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Statewatch News Online: France: CNDS report into Vincennes detention centre death
28 March 2012
France
CNDS report
into Vincennes detention centre death
On 5 July 2010,
the Commission nationale de déontologie de la sécurité
(CNDS, National Commission for the professional ethics of security
forces) was critical of the decision to keep a man in detention
in spite of his poor health when it issued an opinion and recommendations
on the case involving the death of SS, a Tunisian national, in
Paris-Vincennes detention centre for foreigners on 21 June 2008.
The incident was followed by a protest within the centre, the
largest of its kind in France, which had a capacity that was
twice as high as the regulation capacity for French centres de
rétention administrative (CRAs) for foreigners (140),
and the revolt ended when the centre's two compounds (CRA 1 and
CRA 2) burned on 22 June. On 17 March 2010, ten former detainees
were convicted for violent acts and the fire during the protest
in a trial that was criticised as having a foregone conclusion
and as isolating events from their context by defence lawyers,
who walked out of proceedings after the fourth hearing (see Migreurop's
monitoring of the trial at
http://www.migreurop.org/rubrique323.html
, and
Statewatch Journal vol. 20 no. 1, forthcoming).
Reconstruction of events
The CNDS notes that SS had been held in the Paris-Vincennes CRA
2 since 16 June 2008. The Tunisian man had been refused entry
and had just served a four month prison term for drug trafficking,
during which he was visited by medical services on eight occasions.
His medical file had been sent to the CRA, where he was visited
on 17 June, ordered to take medication twice a day, and referred
to a police psychiatric ward for a visit, before returning to
the centre on 18 June. On 19 June, he only took his medication
at night because he had not woken up in the morning, and he was
visited by the centre's doctor, who deemed his state compatible
with detention and with him being transported to Tunisia, although
it was incompatible with the detainee leaving French territory
and his vital prognosis was a cause for concern.
On 20 June, he went to the infirmary twice, asking to only take
his medication once a day, a request that he was granted. On
the following day, security guards were entering rooms looking
for 15 detainees who were on a list, and SS was on a bed in a
different room from that which he was meant to be in, something
that was reportedly quite commonplace. They found him snoring
as he slept and shook him, without managing to wake him up and
moving on, as he was not on their list. The officers claimed
that the detainees in his room had only stated that he was snoring
very loudly, but one of the latter told the police investigating
the death that he had told them that he was very ill and had
to be taken elsewhere. One officer who had accompanied SS to
the psychiatric visit said he believed the man's sleepiness was
a result of his medication. He was seen sleeping by several detainees
without arousing concern, until a friend came to visit him at
around 16:30 on 21 June, but he appeared to be asleep. When the
detainees in his room shook him, they said he was "hard"
and had liquid (similar to blood) dripping from his mouth and
nostrils, and sought assistance from police officers. When officers
came to the scene with a nurse, around ten detainees had crowded
outside the room, an attempt was made to revive him and the emergency
services were called.
The detainees claimed there had not been any disturbance or fight
in the room. The autopsy confirmed this, ruling out any injuries
and establishing that the death resulted from asphyxia due to
acute respiratory distress and lungs with signs of emphysema
that required further tests. The report notes that the Tunisian
consulate was informed of the death and that officers who went
to inform his family did not find anyone at home [his son's mother
has filed a complaint about not being informed of the death in
timely fashion].
As regards the fire in the CRA, the CNDS report notes that commander
BM stated that there were incidents soon after the death as officers
dispersed a crowd that shouted insults, spat and burned some
mattresses in a hall and in a room by using teargas, in order
to avoid direct confrontation. The body was taken out in the
evening. Seine Saint-Denis MP Jean-Pierre Brard visited the CRA
and explained that he would have returned on the next day. On
22 June, there was a protest in the afternoon in CRA 1, which
commander BM blames on a demonstration outside the centre, whereas
the detainees claim that it was a result of a lack of information
about the death to detainees, and a feeling of neglect and lack
of concern for them by police officers. The disturbance spread
out to CRA 2, there was violence against officers, damage to
property and furniture, use of teargas by officers, and the CRA's
two buildings were burned by fires that were set in each of them,
by the time the fire services arrived and had them under control
at around 19:30. The detainees were evacuated and transferred,
and some MPs were temporarily denied access to the centre.
