issued by the Registrar of the Court  
ECHR 084 (2019)  
07.03.2019  
Student’s arrest and detention for allegedly filming a dance  
and uploading it to the Internet was not lawful  
In today’s Chamber judgment1 in the case of Rustamzade v. Azerbaijan (application no. 38239/16)  
the European Court of Human Rights held, unanimously, that there had been:  
a violation of Article 5 § 1 (right to liberty and security) of the European Convention on Human  
Rights.  
The case concerned a student’s arrest and detention in 2013 for allegedly filming some friends  
dancing in a park and uploading the video of it to YouTube. He was charged with hooliganism and  
spent one year in pre-trial detention. He was convicted in 2014 as charged, as well as of mass  
disorder and arms offences which had in the meantime been added to the list of charges, and  
sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment.  
The Court found in particular that the facts relied on in the domestic proceedings could not  
reasonably be considered to constitute criminal behaviour as defined under domestic law or as  
interpreted by the higher courts. Mr Rustamzade had therefore been arrested and detained without  
a reasonable suspicion that he had committed a criminal offence.  
Principal facts  
The applicant, Ilkin Bakir oglu Rustamzade, is an Azerbaijani national who was born in 1992 and lives  
in Baku (Azerbaijan).  
In the first few months of 2013 Mr Rustamzade, an economics student and civil society activist,  
actively participated in a number of demonstrations held in Baku criticising the government for  
deaths of soldiers in the army.  
Against that background, on 1 March 2013 he allegedly made a video recording of friends  
performing what had become a popular dance at the time in Azerbaijan, the “Harlem Shake”. The  
video, later uploaded to YouTube, shows seven people dancing in a park, one of whom makes  
sexually suggestive movements near a bronze statue.  
Mr Rustamzade was arrested and charged in May 2013 with hooliganism. He was accused of a  
“manifest disrespect towards society” and breaching public order by making the video recording and  
uploading it to the Internet. He denied the charges against him.  
At the prosecuting authorities’ request, the court ordered his detention pending trial for two months  
on the ground that there was a risk of his absconding and reoffending. Despite his repeated appeals,  
the courts extended his detention until his conviction in May 2014 of hooliganism as well as of a  
number of other criminal offences which had in the meantime been added to the list of charges,  
including mass disorder and various arms offences. He was sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment.  
A separate application (no. 22323/16) concerning the criminal proceedings against Mr Rustamzade is  
still ongoing before the European Court.  
1. Under Articles 43 and 44 of the Convention, this Chamber judgment is not final. During the three-month period following its delivery,  
any party may request that the case be referred to the Grand Chamber of the Court. If such a request is made, a panel of five judges  
considers whether the case deserves further examination. In that event, the Grand Chamber will hear the case and deliver a final  
judgment. If the referral request is refused, the Chamber judgment will become final on that day.  
Once a judgment becomes final, it is transmitted to the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe for supervision of its execution.  
Further information about the execution process can be found here: www.coe.int/t/dghl/monitoring/execution.  
Complaints, procedure and composition of the Court  
Relying in particular on Article 5 §§ 1 and 3 (right to liberty and security), Mr Rustamzade  
complained that he had been arrested and detained without a reasonable suspicion that he had  
committed a criminal offence and that the courts had failed to justify his pre-trial detention.  
The application was lodged with the European Court of Human Rights on 20 June 2016.  
Judgment was given by a Chamber of seven judges, composed as follows:  
Angelika Nußberger (Germany), President,  
Yonko Grozev (Bulgaria),  
André Potocki (France),  
Mārtiņš Mits (Latvia),  
Gabriele Kucsko-Stadlmayer (Austria),  
Lәtif Hüseynov (Azerbaijan),  
Lado Chanturia (Georgia),  
and also Claudia Westerdiek, Section Registrar.  
Decision of the Court  
Mr Rustamzade maintained that the accusations against him had been groundless, submitting that  
even the video recording of the dance had not been available in the case file examined by the courts  
when they had ordered and extended his detention.  
The Court noted that the Government had not specified whether the material in the case file against  
the applicant had contained witness statements, facts or evidence that would satisfy the objective  
observer that he had committed a criminal offence.  
In any case, it was not at all clear from the decisions of the prosecuting authorities and the domestic  
courts how the video recording of a dance and its subsequent uploading to YouTube could be  
considered a grave breach of public order, which constituted one of the elements of the criminal  
offence of hooliganism under domestic law.  
Nor had it been argued in the proceedings that the applicant’s filming of the dance had been  
accompanied by violence or destruction / damage of others’ property, another constituent element  
of hooliganism as defined in the Criminal Code.  
Both the Plenum of the Supreme Court and the Constitutional Court had confirmed this  
interpretation of the domestic law in decisions concerning hooliganism.  
The Court therefore concluded that the facts relied on could not reasonably be considered to  
constitute criminal behaviour as defined under domestic law or as interpreted by the higher courts.  
Mr Rustamzade’s pre-trial detention had not therefore constituted “lawful detention” effected “on  
reasonable suspicion” of his having committed an offence, in violation of Article 5 § 1.  
Given that finding, the Court held that there was no need to examine separately the complaint  
under Article 5 § 3 about the reasons for his continued pre-trial detention.  
Just satisfaction (Article 41)  
The Court held that Azerbaijan was to pay Mr Rustamzade 20,000 euros (EUR) in respect of  
non-pecuniary damage and EUR 2,500 in respect of costs and expenses.  
The judgment is available only in English.  
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The European Court of Human Rights was set up in Strasbourg by the Council of Europe Member  
States in 1959 to deal with alleged violations of the 1950 European Convention on Human Rights.  
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