Domestic violence victim wins European Court of Human Rights case against Lithuania

domestic violanceA Lithuanian woman from Penevezys, northern Lithuania who fell victim  to her partner’s domestic violence has won her case against the State of  Lithuania at the European Court of Human Rights which ruled on Tuesday that  Lithuania failed to provide adequate protection.

The Strasbourg-based court ruled that Lithuania  violated the European Convention on Human Rights, prohibiting cruel and inhumane  behavior, and ordered to pay the woman EUR 5,000 in non-pecuniary damages.

In February, 2001 the woman turned to the city  district court to bring a private prosecution against her partner, saying that  she had been abused by her partner. In February, 2002, the court ordered  prosecutors to launch a pre-trial investigation and suspicions were brought  against the man.

Later on, the investigation was suspended  several times and eventually dropped in June, 2005 on the grounds that a  prosecution in respect of minor bodily harm should have been brought by the  victim in private capacity. The city district court upheld that decision in  September 2005, noting that a prosecutor „had a right, but not an obligation, to  open an investigation.“

„The Court found that the authorities’  application of the code of criminal procedure in the woman’s case had not  provided her with adequate protection against acts of domestic violence,“ the  ruling reads.

The panel of seven judges ruled that the  Lithuanian authorities had received sufficient information from the woman to  raise a suspicion that a crime had been committed. As of that moment, they had  therefore been under an obligation to act upon her criminal complaint.

Source: BNS - 15min.lt