samir Gea’gea after
arrest. © private |
Jirjis al-Khouri,
1992. © private |
Lebanon
Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri: Torture and unfair trial
Leader of the banned
Lebanese Forces (LF), Samir Gea’gea’, and Jirjis al-Khouri, a member
of the LF, have been held at the Ministry of Defence Detention Centre
(MDDC) in Beirut since 1994. Both are serving life sentences for their
alleged involvement in politically-motivated killings and are being
held in cruel, inhuman and degrading conditions, after unfair trials.
Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri are now the only political
prisoners held following their trials at the MDDC.
In this report, Amnesty International documents human rights
violations suffered by Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri during
their incommunicado pre-trial detention, their interrogation, their
trial before the Justice Council, and their imprisonment at the MDDC.
The main human rights concerns are:
-
Jirjis al-Khouri was
not allowed access to lawyers during interrogations while he was
held incommunicado in pre-trial detention, and was not brought
promptly before a judge to review the lawfulness of his detention;
-
While held
incommunicado in pre-trial detention Jirjis al-Khouri was made to
believe that he was a witness, and was not informed as required by
law of charges being brought against him;
-
While held
incommunicado in pre-trial detention Jirjis al-Khouri was reportedly
tortured and ill-treated, and the “confessions” he claimed he made
under torture were subsequently accepted as the main evidence in his
trial;
-
Samir Gea’gea’ and
Jirjis al-Khouri were unfairly tried
before the Justice Council, a special court whose decisions are
final and not subject to appeal and which so far has failed
to investigate allegations of torture and other abuses reportedly
committed during pre-trial detention;
·
Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri have been held for over ten years
in solitary confinement in cruel inhuman and degrading conditions, in
a manner detrimental to their physical and mental health.
Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis
al-Khouri, like scores of other LF members, may have been victims of
human rights violations committed in a climate of political repression
and intimidation. Amnesty International is concerned that there is no
apparent prospect of these two long term political prisoners being
retried by the Justice Council. The organization is, therefore,
calling for Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri to be released or
promptly retried, before an ordinary and
independent criminal court, in proceedings that conform with
international fair trial standards, and for the allegations of
torture and ill-treatment to be investigated. Over the last ten years
the Lebanese authorities have ignored calls by Amnesty International
and other human rights groups for the injustice visited upon the two
men, including unfair trial, lack of pre-trial guarantees and
allegations of torture in incommunicado detention, to be rectified.
On 27 February 1994, a bomb
exploded in Sayidat a-Najat (Lady of Deliverance) church in Zuq
Michael in Junieh, near Beirut, killing 10 people and injuring others.
In March and April 1994 scores of members and supporters of the
Lebanese Forces (LF), the main Christian militia during the Lebanese
civil war, including its leader Samir Gea’gea’, were rounded up and
detained for various periods in connection with the bombing.
Following these arrests, the authorities banned the LF alleging that
it was responsible for the church bombing, even though the
investigation into the incident had not reached a conclusion.
Consequently, there were additional restrictions on the freedom of
expression and association of LF affiliates and suspected supporters,
as well as other opposition groups. These measures led to serious
human rights violations, including arbitrary arrest, torture, and
unfair trials.
During the interrogation of LF members held in
connection with the church bombing, the examining magistrate announced
that he had discovered evidence indicating that the LF - led by Samir
Gea’gea’ - had perpetrated the assassination of the leader of the
Liberal National Party, Dany Cham’oun and members of his family in
October 1990. Subsequently, Samir Gea’gea’ and other LF officials
were indicted for the killings; some were indicted in absentia.
They were then referred to the Justice Council, the highest criminal
court in Lebanon, in connection with both the church bombing and the
killing of Dany Cham’oun and his family. Accordingly the Justice
Council proceeded with a concurrent trial for Samir Gea’gea’ and other
LF officials accused in both cases. In June 1995, the Justice Council
issued a verdict in relation to the Dany Cham’oun case, sentencing
Samir Gea’gea’ to death, immediately commuted to life imprisonment.
In the case of Samir Gea’gea’ and his involvement
in the political killing of Dany Cham’oun, his defence lawyers argued
that the crime took place during the civil war and was therefore
covered by the General Amnesty Law of 1991 (Law No. 84/91). However,
this argument was dismissed by the Justice Council which said the
killing, despite having taken place during that period, fell within
the category of crimes exempted from the Amnesty Law, and that the
Justice Council had jurisdiction to pursue it.
