I correctly predicted that there was a violation of human rights in GORDANOV v. RUSSIA.

Information

  • Judgment date: 2022-10-04
  • Communication date: 2019-07-05
  • Application number(s): 7434/18
  • Country:   RUS
  • Relevant ECHR article(s): 2, 2-1, 2-2
  • Conclusion:
    Violation of Article 2 - Right to life (Article 2-1 - Life) (Substantive aspect)
    Violation of Article 2 - Right to life (Article 2-1 - Effective investigation) (Procedural aspect)
  • Result: Violation
  • SEE FINAL JUDGMENT

JURI Prediction

  • Probability: 0.747604
  • Prediction: Violation
  • Consistent


Legend

 In line with the court's judgment
 In opposition to the court's judgment
Darker color: higher probability
: In line with the court's judgment  
: In opposition to the court's judgment

Communication text used for prediction

The applicant, Mr Akhmed Gordanov (also spelt as Gardanov), is a Russian national, who was born in 1952 and lives in Pliyevo (also spelt as Plievskiy), Ingushetia.
He is represented before the Court by lawyers from Stichting Justice Initiative.
The applicant is the father of Mr Salman Gordanov, who was born in 1989, and Mr Dzhuneyd (also spelt as Zhuneyd) Gordanov, who was born in 1992.
Both of the applicant’s sons died in 2012.
The facts of the case, as submitted by the applicant, may be summarised as follows.
A.
Events of 3 April 2012 and the investigation thereof 1.
Events of 3 April 2012 On 3 April 2012 the applicant’s sons Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov and three of their fellow villagers Mr S.M., Mr SH.G.
and the fifty-seven year-old Ms Z.V.
were driving home to Pliyevo from work at local brick plant in Nazran.
Salman Gordanov’s VAZ-2107 car had the registration number Г395ВО.
Ms Z.V.
was riding in the front passenger seat of the vehicle.
At about 8.10 p.m. next to house no.
60 in Oskanova Street in Nazran their car was blocked by two cars of the Federal Security Service (the FSB) without registration numbers.
Without a warning, the FSB officers from those cars opened gunfire on Salman Gordanov’s car.
After that, having heard the moaning of the persons in the car, the FSB agents again opened fire and the moaning stopped.
Then, about an hour later, the vehicle with the five passengers in it was towed away for mine cleaning.
During the towing, the body of Salman Gordanov fell out of the car.
According to the authorities, Salman Gordanov and Ms Z.V.
who had been on the back seat of the car, had explosives belts around their bodies.
Therefore, the vehicle with the five passengers had to be towed away for mine cleaning to the middle of the street, where it was blown up.
According to the subsequent forensic examination of the bodies in the car, all of its passengers at the time of the explosion were alive.
According to the applicant, his sons Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov neither had criminal record nor were suspected of the involvement in illegal armed groups or other criminal activities.
2.
The official investigation into the actions of the FSB officers (a) The first refusal to open a criminal case On 26 April 2012 507th military investigations department of the military prosecutor’s office of military unit no.
04062 (the military investigators) initiated an inquiry into the applicant’s complaint of his son’s unlawful killing by the FSB officers.
On 5 May 2012 the military investigators refused to open a criminal case into the incident for the lack of corpus delicti in the actions of the FSB officers.
The refusal referred to the similar statements of three FSB officers A. P., A.B.
and A.N.
involved in the special operation.
According to them, on 3 April 2012 they had received operational information that in a VAZ‐2107 car with registration number Г395ВО with a group of persons involved in illegal armed groups would driving in Nazran.
At about 8 p.m. they had spotted the suspects’ car in Oskanova Street and requested the driver to stop the car and everyone inside to get out.
In response, automatic gunfire had been opened at the officers from the front seat; as a result of the return fire, the persons in the car had been killed on the spot.
After that the officers had approached the car and seen that the front seat passenger had had Kalashnikov machineguns in his hands and that the driver, as well as a woman on the back seat had had the explosives belt.
A round object wrapped in black plastic, resembling a self-made explosive device, had been found between the driver and the front passenger.
It had been analysed and turned out to be the highly explosive power substance of triacetate triperoxide.
Therefore, a group of bomb disposal experts from the Ingushetia FSB had been called to the scene and confirmed that the object had been an explosives device.
To avoid damage, the suspects’ car had been pulled to the middle of the street and all persons around had been evacuated to a safe distance from it.
After that, the car had been blown up.
(b) The second refusal to open a criminal case On 16 May 2012 the military prosecutor of military unit no.
04062 overruled the above refusal as premature and unsubstantiated and ordered that additional steps were taken.
In particular, the military investigators were to request information concerning Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov and the other three passengers’ alleged involvement in illegal activities; the bomb disposal experts who had participated in blowing up the car were to be questioned, as well as local residents who had witnessed the shooting and the blowing up; there was no information in the inquiry file confirming that the car examined by the military investigators as the one in which the FSB officers had driven around at the time of the incident, had in fact been the actual car used by the FSB officers, as the file had no information on its official registration number.
Furthermore, samples of the explosives in the suspects’ car found by the officers, had not been taken for an expert examination and such an examination had not been commissioned.
The cause of death of the five suspects was not established; copies of materials from criminal case no.
