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Relatórios Apresentados
por Portugal aos Órgãos de Controlo da Aplicação
dos Tratados das Nações Unidas em Matéria de
Direitos Humanos
Summary record of the first
part of the 417th meeting : Portugal. 10/05/2000. CAT/C/SR.417.
(Summary Record)
COMMITTEE AGAINST TORTURE, Twenty-fourth
session
SUMMARY RECORD OF THE FIRST PART (PUBLIC)*
OF THE 417th MEETING, Held at the Palais des Nations, Geneva,
on Thursday, 4 May 2000, at 3 p.m.
Chairman: Mr. BURNS
CONTENTS
CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES UNDER ARTICLE
19 OF THE CONVENTION (continued)
Third periodic report of Portugal (continued)
The meeting was called to order at 3.05 p.m.
CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES
PARTIES UNDER ARTICLE 19 OF THE CONVENTION (agenda item 7) (continued)
Third periodic report of Portugal (continued
) (CAT/C/44/Add.7)
At the invitation of the Chairman, the delegation
of Portugal (Mr. Pais, Ms. De Albuquerque, Mr. Ferreira, Ms. de
Matos, Mr. Dias and Ms. Carvalho) took places at the Committee table
The CHAIRMAN invited the Portuguese delegation
to present its replies to the questions raised by the Committee
at a previous meeting.
Mr. PAIS (Portugal) thanked the Committee for its positive appraisal
of his delegation's report and initial statement. The number and
type of questions the Committee had raised reflected well on the
thoroughness of its work as a treaty monitoring body.
Turning first to the Chairman's comments and
questions on deficiencies in police culture and the relationship
between the police and the public, he said that, while the former
could not be changed overnight, the Portuguese authorities were
making far-reaching efforts to modernize the Organization Acts that
regulated the country's police forces: the Judicial Police were
contributing to criminal investigations under the supervision of
the public prosecution, the Public Security Police (PSP) was relinquishing
its military connections and becoming a civilian-based force (its
first non-military Chief Commander had recently been appointed),
and the Republican National Guard (GNR) was also being modernized.
Much greater care was being taken in recruiting new members for
all those forces: admission requirements had been raised, and new
initial assessment and training techniques, such as psychological
testing, had been introduced, involving participation by members
of civil society such as university professors and representatives
of non-governmental organizations (NGOs). In the past three years,
every member of the police forces he had mentioned - over 46,000
people - had attended new training programmes that made extensive
reference to human rights issues and perspectives, monitored the
trainees across all areas of activity, and also covered the use
of firearms, supervision of other agencies, and disciplinary and
criminal responsibility in cases of abuse of authority.
An integrated programme had been developed in order to improve the
relationship between the police and the public - the latter meaning
not only Portuguese nationals but all people living in or visiting
Portugal. The programme was intended to bring about greater police
visibility, greater police insertion in community life, and improved
knowledge of and dialogue with the public and other bodies in society,
particularly the municipalities. The integrated programme comprised
several activities, the main ones being the "Safe School Programme",
"Elderly People in Security" and "Innovate",
which was concerned with contacts between the police and ordinary
victims of crime. Collaborative arrangements had been established
between the Ministry for Internal Affairs and the Portuguese Association
for the Support of Victims.
With regard to the Chairman's questions on the definition of torture,
he noted that the definition contained in article 243 of the Portuguese
Penal Code differed from that contained in article 1 of the Convention
in only relatively minor respects: for example, the words "or
for any reason based on discrimination of any kind" had been
excluded. The reason was that the principles of legality and typification
(i.e. a strict adherence to relevant elements), as set forth in
article 30 of the Portuguese Constitution and article 1 of the Penal
Code, ensured that expressions with indeterminate or unascertainable
meaning in the definition of elements constituting a criminal offence
must be excluded from the pertinent provisions of the Penal Code.