The General Amnesty Law granted an amnesty for
crimes committed before 28 March 1991. It was promulgated by the
Lebanese government on 26 August 1991 and applied to crimes committed
by all militias and armed groups throughout the civil war. The
Amnesty Law was intended to encourage the ‘turning of a new page’ in
the political history of Lebanon. However, it did allow for the
exclusion of certain crimes, the most important of which are found in
Article 3 of the Law, which says the amnesty does not cover "crimes of
assassination or attempted assassination of religious figures,
political leaders, and foreign or Arab diplomats".
The Lebanese public appears to be divided over the
Amnesty Law: while some argue, as does the government, that the Law
facilitates peace and reconciliation, others believe it provides
impunity for those responsible for human rights abuses in the past and
prevents the emergence of truth. Amnesty International has on several
occasions expressed its concern about the Lebanese Amnesty Law of
1991. In its report Lebanon: Human Rights Developments and
Violations (MDE 18/1997) Amnesty International stated:
“In general, Amnesty
International believes that there should be thorough investigations
into allegations of human rights violations. The object of such
investigations should be to determine individual and collective
responsibility and to provide a full account of truth to the victim,
their relatives and society. Investigations must be undertaken by
impartial institutions, and must be granted the necessary authority
and resources for their task. The results of such investigations
should be made public. Amnesty International believes that a new
future of true and lasting peace and human rights protection in
Lebanon is only possible if the country comes to terms with its past
through a process aimed at investigating and establishing the truth of
the war period and its related abuses.”
Apart from the general
concern that the amnesty gives impunity to those who have committed
human rights violations, the exemptions prescribed by the Amnesty Law
have in effect created an environment which allows for selectivity and
discrimination. The fact that certain crimes such as killings of
religious and political personalities are exempt from the Amnesty Law
has led to discrimination between victims of human rights violations
during the war on grounds of their status - that is, only those
violations committed against political and religious leaders are to be
pursued to the exclusion of others. Likewise, the Amnesty Law states
that those committing crimes covered by the amnesty, after the date of
its promulgation, will be liable for prosecution and will also be
liable for all the offences they committed during the war. This
approach seems to be unfair and hampers attempts to address multiple
human rights violations committed during the war, or to bring all
perpetrators of these violations to justice, in an equal and fair
manner.
The trials of Samir
Gea’gea’ and LF supporters are examples of the apparent selectiveness
of this approach. For example, while asserting its jurisdiction over
crimes such as assassination of political and religious leaders, the
Justice Council has not actively pursued such cases apart from those
allegedly committed by Samir Gea’gea’. This raises concerns about the
impartiality and fairness of the court in dealing with the politically
motivated assassinations during the war. This may be due to the fact
that the Justice Council can only act if and when such cases are
referred to it by the Council of Ministers, whose decisions in this
regard may have been politically motivated. Although the case of the
killing of Dany Cham’oun was originally referred to the Justice
Council on 30 October 1990, shortly after the killing took place, it
did not initiate and investigation or pursue Samir Gea’gea’ for this
crime until 1994 when he and scores of LF members were arrested in
connection with the church bombing and at a time when the LF’s
relations with the government had broken down.
It is not yet clear why the Justice Council has not initiated
proceedings in the cases referred to it by the government even after
the security and political situation gradually stabilised by 1992.
Samir Gea’gea’ was arrested
on 21 April 1994 along with scores of other LF members rounded up in
mass arrests in March and April, following the February 1994 bombing
of the Sayidat al-Najat (Lady of Deliverance) church in
Zuq-Mikhael in Junieh
which resulted in the death of 10 people and the
injury of others. Jirjis al-Khouri handed himself over to the
authorities on 15 March 1994, a week after military intelligence
officers stormed his family’s home and arrested the entire family,
including his ten year old sister.
However, after members of the
family were released, they were subjected to intimidation and
harassment between 1994 and 2002. During that period their home was
raided time and time again by members of the military intelligence and
other security departments, and their personal belongings, including
valuables and books were reportedly confiscated. On his arrest,
Jirjis al-Khouri was handcuffed and
blindfolded and taken to the MDDC where he was held incommunicado for
about six weeks.
