Sundheds- og Forebyggelsesudvalget 2014-15 (1. samling)
SUU Alm.del Bilag 248
Offentligt
Response of the Danish Government to the report of the European
Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment (CPT) on its visit to Denmark from 4 to 13
February 2014. [Danish response in
italic]
I.C.
Co-operation
Paragraph 5
in CPT’s report
CPT’s
observation concerning paragraph 5:
-
The CPT trusts that the Danish authorities will make continued efforts to improve the
situation in the light of the Committee’s recommendations, in accordance with the
principle of co-operation which lies at the heart of the Convention.
Please be assured that the Danish Government is continuously striving to ensure that no
persons deprived of their liberty by Danish authorities are treated in a way that may be
characterised as torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, cf. Article 3 of the
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.
In this respect the Government thoroughly examines the recommendations of inter alia the
CPT for the purpose of working towards a better protection of persons deprived of their liberty
against torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
In order to further strengthen the coordination of the Danish Government’s overall human
rights reporting commitments please be informed that in October 2014, the Government
decided to establish a permanent cross-ministerial human rights committee under the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs. The Committee is also expected to map the follow-up to recommendations
received by the Government from international human rights monitoring bodies and
mechanisms, among others.
Concerning the specific reference to the CPT’s concerns
as regards the imposition of judicial
restrictions on remand prisoners, the practice of the use of fixation in prisons and the
prolonged application of mechanical restraints on psychiatric patients, reference is made to the
Ministry of Justice’s responses to paragraphs 33, 35, 72 and 111 (judicial restrictions on
remand prisoners) and to paragraphs 67, 68 and 71 (fixation in prisons), and to the Ministry of
Health’s responses to paragraph 115, 121, 122 and 125 (mechanical restraints on psychiatric
patients) in the CPT’s report below.
1