In the same context, it should be borne in mind that the incriminatory
provisions of article 244 of the Penal Code applying to acts of
torture frequently overlapped with other incriminatory provisions
of the same Code. In such cases, the courts normally imposed the
more severe punishment.
Turning to the Chairman's questions on trials for acts of torture,
he said that in the past three years only one case of torture had
been independently recorded. The case, which had been documented
by Amnesty International, concerned a PSP officer at Sintra who
had applied electric shocks to a prisoner. The officer had been
dismissed from the force following disciplinary procedures and was
currently undergoing criminal trial. Another case that might have
constituted torture had occurred at Sacavém in 1996; however,
following the death of the victim the GNR officer involved had been
found guilty of the more serious crime of murder, thereby incurring
a punishment of 12-25 years' imprisonment instead of the penalty
of 1-5 years applicable to torture. The case illustrated the principle
of subordination he had referred to in his previous answer, whereby
punishment for the more serious crime absorbed that for the less
serious crime if the same essential facts applied to both.
In reply to another question put by the Chairman, the cases of alleged
physical abuse by members of the police forces mentioned in paragraph
51 of the Portuguese delegation's report concerned offences said
to have been committed by officers of the PSP and the GNR during
the period 1996-1998, and brought to the attention of the Inspectorate-General
(Inspeccão-Geral da Administracão Interna - IGAI).
It was the practice of the IGAI to investigate only the most serious
cases involving death, torture, serious physical abuse and abuses
of authority. Other cases were handed over to the domestic police
forces, with the IGAI maintaining a monitoring role to ensure that
due process was completed.
Serious cases investigated by the IGAI during the period 1997-1999
comprised: in 1997, 23 cases involving one death, 6 cases of physical
abuse and 3 cases involving abuse of authority; in 1998, 32 cases
involving four deaths, four suicides, 11 cases of physical abuse,
2 cases of wounding by firearms and one violation of fundamental
rights; in 1999, 34 cases involving four deaths, 14 cases of physical
abuse, 5 cases of wounding by firearms, 1 case of abuse of authority
and 1 case of violation of fundamental rights.
The outcome of those inquiries had been the following. In 1997,
police officers had been found guilty in eight cases and the following
punishments had been applied: one reprimand, three fines, three
suspensions from duty, three prison terms (for GNR officers), and
one dismissal. In 1998, officers had been found guilty in eight
cases and the following punishments had been applied: three reprimands,
one removal from active service and four suspensions from duty.
In 1999, officers had been found guilty in 13 cases, leading to
four suspensions from duty, one reprimand, five fines and one prison
term.
Turning to the Chairman's questions relating to the Amnesty International
report discussed earlier, he said that all 14 deaths reported as
having occurred in police custody between 1996 and 1999 had been
investigated. Only the death recorded at Sacavém in 1996
had been found to have been caused deliberately by a police officer.
Together with two collaborators, he had been dismissed from the
GNR and sentenced to prison. In two of the remaining 13 cases -
those of Olivio Almada and Victor Santos - it had not been proved
that their deaths had resulted from action taken by the officers
during the detention. In the former case, the officers had been
found guilty of illegal detention, and in the latter the evidence
seemed to indicate that the victim had committed suicide and that
the officers were not involved.
That left 11 cases, which had all involved victims shot during police
operations against crime or while the perpetrators of crimes were
being apprehended. In six of those cases - Carlos Araújo,
Paulo Jorge, Manuel Magalhães Silva and three others not
named in the Amnesty International report - it had been found that
police officers had made excessive or unjustified use of firearms,
and suspensions from duty had been ordered. Some officers had been
tried and found guilty of negligent homicide, which carried a penalty
of up to five years' imprisonment. In two cases (Fernando Azevedo
and one other not mentioned in the report), the officers' use of
firearms had been found to constitute a legitimate act of self-defence.
The three most recent cases had occurred in Porto in the current
year, and proceedings were still in their early stages. In the first,
involving police intervention in a public disturbance, the officers
involved were currently in pre-trial detention.