Samir
Gea’gea’, a medical doctor by training, was born in ‘Ayn al-Rummanah
in Beirut in 1952. In 1986 he became leader of the LF, the main
Christian militia during the civil war. Jirjis al-Khouri, a computer
technician, was born in Tyre in south Lebanon in 1968. His exact
position within the LF at the time of his arrest is not clear, but he
was allegedly a member of the LF security department. He was
previously a member of the Phalange Party’s students’ bureau.
There were serious
violations and irregularities in Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri’s
pre-trial detention at the MDDC. The detainees were arrested
without warrant and were held incommunicado without access to lawyers
or families. They were not brought promptly before a judge to review
the lawfulness of their detention. Amnesty International is not aware
of any habeas corpus remedies made available to them during
their unlawful detention.
Both defendants were
denied access to their lawyers during their interrogations at the MDDC.
At a later stage lawyers were allowed to see them only for short
periods of time and at intervals which would not allow them to perform
their defence tasks properly. The defendants did not have unrestricted
access to their legal papers, and defence lawyers were not allowed to
communicate with them during trial proceedings. In the case of Jirjis
al-Khouri, these flaws led defence lawyers to argue that all
statements obtained during preliminary interrogations should be
declared null and void as most were not carried out by authorized
judicial officers, in contravention of the Code of Criminal
Procedures.
Following his
incommunicado detention and during the course of almost one year,
Jirjis al-Khouri was allowed to see his lawyer only three times,
briefly and in a very restricted manner. While held incommunicado he
was not informed of the charges brought against him and only knew of
them when the indictments were issued. During interrogation while held
incommunicado, he was made to believe that he was a witness rather
than a defendant, and was not informed as required by law of his
rights in pre-trial detention nor of the charges being brought against
him.
Jirjis al-Khouri told the
court he was tortured during incommunicado pre-trial detention, and
stated that “confessions” – which he retracted – were extracted as a
result. He said he was tortured by members of military intelligence
who used many techniques including: the ballanco (hanging by
the wrists which are tied behind the back); electric shocks; having
his toe nails crushed; having his hair pulled out; repeatedly being
deprived of food and sleep over a period of more than 40 days; being
forced to drink dirty water; and hearing threats to kill members of
his family. As a result of torture, he said he was unable to stand
for about one month, bled from parts of his body including his mouth,
suffered hallucinations and forgot his name. He said he was being
beaten in the presence of judges and the Public Prosecutor. He was
told that he had to choose one of two options: to confess that he had
himself bombed the church or that he had participated in the bombing.
He told the court that finally he signed papers presented to him
because he could no longer stand the effects of torture which were
compounded by pain from a back operation he had had in 1987.
Amnesty International has received many reports of
torture committed at the MDDC. Fawzi al-Rasi, who was among those held
in connection with the church bombing in 1994, died in custody
apparently as a result of torture there. He died after being admitted
to an intensive care unit on 22 April 1994. At the time of the arrest
and subsequent incommunicado detention of Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis
al-Khouri, the MDDC was an unlawful place of detention operating
contrary to Lebanese law and international standards. It continues to
operate outside the state’s ordinary prison system despite its
legalization as a place of detention in January 1995.
The MDDC is one of about
eight “private” detention centres in the country which were authorized
by the government during the first half of the 1990s through a decree
issued by the Council of Ministers. They are under the jurisdiction of
the Minister of Defence and are apparently run by the military
intelligence and other security services. A maximum security prison,
the MDDC has been used over the years as a transit detention centre
where detainees are held for weeks or months, before being
transferred, mainly to ordinary prisons. In certain cases political
detainees may be brought back to the MDDC where they may be abused
again. The MDDC continues to be out of bounds of the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and apparently of prison inspection
systems operated by the Ministry of Interior.
The reputation of the
MDDC was such that when a detainee was told in 2000 that he was being
transferred there he was overwhelmed with “fear and was praying to God
to be dead before [his] arrival so they could not touch [him]”.
