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The Committee
against Torture, established under article 17 of the Convention against
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment,
Meeting on 15 May 2000,
Having concluded its consideration of communications Nos. 130/1999 and
131/1999, submitted to the Committee against Torture under article 22 of the
Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment,
Having taken into account all information made available to it by the
authors of the communication, their counsel and the State party,
Adopts its views under article 22, paragraph 7, of the Convention.
1.1 The authors of the communications are Mr. V.X.N., born on 1 December
1959, and Mr. H.N., born on 10 November 1963, two Vietnamese nationals
currently residing in Sweden where they received refugee status and
permanent residence permits on 18 August 1992 and 23 August 1991
respectively. The authors claim that they risk torture if they are returned
to Viet Nam and that their forced return to that country would therefore
constitute a violation by Sweden of article 3 of the Convention. The authors
are represented by counsel.
1.2 In view of the similarities of the two claims, the Committee decided to
consider the communications together.
1.3 In accordance with article 22, paragraph 3, of the Convention, the
Committee transmitted communications Nos. 130/1999 and 131/1999 to the State
party on 29 April 1999. Pursuant to rule 108, paragraph 9, of the
Committee's rules of procedure, the State party was requested not to expel
the authors to Viet Nam pending the consideration of their cases by the
Committee. In a submission dated 27 May 1999 the State party informed the
Committee that the authors would not be expelled to their country of origin
while their communications were under consideration by the Committee.
The Facts as Presented by the Authors
The Case of Mr. V.X.N.
2.1 The author of the first communication (No. 130/1999), Mr. V.X.N., states
that he came to Sweden in 1992, recognized as a quota refugee. In 1995 the
author was sentenced under Swedish law to five years' imprisonment.
According to the sentence, the author was also to be expelled from Sweden
after having served his sentence. The author was released from prison on 16
January 1999 and is at present awaiting expulsion to Viet Nam.
2.2 The author states that his family, in particular his father, had been
collaborating with the previous regime in Viet Nam. When the Communist
regime came to power in 1975 the family's property was confiscated and they
were forcibly relocated to a forest region where the living conditions were
difficult. The author states that, at the beginning of 1976, he was
sentenced to 12 years in prison, according to the author for not having
complied with a decision that he, his parents and his siblings were to stay
in the area to which they had been deported. The family instead moved back
to a city in the area from which they had been deported. When the police
tried to make the family return to the forest, the author's uncle was shot
dead and his father was treated harshly. The author claims that he resisted
the police by seizing one of the policemen's weapon, which resulted in two
police officers being shot dead and four injured. The author was then
arrested.
2.3 The author was allegedly first detained in a remand prison for political
prisoners. After approximately two weeks the author was moved to 24 Nguyen
Cong Chu Nha Trang prison where he was held in detention for eight months
before any judicial proceedings took place. The author claims that, while in
detention, he was severely tortured on a daily basis during the first two
months. The torture allegedly included beatings with weapons and batons to
his head, back and chest while his hands were tied behind his back. The
author also alleges that the police threatened to execute him. For the next
six months, the author was kept in solitary confinement and was allegedly
forced to lie locked up in his own urine and faeces. The author's submission
includes a medical certificate dated 24 March 1999 from the Unit for War and
Torture Injuries in Gothenburg, which indicates that the author's account
appears to be credible and that the author suffers from post-traumatic
stress syndrome.
2.4 The author submits that he was then sentenced to death, but owing to his
young age the sentence was commuted to 12 years in prison. After nine years'
imprisonment in Dong Rang prison, which included forced labour, he
eventually managed to escape and, after two years of hiding on an
uninhabited island fled from Viet Nam in 1986. Together with others, he
stole a boat. While they were still in Vietnamese territorial waters, the
Vietnamese military attempted to prevent them from proceeding. Shots were
fired on both sides and many of the fugitives were wounded. The author
states that he believes that some of the soldiers were also wounded and
probably killed.
2.5 The author, together with his family, eventually reached the Philippines
where they stayed in a refugee camp. With the assistance of the Office of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the author and
his family were accepted as so-called quota refugees by Sweden and received
permanent residence permit in 1992.
2.6 In 1995, the Court of Appeal for Western Sweden sentenced the author to
five years' imprisonment, to be followed by permanent expulsion from Sweden.
The author was released from prison on 26 January 1999. On the same date,
the Swedish Minister of Justice, at the request of UNHCR, decided to stay
the execution of the expulsion order to allow UNHCR to pronounce on the
compatibility of an expulsion with article 33.2 of the 1951 Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees.
The Case of Mr. H.N.
3.1 The author of the second communication (No. 131/1999), Mr. H.N., states
that he came to Sweden in 1991, recognized as a quota refugee. In 1995 the
author was sentenced under Swedish law to five years' imprisonment. The
author was also to be expelled from Sweden after having served his sentence.
The author was released from prison on 12 October 1998 and is at present
awaiting expulsion to Viet Nam.
3.2 The author states that his father was a high ranking military officer in
the South Vietnamese Army until he was murdered by the Viet Cong in 1970.