With regard to the section of the Amnesty International report dealing
with ill-treatment by police officers, disciplinary or criminal
investigations were under way in the cases involving Marco Fernandes,
Juvenal Ova and Mario Rocha. In view of its serious nature, the
first case was being monitored by the IGAI in addition to the regional
command of the PSP. The IGAI had also investigated the case of the
GNR officers in Anadia, and sufficient evidence had been found to
initiate eight disciplinary hearings. Criminal proceedings had also
been initiated.
Of the other cases mentioned, the one involving Carlos Zurita had
been closed, since the victim had declined to bring a complaint;
the case involving the two Mecha brothers had been investigated
by the IGAI and the officers exonerated (six officers had been wounded
in attempting to deal with a public disturbance and the police were
found to have used legitimate force); and in the cases of Pedro
Silva and Pedro Sousa, injured during a demonstration in Lisbon,
the facts of the situation had been confirmed, but only in the first
case had a perpetrator been found and punished.
With regard to the section of the Amnesty International report on
illegal detention by police officers, he did not agree that police
officers were in the habit of failing to complete detention forms.
All the checks carried out, in particular the unannounced inspections
by the IGAI, tended to support the opposite conclusion. There had
indeed been illegal detention in the cases of Olivio Almada and
of several persons at Anadia, but they were exceptional. As to the
case of Bruno Mauricio, the inquiries conducted by the police inspection
service and the courts had failed to establish the veracity of his
complaint.
Turning to the section on effective impunity, he rejected the allegation
of a "malaise affecting the Portuguese justice system in general".
While he accepted that, in general terms, the cases to which the
section referred raised difficulties, criminal charges had been
brought in all of them. The question whether the sentences imposed
were light was one that the courts alone were able to assess, on
the basis of the facts and circumstances of each case. That did
not mean that the Portuguese authorities were insensitive to information
presented in the media or merely paid lip-service to the principle
of judicial independence or presumption of innocence. Rather, he
was satisfied that the information provided for the Committee on
all the cases cited by Amnesty International demonstrated the adequacy
of the measures taken to prosecute those justly accused of acts
of torture or ill-treatment.
A register of criminal proceedings against law enforcement officials
had been established in the Office of the Attorney-General, with
a view to collating information from courts throughout the country
and establishing tighter controls over the prevention and punishment
of crimes relating to the Convention against Torture. Furthermore,
the public prosecution service automatically investigated any case
of torture or ill-treatment brought to its attention by any means
whatsoever, even when the victims failed to lodge complaints through
the prescribed legal channels. The only exception concerned the
crime of minor common assault.
As to the question of violence against the inmates of Porto prison,
raised in the Amnesty International document, a delegation of the
European Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) had carried
out a 12-day visit to Portugal in April 1999 and the CPT, in its
final observations on the visit, had requested the Portuguese authorities
to prepare a report dealing specifically with the penitentiary facility
at Porto. That report, submitted on 30 July 1999, described the
measures adopted immediately and those planned for the medium term
in order to follow up on the CPT's comments.
The first measure had been a thorough evaluation of the situation
by the inspection service of the General Prison Services Directorate,
focusing on violence between prisoners arising from overcrowding
and drug problems. The evaluation had resulted in the adoption of
the following measures: a reduction in the number of prisoners from
1,350 to 1,000; the installation of closed-circuit television as
an additional surveillance tool; the introduction of additional
compulsory patrols inside the facility; an increase (from 5 to 13)
in the number of deputy chief guards responsible for monitoring
the movement of prisoners in each wing (it was not the case, as
the Amnesty International report stated, that prisoners performed
that task); and, in recognition of the fact that most violence between
inmates was drug related, improved access to health facilities,
including more health personnel, better availability of methadone
and antidotes, more support for HIV-positive prisoners, and stronger
measures to tackle drug trafficking in the prison, including more
searches and more sophisticated techniques. Finally, in the current
year to date two Porto prison guards had been arrested, one of whom
had been placed in preventive detention pending disciplinary action,
while the other was simultaneously the subject of a disciplinary
inquiry and criminal proceedings.