12560021 opened against the suspects were illegible and the reasons for their inclusion into the inquiry file were unknown.
On 30 May 2012 the military investigators interviewed a bomb disposal expert Lieutenant Colonel A.E.
whose brief statement was similar to those of his three FSB colleagues given on 5 May 2012.
In addition, he stated that he had been the head of the bomb disposal group and that when his team had arrived at the scene, he had seen the suspects’ car which had had numerous bullet holes.
Then the object in the black bag between the driven and the passenger had been analysed and it had turned out to be the explosive substance of triacetate triperoxide.
Given the danger the explosives represented, it had been decided to blow the car up on the spot, having evacuated the residents to a safe distance, by way of controlled explosion.
During the car examination, he had not taken samples from either the explosives belts or the explosive in the black bag.
On 30 May 2012 the military investigators again interviewed the FSB officer A. P. who stated that he had been the head of the group on 3 April 2012 and reiterated his statement of 5 May 2012.
On 31 May 2012 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the incident.
The text of the decision reiterated the one of 5 May 2012.
In addition, it referred to the examination of the FSB car, which had been carried out on an unspecified date after the incident.
According to the document, the car, which had registration plates only during special operations, had had one bullet hole in the right back window and it had been made as a result of gunfire opened from Salman Gordanov’s car at the FSB officers.
The decision also contained information, that the return gunfire at the suspects’ car had been opened by officers A.B.
and A.N.
from their machineguns and that due to the explosives found in the car, it had been towed away by an armoured UAZ vehicle to the middle of the street and then blown up.
The decision also referred to the results of forensic examination carried out on 5 April 2012 on two bodies from the car.
According to its findings, the injuries obtained as the result of the blowing up had caused Dzhuneyd Gordanov’s death as well as that of Ms Z.V.
; the cause of Salman Gordanov’s death and of the other two men had been impossible to establish; samples of their tissues had been sent for further examination to a genetic examinations laboratory in Rostov-on-Don.
(c) The third refusal to open a criminal case and the applicant’s appeal On 22 August 2012 the deputy military prosecutor of military unit no.
04062 overruled the above refusal as premature and unsubstantiated and ordered additional steps to be taken.
In particular, the local residents who had witnessed the incident and the blowing-up of the car had not been identified and questioned; it had not been confirmed that the vehicle examined by the military investigators had in fact been used by the FSB officers during the operation on 3 April 2012; the explosives, allegedly found in the suspects’ car, had not been sampled for the expert examination.
On 6 September 2012 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the incident referring to the same materials as in previous refusals.
In addition, they referred to the statement obtained from the FSB officer V.N., who had participated in the operation along with the three other colleagues, but had not previously been interviewed by the investigation.
According to him, on 3 April 2012 he had put on the uniform of the traffic police officer and waived with the traffic police baton for the suspects’ car to stop.
The latter had not obeyed and the passenger in the front seat had opened gunfire at him and his colleagues.
Despite their warnings that they had been the FSB officers, the suspects had continued to fire their guns at the officers’ car.
The officers had had to open fire at the suspects’ car as a result of which the five persons inside of it had been shot and died on the spot.
On 13 December 2012 the applicant appealed against the above refusal to the Nalchik Military Garrison Court.
He stressed that the refusal had been based only on the statements of the implicated officers and requested that a fully-fledged investigation be carried out into the circumstances of the death of his sons.
He stated, among other things, that according to statements of local residents, given to the investigation in the criminal case (see below), including statements of Mr U.B., Mr I.E., Mr A.A., Ms A.Kh.
and Mr T.E., all the five persons, including the applicant’s sons, had been riding home to Pliyevo after work in the brick plant in Salman Gordanov’s car.
The only woman among the passengers, Ms Z.V., had been riding in the front passenger seat; none of the five persons riding the car had been armed.
The car had driven down the Oskanova Street in Nazran when, according to the witnesses, two cars with the FSB officers had pulled up next to it and without giving any warnings, had opened gunfire at the vehicle.
After Salman Gordanov’s car had stopped, the attackers had checked it and then, in order to silence the moaning of the wounded persons inside, had opened gunfire at it again.
Then, about an hour later, with the persons still alive in it, Salman Gordanov’s car had been towed to another side of the street and blown up.
As a result, all of its passengers had been killed and their bodies blown up to cover up the traces of the execution.
In the evening of the same day, the Ingushetia branch of the National Counterterrorism Committee (НАК) had published a statement according to which five men liquidated during the special operation had been members of illegal armed groups.
However, on the following day, after it had become clear that one of the five alleged suspects had been a woman, additional information had appeared according to which Ms Z.V.
had allegedly worn the explosives belt.
Referring to the conclusions of the forensic examinations of the bodies of Ms Z.V.
and Dzhuneyd Gordanov, their death had been caused by the explosion, which meant that they had been wounded by the FSB officers, had been alive and then killed by the explosion.
