Convention Abbreviation:
CAT
COMMITTEE AGAINST TORTURE
Twenty-third session
8-19 November 1999
CONSIDERATION
OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES UNDER ARTICLE 19 OF THE CONVENTION
Conclusions
and recommendations of the Committee against Torture
Uzbekistan
76. The Committee considered the initial report of Uzbekistan (CAT/C/32/Add.3)
at its 405th, 408th and 409th meetings on 17, 18 and 19 November 1999
(CAT/C/SR.405, 408 and 409), and adopted the following conclusions and
recommendations.
1. Introduction
77. The Committee notes with satisfaction the excellent quality of the
State party's initial report, which is in conformity with the guidelines,
together with its frankness and exhaustiveness, while observing that
it was submitted three years late. The Committee also notes with satisfaction
the oral introduction of the report made by the head of the delegation.
It especially welcomes the readiness of the delegation to enter into
a dialogue with the Committee.
2. Positive aspects
78. The Committee has identified several positive aspects, in particular:
(a) The fact that under Uzbek law torture is a separate offence that
carries severe penalties;
(b) The popularization and training measures in the field of human rights
aimed at law-enforcement personnel;
(c) The adoption of a legal provision (article 15 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure) and a Supreme Court plenary court decision making evidence
obtained by torture inadmissible;
(d) The large number of investigations carried out following allegations
of torture or ill treatment inflicted on citizens by law-enforcement
personnel, which proves the existence of an effective system for handling
complaints;
(e) The many important projects for the reform of the principal codes
and the judicial system announced by the delegation.
3. Factors and difficulties impeding the application of the provisions
of the Convention
79. The Committee is aware of the difficulties inherent in any process
of transition from a totalitarian regime to the rule of law.
4. Subjects of concern
80. Nevertheless, the Committee notes the following subjects of concern:
(a) The incompleteness of the definition of torture, which leaves unpunished
certain aspects of torture as defined in article 1 of the Convention,
and, in particular, the impossibility of prosecuting, under existing
Uzbek law, an individual guilty of torture at the instigation of a law-enforcement
officer and, moreover, the failure to make an attempt to commit torture
an offence;
(b) The particularly large number of complaints of torture or maltreatment
and the small number of subsequent convictions;
(c) The establishment of a regime of criminal liability applicable to
law-enforcement officials (policemen, procurators, judges, etc.) who
wrongly prosecute or convict, which could tend to undermine the judiciary
or weaken the will to prosecute and punish;
(d) The failure actually to apply the Supreme Court's plenary court
decision excluding evidence obtained by torture. In this context, the
Committee notes that, in practice, criminal prosecutions in Uzbekistan
do not seem to respect the principle of the presumption of innocence
and have an inquisitorial character incompatible with article 11 of
the Convention;
(e) The lack of a formal prohibition of the expulsion, return or extradition
of a person to another State where he runs the risk of being subjected
to torture, in accordance with article 3 of the Convention.
5. Recommendations
81. The Committee recommends that the State party:
(a) Adopt a definition of torture strictly in conformity with article
1 of the Convention, by applying article 4;
(b) Review the system for handling complaints of torture or ill treatment,
so as to minimize the risk of offences going unpunished;
(c) Revise the judiciary regulations to bring them into conformity with
the relevant international legal instruments, in particular (i) the
Basic Principles on the Independence of the Judiciary, adopted in 1985,
and (ii) the Guidelines on the Role of Prosecutors, adopted in 1990;
(d) Ensure, in practice, absolute respect for the principle of the inadmissibility
of evidence obtained by torture;
(e) Formally prohibit the expulsion, return or extradition of persons
to a State where they would be in danger of being subjected to torture;
(f) Make the declarations under Articles 21 and 22 of the Convention;
(g) Report to the Committee, in the next report, to be submitted in
October 2000, on the missing or incomplete replies to the questions
concerning, in particular, the number of persons detained and the number
of persons executed after being sentenced to death during the past two
years.