Already, the measures he had described had led to a certain easing
of tension and improvements in the relationship between guards and
inmates at Porto prison.
Turning to the question on universal jurisdiction raised by the
Chairman, he said that under article 5.2 of the Penal Code, Portuguese
courts enjoyed jurisdiction over all acts committed outside national
territory provided they were covered by the terms of a treaty or
international agreement to which the State of Portugal was committed.
Portugal therefore had no legal difficulty in accepting the commitments
deriving from article 5 (a), (b) and (c) of the Convention against
Torture. However, effective implementation of the jurisdiction of
Portuguese courts depended on verification of the conditions specified
in the Convention and in article 6 of the Penal Code, and was also
subject to the universally accepted principles of ne bis in idem
and aut dedere aut judicare
The Portuguese penal system was adequately provided with the principles
and norms of universal jurisdiction necessary to prevent impunity
in cases where basic human rights were violated, in compliance with
articles 8 and 29.2 of the Portuguese Constitution. The jurisdiction
of Portuguese courts could thus be extended to cases such as that
of General Pinochet. However, its effective implementation was dependent
on concrete verification of the circumstances, conditions and alleged
facts, as stipulated in articles 5 and 6 of the Penal Code.
Replying to questions raised by Mr. Yu, he said that a code on the
physical conditions of detention facilities in police stations had
recently been approved. In addition, the IGAI conducted unannounced
inspection visits in police stations, especially those located in
difficult areas and which had detention facilities. The inspector
checked whether there were detainees, whether the detention logs
had been filled out, and whether the dates were correct. The inspector
spoke privately with the detainee, checked his information, and
heard complaints.
Police agents must immediately inform the Public Prosecutor's Office
of any detentions. The Code of Criminal Procedure forbade the questioning
of detainees by police officers; hearings could be conducted only
by judges. The IGAI was currently assessing whether the rigorous
recommendations governing the criminal investigation phase were
respected by police officers.
The Code of Criminal Procedure provided for the acceleration of
the trial in cases involving serious crimes, through the intervention
of the Procurator-General or, if the case had already come before
the court, the Supreme Council of the Judiciary. Delays were investigated
to determine responsibility. Various additional measures had been
taken to tackle procedural delays, including the appointment of
additional judges on an emergency basis, the establishment of quick,
easy procedures for the simplest cases, and the creation of measures
encouraging recourse to arbitration and court settlements.
The delegation believed that the information it had provided concerning
the Porto prison, which was the only such establishment where a
problem of violence between prisoners had arisen, should be sufficient.
After visiting Portuguese prisons, the CPT had reported that the
general climate and relations between prisoners and staff were fairly
satisfactory. Violence between prisoners, a problem related to drug
addiction, nonetheless deserved the close attention of prison administrations.
Measures had been taken to improve the treatment of prisoners, to
combat drug traffic in prisons, and to provide appropriate training
to staff.
The delegation had provided information on steps taken to improve
the treatment of prisoners in its introductory statement. With a
view to combating the drug trade in prisons, detection methods had
been improved and proceedings had been initiated against staff.
A number of staff members had been expelled, and one had been sentenced
to eight years in prison. Several hundred visitors carrying drugs
had been apprehended in 1998 and 1999. Five of those had been arrested,
and one had been sentenced to seven years in prison. In addition,
prison guards were subject to impromptu check-ups to assess their
consumption of alcohol and narcotics. Although staff training courses
covered the subject of drug addiction, a recent law required continuing
training of staff in that subject and provided for the creation
of staff support offices, with a view to ensuring their psychological
and emotional stability.