Another former detainee and member of the LF held for years without
trial at the MDDC told Amnesty International in 2002:
“There was torture by
electric shocks and the Ballanco and extraction of ‘confessions’ under
duress. Cells were without windows or sun light. It was like a grave:
you are confined to one place for long periods and subjected to
ill-treatment, not allowed to have access to the toilet except one
time during day time (during the night detainees are provided with
containers to use instead) when the detainee will be blindfolded and
handcuffed. At times the eleven cells in the detention centre would be
full to the extent that people would be left handcuffed and
blindfolded in the corridors. As a result of long solitary confinement
underground detainees suffered physically and psychologically. They
were physically weak suffering from pain in their joints.”
Some of the torture
methods documented in recent years by Amnesty International from
testimonies given by former detainees at the MDDC include:
·
Incommunicado detention in underground cells of about three by two
metres without access to fresh air or natural light;
·
Being stripped naked;
·
Blindfolding, hand-cuffing and tying of hands behind the back;
·
Prolonged interrogation for hours, mostly during the night;
·
Beating on different parts of the body;
·
Crushing of toes;
·
Pulling out of hair;
·
Exposure to screams of other detainees being tortured;
·
Being threatened that female relatives would be attacked and raped;
·
Being forced to remain for prolonged periods in fixed positions;
·
Being subjected to electric shocks;
·
The ballanco (hanging by the wrists which are tied behind the
back);
·
Having one’s religious beliefs denigrated;
·
Being prevented from praying or having access to priests;
·
Prolonged suspension in contorted positions while being beaten with
sticks and cables on the feet;
·
Deprivation of sleep, food and drink for prolonged periods;
·
Denial of access to the toilet except once during the day, and being
forced to use containers during the night.
On 13 June 1994, 22
people including Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri, were charged in
connection with the church bombing but charges against most of them
were later dropped by the examining magistrate. The charges brought
against both defendants in accordance with the provisions of the Penal
Code and [Terrorism] Law 11/1/1958 included the offences of “carrying
out acts intended to change the Constitution by illegal means”,
“killings” and aiming to abolish the “legitimate role represented by
the army”. Eight of the 22, including Samir Gea=gea=
and Jirjis al-Khouri, were referred to trial (five of them
in absentia) before the Justice Council. In July 1996 the
court acquitted Samir Gea‘gea’ of the church bombing charge, but
sentenced him to ten years imprisonment for
Amaintaining a
militia in the guise of a political party,” and for “dealing with
military weapons and explosives@;
Jirjis al-Khouri was sentenced to life imprisonment with hard labour.
Between 1995 and 1999
Samir Gea’gea’ was handed down multiple death sentences commuted to
life imprisonment by the Justice Council for the October 1990 killing
of Dany Cham’oun and his family, the assassinations during the civil
war of former Prime Minister Rashid Karami in 1987, and the attempted
assassination of former Lebanese Minister Michel al-Murr in 1991. A
Criminal Court also sentenced him to life imprisonment for the
assassination of former LF cadre Elias al-Zayek in 1990.
The Justice Council is a special court to which cases
are referred at the discretion of the Council of Ministers,
on the advice of the Minster of Justice,
and not as a result of normal judicial procedures. The Justice Council
has jurisdiction over cases involving, among other things,
assassinations of, or assassination attempts on senior politicians,
diplomats and religious personalities and cases of political violence
and “terrorism”. There is no right of judicial review of the
sentences passed by the Justice Council, including death penalty
sentences. Amnesty International has expressed concerns about the
Justice Council’s procedures which are incompatible with fair trial
standards as laid down by Article 14 of the the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). The UN Human Rights Committee,
the body which moniters implemention by states of the ICCPR, has
pointed out that “decisions passed by the Justice Council are not
subject to appeal ... contrary to article 14, paragraph 5, of the
Covenant.”
Amnesty International is also concerned that defendants tried
before this court are routinely held in prolonged pre-trial detention,
sometimes for years.
Amnesty International considers trials before the
Justice Council to be in violation of international standards for fair
trial because its decisions are final and not subject to appeal. The
way cases referred to this court are chosen is selective, and the
manner in which they are prosecuted may be based on political
considerations rather than legal merit. Article 26 of the ICCPR states
“[a]ll persons are equal before the law and are entitled without
any discrimination to the equal protection of the law. In this
respect, the law shall prohibit any discrimination and guarantee to
all persons equal and effective protection against discrimination on
any ground such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or
other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other
status.” Principle 5 emphasizes the right to be tried before an
ordinary court: “[everyone] shall have
the right to be tried by ordinary courts or tribunals using
established legal procedures. Tribunals that do not use the duly
established procedures of the legal process shall not be created to
displace the jurisdiction belonging to the ordinary courts or judicial
tribunals.”