The author states that in 1975, when the North Vietnamese came to power in
Viet Nam, he was no longer allowed to continue his primary education as he
was the son of a South Vietnamese soldier. In his early twenties, the
author, together with a small group of like-minded friends, created a
resistence movement to work against the Communist regime. Its activities
consisted mainly in producing and putting up anti-Government posters at
night.
3.3 The author alleges that he was arrested and sent to a work camp, where
he and many other children of South Vietnamese military personnel had to
clear minefields. According to the author, many were either killed or
injured. After one month, the author managed to escape and resumed his
activities with the resistance, in hiding.
3.4 In 1985, after one year in hiding, the author was again arrested.
According to the author, he was tortured during interrogation. The torture
included beatings with rifles on his chest until he lost consciousness. The
author further alleges that rifle barrels were put into his mouth and that
he was threatened with death. The torture continued for several days, until
the author was taken to hospital. Despite the fact that the author was tied
up with rope to his hospital bed, he managed to escape. The author's
submission includes a medical certificate dated 1 April 1999 from the Unit
for War and Torture Injuries in Gothenburg, which states that the author's
account appears credible and that the author "with great probability has
been subjected to cruel and inhuman treatment and torture in his home
country". Between September 1985 and August 1988, the author, together with
his wife, hid in the mountains.
3.5 In August 1988 the author, his wife, their child and other compatriots
managed to leave Viet Nam by boat. While still in Vietnamese territorial
waters, they were intercepted by the military who attempted to prevent them
from leaving the country, which resulted in shots being fired on both sides.
Many of the fugitives were wounded. The author states that he believes that
some of the soldiers were also wounded and probably killed.
3.6 The author and his family eventually reached the Philippines on 25
August 1988 where they stayed in a refugee camp. With the assistance of
UNHCR, the author and his family were accepted as so-called quota refugees
by Sweden and received permanent residence permits in 1991.
3.7 In 1995, the Court of Appeal for Western Sweden sentenced the author to
five years' imprisonment, to be followed by permanent expulsion from Sweden.
The author was released from prison on 12 October 1998. On 26 January 1999
the Swedish Minister of Justice, at the request of UNHCR, decided to stay
the execution of the expulsion order to allow UNHCR to pronounce on the
compatibility of an expulsion with article 33.2 of the 1951 Convention
relating to the Statut of Refugees.
3.8 In order to support their individual submissions, both authors refer to
the general human rights situation in Viet Nam, noting that Amnesty
International is not allowed to work in Viet Nam and that it is therefore
difficult to establish clear evidence of the extent to which torture is
being used in the country. However, the view of Amnesty International is
that torture by the police during detention and in prisons is common.
Complaint
4. The authors submit that, upon return to Viet Nam, they will be
apprehended, tortured and sentenced to death and that their forced return to
Viet Nam by Sweden would therefore constitute a violation of article 3 of
the Convention.
Observations by the State Party on Admissibility and Merits
5.1 In its submissions of 3 September 1999, the State party refers to
article 22, paragraph 5 (a) of the Convention, according to which the
Committee shall not consider any communication from an individual unless it
has ascertained that the same matter has not been and is not being examined
under another procedure of international investigation or settlement. In
this context, the State party draws the attention of the Committee to the
fact that UNHCR has already examined the cases of the authors. In a letter
dated 16 March 1999, the UNHCR Regional Representative for the Baltic and
Nordic Countries informed the Swedish Minister of Justice that an expulsion
of the authors would not be a breach of article 33 of the 1951 Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees.
5.2 Moreover, the State party submits that the present communication should
be considered inadmissible in accordance with article 22, paragraph 2 of the
Convention for being incompatible with its provisions due to the lack of the
necessary substantiation of the claim. Concerning the merits, the State
party contends that the present communication reveals no violation of the
Convention.
5.3 With respect to the merits of the communication, the State party draws
the attention of the Committee to the fact that according to the Swedish
1989 Aliens Act, an alien must not be expelled from Sweden on account of
having committed a criminal offence unless certain conditions are met.
Firstly, the alien must be convicted of a crime that is punishable by
imprisonment. Secondly, the alien may only be expelled if he is sentenced to
a punishment more severe than a fine and if (a) it may be assumed that the
alien will continue criminal activity in Sweden; or (b) the offence is of
such a serious character that the alien should not be allowed to remain in
Sweden.
5.4 The State party further notes that special conditions apply for aliens
who are considered to be refugees. Such aliens may be expelled if they have
committed a particularly serious crime and public order and security would
be seriously endangered if they were allowed to remain in Sweden. Pursuant
to the 1989 Aliens Act, there is an absolute impediment to expelling an
alien to a country where there are reasonable grounds for believing that
he/she would be in danger of suffering capital or corporal punishment or of
being subjected to torture or other inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment.
5.5 The State party confirms that the authors were granted permanent
residence permits and refugee status as quota refugees in Sweden, in 1992
and 1991 respectively. In accordance with the State party's practice
prevailing at the time, they were accepted as quota refugees without any
detailed examination of their individual reasons for flight. The Swedish
Immigration Board decided to grant asylum to the authors following an
interview conducted with the authors by the local police authority.
5.6 The State party states that in April 1995 the two authors were sentenced
by the District Court of Halmstad to six years' imprisonment for gross rape,
committed together with two other Vietnamese nationals. The authors had
previously been found guilty of crimes of violence on several occasions.