Victims indeed had the right to lodge complaints and to receive
special attention. Acknowledging that victims of domestic violence
and sexual abuse had received inadequate attention when filing complaints,
the Government had adopted information and education measures, supported
the creation by NGOs of special victim-support offices, and instructed
police chiefs to establish such offices in areas where NGOs had
not done so. The Portuguese Association for the Support of Victims
currently had 11 branches in 10 major cities that provided free,
confidential support services, including accompanying victims in
emergency situations, referring them to community agencies, providing
legal and psychological counselling, offering police forces training
in the treatment of victims of crime, and introducing victim-awareness
programmes into schools and health centres. The number of victims
that had requested support had dramatically increased over the previous
decade to over 4,500 cases in 1999.
Even when victims did not lodge complaints through the appropriate
channels, the Public Prosecutor's Office automatically investigated
any case of torture or ill-treatment brought to its attention; the
same applied to disciplinary proceedings. Strict communication procedures
had been established between the Public Prosecutor's Office, the
IGAI and the Directorate-General of Prison Services, allowing for
closer supervision of cases handled by those entities.
The number of cases that came before the Fact Finding Commission
for the Award of Compensation to Victims of Violent Crimes had grown
steadily, reaching 82 in 1999, and award amounts had also risen.
The average time required to process requests had also dropped considerably,
and was currently about four and a half months.
Replying to questions raised by Mr. Camara, he said that under current
legislation Portuguese citizens over the age of 16 must carry identification
papers in public places, places open to the public and places under
police surveillance. Article 250 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
provided that police officers should request persons in such places
to identify themselves if they had reasonable suspicions that a
crime had been committed, that an extradition or expulsion procedure
was pending, that a foreigner had entered or was residing illegally
in the country, or that an arrest warrant existed.
If the person concerned failed to produce the proper identification
document, the police could attempt to identify him by communicating
with a third party able to produce it, by escorting the suspect
to the place where the document was, or by having the suspect recognized
by a third, duly identified person. If those efforts failed, police
agents could then escort the unidentified person to the nearest
police station and keep him there only for as long as it took to
identify him, which must not exceed 2 hours, or 6 hours for a person
suspected of one of the irregularities listed.
Police officers were required to show the suspect their badges,
to inform him of the reasons for the identification request, to
record the facts, and to allow him to contact someone. If the suspect
unjustifiably refused to identify himself, he would be formally
advised that his refusal was justiciable under the Criminal Code.
The report contained statistics on criminal proceedings instituted
against police personnel. Simultaneously, the police station concerned
initiated disciplinary measures. In grave cases involving death,
torture, severe physical injury or grave abuses of authority, the
IGAI conducted the disciplinary investigation, which was handled
with due rapidity. Criminal proceedings involving cases in which
the accused had been previously detained were also given priority.
Other, less serious, cases were subject to the general problems
afflicting the Portuguese courts, including the backlog of trials,
slow proceedings and the obligation to respect legal safeguards,
and repeated appeals. In addition, the principle of the presumption
of innocence required collection of sufficient evidence, or the
trial could not proceed. That was not a matter of impunity but of
respect for the necessary procedural safeguards of any criminal
proceeding.
Disciplinary and criminal proceedings could indeed be undertaken
simultaneously. Disciplinary proceedings sometimes began before
the start of the criminal prosecution. When, however, the IGAI was
informed of the occurrence of a crime, it must immediately communicate
that information to the Public Prosecutor's Office, which in turn
initiated the criminal proceedings. Conversely, the Public Prosecutor's
Office, having initiated proceedings, was obliged to communicate
the facts to the police station or the IGAI, so that disciplinary
measures could also be taken. Occasionally, disciplinary proceedings
were suspended pending the outcome of the criminal trial, especially
when the evidence was inconclusive. In all circumstances, the principle
of independence of the two kinds of proceeding was observed.
Responding to questions raised by Ms. Gaer, he said that the number
of complaints had dropped in recent years owing to the training
of law enforcement officials in human rights and professional ethics;
the evaluation and monitoring of the activities of police forces
and prison staff; the dissemination of information about international
standards and norms (including the recommendations of the Committee
against Torture and the European Committee for the Prevention of
Torture) to all personnel working in law enforcement agencies; and
the dissemination of information regarding behaviour that infringed
on human rights and the disciplinary consequences arising therefrom.
