France again condemned by European justice for unworthy conditions of detention

by time news

2023-07-06 12:53:29
Patients in the courtyard of the Fresnes prison hospital, November 25, 2020. (Photo by Christophe ARCHAMBAULT / AFP) CHRISTOPHE ARCHAMBAULT / AFP

Three years after a historic judgment pinning it for the overcrowding of its prisons, France was again condemned, Thursday, July 6, by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) for “the conditions of detention suffered” by three inmates of Fresnes prison. When they applied to the Court in 2018, the three applicants (two French and a Surinamese) were detained in this penitentiary center in the suburbs of Paris where “the overcrowding rate was 197%” as of January 1, 2019, according to a press release the court based in Strasbourg.

Imprisoned between 2016 and 2019, they were there at the same time as detainees who, with several others incarcerated in French prisons, had France condemned in January 2020 for prison overcrowding, recalls the European Court. In this previous judgment, very severe, the ECHR had then pointed to the existence of a “structural problem” and had recommended to the French authorities “to consider the adoption of general measures” to end overcrowding and improve prison conditions.

In this new decision issued on Thursday, “the Court sees no reason to reach a different conclusion” et “therefore considers that there has been a violation of Articles 3 and 13 of the European Convention on Human Rights” (prohibition of inhuman or degrading treatment and right to an effective remedy), in particular “because of the conditions of detention suffered by the applicants as a result of prison overcrowding”, writes the ECHR in its press release. In total, France will have to pay more than 46,000 euros to the three applicants.

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In addition, some applicants disputed the application of a full search regime when leaving the visiting rooms at Fresnes. But, on this point, the Court ruled against them, noting that the plaintiffs had not exhausted all the legal avenues of appeal before the French courts, one of the conditions necessary for referral to the ECHR. In particular, they had “the interim release procedure”provided for by French administrative law, and which “has effectively made it possible, in a certain number of cases, to remedy the violation of Article 3 of the Convention with regard to the practice of integral excavations”falls under European jurisdiction.

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