In the ‘The
Torture Files’, the Investigations Unit of the Irish national broadcasting
service (RTE) argues that new evidence, which was unearthed in the British
National Archives, could justify a re-visiting of the European Court of Human
Rights judgment in the Ireland v United
Kingdom case. The programme, broadcast on 4 June 2014, can be viewed here. Rita O’Reilly of
the RTE Investigations Unit discusses their revelations in the Irish Times here.
Subsequent
to the broadcast, Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams called on the Irish Government
to request the ECHR to re-open the case. Amnesty International’s Northern
Ireland Programme Director Patrick Corrigan has described the evidence that the
British Government misled the European Commission and Court of Human Rights
during the proceedings as ‘deeply
worrying’.
‘The Torture Files’
traces the experiences of the 14 ‘Hooden Men’ who were subjected to what became
known as the ‘Five
Techniques’. As ‘The Torture Files’ recounts, the ‘Five Techniques’
involved five sensory deprivation methods applied in combination over several
days. These are hooding,
sleep deprivation, a severe wall-standing position, continual noise generator
and bread/water diet. In August and October 1971, these ‘Five Techniques’ were
used during the ‘interrogation in depth’ of 14 men. These interrogations arose
out of the 1971 Operation
Demetrius, an operation mounted by the British Army and the RUC on the 9
August 1971 that detained 342 men and signalled the introduction of internment
or detention without trial.
‘The Torture
Files’ shows that the British Government was aware that the ‘five techniques’
produced severe long-term psychological effects. The Irish Government’s expert
witnesses before the European Commission of Human Rights, psychiatrists Professor Robert Daly and
Professor Baastians, argued that the effects of the techniques would be
long-term mental and physical illness. In opposition, the British Government’s
expert witness, Dr Leigh, argued that the ‘acute psychiatric symptoms
developed during interrogation were minor and their persistence was the result
of everyday life in Northern Ireland’. Yet, among other revelations, ‘The
Torture Files’ divulge the contents of Dr Leigh’s Report where he later in 1975
assessed one of the 14 men and drew a completely opposite conclusion
–considering that the ‘other psychiatric symptoms’ was probably the result of interrogation in
depth.
The Irish
Government argued in the European Commission on Human Rights hearings that ‘the
British Government failed on several occasions in their duty to furnish the
necessary facilities for the effective conduct of the investigation’. However,
the European Commission did not draw this conclusion but as the Court’s
judgment recalls, it did note that the assistance afforded was not always at a desirable standard.
Another
significant revelation in the ‘The Torture Files’ is the letter from Merlyn
Rees (Home Secretary) to British Prime Minister Jim Callaghan in March 1977.
Here, Rees stated that his view (confirmed by former Stormont Prime Minister
Brian Faulkner) was that the decision to ‘use torture in Northern Ireland’ was ‘taken by Ministers in
particular Lord Carrington, then Secretary of State for Defence’ and
therefore, prosecutions of members of the security forces should not take
place. The Ministry for Defence concurred.
Yet, in the
UK Counter-Memorial, the British Government argued that they ‘do not admit any
of the particular allegations of ill-treatment made by the applicant
Government, or that any particular act alleged is attributable to or the
responsibility of the UK Government’. ‘So far as concerns the five
techniques….the UK Government deny that the techniques, as applied in Northern
Ireland, constituted ill-treatment contrary to Article 3 or that the use of
these techniques constituted an administrative practice contrary to article
3…..the UK Government accordingly maintain that the allegation of an
administrative practice is ill-founded’ (ECHR
Report, p260). Further, ‘it would
be….neither be fair nor reasonable to regard condonation by sub-ordinate
officers of acts forbidden by higher authorities as an administrative practice
for which the Government is responsible and there was no evidence of such
toleration’ (ECHR
Report, p264). Here, the UK was arguing that the official tolerance element
of an administrative practice must involve ‘a superior of such rank as to be
entitled to speak for the Government’ or of rank that an inference of authority
can be drawn. But the European Commission of Human Rights reiterated that
official tolerance involved either the direct superiors of those immediately
responsible for the acts or that of a higher authority. This allowed the Irish
Government to successfully demonstrate an official tolerance despite the lack
of evidence at the time of a political decision. Therefore, Merlyn Rees’
understanding would mean that the acts of lower level officers had not been prohibited
by higher authorities but had been political sanctioned, despite consistently
denying an official tolerance before the European Commission of Human Rights.
In light of
these revelations, it has been argued that there are grounds to re-open the
case and revisit the Court’s decision on article 3 where it found that the five
techniques constituted a practice of inhuman and degrading treatment in breach
of article 3 but did not amount
to torture (the latter being the finding of the European
Commission). The argument that the case can be re-opened hinges on previous
situations where the European Court of Human Rights has reversed its earlier
decisions. In Al-Khawaja and Tahery v United Kingdom,
the UK Government requested the ECHR to revisit its judgment and in turn, the
ECHR overturned its original finding that the UK violated article 6 in relation
to admissibility of hearsay evidence. However, this procedure falls under article 43 of the
ECHR, which permits any party to request, in exceptional cases, the case to
the referred to the Grand Chamber within 3 months of the Chamber judgment.
Rather ‘The Torture Files’ claim would fall under Rule 80 of the Rules of the
Court. Under Rule
80(1), ‘a party may, in the event of the discovery of a fact which might by its nature have a decisive influence and
which, when a judgment was delivered, was unknown
to the Court and could not reasonably have been known to that party,
request the Court, within the period of six months after that party acquired
the knowledge of the fact, to revise the judgment’.
The Irish
Times reports that the Irish Attorney General Maire Whelan has refused to seek
the case to
be re-opened after representations from lawyers acting for the ‘Hooded
Men’. However, Rita
O’Reilly reports that the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs has sought
access to the RTE Investigation Unit’s research. Whether the Irish Government’s
position will remain unchanged, time can only tell. The sequence of events in
1971 that led to Irish Government’s application to the European Commission on Human
Rights began with a suggestion by Sean MacBride to make such an application,
which was reported in the Irish media in August 1971 and which gathered
considerable momentum over
the following months.
This blog
post was contributed by Dr Aisling O’Sullivan, lecturer in law at Sussex Law
School. Dr O’Sullivan was project researcher with Professor Schabas, who was
the Principal Investigator, on a project funded by the Irish Research Council
for the Humanities and Social Sciences ‘Ireland’s
Participation in International Human Rights Law and Institutions’. The
research including an investigation of Irish and British National Archives
files on the Ireland v UK case. The research,
which was undertaken at the Irish Centre for Human Rights, was used by RTE in
preparation of ‘The Torture Files’.
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