Bronze Night - Human Rights Issues Concerning Arrests and Use of Force By The Police

Human Rights Issues Concerning Arrests and Use of Force By The Police

In November 2007, the UN Committee Against Torture has considered Estonia's report and expressed concern over "allegations of brutality and excessive use of force by law enforcement personnel, especially with regard to the disturbances that occurred in Tallinn in April 2007, well documented by a detailed compilation of complaints". In September, 2010, the European Court of Human Rights, noting that the applicants failed to substantiate their allegation of discrimination on the basis of their ethnic origin and that there is no indication of discrimination of any kind in connection with their alleged ill-treatment and detention, has rejected some of complaints of seven persons arrested during the events against Estonian authorities, while adjourning their complaint of deprivation of liberty, as well as complaints of four of them concerning ill-treatment due to insufficient information. In 2011, the Committee for the Prevention of Torture (Council of Europe) has published its report on its 2007 visit to Estonia, stating that many of the persons detained by the police in connection with the April 2007 events in Tallinn were not granted all the fundamental safeguards (the right of those concerned to inform a close relative or another third party of their choice of their situation, the right of access to a lawyer, and the right of access to a doctor) from the outset of their detention: while many of the persons concerned were allowed to contact someone and to be assisted by a lawyer only when brought before a judge, a number of detained persons claimed that their requests to see a doctor whilst in police custody had been denied, even when they displayed visible injuries.

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