The Commission's Opinion
The CNDS' Opinion on the death of SS, in terms of the quality
of medical care, asserts that it is not competent to reach a
conclusion, but nonetheless expresses its "shock" about
the content of the medical report on SS's condition issued by
the CRA's doctor, in which his state of health is deemed compatible
with detention at the same time as his vital prognosis was a
cause for concern. As regards officers awareness of SS's state
of health, no shortcomings are identified in view of the man's
movements in and out of the room captured on CCTV and the absence
of visible signs of him suffering. Moreover, they acted in timely
fashion once they were informed of there being a problem by his
roommates. The CNDS deplores the lack of initiatives resulting
from the diagnosis of the detainees' state of health that expressed
concern for his vital prospects, wondering whether he should
have been in the centre, and will pass on relevant documents
and its Opinion to the prosecution services, leaving it to the
judicial authorities to establish whether any legal steps should
be adopted and whether there are any repercussions in the field
of criminal law.
With regards to the fire, the CNDS does not feel that it is in
a position to reach a conclusion, noting the existence of the
two theses mentioned above. It limits itself to asserting the
difficulty of managing a death in a centre hosting 280 people
in an extremely limited space and agrees with some findings expressed
in an April 2008 report by the Commission nationale de contrôle
des centres et locaux de rétention administrative et des
zones d'attente (CRAZA), an oversight body that checks on conditions
in places of detention. While it states that in spite of its
shortcomings, it is unfair to speak of the Vincennes CRA as a
"concentration camp" or "prisoner camp",
it adds that its capacity is excessive and should be scaled back
down to the limit established by law for such centres, namely
140 places [its division into CRA 1 and CRA 2, two buildings
treated as separate centres, enabled this limit to be circumvented].
The report also called for measures to be adopted to open the
centre up to external bodies or associations in order to relieve
the tension within it resulting from the large number of people
who feared expulsion who were kept there for up to 32 days.
The initial refusal of entry to MPs on 22 June 2008 because evacuation
operations were underway, is deemed a failure in terms of the
ethics of security because it contravenes the law, as MPs are
allowed to visit sites where people are denied their freedom
"at any time". Finally, the CNDS felt that it was not
in a position to reach a conclusion regarding security norms
and construction materials employed in the CRA, and the lengthy
exposure of detainees to smoke without any specific protective
equipment, unlike police officers. The MPs who filed the complaint
"deplored" the absence of an evacuation plan, lack
of organisation and failure to take into account the detainees'
distress as victims of the fire, especially as they were not
promptly informed of where they were being transferred to, and
allegedly were not able to take their personal effects with them,
those transferred to Nîmes were not allowed to go to the
toilet or drink throughout the journey, and the lack of food
offered to the detainees. Commander BM replied by claiming that
the detainees transferred to Nîmes were given cold meals
and had their personal effects returned to them, adding that
the decisions adopted were improvised as no contingency evacuation
plans appeared to be in place, which could have led to dramatic
consequences. Hence, and considering that the centre's authorities
had to take charge of 248 detainees in difficult circumstances,
the CNDS deemed that police officers had acted in compliance
with the ethics of security.
Final recommendations
While the CNDS declares itself unable to evaluate the medical
report that deemed the health conditions of SS to be a cause
of concern as regards his vital prognosis and advised not to
remove him from French territory, while it also considered that
they were compatible with detention, it has passed on relevant
documentation to the prosecution service to examine whether it
should entail further action. It recommends that in cases such
as this, with these specifications, the responsible authorities
should adopt any actions required for the sake of a detainee's
health. It also reiterates that article 719 of the code of penal
procedure establishes the right for MPs to visit places of detention
(detention centres, waiting areas at border points, prisons and
places where people are kept in custody), without any limits
to this right, noting that staff and officials in these sites
should be regularly reminded of this. Measures for the prevention
of fires and to put them out should also be implemented, alongside
regular fire drills.
Source
Commission nationale de déontologie de la sécurité,
Saisine no. 2008-67, 2008-71.
Avis
et recommendations de la Commission nationale de déontologie
de la sécurité, 5 July 2010 [pdf]
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