Most of the defendants
sentenced by this court over the last ten years were affiliated to
political groups opposed to the government. Their trials were
seriously prejudiced as a result of politically motivated smear
campaigns following their arrest. In the two cases discussed in this
report and subsequent cases brought before this court, Amnesty
International noticed a persistent violation of the right to
presumption of innocence.
One of the main flaws of
the Justice Council is that it does not have total jurisdiction over
the legal process of the cases brought before it, especially
jurisdiction over all pre-trial procedures.
This is contrary to Principle 3 of the UN
Basic Principles on the Independence of the Judiciary which states ''[t]he
judiciary shall have jurisdiction over all issues of a judicial nature
and shall have exclusive authority to decide whether an issue
submitted for its decision is within its competence as defined by law.''
As far as Amnesty
International is aware, the Justice Council has failed to investigate
numerous allegations made by defendants of torture and ill-treatment
during pre-trial detention. In the case of
Jirjis al-Khouri, the Justice Council has failed to investigate
serious allegations of torture and extraction of “confessions” under
torture and ill-treatment despite Jirjis al-Khouri’s accusation that
the then Public Prosecutor was present while he was being beaten
during interrogation in
incommunicado detention.
Over ten years after their
arrests, Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri remained held in solitary
confinement in individual underground cells at the MDDC. They are not
allowed to communicate with other detainees even when they are outside
their cells, and are denied access to newspapers, radio, TV and any
literature of a political nature. Both detainees, however, receive
visits from members of their families on specified days of the week.
The visits are restricted and are subject to prior approval by the
Public Prosecutor, and are conducted from behind glass barriers in the
presence of military intelligence officers.
Cut off from the outside world the two political
prisoners have apparently suffered physically and mentally.
Samir Gea’gea’ was examined by a team of medical doctors, who made
their findings public in a press conference held at the Medical
Syndicate in Beirut on 16 September 2004. The examination revealed
that Samir Gea’gea’ suffers from osteomalacia, a disease of the bones
uncommon among those who are in their early fifties as is the case
with Samir Gea’gea’, and which could lead to spontaneous fracturing of
the bones. Despite additional medical examination the cause of this
disease was unclear, leading the panel of doctors to believe that it
may be due to a lack of exposure over the years to regular and
adequate sunlight. The report also revealed that he suffers from
tachycardia or an irregular heart beat which may be the result of
“physically and mentally stressful conditions”. The panel stressed the
necessity of providing him with proper medical care in accordance with
international standards, and concluded that the general health of
Samir Gea’gea’ appears to be fine, but there are signs of ill-health
in view of the heart and bone conditions. In previous years he had
suffered from paralysis of one of his fingers and chronic pain in his
right shoulder. Ten days after the release of the medical report on
Samir Gea’gea’, the authorities announced that he had been moved to a
new cell with reportedly better conditions.
The precise health condition of Jirjis al-Khouri is
not known given that he has not been allowed access to independent
medical care, but he is reportedly suffering from pains in his spine,
neck, leg and stomach. He reportedly sleeps on a mattress on the
floor. According to information obtained by Amnesty International,
his family’s request to allow him access to an independent medical
examination has been refused by the authorities. He is allowed access
to his family every Tuesday and Thursday excluding public holidays,
but his family’s requests for him to be allowed access to priests,
medical care and homemade food have been denied.
Amnesty
International considers prolonged solitary confinement to be cruel and
damaging to the physical and mental health of a prisoner. This is
particularly so in the case of Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri who
have been held for over ten years in solitary and isolated cells in a
place which is not a prison institution, not subject to ordinary
prison rules, and not accessible to visits by the ICRC or other
inspectors. Article 7 of the UN Basic Principles for the Treatment of
Prisoners states: "Efforts addressed to the abolition of solitary
confinement as a punishment, or to the restriction of its use, should
be undertaken and encouraged." The Human Rights Committee has
stated that "prolonged solitary confinement... may amount to acts
prohibited by article 7” of the ICCPR which states that “no one
shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment.".
