European Court of Human Rights rules against Greece

European Court of Human Rights rules against Greece
# 07 July 2022 21:11 (UTC +04:00)

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) Thursday ruled that Greece’s “pushback” operation that led to the sinking of a migrant boat, killing eleven (including children and infants), violated articles 2 and 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights, APA reports citing Jurist.

In Safi and others v. Greece, the court held that the behavior of Greek security officials violated the migrants right to life and the prohibition on inhuman or degrading treatment.

On January 20th, 2014, a boat of migrants from Afghanistan was traveling off of the coast of the Greek island of Karmakonisi. They were spotted by Greek security forces who attempted to tow the vessel because it was over capacity and not seaworthy. According to the Greek government, the migrants moved around, causing the vessel to capsize and sink.

The court found that the investigation into the incident violated the migrants right to life. One incident that was heavily discussed was the fact that one of the translators who took the survivors statements reportedly did not speak the language the survivors spoke. This led to discrepancies between the survivors’ official and unofficial statements.

The court also found that the behavior of the security forces during the rescue violated the migrants right to life. The migrants were not given life vests and the security forces did not call for a bigger boat to remove the migrants from the unsafe vessel. The court also found a significant delay between the reporting of the incident to authorities and the actual incident itself.

Finally, the court found that the behavior of officials after the survivors were taken to Karmakonisi violated the ban on degrading treatment. Survivors were forced to disrobe on a public basketball court in front of other survivors and a large amount of security officials. They were then cavity searched publicly, violating the migrants right to humane treatment.

The court assigned remedies under Article 41, including 100,000 euros to one of the applicants, 80,000 to three of the applicants jointly, 40,000 to another applicant, and 10,000 to each of the remaining 11 applicants.

#
#

THE OPERATION IS BEING PERFORMED