Owing to the authors' refugee status, the District Court rejected the public
prosecutor's request that the authors be expelled from Sweden. Both the
authors and the prosecutor appealed the judgement to the Court of Appeal for
Western Sweden.
5.7 The Court of Appeal, after holding an oral hearing at which the authors
were present together with their public defence lawyer, found that the
requirements for expulsion were fulfilled. In its judgement of 15 June 1995,
the Court of Appeal lowered the sentences to five years' imprisonment and
ordered that the authors should be expelled from Sweden after having served
their sentences. The authors appealed the judgement to the Supreme Court,
which refused leave to appeal. While still serving his five-year prison
sentence, Mr. V.X.N. was found guilty of assault, gross assault and rape.
Mr. H.N. was similarly found guilty of complicity in rape.
5.8 In December 1998, the Vietnamese Embassy in Stockholm informed the
Ministry for Foreign Affairs that the Ministry of Public Security of Viet
Nam had accepted the repatriation of the authors.
5.9 Following a petition from UNHCR in January 1999, the Minister of Justice
stayed the enforcement of the expulsion order, awaiting the advice of UNHCR
Regional Representative for the Baltic and Nordic Countries as to the
compatibility of the expulsion with article 33, paragraph 2, of the 1951
Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, in accordance with which the
protection against "refoulement" can not be claimed "by a refugee whom there
are reasonable grounds for regarding as a danger to the security of the
country in which he is, or who, having been convicted by a final judgement
of a particularly serious crime, constitutes a danger to the community of
that country." On 16 March 1999, UNHCR informed the Minister of Justice that
the decision to expel the authors did not violate the 1951 Refugee
Convention.
5.10 The State party further informs the Committee that since January 1999,
Mr. V.X.N. has three times requested the Government to cancel the expulsion
order, or to grant him a temporary residence permit. At the time of the
State party's submission, two requests had been denied, and the third was
pending. Since January 1998, Mr. H.N. has made six similar requests to the
Government. At the time of the State party's submission, five requests had
been turned down while the sixth was still pending.
5.11 The State party underlines that when determining whether the forced
return of the authors to Viet Nam would constitute a breach of article 3 of
the Convention, the following considerations are relevant: (a) the general
situation of human rights in Viet Nam and (b) the personal risk of the
authors of being subjected to torture if returned to Viet Nam.
5.12 The State party submits that when the Court of Appeal found, on 15 June
1995, that no impediments existed to expulsion of the authors, account was
taken of the opinion of the Swedish Immigration Board that no obstacles of a
general character existed to expelling persons who had fled Viet Nam. As for
impediments of an individual character, the Board had found that the scanty
information available regarding the authors' personal circumstances did not
indicate that there was any impediment of such kind. In addition, on 21 May
1999 and 1 June 1999, the authors were interviewed by the Board at the
request of the Ministry of Justice but no impediments to expulsion were
identified as a result.
5.13 As to the general situation of human rights in Viet Nam today, the
State party submits that according to various reports from international and
other sources, such as Amnesty International, the United States Department
of State and the Swedish Embassy in Hanoi, measurable improvements have been
made in a few areas, although serious problems remain, particularly as to
the enjoyment of the freedom of speech, assembly, association and religion.
Arbitrary arrests and detentions occur quite frequently and prison
conditions are harsh, but reports of torture of detainees are rare. Although
there are reports of police brutality, there is no evidence that torture is
practised regularly nor that prisoners are tortured.
5.14 The State party further submits that illegal departure from Viet Nam in
the middle of the 1980s is no longer considered to be a criminal offence.
The majority of the people who departed illegally at that time have now
returned with the assistance of UNHCR. A large number of returnees come from
the same part of Viet Nam as the authors. Among those who have been
repatriated involuntarily, some have served prison sentences for crimes
committed in countries of first asylum, but according to UNHCR there are no
reports of retribution or discrimination after their return. The State party
further underlines that the majority of the approximately 500 returnees who
have faced legal action upon return on charges of crimes committed before
departure from Viet Nam have been sentenced for crimes of violence and none
for political crimes. UNHCR has been able to visit all of them in private.
Finally, the State party points out that several children of former leaders
of the South Vietnamese Army travel between Sweden and Viet Nam without
encountering any difficulties with the Vietnamese authorities.
5.15 As for the assessment of the individual risks of the authors of being
subjected to torture, the State party recalls that according to the
jurisprudence of the Committee this risk must be foreseeable, real and
personal, and submits the following.
The Case of Mr. V.X.N.
6.1 The State party recalls that the author has invoked three different
reasons why he would be exposed to a risk of torture if expelled to his
country of origin. He maintains that he would be apprehended and tortured by
the Government or some governmental agency for having escaped from prison,
where he was serving a 12-year sentence for having killed two policemen and
injured four. Secondly, some of the pursuing soldiers may have been injured
or shot to death when the author and others escaped Viet Nam by boat.
Thirdly, the author has also stated that he has received death threats from
the owner of the boat which he stole in order to escape. The State party
draws the Committee's attention to the fact that the author of the present
communication has not belonged to any political organisation, nor has he
been politically active in his home country.