On 21 December 2012 the Nalchik Military Garrison Court rejected the applicant’s complaint without examination as on 20 December 2012 the refusal of 6 September 2012 had been overruled and further inquiry had been ordered by the military investigators’ superiors.
(d) The fourth refusal to open a criminal case and the applicant’s appeal On 29 December 2012 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the actions of the FSB officers on 3 April 2012.
The decision referred to the same grounds as the one of 6 June 2012.
On 10 February 2013 the applicant appealed against the above refusal to the Nalchik Military Garrison Court.
He referred to the same defects of the inquiry as in his appeal of 13 December 2012.
In addition, he stated that the statements of the FSB officers had been inconsistent and untruthful as, amongst other things, Salman Gordanov had not been wanted by the authorities and had always resided at his permanent address in Pliyevo.
There had been no requests for the car to stop, as the state of the vehicle showed that the gunfire had been opened at the car while it had been moving; the front passenger seat had been occupied by Ms Z.V.
who had not been armed and could not have opened gunfire as alleged; according to the forensic examination, at least two of the persons riding the car, Ms Z.V.
and Dzhuneyd Gordanov had not been killed by the gunfire, but by the explosion, which had been carried out by the agents in an hour after the shooting.
The applicant further stated that the investigators had been protracting the inquiry and did not want to have the crime resolved.
On 19 March 2013 the Nalchik Military Garrison Court rejected the applicant’s complaint without examination as on 15 March 2013 the refusal of 29 December 2012 had been overruled and further inquiry had been ordered by the military investigators’ superiors.
(e) The fifth refusal to open a criminal case On 25 March 2013 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the actions of the FSB officers referring to the same grounds.
The applicant was not informed of that decision.
On 24 April 2013 the head of the military investigating department of the Southern Federal Circuit overruled the above refusal having stated that the statements of the FSB officers given to the inquiry had been contradictory.
In particular, the FSB officers had stated that the suspects in Salman Gordanov’s car had been killed and then their vehicle had been towed away and blown up.
However, the forensic examinations had established that Dzhuneyd Gordanov and Ms Z.V.
had died from an explosives’ trauma, which contradicted the officers’ version of their death before the explosion.
In addition, the inquiry had not clarified the cause of the death of the other three passengers of the car, including Salman Gordanov.
The examination of the FSB vehicle which had established the bullet hole, had failed to clarify the type of weapon by which it could have been made.
Therefore, the refusal was premature and unsubstantiated and a new inquiry was to be carried out into the circumstances of the incident.
The applicant was not informed of that decision.
(f) The sixth refusal to open a criminal case On 15 May 2013 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the actions of the FSB officers referring to the same grounds.
The applicant was not informed thereof.
On 21 May 2013 the deputy head of the 507th military investigating department overruled the above refusal as unlawful referring to the same grounds as the ones mentioned in the decision of 24 April 2013.
(g) The seventh refusal to open a criminal case On 30 May 2013 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the actions of the FSB officers referring to the same grounds as in previous refusals.
The applicant was not informed thereof.
On 5 June 2013 the military prosecutor of military unit no.
04062 overruled the above refusal as unlawful, having stated, as follows: “... the investigator failed to identify and question the bomb disposal experts from the Ingushetia FSB who had participated in the operation ... the statements given by the operational FSB officers who had participated in the operation are superficial as they neither reflect the true picture of what happened, nor explain the necessity of blowing up the car with the persons in it.
Along with that, the investigators had not obtained the information justifying the [intended] detention of those [five] persons, including Ms Z.V.
...
In addition, the investigators failed to include into the case file the expert examination of either the firearms or the ammunition collected at the scene; moreover, no examination of the gunshot residue on the bodies or belongings of those [five] persons had been commissioned.
It is therefore necessary to - identify and question in detail the bomb disposal experts from the Ingushetia FSB who had participated in the operation concerning its conduct and the necessity to blow up the car; - obtain the results of the examinations of the firearms and ammunition collected at the scene and find out whether any gunshot residue had been present on the bodies of the dead persons and their personal belongings; - obtain from the relevant power structures the information which had served as the basis for the decision to detain those [five] persons, including Ms Z.V...” On 20 June 2013 the military investigators again interviewed a bomb disposal experts Lieutenant Colonel A.E.
whose statement differentiated from the one given on 30 May 2012.
The officer stated, in particular, that after he had smelled the substance in the suspects’ car and established that it had been triacetate triperoxide, it had been decided to tow the car away from the nearby house.
During the towing, the driver’s body (Salman Gordanov) had fallen out.
The other bodies had remained in the car.
Then the car had been blown up by destructor (при помощи разрушителя).
Lieutenant Colonel did not remember how exactly the destruction had been carried out: by a switch or by a cord.
