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On 18 June 2024, the Special Investigation Service of Georgia published a statement informing the public that it did not consider it appropriate to reopen the investigation into the unlawful killing of Temirlan Machalikashvili.
Social Justice Center, which is defending the interests of the Machalikashvili family before the European Court of Human Rights and at the level of the national investigation, considers the decision of the Special Investigation Service to be unjustified and continues the trend of unfair, ineffective, and politicized justice in this case. At the same time, this decision once again proves that the Special Investigation Service is not an independent agency and does not have the institutional resources to investigate serious and politicized cases of crimes committed by law enforcement agencies.
According to the statement of the Special Investigation Service, the Service decided on the cases of the "Tsintsabadze group" on the basis of the recommendations of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe and, within the framework of this group of cases, considered that it was not appropriate to open an investigation into the case of the unlawful killing of Temirlan Machalikashvili. The Special Investigation Service based its assessment on several arguments:
The Special Investigation Service made the above-mentioned decision based only on the investigative materials prepared by the Tbilisi Prosecutor's Office and did not conduct a full, complete and impartial investigation.
The Special Investigation Service took one year to make this negative decision, and during this period the agency never responded to any of our petitions and statements, nor did it interview the family members of Temilan Machalikashvili. 1 year after the entry into force of the European Court's decision, we learned about the refusal of the investigation through a press release published on the official website of the agency. The manner in which the agency has been working on this case further illustrates the problem of its politicization and impartiality.
Social Justice Center considers that the decision of the Special Investigation Service is formal, not properly investigated, unjustified and contradicts the obligation to execute the ECHR judgment.
The European Court of Human Rights considered that the violation of the standards of impartiality and effectiveness of the investigation in the case of the unlawful killing of Temirlan Machalikashvili violated the procedural aspect of the right to life and considered that due to the ineffective investigation it was impossible to discuss various issues, including the violation of the essential part of the right to life. Therefore, the Special Investigation Service should have taken into account that the violation of essential aspects was not found by the European Court due to the fundamental shortcomings of the investigation and the lack of relevant evidence.
In its judgement, the European Court of Human Rights found that the state had violated fundamental principles of investigation in this case, including, according to the Court, the following
In view of the European Court's assessments, the Social Justice Center has repeatedly applied to the Special Investigation Service and submitted numerous applications and petitions requesting immediate investigative/procedural measures under the conditions of the resumption of the investigation, including 1. Renewed and additional questioning of high-ranking officials of the State Security Service; 2. Examination of the correspondence of the State Security Service employees and renewed questioning to evaluate numerous errors in their interrogations. 3. Carrying out an investigative experiment (which is essential and which was refused by the Tbilisi Prosecutor's Office) to investigate possible falsification of evidence. As mentioned above, the Special Investigation Service did not respond to any of our statements and petitions for a year.
As it is clear from the statement of the Special Investigation Department, the department did not take into account the evaluations presented in the decision of the European Court and presented the fundamental violations identified by the Court in this case as minor procedural violations that cannot affect the results of the investigation. For us, it is unreasonable and doubtful how the Special Investigation Service can consider the issue of the institutional impartiality of the investigation, the failure to establish the facts of fundamental importance to the case, and the fundamental errors in the testimony of the Special Forces as minor procedural violations. It should be noted that this evaluation exactly repeats the position of the Ministry of Justice on this case, which it publicly presented after the publication of the European Court's decision.
The working manner of the Special Investigation Service in the mentioned cases and the argumentation presented once again demonstrate the problem of institutional independence and impartiality of this agency, which has been numerously criticized by the Venice Commission, the European Union, and local actors.
We argued before the Inquiry that these investigative measures may have had a decisive impact on the investigation and the establishment of the truth in this case.
The principle of a thorough investigation requires the investigation to take all measures to establish the truth and, to this end, the investigation should have shown that it made a good faith effort to verify all suspicions, questions and versions and to collect the necessary evidence. Unfortunately, the Special Investigation Service did not act with integrity and due diligence and unreasonably refused to reopen the investigation without proper communication with the victim's family and their lawyers.
It has been one year since the European Court of Human Rights decision on the unlawful killing of Machalikashvili came into force, and the Georgian government is obliged to implement it. It should be noted that the effective implementation of the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights is obligatory for all Member States. Enforcement of the decision includes not only the payment of compensation to the applicant, but also the restoration of the violated right, which in similar cases includes the resumption of the investigation.
Enforcement of the European Court's decision in the Machalikashvili case meant, first of all, re-examination of the case and resumption of the investigation, taking into account the fundamental shortcomings identified by the Court in the course of the investigation.
On 11-14 March, the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe discussed the issue of the implementation of the Tsintsabadze group of cases, which includes the Machalikashvili case. The Committee of Ministers expressed its deep concern about the protracted investigation of several cases related to the Tsintsabadze group, including the Machalikashvili case, and urged the government to take all necessary measures to complete them expeditiously and comprehensively. The Committee also requested the Government to provide the Committee with summary information on the measures taken and planned to remove the obstacles encountered in the investigation of the above-mentioned cases. In particular, the Committee urged the Special Investigation Service to immediately review the case material in accordance with the ECHR judgment and to inform the Committee and the family of the deceased of the resumption of the investigation. The Committee of Ministers scheduled the next discussion on the monitoring of the execution of the mentioned case at the meetings in 2025.
The decision of the Special Investigation Service, published on 18 June, represents the Georgian government's manifest refusal to implement the decision of the European Court of Human Rights, which is contrary to its obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights.
It should be noted that the process of implementation of the European Court's judgments by the Georgian government is already difficult and problematic. According to the 2023 data, a total of 180 decisions of the European Court against Georgia have been referred to the Committee of Ministers for enforcement. Of these, the Committee of Ministers has suspended the monitoring of only 104 cases (57% of cases), while the monitoring of the remaining cases (pending cases) is ongoing. According to this indicator, Georgia ranks last among Council of Europe member states, after Azerbaijan and Serbia. The high rate of ongoing unenforceable judgments indicates that the state has not taken the necessary steps to finally enforce them and is hindering the fulfilment of its international obligations.
The Social Justice Centre plans to immediately apply to the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe to consider an interim resolution on the matter at the Committee's meeting scheduled for September this year. It is fundamentally important to wait for the Committee of Ministers' assessment and decision on the Special Investigation Unit's decision.
It is essential to await the assessment and decision of the Committee of Ministers on the decision of the Special Investigation Service. In its communication to the Committee, the Social Justice Centre calls, inter alia, for the application of Article 46, Part 4 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which allows the Committee to apply to the European Court of Human Rights to rule on the violation by the State of its enforcement obligations.
It should be noted that the members of the Temirlan Machalikashvili family and the Social Justice Centre, which represents the interests of the Temirlan Machalikashvili family, have not yet received the explained written decision of the service. Accordingly, upon receipt of the Special Investigation Service's decision, we will publicly present a detailed legal assessment of the decision.
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