The circumstances of the case took place in Yekaterinburg, Russia on 25
September, 1999 when the applicant was involuntary detained in a
psychiatric hospital. The reasons for her detention were that "she had
remained awake throughout the night studying the Bible and weeping".
Later the hospital authorities stated that there was psychiatric
evidence that she was mentally ill.
On 5 November, 1999, after 39 days of detention, the Ordzhonekidzevskiy
District Court of Ekaterinburg confirmed that the detention had been
necessary as the applicant had suffered from an acute attack of paranoid
schizophrenia. The applicant's representative and the applicant herself
did not have any access to the report of the medical commission either
before or after the hearing. Moreover the court hearing began in the
absence of the applicant and her representative; they were requested to
wait at the lobby while the court considered the medical documents. On
24 December, 1999, the Sverdlovsk Regional Court dismissed Ms.
Rakevich's appeal against the decision of the District Court, confirming
her detention was lawful and necessary. It also established, however,
that the applicant's compulsory care was no longer necessary as the
applicant had a job, was the single mother of a young son and had
already spent a considerable period of time in the hospital and thus the
court ordered not to prolong the applicant's detention.
The application to the European Court of Human Rights was submitted on 8
June, 2000.
The applicant claimed before the Court, inter alia, that:
1. There was a violation of Article 5(1) of the Convention since the law
on Psychiatric Treatment was violated on count that the judicial
decision approving her confinement was delivered 39 days after she was
detained, instead of within the 5 day time limit as laid down in the law.
2. Ms. Rakevich challenged the absence of an independent right to
initiate proceedings herself to test the lawfulness of her detention,
which constitutes the cornerstone guarantee of Article 5(4) which is
"Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by detention shall be entitled
to take proceedings by which the lawfulness of his detention shall be
decided speedily by a court".
The Court found the following violations of Article 5:
1. The applicant's detention did not follow the procedure prescribed by
law - that it took 39 days to approve the detention - therefore there
has been a violation of Art 5(1). This decision will hopefully prompt
the Russian authorities to change the practice of delayed judicial
reviews of such cases.
2. The detainee lacked the independent right to take proceedings to test
the lawfulness of her detention by a court. According to the Law on
Psychiatric Treatment Section 33 (2) "An application for the involuntary
placement of a person in a psychiatric hospital shall be filed by a
representative of the hospital where the person is detained". So the
Court found that the Law did not permit the applicant to apply to the
court herself. This is a violation of Article 5(4) and should lead to a
change in the Russian mental health law.
The Court also held that Russia should pay the applicant EUR 3000.
The applicant was represented by staff attorney with non-governmental
organization SUTYAJNIK, Anna Demeneva (Ekaterinburg), advised by
INTERIGHTS legal officers Borislav Petranov and Vesselina Vandova (London).
The text of the European Court s judgement is available at www.echr.coe.int
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News agency Sutyajnik-Press
Telephone/fax of the NGO Sutyajnik : 7-3432-56-36-51, Russia,
Yekaterinburg, 620072, Sireneviy Bulvard, 1-313; e-mail: [email protected]