6.2 The State party submits that during the examination of the author's
case, contradictions, inconsistencies and peculiarities concerning essential
points raised serious doubts as to the credibility of the author's claims.
Firstly, it seems that the author did not raise the subject of torture until
he submitted his complaint to the Committee at the beginning of 1999. During
the interview conducted with him by the local police authority in 1992, the
author did not, according to the State party, mention that he had previously
been ill-treated or tortured nor that he feared being tortured upon return.
Similarly, no mention of torture was made during the proceedings before the
District Court and the Court of Appeal, in his request to the Supreme Court
for leave to appeal, or in his request to the Government in January 1999 to
quash the expulsion order.
6.3 Although noting the medical certificate submitted by the author to
support his claim, the State party points to inconsistencies as regards the
author's account of the nature and extent of his alleged previous torture.
During the medical examination of March 1999, the author stated that he had
been in custody for eight months and was tortured on a daily basis during
the first two months. In the interview held by the Swedish Immigration Board
on 21 May 1999, the author stated that he was tortured daily during one
month and thereafter three times a week. Finally, during the last interview
held by the Board on 1 June 1999, the author stated that he was in custody
for six months and tortured almost every day. In addition, the author's
description of the alleged torture has become increasingly dramatic during
the proceedings. Initially the author only mentioned that he had been kicked
and beaten, while in the last interview he mentions for the first time
electric shocks and having been forced to drink water mixed with detergent.
6.4 The State party draws the Committee's attention to the fact that during
the initial local police interview in 1992, the author did not mention that
he had been sentenced to 12 years' imprisonment, nor that he had escaped
from prison. His account at that time was that he had tried to escape from
Viet Nam in March 1981 but failed in his attempt and was sentenced to three
years' imprisonment, a sentence which he served. According to the records of
1992, the author claimed that he again tried to leave the country in October
1984 but was sentenced to prison for two years and ten days upon discovery.
In his petition to the Government submitted in January 1999 he stated that
he had been sentenced to 12 years' imprisonment because he had run away from
the place in the jungle to which his family had been forcibly moved and had
participated in the organization of a group which aim was to help others who
were still left in the jungle to escape. He then claimed that he was caught
together with four others, three of whom were sentenced to death and one to
17 years in prison. It is also noted by the State party that the author has
provided no evidence to substantiate his claim that he was sentenced to 12
years' imprisonment.
6.5 The State party also refers to other peculiarities and inconsistencies,
such as the fact that if the author's most recent account is true, his three
eldest children must have been conceived in prison, and that it is unlikely
that any uninhabited islands are to be found in the area where the author
claims to have hidden after his escape from prison. The State party
maintains that these inconsistencies are reasons to doubt the credibility
and veracity of the first claim of the author, based on his alleged past
experience of torture and escape from prison.
6.6 With reference to the inconsistencies mentioned, the State party submits
that all three interviews held with the author were conducted in the
presence of a Vietnamese interpreter and that the author stated that he
understood the interpreter well.
6.7 With reference to the author's flight from Viet Nam, the State party
draws the attention of the Committee to the fact that the author has only
mentioned pursuing soldiers having been injured or killed in his submission
to the Committee and in his request to the Government for leave to appeal,
and that no information to this effect was given during the initial police
interview, the judicial proceedings or during the interview conducted by the
Swedish Immigration Board in May 1999. The State party submits that this
indicates that the author does not attach any particular importance to the
circumstance and that he does not fear that it will entail any serious
consequences for him, particularly as it has not been asserted that the
author himself is, or is suspected of being, personally responsible for the
shooting. Furthermore, it is submitted that accounts of shootings in
connection with escapes from Viet Nam in the 1980s are common but that in no
case has it been possible to verify this information.
6.8 As regards the risk of the author being ill-treated by a private person,
i.e. the owner of the boat which the author stole in order to escape, the
State party recalls the definition of torture as contained in article 1 of
the Convention, as well as the Committee's views regarding the case of
G.R.B. v. Sweden (communication No. 83/1997) adopted on 15 May 1998. The
State party submits that the risk of ill-treatment by a private person,
without the consent or acquiescence of the Government of the country to
which expulsion is to take place, falls outside the scope of article 3 of
the Convention.
6.9 The State party submits that, according to the Swedish Embassy in Hanoi,
there is no indication that the author is of any particular interest to the
Vietnamese authorities at present. No evidence has been brought forward by
the author to support the claim that he is wanted by the police after his
escape from Viet Nam. Reiterating its doubts as to the veracity of the
author's claim, the State party submits that even if this information was to
be considered as credible and if it was assumed that the author would in
fact be detained and imprisoned upon his return, the risk of detention and
imprisonment as such is not sufficient to prompt the absolute protection
provided for in article 3 of the Convention. In this context, the State
party recalls that there is little evidence that torture is practised in
Viet Nam.
6.10 Finally, the State party informs the Committee that one of the
Vietnamese nationals who were convicted of gross rape in the same trial as
the author was expelled to Viet Nam in April 1998. Although the expelled
person claimed that he had left the country illegally and had committed a
crime in connection with his escape, the information received by the State
party regarding his current situation does not indicate that he has been
treated badly by the Vietnamese authorities since his return.