He further explained that his previous statement where he had mentioned that the car had been blown up by controlled explosion (контролируемый взрыв) had been incorrect and it must have been wrongly recorded by the investigators.
(h) The eighth refusal to open a criminal case and the applicant’s appeal On 20 June 2013 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the actions of the FSB officers referring to the same grounds.
On 23 October 2013 the applicant appealed against the above refusal to the Nalchik Military Garrison Court.
He stated, in particular, that according to numerous statements of local residents given to the relatives of the five killed persons, those persons, including his sons, had remained alive after the shooting and a number of witnesses had heard them moaning.
Then, the FSB officer had subjected the car to new shooting and the wounded had been silenced.
Those details had been confirmed by the forensic examination of the bodies of Dzhuneyd Gordanov and Ms Z.V.
The applicant again pointed out that the refusal to initiate a fully-fledged criminal investigation had been based on the evidence from the implicated officers whose statements had been inconsistent and untruthful.
On 13 November 2013 the military prosecutor of military unit no.
04062 overruled the above refusal as unlawful on the grounds similar to those of his decision of 5 June 2013.
On 15 November 2013 the Nalchik Military Garrison Court rejected the applicant’s complaint without examination as on 13 November 2013 the refusal had been overruled and further inquiry had been ordered.
(i) The ninth refusal to open a criminal case On 26 November 2013 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the actions of the FSB officers referring to the same grounds as the ones in their previous refusals.
On 17 January 2014 it was overruled by their superiors as unlawful.
On 13 February 2014 the military investigators again interviewed bomb disposal expert Lieutenant Colonel A.E.
who provided a brief statement and explained that he had been the only officer who had examined Salman Gordanov’s car.
At the time, he could not assess whether the persons therein had been alive; it had been impossible to take them out due to the explosives inside.
In order to save the people inside it had been decided to clear the car of explosives.
However, “during the clearing of the explosives, owing to their instability and the fact that they had been self-made, they had blown themselves up”.
(j) The tenth refusal to open a criminal case and the applicant’s appeal On 14 February 2014 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the actions of the FSB officers referring to the same grounds.
On 15 December 2014 the applicant appealed against the above refusal to the Nalchik Military Garrison Court, stressing, in particular, that Salman Gordanov’s car with its passengers had been blown up to cover up their murder by the FSB officers.
On 6 February 2015 the Nalchik Military Garrison Court rejected the applicant’s complaint without examination as on 6 February 2015 the above refusal had been overruled and further inquiry had been ordered.
(k) The eleventh and twelfth refusals to open a criminal case On 16 February 2015 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the actions of the FSB officers.
The applicant was not informed thereof.
On an unspecified date in 2017 the applicant appealed against the above refusal to the Nalchik Military Garrison Court.
On 3 August 2017, the Nalchik Military Garrison Court rejected the applicant’s complaint without examination as on 3 August 2017 the above refusal had been overruled and further inquiry had been ordered.
On 4 August 2017 the military investigators again refused to open a criminal case into the actions of the FSB officers.
3.
Investigation into the actions of Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov On 3 April 2012 the Ingushetia Investigating Committee (the investigators) opened criminal case no.
12560021 into the incident of 3 April 2012 under Article 222 of the Criminal Code (unlawful possession of firearms).
On 10 May 2012 the Ingushetia Ministry of the Interior (the Ingushetia police) informed the investigators from the Ingushetia Investigations Department that no compromising information on the five persons, including the applicant’s sons, was available.
On 25 July 2012 the investigators replied to a human rights NGO, which had requested information on behalf of the applicant, that an inquiry had been initiated by the military investigators in connection with the death of Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov as a result of the incident of 3 April 2012.
From the documents submitted it transpires that the investigation of the criminal case was terminated on several occasions and each time that decision was overruled due to the applicant’s complaints to domestic courts.
In his complaint the applicant insisted on thorough and comprehensive investigation of the circumstances of his sons’ death on 3 April 2012 and the actions of the implicated FSB officers.
On 29 September 2016 the deputy head of the Ingushetia Investigating Committee overruled yet another decision (this time of 10 June 2016) to terminate the investigation in the criminal case due to the death of the suspect.
He stated that the decision had been premature and unlawful and ordered that the investigation of the criminal case be reopened.
In particular, he ordered that the investigators were to: “... eliminate the noted numerous shortcomings and deficiencies, take the necessary steps to ensure full and objective investigation and to establish all of the circumstances surrounding the crime ...” From the documents submitted it is unclear when the investigation of the criminal case was reopened.
B.
Relevant domestic law and practice For a summary of the relevant domestic regulations, see Dalakov v. Russia, no.
35152/09, §§ 51-53, 16 February 2016.
COMPLAINTS The applicant complains under Article 2 of the Convention that his sons Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov were killed as a result of unjustified use of lethal force by State agents and that the authorities failed to investigate the matter.

