37
24.1.2006
Press release issued by the Registrar
CHAMBER JUDGMENT ÜLKE v.
The European Court of Human Rights has today notified in writing its Chamber judgment[1] in the case of Ülke v. Turkey (application no. 39437/98).
The Court held unanimously that there had
been a violation of Article
3 of the European Convention on Human Rights
(prohibition of degrading treatment).
Under Article 41 of the Convention (just
satisfaction), the Court awarded the applicant 10,000 euros (EUR) for pecuniary
damage and EUR 1,000 for costs and expenses. (The judgment is available only in
French.)
1. Principal
facts
The applicant, Osman Murat Ülke, is a Turkish national who was born in 1970.
Until 1985 he lived in
The applicant was called up in August 1995,
but refused to do his military service on the ground that he had firm pacifist
convictions, and he burned his call-up papers in public at a press conference.
On
On
In total, the applicant served 701 days of
imprisonment as a result of the above convictions. He is wanted by the security
forces for execution of the remainder of his sentence and is at present in
hiding. He has dropped all forms of associative and political activity. He has
no official address and has broken off all contacts with the administrative
authorities. He has been sheltered by the family of his fiancée, with whom he
has been unable to contract a legal marriage. He has also been unable to
recognise the child born from their union as his son.
2. Procedure
and composition of the Court
The application was lodged with the
European Commission of Human Rights on
Judgment was given by a Chamber of seven
judges, composed as follows:
Jean-Paul
Costa (French), President,
András Baka (Hungarian),
Rıza Türmen (Turkish),
Karel Jungwiert (Czech),
Mindia Ugrekhelidze (Georgian),
Antonella Mularoni (San Marinese),
Elisabet Fura-Sandström (Swedish), judges,
and also Sally Dollé,
Section
Registrar.
3. Summary
of the judgment[2]
Complaints
The applicant complained that he had been prosecuted and convicted on account of his convictions as a pacifist and conscientious objector. He relied on Articles 3 (prohibition of inhuman or degrading treatment), 5 (right to liberty and security), 8 (right to respect for private and family life) and 9 (right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion) of the Convention.
Decision
of the Court
Article 3
The Court noted that, despite the large number of times the applicant had been prosecuted and convicted, the punishment had not exempted him from the obligation to do his military service. He had already been sentenced eight times to terms of imprisonment for refusing to wear uniform. On each occasion, on his release from prison after serving his sentence, he had been escorted back to his regiment, where, upon his refusal to perform military service or put on uniform, he was once again convicted and transferred to prison. Moreover, he had to live the rest of his life with the risk of being sent to prison if he persisted in refusing to perform compulsory military service.
The Court noted in that connection that there was no specific provision in Turkish law governing penalties for those who refused to wear uniform on conscientious or religious grounds. It seemed that the relevant applicable rules were provisions of the military penal code which made any refusal to obey the orders of a superior an offence. That legal framework was evidently not sufficient to provide an appropriate means of dealing with situations arising from the refusal to perform military service on account of one’s beliefs. Because of the unsuitable nature of the general legislation applied to his situation the applicant had run, and still ran, the risk of an interminable series of prosecutions and criminal convictions.
The numerous criminal prosecutions against the applicant, the cumulative effects of the criminal convictions which resulted from them and the constant alternation between prosecutions and terms of imprisonment, together with the possibility that he would be liable to prosecution for the rest of his life, had been disproportionate to the aim of ensuring that he did his military service. They were more calculated to repressing the applicant’s intellectual personality, inspiring in him feelings of fear, anguish and vulnerability capable of humiliating and debasing him and breaking his resistance and will. The clandestine life amounting almost to “civil death” which the applicant had been compelled to adopt was incompatible with the punishment regime of a democratic society.
Consequently, the Court considered that,
taken as a whole and regard being had to its gravity and repetitive nature, the
treatment inflicted on the applicant had caused him severe pain and suffering
which went beyond the normal element of humiliation inherent in any criminal
sentence or detention. In the aggregate, the acts concerned constituted
degrading treatment within the meaning of Article 3.
Articles 5, 8 and 9
The Court noted that the facts which the
applicant complained of were practically the same as those which underlay the
complaints examined in the previous parts of the judgment. It accordingly took
the view that it was not necessary to give a separate ruling on the complaints
under Articles 5, 8 and 9.
***
The Court’s judgments are accessible on its
Internet site (http://www.echr.coe.int).
F – 67075 Strasbourg Cedex
Press contacts: Roderick Liddell (telephone: +00 33 (0)3 88 41 24 92)
Emma Hellyer
(telephone: +00 33 (0)3 90 21 42 15)
Stéphanie Klein (telephone: +00 33 (0)3 88 41 21 54)
Beverley
Jacobs (telephone: +00 33 (0)3 90 21 54 21)
Fax: +00 33 (0)3 88 41 27 91
The European Court of Human Rights was set up in
[1] Under Article 43 of the European Convention on Human Rights, within three months from the date of a Chamber judgment, any party to the case may, in exceptional cases, request that the case be referred to the 17‑member Grand Chamber of the Court. In that event, a panel of five judges considers whether the case raises a serious question affecting the interpretation or application of the Convention or its protocols, or a serious issue of general importance, in which case the Grand Chamber will deliver a final judgment. If no such question or issue arises, the panel will reject the request, at which point the judgment becomes final. Otherwise Chamber judgments become final on the expiry of the three-month period or earlier if the parties declare that they do not intend to make a request to refer.
[2] This summary by the Registry does not bind the Court.