The Case of Mr. H.N.
7.1 The State party recalls that the author has invoked three different
reasons why he would be exposed to a risk of being subjected to torture if
expelled to his country of origin. He maintains that he would be apprehended
and tortured by the Government or some governmental agency for having run
away from the mine clearance work that he was forced to perform. Secondly,
the author claims that he belonged to a resistance movement and was
suspected of carrying out hostile activities against the Government, such as
putting up posters. Finally, the authors fears reprisals for having killed
several policemen in connection with his escape from Viet Nam. Some of the
pursuing soldiers may have been injured or shot to death when the author and
others escaped Viet Nam by boat.
7.2 The State party notes that the author has alleged that he was
apprehended and subjected to torture in 1985. According to the medical
certificate issued after an examination of the author by a psychiatrist in
April 1999, it is very likely that the author was subjected to cruel and
inhuman treatment and torture in his country. However, the State party draws
the attention of the Committee to the fact that no mention is made of the
author suffering from a post-traumatic stress disorder, nor is there any
reference to physical signs of torture.
7.3 The State party submits that during the examination of the author's
case, contradictions and inconsistencies concerning essential points raised
serious doubts as to the credibility of the author's claims. The Committee's
attention is drawn to the fact that the author, when interviewed by the
police authorities in 1991, did not mention that he had been apprehended and
tortured in Viet Nam. Nor did the author bring up the subject of torture
during the proceedings in the District Court, the Court of Appeal or in his
request to the Supreme Court for leave to appeal. Not until January 1998, in
his petition to the Government, did the author claim that he had previously
been tortured and that he feared imprisonment if expelled.
7.4 Further, the State party points out that the author has given the
following different versions as to why he was apprehended and tortured by
the police in 1985: (a) in his petition to the Government in January 1998 he
stated that he was discovered when planning his escape from Viet Nam; (b)
according to the medical report of April 1999, he was interrogated and
tortured to reveal the names of his comrades in the resistance movement; (c)
during the interview before the Swedish Immigration Board in May 1999, the
author claimed that he was apprehended for carrying arms and evading mine
clearance duty; (d) during the interview before the Board in June 1999, the
author stated that he was suspected of revolutionary activities and of
putting up posters; and (e) in the author's complaint to the Committee, he
invokes his escape from mine clearance duty as the reason for having been
tortured.
7.5 The State party draws the attention of the Committee to the fact that,
when interviewed by the police in 1991, the author mentioned that he had
been forced to perform hard work in a place where there were mines, but made
no mention of having evaded mine clearance duty. When interviewed in June
1999, the author stated that he risked being tortured upon return to Viet
Nam for having shot policemen and for being an opponent of the regime. In
view of the fact that the author did not expressly refer to the escape from
mine clearance duty as a reason why he would be in danger of being tortured,
the State party concludes that the author himself does not fear that this
circumstance will entail any serious consequences for him. In addition, the
State party submits that there is no information indicating that such an act
would be considered a punishable offence in Viet Nam today, let alone be
punished with imprisonment.
7.6 With reference to the author's claim to have engaged in activities
within the resistance movement, the State party points out that during the
initial interview, in 1991, the author did not make any such claim; nor were
political activities expressly mentioned in the author's communication to
the Committee, they were only mentioned in the medical certificate issued in
April 1999. The records of the medical examination further indicate that the
author claimed to have been "organized" in the resistance movement and was
apprehended for hostile activities against the Government and put in a
labour camp. After having escaped he allegedly again joined the resistance,
after which he was apprehended and tortured. However, the State party points
out that during the interview before the Swedish Immigration Board in May
1999, the author submitted that he was "the founder" of the resistance
movement which consisted of five members.
7.7 Apart from the above inconsistencies, the State party points out that
the author himself has stated before the Board that if the Vietnamese
authorities had known anything about the resistance movement, the author
would have been executed. According to the State party, this clearly
indicates that the movement was unknown to the authorities. In addition, the
State party submits that according to information from UNHCR and human
rights organisations in the area of Nha Trang, no armed resistance movement
or any resistance group devoting itself to putting up posters in the city
has ever been heard of. It is also emphasized that the Vietnamese
authorities would not at present have an interest in punishing a person for
writing and putting up anti-governmental posters about 15 years ago.
7.8 With reference to the author's escape from Viet Nam, the State party
draws the attention of the Committee to the fact that during the initial
police interview, in 1991, the author did not mention that he had fired at
policemen in connection with his escape. Not until July 1998, in his
petition to the Government, and in subsequent interviews, did the author
indicate that he had shot and killed one or several policemen. The State
party underlines that according to the author, there were a large number of
people on the boat and the escape, which took place from a big city, was
tumultuous. In such circumstances, it would, according to the State party,
be surprising if the police were able to identify a perpetrator. Further,
the State party draws the attention of the Committee to the fact that the
author has not asserted he is being sought by the police in connection with
the alleged killings and that there is no indication that the police have
issued a warrant for his arrest.
7.9 The State party also submits that the author has given inconsistent and
contradictory information inter alia regarding his family in Viet Nam and
whether or not his wife was with him when he was hiding from the authorities
between 1985 and 1988.