Judgment

THIRD SECTION
CASE OF GORDANOVY v. RUSSIA
(Application no.
7434/18)

JUDGMENT

STRASBOURG
4 October 2022

This judgment is final but it may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Gordanovy v. Russia,
The European Court of Human Rights (Third Section), sitting as a Committee composed of:
Georgios A. Serghides, President,
Anja Seibert-Fohr,
Peeter Roosma, judges,and Olga Chernishova, Deputy Section Registrar,
Having regard to:
the application (no.
7434/18) against the Russian Federation lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) on 2 February 2018 by two Russian nationals, Mr Akhmed Gordanov and Ms Liza Gordanova, both born in 1952. Prior to their deaths in 2020 and 2022 respectively they lived in Pliyevskiy. The applicants were represented by lawyers of Stichting Russian Justice Initiative, an NGO practising in Moscow;
the decision to give notice of the application to the Russian Government (“the Government”), who were initially represented by Mr M. Galperin, former Representative of the Russian Federation to the European Court of Human Rights, and later by his successor in this office, Mr M. Vinogradov;
the parties’ observations;
Having deliberated in private on 13 September 2022,
Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
SUBJECT-MATTER OF THE CASE
1.
The applicants alleged that State agents had killed their sons Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov by using unjustified lethal force against them and that the authorities failed to investigate the matter effectively. 2. According to the applicants, on 3 April 2012 Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov drove from work together with three of their colleagues; the only female passenger was seated in the front passenger seat. Suddenly, in a street in Nazran their car was subjected to unprovoked gunfire by officers of the Federal Security Service (the FSB). After the shooting the officers towed the car, with all five persons inside, to the other side of the street. During the towing, the body of Salman Gordanov fell out. The officers pushed it back inside and then blew the vehicle up. The incident was witnessed by a number of local residents. 3. Shortly thereafter, the authorities opened a preliminary inquiry into the incident, which resulted in twelve refusals to open a criminal case for the lack of corpus delicti. Each of those refusals, except for the last one of 4 August 2017, was overruled by the investigators’ superiors as being based only on the statements of the implicated FSB officers. 4. For instance, according to the second refusal of 31 May 2012, the bomb disposal officer A.E. stated that the passengers of the car had opened gunfire at the FSB officers and the latter had had to protect themselves by shooting back; it had been the man seated on the passenger front seat who had opened machine-gun gunfire at the officers. On-the-spot chemical analysis of the object found inside of the attackers’ car had established that it had been highly explosive substance of triacetate triperoxide. Given its danger, it had been decided to blow the vehicle up on the spot by way of “controlled explosion”. Nothing had fallen out of the car during the towing. 5. According to the seventh refusal to open a criminal case issued in July 2013, officer A.E. changed his previous statement saying that he had established by the smell that the object in the car had been the explosive substance. Then one of the officers, not him, had decided to tow the car away and during the process Salman Gordanov’s body had fallen out. After that the vehicle with the bodies inside had been blown up by a specialised device with a cord. Officer A.E. could recall neither how exactly the blowing up had been carried out nor the identity of the officer who had ordered the towing. 6. The tenth refusal to open a criminal case issued in February 2014 stated that in his third statement to the inquiry, officer A.E. had indicated that he had been the only officer who had examined the car and he had been unable to assess whether the five persons inside the attackers’ car had been alive. According to the officer, it had been impossible to take them out of the vehicle due to the explosive found inside of it. To save the lives of those five persons, it had been decided to clear the car of the explosive; however, during that process the latter had suddenly ignited and blown up. 7. The last refusal to open a criminal case issued in August 2017 failed to clarify whether the explosive had been located in the vehicle or whether it had been attached to the passengers; it remained unclear whether the five persons in the car had been armed and whether the FSB officers had issued a warning before opening gunfire at the vehicle; it remained unclear why Salman Gordanov’s body had been pushed back into the car after it had fallen out during the towing. The reasons for the blowing up of the vehicle remained unelucidated and no explanation was given to the lack of forensic examination of the attackers’ firearms allegedly found at the scene. 8. No criminal case into the death of the applicants’ sons has been opened to date. At the same time, the criminal case opened on 3 April 2012 against Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov for unlawful possession of firearms, was terminated and then re-opened on a number of occasions, for the last time on 29 September 2016. No meaningful steps had been taken therein. 9. The applicants complained under Article 2 of the Convention that the authorities had failed to effectively investigate the unjustified use of lethal force by State agents against their sons Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov. 10. On 8 May 2020 the second applicant informed the Court of the death of her husband, the first applicant, on 15 April 2020 and expressed her wish to pursue the proceedings in his stead. On 2 May 2022 the applicants’ daughter, Ms Zaira Yandiyeva, born in 1982, informed the Court of the death of her mother, the second applicant, on 10 March 2022. Ms Yandiyeva expressed her wish to pursue the proceedings in her parents’ stead. The Government did not object. THE COURT’S ASSESSMENT
11.
