Relying in particular on Article 3 (prohibition of inhuman or degrading treatment), Mr Bordenciu
submitted that such conditions of detention were inhuman.
Violation of Article 3 (degrading treatment)
Just satisfaction: EUR 15,000 (non-pecuniary damage) and EUR 1,500 (costs and expenses)
Niţulescu v. Romania (no. 16184/06)
The applicant, Gabriela Niţulescu, is a Romanian national who was born in 1964 and lives in Moreni
(Romania).
The case concerned Ms Niţulescu’s complaint about the unfairness of proceedings brought against
her for influence peddling.
Ms Niţulescu, employed at the local council, was accused in 2002 by a colleague, R.C.A., of
demanding money in exchange for her recommending to the mayor that R.C.A. be given a
permanent post. Ms Niţulescu was indicted in June 2003 on a charge of influence peddling. In the
ensuing domestic proceedings, she was acquitted in July 2004, the County Court finding that most of
R.C.A.’s statements, only corroborated by her husband and brother, were contradictory and could
not be supported by recordings that R.C.A. had made of her conversations with Ms Niţulescu, as the
correct procedures for telephone tapping had not been respected. This judgment was upheld on
appeal, the Court of Appeal also taking into account Ms Niţulescu’s claim – corroborated by four
other colleagues – that she had received the money from R.C.A. as a loan. However, an appeal on
points of law submitted by the prosecutor was subsequently allowed by the High Court of Cassation
and Justice, which quashed the first two domestic courts’ decisions and convicted Ms Niţulescu of
influence peddling and sentenced her to two years’ imprisonment, suspended with probation. It
essentially based its decision on the audio tapes of the conversations between R.C.A. and
Ms Niţulescu.
Relying on Article 6 § 1 (right to a fair trial), Ms Niţulescu complained that her conviction had mainly
been based on the audio tapes, despite the fact that they had been recorded without proper judicial
authorisation.
Violation of Article 6 § 1
Just satisfaction: EUR 3,000 (non-pecuniary damage)
Abdurakhmanova and Abdulgamidova v. Russia (no. 41437/10)
The applicants, Azha Abdurakhmanova and Sabina Abdulgamidova, are Russian nationals who were
born in 1950 and 1987 respectively and live in Makhachkala (Republic of Dagestan, Russia). They are
the mother and wife of Abdurakhman Abdurakhmanov, born in 1985, who, the applicants alleged,
was abducted by State officials in Dagestan, Russia, and subsequently disappeared.
According to the applicants’ submissions, Abdurakhman Abdurakhmanov, who was living with his
wife in Moscow, was abducted on 25 June 2010 in Kaspiysk, Dagestan, while visiting relatives there
together with his wife. The abduction, by a group of men, some of whom were masked, took place in
the street, in daylight, and was witnessed by a number of people, including neighbours and the
applicants’ relatives. On the same day, a group of officers from the district department of the
interior had visited Azha Abdurakhmanova’s house and had presented her with an arrest warrant in
respect of her son Abdurakhman Abdurakhmanov, who, according to the warrant, was suspected of
terrorist activities.
On the day following the abduction, Ms Abdurakhmanova complained about it to the Dagestan FSB
and the Dagestan Prosecutor’s office; a few days later she also complained to the Dagestan Ministry
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