7.10 With reference to the inconsistencies mentioned, the State party
submits that all three interviews with the author were conducted in the
presence of a Vietnamese interpreter. The State party acknowledges that
during the last interview before the Board, held in June 1999, the author
stated that the interpreter spoke a different dialect and that there were
certain things he had not understood, without specifying what. However, the
State party underlines that the interpreter had no difficulties
understanding the author and that it has been informed that speakers of
different Vietnamese dialects can easily understand each other.
7.11 The State party submits that according to the Swedish Embassy in Hanoi,
there is no indication that the author is of any particular interest of the
Vietnamese authorities today. No evidence has been brought forward by the
author to support the claim that he is wanted by the police following his
escape from Viet Nam. Reiterating its doubts as to the veracity of the
author's claim, the State party submits that even if this information were
credible, it would not be sufficient to prompt the absolute protection
provided for in article 3 of the Convention (see para. 6.9 above).
7.12 Finally, the State party refers to the case of another Vietnamese
national, convicted of gross rape in the same trial as the author and
expelled to Viet Nam in April 1998 (see para. 6.10 above).
Additional Observations by the State Party
8.1 In its supplementary submissions dated 5 and 19 October 1999, the State
party draws the attention of the Committee to a letter from the Ministry of
Public Security of Viet Nam to the Swedish Embassy in Hanoi, stating that
neither of the authors have any criminal record in Viet Nam.
8.2 It is further submitted that the second of the Vietnamese nationals
expelled to his country of origin after servicing a prison sentence in
Sweden for a crime committed together with the authors has addressed a
petition to the Government of Sweden to be reunited with his family in
Sweden. The State party informs the Committee that before his expulsion,
this Vietnamese national claimed that he was suspected of stealing a police
boat and murdering two policemen in connection with his escape from Viet
Nam. He also maintained that he had previously been imprisoned three times
in Viet Nam and that he had been tortured. The State party draws the
attention of the Committee to the fact that in his new petition, made more
than a year after his return to Viet Nam, there is no indication that he has
been of interest to the Vietnamese authorities since his return.
Counsel's Comments
9.1 Counsel dismisses the State party's argument that the authors'
communications should be considered inadmissible in accordance with article
22, paragraph 5 (a) of the Convention. It is submitted that there is no
UNHCR procedure of international investigation or settlement provided for by
the 1951 Refugee Convention. In addition, the issue considered by the UNHCR
Regional Representative for the Baltic and Nordic Countries was the
compatibility of the expulsion decision with article 33 of the 1951 Refugee
Convention and not the question which is pending before the Committee, i.e.
whether the authors' face a risk of torture upon return to Viet Nam.
9.2 Counsel informs the Committee that although the Ministry of Public
Security of Viet Nam accepted the repatriation of the authors in December
1998, Viet Nam had a few months earlier refused such repatriation. According
to a Swedish newspaper, the reason for the refusal was said to that the
authors were accused of committing serious crimes in Viet Nam prior to their
escape.
9.3 With reference to the interviews conducted with the authors by the
Swedish Immigration Board in May and June 1999, counsel draws the attention
of the Committee to the fact that these took place after the submission of
the authors' communications to the Committee, and only after the submission
of a request by counsel to the Ministry of Justice, stating that "the
written opinion of the Swedish Immigration Board which was the basis of the
Court of Appeal's decision to expel [the authors], contains only general
statements".
9.4 Counsel recalls that when the authors were initially interviewed by the
police, in 1992 and 1991 respectively, they were already accepted as quota
refugees and did not applied for asylum under the same circumstances as
normal asylum-seekers arriving in Sweden. During the interviews no questions
were asked about previous torture and ill-treatment in Viet Nam, nor were
the authors asked about the risks they would face should they be returned.
9.5 In the case of the first author, Mr. V.X.N., counsel submits that the
subject of past or future risk of torture was never brought up during the
criminal proceedings, either by the courts, or by the author's defence
counsel and the author therefore did not know that the issue would be of any
significance. In Mr. H.N.'s case, counsel submits that the author's defence
brought the issue to the attention of the District Court. However, in the
District Court's decision not to expel the authors, reference was only made
to the fact that, even though conditions in Viet Nam had recently improved
considerably, it could not be maintained that the defendants were no longer
refugees. The issue of fear of future torture was not brought up by the
defence counsel before the Court of Appeal, as the defence counsel, in view
of the decision made by the District Court, did not believe that the Court
of Appeal would agree to expulsion.
9.6 Counsel further draws the attention of the Committee to the fact that,
although a Vietnamese interpreter was present during all interviews with the
authors, it is claimed by the authors that there is a considerable
difference between the dialects of the north and those of the south of Viet
Nam. The interpreters used by the Swedish Immigration Board are normally
from the north, whereas the authors are from the south. According to
counsel, this circumstance explains some of the inconsistencies referred to
by the State party.
9.7 In response to the State party's argument that the numerous accounts of
shootings in connection with escapes from Viet Nam in the 1980s have in no
case been possible to verify, counsel submits that this is logical. He
submits that Vietnamese nationals already repatriated would have no interest
in having this information confirmed and that it would be inappropriate for
UNHCR to investigate and search for evidence against the very people they
are assisting.