Having regard to the close family ties of Ms Zaira Yandiyeva with the applicants and her legitimate interest in pursuing the application concerning fundamental human rights, the Court accepts that she may pursue the applications in their stead (see Tagayeva and Others v. Russia, nos. 26562/07 and 6 others, § 476, 13 April 2017). 12. The Court notes that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 (a) of the Convention or inadmissible on any other grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible. 13. The principles concerning relevant procedural and substantive obligations under Article 2 of the Convention have been summarized in Armani Da Silva v. the United Kingdom ([GC], no. 5878/08, §§ 229-39, 30 March 2016, and Tagayeva and Others, cited above, §§ 562-63 and 601, respectively. 14. No fully-fledged criminal investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death of the applicants’ sons was carried out, other than the preliminary inquiry, which resulted in the twelve refusals to open a criminal case. The evidence collected by the inquiry was conflicting and pointed to glaring inconsistencies in the statements of the implicated State agents. It, therefore, should have prompted opening of a fully‐fledged criminal investigation into the matter. However, the authorities took statements from only a few of the concerned officers and none from local residents who had witnessed the incident. Meanwhile, those officers gave “an explanation”, which absolved them from the liability for perjury. The Court has already found that a preliminary inquiry alone was not capable of elucidating the circumstances of the use of the lethal force or leading to punishment of those responsible when it comes to allegations of the use of lethal force by State agents in comparable circumstances (see, for a similar situation, Uzhakhov and Albagachiyeva, no. 76635/11, § 75, 23 June 2020 [Committee], and the authorities cited therein). 15. In view of the foregoing, the Court concludes that there has been a violation of Article 2 of the Convention under its procedural limb on account of the failure to effectively investigate the circumstances surrounding the death of Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov. 16. As to whether the use of force against the Gordanov brothers was no more than “absolutely necessary”, the Court observes that the implicated officers implied that the behaviour of the applicants’ sons had necessitated the use of lethal force against them. However, there is no evidence in the case file to sufficiently support this hypothesis. Firstly, it is open to doubt whether the passengers of the car opened the gunfire at the officers as alleged, as no firearms were attributed to them as having been used to open that fire. Secondly, according to the statements of the implicated officers, the gunfire was opened by the male passenger in the front seat of the car whereas there was information that the female passenger was seated there. Thirdly, the Court notes conspicuous inconsistencies in the statements of officer A.E. who had played the key role in the incident (see paragraphs 4-6 above), in the absence of any statements from other witnesses, other than from his implicated colleagues. In sum, while bearing in mind the limitations on the scope of its review, the Court neither finds elements to conclude that the conduct by the State agents was compatible with the requirement to minimise the risk to life of individuals concerned, nor can it support the conclusion that the use of lethal force was absolutely necessary, as the Government seem to suggest. 17. In the light of the foregoing, the Court finds that it has not been demonstrated that the lethal force used, which brought about the death of the applicants’ sons, was absolutely necessary, as required by Article 2 of the Convention. 18. There has accordingly been a violation of the substantive limb of Article 2 of the Convention in respect of Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
19.
The applicants claimed jointly 407,300 roubles (about 4,600 euros (EUR)) in respect of pecuniary damage. They also claimed EUR 5,569 for costs and expenses and enclosed copies of relevant documents. They left determination of the award for non-pecuniary damage to the Court. 20. The Government contested the claims as unsubstantiated. 21. Having regard to the documents in its possession and it’s relevant practice (see, among other authorities, Imakayeva v. Russia, no. 7615/02, § 213, ECHR 2006‐XIII (extracts) and compare with Pugoyeva v. Russia [Committee], no. 43479/14, §§ 64-66, 7 December 2021, Tatayev and Others v. Russia [Committee], no. 51928/15, §§ 111-14, 19 October 2021, and Turayeva v. Russia [Committee], no. 36255/16, §§ 12-14, 21 June 2022), the Court awards the applicants jointly EUR 2,000 in respect of pecuniary damage and EUR 120,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage, plus any tax that may be chargeable on those amounts. Both awards are to be paid to Ms Zaira Yandiyeva. 22. In respect of costs and expenses, the Court awards the applicants EUR 2,500 together with any tax that may be chargeable to them, the net award to be paid into the representatives’ bank account, as identified by the applicants. FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT, UNANIMOUSLY,
(a) that the respondent State is to pay Ms Zaira Yandiyeva, within three months, the following amounts, to be converted into the currency of the respondent State, save for the payment for costs and expenses, at the rate applicable at the date of settlement:
(i) EUR 2,000 (two thousand euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable, in respect of pecuniary damage;
(ii) EUR 120,000 (one hundred twenty thousand euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable, in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(iii) EUR 2,500 (two thousand five hundred euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable to the applicants, in respect of costs and expenses, to be paid to the account of the applicants’ representatives as indicated by the applicants;
(b) that from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the default period plus three percentage points;
Done in English, and notified in writing on 4 October 2022, pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Olga Chernishova Georgios A. Serghides Deputy Registrar President