The newly adopted amnesty law for minor offences had resulted in
the release of about 1,500 prison inmates. It did not affect violations
of fundamental rights and freedoms by law enforcement officers in
the performance of their duties.
In late 1999, the administration of the territory of Macau had passed
from Portugal to the People's Republic of China. Before that transition,
Portugal had attempted to ensure that Macau would benefit from solid
legal protections, particularly in the area of torture. By agreement
between the two countries, the Convention against Torture had been
extended to Macau in
mid-1999. The reporting obligation now fell
to the Special Administrative Region of Macau; a report had not
yet been presented. Furthermore, the Macau Criminal Code, adopted
in 1995, contained three provisions relating to the crime of torture.
Under the terms of the 5 May Agreements, a referendum had been held
in East Timor, marking the culmination of lengthy efforts by the
international community, and particularly by Portugal, to ensure
the Timorese people's right to determine its own political future.
Following the wave of violence that had followed the announcement
of the results, Portugal had requested the United Nations to intervene,
the Security Council had taken action, and an international force
had been deployed. In October 1999, the Security Council had established
the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET),
according it overall responsibility for the administration of that
territory, including the exercise of legislative and executive authority
and the administration of justice. Portugal could not legally extend
the applicability of the Convention against Torture or of any other
international instrument to East Timor. The Portuguese legal criminal
framework nonetheless contained principles and rules that prevented
impunity for such fundamental violations of human rights as genocide,
slavery and traffic in human beings. There were no legal obstacles
to exercising the jurisdiction of the Portuguese courts in such
cases, if and when the factual conditions were consonant with the
Portuguese Criminal Code and with article 5 of the Convention against
Torture.
The Government had, however, made efforts to apply some minimum
human rights standards in East Timor: regulations issued by UNTAET
provided that persons performing public duties should observe internationally
recognized human rights standards, citing the major United Nations
human rights instruments.
Sexual harassment and abuse almost never occurred in Portuguese
prisons. In recent years, three cases had been reported, one of
sexual abuse and two of harassment; all had been investigated on
a confidential basis. In the sexual abuse case, the guard had been
dismissed. In one of the sexual harassment cases, the staff member
had been dismissed; the other case was still pending.
Ongoing training programmes dealt with the role of the police in
cases of violence against women. Those programmes featured videotapes
that discussed support for women victims, described appropriate
treatment methods, and emphasized that women victims should preferably
be handled by women police officers and directed toward social,
medical and legal support services.
The two officers who had sexually abused a young drug addict had
been sentenced to six and a half and five and a half years' imprisonment
respectively (the first for committing the abuse, the second for
acting as lookout) and banned from exercising public duties for
four years. They had appealed against the decision. Disciplinary
proceedings had also been instituted with a view to their expulsion.
With regard to the matter of organ donations, a law enacted in 1994
had created a national registry of non-donors, and authorized persons
to stipulate that they did not wish to donate organs after their
deaths. That law had been widely publicized by the media.
Replying to a question raised by Mr. Rasmussen, he said that the
code of medical ethics provided a general framework for the duties
of doctors, and stipulated that a doctor must never cooperate in
any act of torture, nor allow premises, instruments or medicine
to be used for that purpose. In addition, doctors were strictly
required to report to the competent bodies any case of torture that
came to their attention. Doctors were also forbidden to feed against
his will a patient on hunger strike, even when his life was at risk.
Doctors providing health care in prison and detention facilities
were obliged to respect the interests and personal integrity of
the patient. Furthermore, if a person admitted to a prison was wounded,
bore marks of abuse, or complained of having been beaten, the doctor
must immediately examine and question the detainee. The results
were sent to the perpetrator's superiors, who then initiated the
appropriate proceedings.
The public part of the meeting rose at 4.05
p.m.
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