9.8 Counsel emphasizes that the reference of the State party in its initial
observations and its supplementary comments dated 19 October 1999 to the
cases of two other Vietnamese nationals who have been returned to Viet Nam
should not be taken into account by the Committee, as every individual claim
should be examined on its own merits.
9.9 Apart from counsel's comments applicable to both authors, he submits the
following regarding the merits of the respective cases.
The Case of V.X.N.
10.1 Counsel argues that in its assessment of the risks faced by the author,
the State party neglects to attach due importance to the result of the
medical examination. The description of the physical sufferings of the
author indicates that the inconsistencies referred to by the State party to
raise doubts as to the author's credibility are to be expected from a person
who tries to recount his experiences of torture.
10.2 Counsel notes the State party's argument that the author has not
provided any evidence, i.e. a judgement that he was in fact sentenced to 12
years' imprisonment and that it refers to certain "peculiarities" in
relation to the author's stay in and escape from prison. Counsel submits
that the judgement in Viet Nam was never transmitted directly to the author,
but only to his defence counsel at the time, whose name he does not remember
after 23 years. However, the author has given details about the trial
itself, i.e. that it took place in the city of Nha Trang and that the
investigation was done by the Khanh Hoa county authorities.
10.3 As to the "peculiarities" referred to by the State party, counsel
submits that there is no reason to doubt the author's affirmation that his
three eldest children were in fact conceived during the author's
imprisonment. Prison guards could be bribed to leave prisoners and their
visiting wives alone for some privacy, although it was formally forbidden.
As to the unlikelihood to find any uninhabited islands in the area where the
author claims to have hidden after his escape from prison, the existence of
the thinly populated Vung Me island, outside Nha Trang, where the author hid
can easily be confirmed.
10.4 Counsel further submits that the statements regarding prison sentencing
attributed to the author during his initial interview in 1992 are the result
of misunderstandings due to the fact that the author, after his sentencing
in 1976, served the time until his escape nine years later in three
different prisons. Counsel maintains that no other inconsistencies relating
to the author's account of torture, sentencing, imprisonment and escape from
prison are of substantial value, and should be seen in the light of the
considerable time which has elapsed since the events took place.
10.5 Counsel further states that the protection provided for in article 3 of
the Convention does not only apply to the risk of being subjected to torture
by the Vietnamese State authorities, but also if the authorities are not
able to provide the individual with necessary protection against criminal
actions in Viet Nam. Counsel refers in this context to the jurisprudence of
the European Court of Human Rights.
10.6 Finally, counsel refers to the State party's supplementary observations
of 5 October 1999, stating that the information provided by the Vietnamese
authorities as to the author's criminal record is incorrect and maintaining
that the author was sentenced by a court in Nha Trang in 1976 to 12 years'
imprisonment.
The Case of Mr. H.N.
11.1 Counsel submits that the inconsistencies referred to by the State party
with regard to the information provided by the author are not of substantial
character but are merely a matter of semantics. The inconsistencies can be
explained simply, by the fact that different interpreters were used during
the different interviews or that the author's statements may have been
written down differently on different occasions. As an example, counsel
notes the State party's argument that the author's petition to the
Government in January 1998, in which he stated that he was discovered when
planning his escape from Viet Nam and was thereafter apprehended and
tortured, diminishes the credibility of the author. In this respect, counsel
submits that this statement in no way contradicts the author's claim that he
was of interest to the authorities for having escaped mine clearance duty or
for having been active in the resistence, or for a combination of the two.
11.2 With reference to the author's activities in the resistance, counsel
disputes that individuals from different human rights organisations and from
UNHCR referred to by the State party would necessarily have any knowledge
about the activities of a small anti-Communist resistance group operative in
Nha Trang 14 years ago.
11.3 Counsel disputes the indication by the State party that the author's
account of his escape and the shootings in connection with it has been
"escalating". Counsel argues that rather it is the questioning during the
various interviews which escalated and recalls that during the initial
police interview, in 1991, the author was not asked in detail about his
escape. Counsel further disputes the State party's assertion that there is
no indication that an arrest warrant for the author has been issued, and
reminds the Committee of the initial refusal by the Vietnamese authorities
to accept the repatriation of the authors because they had committed crimes
in Viet Nam prior to their escape.
11.4 Counsel submits that it would not be possible for the author to submit
any evidence other than a medical certificate to support his claim, given
the circumstances of his escape. Counsel argues that it would not seem
appropriate for the author to contact the Vietnamese authorities requesting
documentary evidence and that the police, for obvious reasons, does not
supply written evidence that torture has occurred.
11.5 Finally, counsel refers to the State party's supplementary observations
of 5 October 1999, in which it is stated that the author has no criminal
record in Viet Nam, submitting that this is in accordance with the author's
statements that he has not been sentenced by a Vietnamese court for any
crime.
Further Comments by the State Party
12.1 In its complementary submission dated 8 February 2000, the State party
states that there was never any refusal on the part of Viet Nam to accept
the repatriation of the authors. The State party adds that for many years it
has been faced with difficulties when trying to repatriate Vietnamese
citizens, and that the acceptance of the Vietnamese authorities in this
respect was a result of lengthy discussions between the two countries
concerned regarding a large number of repatriation cases.