THIRD SECTION
CASE OF GORDANOVY v. RUSSIA
(Application no.
7434/18)

JUDGMENT

STRASBOURG
4 October 2022

This judgment is final but it may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Gordanovy v. Russia,
The European Court of Human Rights (Third Section), sitting as a Committee composed of:
Georgios A. Serghides, President,
Anja Seibert-Fohr,
Peeter Roosma, judges,and Olga Chernishova, Deputy Section Registrar,
Having regard to:
the application (no.
7434/18) against the Russian Federation lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) on 2 February 2018 by two Russian nationals, Mr Akhmed Gordanov and Ms Liza Gordanova, both born in 1952. Prior to their deaths in 2020 and 2022 respectively they lived in Pliyevskiy. The applicants were represented by lawyers of Stichting Russian Justice Initiative, an NGO practising in Moscow;
the decision to give notice of the application to the Russian Government (“the Government”), who were initially represented by Mr M. Galperin, former Representative of the Russian Federation to the European Court of Human Rights, and later by his successor in this office, Mr M. Vinogradov;
the parties’ observations;
Having deliberated in private on 13 September 2022,
Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
SUBJECT-MATTER OF THE CASE
1.
The applicants alleged that State agents had killed their sons Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov by using unjustified lethal force against them and that the authorities failed to investigate the matter effectively. 2. According to the applicants, on 3 April 2012 Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov drove from work together with three of their colleagues; the only female passenger was seated in the front passenger seat. Suddenly, in a street in Nazran their car was subjected to unprovoked gunfire by officers of the Federal Security Service (the FSB). After the shooting the officers towed the car, with all five persons inside, to the other side of the street. During the towing, the body of Salman Gordanov fell out. The officers pushed it back inside and then blew the vehicle up. The incident was witnessed by a number of local residents. 3. Shortly thereafter, the authorities opened a preliminary inquiry into the incident, which resulted in twelve refusals to open a criminal case for the lack of corpus delicti. Each of those refusals, except for the last one of 4 August 2017, was overruled by the investigators’ superiors as being based only on the statements of the implicated FSB officers. 4. For instance, according to the second refusal of 31 May 2012, the bomb disposal officer A.E. stated that the passengers of the car had opened gunfire at the FSB officers and the latter had had to protect themselves by shooting back; it had been the man seated on the passenger front seat who had opened machine-gun gunfire at the officers. On-the-spot chemical analysis of the object found inside of the attackers’ car had established that it had been highly explosive substance of triacetate triperoxide. Given its danger, it had been decided to blow the vehicle up on the spot by way of “controlled explosion”. Nothing had fallen out of the car during the towing. 5. According to the seventh refusal to open a criminal case issued in July 2013, officer A.E. changed his previous statement saying that he had established by the smell that the object in the car had been the explosive substance. Then one of the officers, not him, had decided to tow the car away and during the process Salman Gordanov’s body had fallen out. After that the vehicle with the bodies inside had been blown up by a specialised device with a cord. Officer A.E. could recall neither how exactly the blowing up had been carried out nor the identity of the officer who had ordered the towing. 6. The tenth refusal to open a criminal case issued in February 2014 stated that in his third statement to the inquiry, officer A.E. had indicated that he had been the only officer who had examined the car and he had been unable to assess whether the five persons inside the attackers’ car had been alive. According to the officer, it had been impossible to take them out of the vehicle due to the explosive found inside of it. To save the lives of those five persons, it had been decided to clear the car of the explosive; however, during that process the latter had suddenly ignited and blown up. 7. The last refusal to open a criminal case issued in August 2017 failed to clarify whether the explosive had been located in the vehicle or whether it had been attached to the passengers; it remained unclear whether the five persons in the car had been armed and whether the FSB officers had issued a warning before opening gunfire at the vehicle; it remained unclear why Salman Gordanov’s body had been pushed back into the car after it had fallen out during the towing. The reasons for the blowing up of the vehicle remained unelucidated and no explanation was given to the lack of forensic examination of the attackers’ firearms allegedly found at the scene. 8. No criminal case into the death of the applicants’ sons has been opened to date. At the same time, the criminal case opened on 3 April 2012 against Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov for unlawful possession of firearms, was terminated and then re-opened on a number of occasions, for the last time on 29 September 2016. No meaningful steps had been taken therein. 9. The applicants complained under Article 2 of the Convention that the authorities had failed to effectively investigate the unjustified use of lethal force by State agents against their sons Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov. 10. On 8 May 2020 the second applicant informed the Court of the death of her husband, the first applicant, on 15 April 2020 and expressed her wish to pursue the proceedings in his stead. On 2 May 2022 the applicants’ daughter, Ms Zaira Yandiyeva, born in 1982, informed the Court of the death of her mother, the second applicant, on 10 March 2022. Ms Yandiyeva expressed her wish to pursue the proceedings in her parents’ stead. The Government did not object. THE COURT’S ASSESSMENT
11.