In these
two cases the safeguards that must be accorded to pre-trial detainees
have been absent, leading to allegations of torture and intimidation
to extract “confessions”. One of these safeguards is the right of the
detainee to be brought without delay before a judicial or other
competent authority. According to Article 9(3) of the ICCPR,
to which Lebanon has been a state party since 1976, "[a]nyone
arrested or detained on a criminal charge shall be brought promptly
before a judge or other officer authorized by law to exercise judicial
power and shall be entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to
release." Principle 37 of the UN Body of Principles for
the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or
Imprisonment states,
"A
person detained on a criminal charge shall be brought before a
judicial or other authority provided by law promptly after his arrest.
Such authority shall decide without delay upon the lawfulness and
necessity of detention. No person may be kept under detention pending
investigation or trial except upon the written order of such an
authority. A detained person shall, when brought before such an
authority, have the right to make a statement on the treatment
received by him while in custody."
The
Lebanese authorities are also obliged to investigate allegations of
torture. In the case of Jirjis al-Khouri the authorities refused to
conduct an independent investigation into claims of torture, and
considered a medical report they commissioned to be conclusive proof
that he had not been tortured. The Special Rapporteur on torture has
stated that "the absence of marks on the body that would be
consistent with allegation[s] of torture should not necessarily be
treated by prosecutors and judges as proof that such allegations are
false" and has called for "the judiciary to be made more aware
of other forms of torture, such as intimidation and other threats”.
The UN Commission on Human Rights has stated that "intimidation and
coercion, as described in article 1 of the Convention [against
Torture]…, including serious and credible threats, as well as death
threats, to the physical integrity of the victim or of a third person,
can amount to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or to torture".
Amnesty International is concerned that despite categorical retraction
by Jirjis al-Khouri of the statements he made while held incommunicado
at the MDDC, asserting that they were made under torture, the Justice
Council accepted them and considered them as the main evidence against
him and other defendants. This contravenes
Article 15 of the UN Convention against Torture which provides that
states parties must “ensure that any
statement which is established to have been made as a result of
torture shall not be invoked as evidence in any proceedings, except
against a person accused of torture as evidence that the statement was
made”.
The Special
Rapporteur on torture has stated "[n]o statement or confession made
by a person deprived of liberty, other than one made in [the] presence
of a judge or a lawyer, should have a probative value in court, except
as evidence against those who are accused of having obtained the
confession by unlawful means."
The Special Rapporteur on torture has recommended, "[p]rosecutors
and judges should not require conclusive proof of physical torture or
ill-treatment (much less final conviction of an accused perpetrator)
before deciding not to rely as against the detainee on confessions or
information alleged to have been obtained by such treatment; indeed,
the burden of proof should be on the State to demonstrate the absence
of coercion."
Article 15 of the Convention against Torture states, "[e]ach State
Party shall ensure that any statement which is established to have
been made as a result of torture shall not be invoked as evidence in
any proceedings, except against a person accused of torture as
evidence that the statement was made." The Committee
against Torture has recommended that "all evidence obtained
directly or indirectly by torture be strictly prevented from reaching
the cognizance of the deciding judges in all judicial proceedings".
At the MDDC
and other “private” prisons operated by the military intelligence and
other security forces, political detainees, arrested usually without
warrant, are routinely held incommunicado for months without the
knowledge of their relatives or lawyers. This practice, which has
continued for years now, apart from being in itself a human rights
violation, facilitates other human rights violations against detainees
including torture and ill-treatment leading to physical and mental
ill-health and even death in custody. These are violations of Lebanese
law as well as of international human rights standards and treaties to
which Lebanon is a state party, including the UN Convention against
Torture. Article 10 of the UN Declaration on Enforced Disappearance
states, "[a]ny person deprived of liberty shall be held in an
officially recognized place of detention".
The Human Rights Committee states that detainees should be held “in
places officially recognized as places of detention".
Furthermore, the Special Rapporteur on torture has stated, "the
maintenance of secret places of detention should be abolished under
law. It should be a punishable offence for any official to hold a
person in a secret and/or unofficial place of detention. Any evidence
obtained from a detainee in an unofficial place of detention and not
confirmed by the detainee during interrogation at official locations
should not be admitted as evidence in court."