12.2 The State party states that the Swedish Embassy in Hanoi has confirmed
that although the Vietnamese language has different dialects, with
differences in pronunciation and sometimes vocabulary, these differences are
not significant. The State party further points out that the written
language is the same in all parts of the country.
12.3 Finally, with reference to Mr. V.X.N.'s claim that he would risk
ill-treatment by a private person, the State party wishes to underline that
no evidence has been brought forward to suggest that the Vietnamese
authorities would be incapable of affording the author appropriate
protection against such treatment. The State party states that the
jurisprudence mentioned by counsel in this respects concerns solely the
interpretation of the European Convention on Human Rights and is not
applicable to the Convention against Torture.
Issues and Proceedings Before the Committee
13.1 Before considering any claims contained in a communication, the
Committee against Torture must decide whether or not the communication is
admissible under article 22 of the Convention. With reference to article 22,
paragraph 5 (a), of the Convention, the Committee takes note of the State
party's view that the cases of the authors have already been examined by
UNHCR to ascertain whether or not an expulsion would be compatible with the
State party's obligations under article 33.2 of the 1951 Refugee Convention.
The Committee notes, however, that neither the 1951 Refugee Convention nor
the Statute of UNHCR provides for the establishment of a procedure of
international investigation or settlement. The Committee considers that a
written opinion or advice given by a regional or international body on a
matter of interpretation of international law in relation to a particular
case does not imply that the matter has been subject to international
investigation or settlement.
13.2 The Committee is further of the opinion that all domestic remedies have
been exhausted and finds that no further obstacles to the admissibility of
the communications exist. Since both the State party and the authors'
counsel have provided observations on the merits of the communications, the
Committee proceeds with the consideration of those merits.
13.3 The Committee must decide, pursuant to article 3, paragraph 1, of the
Convention, whether there are substantial grounds for believing that the
authors would be in danger of being subjected to torture upon return to Viet
Nam. In reaching this decision, the Committee must take into account all
relevant considerations, pursuant to article 3, paragraph 2, of the
Convention, including the existence of a consistent pattern of gross,
flagrant or mass violations of human rights. The aim of the determination,
however, is to establish whether the individuals concerned would be
personally at risk of being subjected to torture in the country to which
they would return. It follows that the existence of a consistent pattern of
gross, flagrant or mass violations of human rights in a country does not as
such constitute a sufficient ground for determining that a particular person
would be in danger of being subjected to torture upon his/her return to that
country; additional grounds must exist to show that the individual concerned
would be personally at risk. Similarly, the absence of a consistent pattern
of gross violations of human rights does not mean that a person cannot be
considered to be in danger of being subjected to torture in his or her
specific circumstances.
13.4 The Committee recalls the absolute character of the obligation of State
parties contained in article 3, paragraph 1, of the Convention. In this
connection the Committee notes that pursuant to the Swedish 1989 Aliens Act
there is an absolute impediment to expulsion an alien to a country where
there are reasonable grounds for believing that he/she would be in danger of
suffering capital or corporal punishment or of being subjected to torture or
other inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
13.5 The Committee notes that the decision by the Court of Appeal to expel
the authors was taken on the basis of what the Swedish Immigration Board
characterized as "scanty" available information regarding the authors'
personal circumstances. It is further noted that the complementary
interviews with the authors, conducted to provide a basis for a risk
assessment, were not conducted until after the submission of the authors'
communications to the Committee and only upon request from counsel to the
Ministry of Justice.
13.6 Having noted the above, the Committee considers that the authors'
activities in Viet Nam and their history of detention and torture are
relevant in determining whether they would be in danger of being subjected
to torture upon their return. The Committee notes in that respect that the
State party has pointed to inconsistencies in the authors' accounts of
events and has contested the general veracity of their claim. In the present
case, although a number of disparities may be explained by difficulties in
translation, the considerable time which has elapsed since the authors'
escape from Viet Nam and the procedural circumstances, the Committee
considers that some doubts as to the authors' credibility remain.
13.7 Notwithstanding the above, the Committee is aware of the human rights
situation in Viet Nam, but considers that given, inter alia, the
considerable time which has elapsed since the escape of the authors and the
fact that the illegal departure from Viet Nam in the middle of the 1980s is
no longer considered an offence by the Vietnamese authorities, the authors
have not substantiated their claims that they will personally be at risk of
being subjected to torture if returned to Viet Nam at present. In this
connection the Committee notes that a risk of being imprisoned upon return
as such is not sufficient to trigger the protection of article 3 of the
Convention.
13.8 The Committee recalls that, for the purposes of the Convention, one of
the prerequisites for "torture" is that it is inflicted by or at the
instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or
other person acting in an official capacity. The Committee considers that
the issue whether a State party has an obligation to refrain from expelling
a person who might risk pain or suffering inflicted by a private person,
without the consent or acquiescence of the State, falls outside the scope of
article 3 of the Convention.
14. The Committee against Torture, acting under article 22, paragraph 7, of
the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment, is of the view that the facts as found by the
Committee do not reveal a breach of article 3 of the Convention.
[Done in English, French, Russian and Spanish, the English text being the
original version.]
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