Having regard to the close family ties of Ms Zaira Yandiyeva with the applicants and her legitimate interest in pursuing the application concerning fundamental human rights, the Court accepts that she may pursue the applications in their stead (see Tagayeva and Others v. Russia, nos. 26562/07 and 6 others, § 476, 13 April 2017). 12. The Court notes that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 (a) of the Convention or inadmissible on any other grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible. 13. The principles concerning relevant procedural and substantive obligations under Article 2 of the Convention have been summarized in Armani Da Silva v. the United Kingdom ([GC], no. 5878/08, §§ 229-39, 30 March 2016, and Tagayeva and Others, cited above, §§ 562-63 and 601, respectively. 14. No fully-fledged criminal investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death of the applicants’ sons was carried out, other than the preliminary inquiry, which resulted in the twelve refusals to open a criminal case. The evidence collected by the inquiry was conflicting and pointed to glaring inconsistencies in the statements of the implicated State agents. It, therefore, should have prompted opening of a fully‐fledged criminal investigation into the matter. However, the authorities took statements from only a few of the concerned officers and none from local residents who had witnessed the incident. Meanwhile, those officers gave “an explanation”, which absolved them from the liability for perjury. The Court has already found that a preliminary inquiry alone was not capable of elucidating the circumstances of the use of the lethal force or leading to punishment of those responsible when it comes to allegations of the use of lethal force by State agents in comparable circumstances (see, for a similar situation, Uzhakhov and Albagachiyeva, no. 76635/11, § 75, 23 June 2020 [Committee], and the authorities cited therein). 15. In view of the foregoing, the Court concludes that there has been a violation of Article 2 of the Convention under its procedural limb on account of the failure to effectively investigate the circumstances surrounding the death of Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov. 16. As to whether the use of force against the Gordanov brothers was no more than “absolutely necessary”, the Court observes that the implicated officers implied that the behaviour of the applicants’ sons had necessitated the use of lethal force against them. However, there is no evidence in the case file to sufficiently support this hypothesis. Firstly, it is open to doubt whether the passengers of the car opened the gunfire at the officers as alleged, as no firearms were attributed to them as having been used to open that fire. Secondly, according to the statements of the implicated officers, the gunfire was opened by the male passenger in the front seat of the car whereas there was information that the female passenger was seated there. Thirdly, the Court notes conspicuous inconsistencies in the statements of officer A.E. who had played the key role in the incident (see paragraphs 4-6 above), in the absence of any statements from other witnesses, other than from his implicated colleagues. In sum, while bearing in mind the limitations on the scope of its review, the Court neither finds elements to conclude that the conduct by the State agents was compatible with the requirement to minimise the risk to life of individuals concerned, nor can it support the conclusion that the use of lethal force was absolutely necessary, as the Government seem to suggest. 17. In the light of the foregoing, the Court finds that it has not been demonstrated that the lethal force used, which brought about the death of the applicants’ sons, was absolutely necessary, as required by Article 2 of the Convention. 18. There has accordingly been a violation of the substantive limb of Article 2 of the Convention in respect of Salman and Dzhuneyd Gordanov. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
19.
The applicants claimed jointly 407,300 roubles (about 4,600 euros (EUR)) in respect of pecuniary damage. They also claimed EUR 5,569 for costs and expenses and enclosed copies of relevant documents. They left determination of the award for non-pecuniary damage to the Court. 20. The Government contested the claims as unsubstantiated. 21. Having regard to the documents in its possession and it’s relevant practice (see, among other authorities, Imakayeva v. Russia, no. 7615/02, § 213, ECHR 2006‐XIII (extracts) and compare with Pugoyeva v. Russia [Committee], no. 43479/14, §§ 64-66, 7 December 2021, Tatayev and Others v. Russia [Committee], no. 51928/15, §§ 111-14, 19 October 2021, and Turayeva v. Russia [Committee], no. 36255/16, §§ 12-14, 21 June 2022), the Court awards the applicants jointly EUR 2,000 in respect of pecuniary damage and EUR 120,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage, plus any tax that may be chargeable on those amounts. Both awards are to be paid to Ms Zaira Yandiyeva. 22. In respect of costs and expenses, the Court awards the applicants EUR 2,500 together with any tax that may be chargeable to them, the net award to be paid into the representatives’ bank account, as identified by the applicants. FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT, UNANIMOUSLY,
(a) that the respondent State is to pay Ms Zaira Yandiyeva, within three months, the following amounts, to be converted into the currency of the respondent State, save for the payment for costs and expenses, at the rate applicable at the date of settlement:
(i) EUR 2,000 (two thousand euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable, in respect of pecuniary damage;
(ii) EUR 120,000 (one hundred twenty thousand euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable, in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(iii) EUR 2,500 (two thousand five hundred euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable to the applicants, in respect of costs and expenses, to be paid to the account of the applicants’ representatives as indicated by the applicants;
(b) that from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the default period plus three percentage points;
Done in English, and notified in writing on 4 October 2022, pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Olga Chernishova Georgios A. Serghides Deputy Registrar President