Despite calls, including from members of
parliament, for the improvement of conditions in “private” detention
centres and for them to be brought in line with Lebanese prison
regulations and international standards, violations against detainees
at the MDDC continue to be widely reported and appear not to be
investigated. The lack of ICRC access to the MDDC runs counter to
Decree No. 8800 issued by President Emile Lahoud on 4 October 2002.
The Decree states “Delegates of the ICRC shall be allowed to visit
the prisoners they choose, to talk to them without restriction or
surveillance for the whole duration of the visit, and in a place that
they choose inside the prison. They shall be allowed to record the
identity of the prisoners they meet.” The Decree authorizes
medical delegates of the ICRC to meet all the prisoners they choose
and to interview them without surveillance. However, despite this
Decree the ICRC continues to be denied access to the MDDC, apparently
due to the refusal of the military intelligence to comply with the
Decree.
Amnesty International
considers the trial of Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri to be in
violation of international standards of fair trial, and their
conditions of detention to be cruel, inhuman and degrading. The
organization is equally concerned at reports of torture and
ill-treatment inflicted on Jirjis al-Khouri and scores of other
detainees who have been held at the MDDC. The organization regrets
that the Lebanese authorities have failed so far to address its
repeated calls for these two prisoners to be given a fair trial, and
for all allegations of torture and ill-treatment and extraction of
“confessions” under torture and ill-treatment at the MDDC during
incommunicado detention, to be investigated independently.
The organization believes that any
statement made involuntarily or extracted under torture or
ill-treatment should be excluded as evidence in judicial or other
proceedings
except where it is evidence against a person accused of perpetrating
torture. Amnesty
International calls on the Lebanese authorities to implement without
delay the following recommendations:
-
Samir Gea’gea’ and Jirjis al-Khouri should be released, or
promptly retried before
an ordinary and independent criminal court, that applies regular
provisions of the criminal law, in proceedings which must adhere to
international standards for fair trial, including the right of the
defendants to:
- have
adequate time and facilities for the preparation of their defence and
to communicate with counsel of their own choosing, in private and
without any hindrance;
- be
tried without undue delay;
-
examine, or have examined, the witnesses against them and to obtain
the attendance and examination of witnesses on their behalf under the
same conditions as witnesses against them;
- not
be compelled to testify against themselves or to “confess” guilt;
- have
any statements obtained through torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment made inadmissible in any proceedings before
the court;
-
appeal and review the court ruling before a higher court, which is
similarly independent of government;
·
Conduct an independent,
thorough, and impartial investigation into their trials and
allegations of torture and ill-treatment, and their prolonged solitary
confinement in cruel, inhuman and degrading conditions;
·
Reform the justice system,
including by abolishing the single-tier courts and the death penalty.
Ensure that all detainees are tried before a competent and impartial
court established by law without any interference of a political or
any other nature and with the judges having exclusive power to decide
on matters of a judicial nature;
·
Implement all relevant
international treaties and standards including the ICCPR, the UN
Convention against Torture, the UN Body of Principles for the
Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment,
and the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners;
·
Enforce Presidential Decree
No. 8800 and ensure that the ICRC is allowed immediate and unfettered
access to all Lebanese prisons including those run by the MDDC and all
other “private” detention centres. The MDDC and all other prisons must
be subject to independent inspection through bodies that are
independent of the authorities running the prisons;
·
Improve detention
conditions in the MDDC including by ensuring that they are brought in
line with international standards. The MDDC and all other “private”
prisons must be subject to normal prison regulations governing the
prison system in Lebanon and in line with recognized international
standards for the treatment of detainees;
·
In particular take
immediate steps to ensure that the detainees are well-treated and not
subjected to any form of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment. The authorities must stop holding detainees incommunicado,
confining detainees in dark cells or subjecting them to any other
unlawful treatment or punishment prejudicial to their mental and
physical health.
Among
the cases involving killings of political and religious
personalities, some of which were referred to the Justice Council,
were those of Presidents Bashir Gemayel and Rene Ma’awwad; Kamal
Jumblat the leader the Progressive Socialist Party; Mufti Hasan
Khaled; and journalist and publisher Salim al-Luzi.
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