Submitted by: 
              A. L. N. (name deleted)  
            
          
            
              Alleged victim: 
              The author  
            
          
            
              Date of communication: 
              25 July 1997  
            
 
      
      
        
          
            
              The Committee against 
              Torture, established in conformity with article 17 of the Convention 
              against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment 
              or Punishment,  
            
          
            
              Having completed 
              consideration of communication No. 90/1997 submitted to the Committee 
              against Torture under article 22 of the Convention against Torture 
              and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment,  
            
          
            
              Having taken account 
              of all the information communicated to it by the author of the communication 
              and the State party,  
            
 
      Views under article 
        22, paragraph 7, of the convention
      
         
        
          
             1. The author of the communication 
            is A. L. N., an Angolan born on 25 September 1978. He is currently 
            resident in Switzerland where he has applied for refugee status and 
            risks being sent home. The author claims that his expulsion would 
            constitute a violation of article 3 of the Convention against Torture 
            and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.  
          
 The facts 
        as submitted by the author 
      
      
        
          
             2.1 The author states 
            that on 16 February 1997 his father, a member of the União Nacional 
            para a Indepêndencia Total de Angola (UNITA) gave him a video cassette 
            on torture and massacres perpetrated by the Movimento Popular para 
            a Libertação de Angola (MPLA) for him to take to a friend. The cassette 
            contained a scene filmed in 1987 showing soldiers plunging the then 
            nine-year-old author's hand into boiling water in front of his father. 
            The author says that the scars are still visible. He was arrested 
            on the way during an identity check by MPLA soldiers, who took him 
            to an unknown site in Luanda, where he was beaten. He was then forced 
            to take the soldiers to the family home so that they could arrest 
            his father. At the house he managed to escape while the soldiers were 
            momentarily distracted. On 19 February 1997, he left the country on 
            a borrowed passport issued to the son of one of his father's friends 
            and went to Italy. He arrived in Switzerland on 24 February 1997. 
             
          
          
             2.2 That same day, the 
            author submitted an application for asylum to the Refugee Registration 
            Centre in Geneva (CERA). On 2 June 1997, the Federal Office for Refugees 
            (ODR) rejected the application and ordered his expulsion, finding 
            that the author's statements did not meet the plausibility criteria 
            laid down in article 12 (a) of the Federal Asylum Act. The Office 
            also said there was no evidence to suggest that the author would be 
            specifically and seriously likely, in the event of a return to his 
            country, to be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading 
            treatment.  
          
          
             2.3 The author appealed 
            against this decision before the Commission de recours en matière 
            d'asile (CRA), which rejected the appeal in a decision dated 16 
            July 1997. The Commission found that the author had not shown that 
            his return to his country of origin would put him in danger. It added 
            that the author was young, in good health and, according to his own 
            statements, capable of going back to live in Luanda, since he had 
            already lived there and could count on his family for support.  
          
 
       The complaint 
        
      
      
        
          
             3. The author says that 
            he is still on the wanted list because of the video cassette and fears 
            for his physical and mental health if sent home. He says that he is 
            part of the Bakongo ethnic minority, and that CRA itself has acknowledged 
            that members of that group are exposed to some danger.  
          
 
       
      
 The State 
        party's observations on the admissibility and merits of the communication 
        
      
      
        
          
             4. On 16 October 1997 
            the Committee, through its Special Rapporteur, forwarded the communication 
            to the State party for its observations.  
          
          
             5.1 In a reply dated 15 
            December 1997, the State party indicated that the author had exhausted 
            domestic remedies. The communication could thus be considered on its 
            merits.  
          
          
             5.2 The author's main 
            point, i.e., his arrest after coming into possession of a video cassette 
            showing a scene in which soldiers plunged his hand into boiling water, 
            had not been consistently related at the two hearings on his application, 
            at CERA and before the Cantonal authorities. His accounts were vague 
            or contradictory as regards both the origin of the video cassette 
            and the way in which it was supposed to have been filmed or what precisely 
            it contained.  
          
          
             5.3 The author said that 
            the soldiers had not asked him who the video cassette was for. There 
            again his story was not credible. Experience unfortunately showed 
            that, as a rule, people arrested in such cases were tortured precisely 
            in order to obtain information about those who had an interest in 
            documents challenging the regime in power.  
          
          
             5.4 The author's account 
            of how he managed to escape was also unconvincing. It did not seem 
            possible that the author, escorted by five guards, should have managed 
            to escape from them as easily as described, without even being pursued. 
             
          
          
             5.5 On the strength of 
            the author's tale, the scars visible on his hands could not be ascribed 
            with sufficient probability to acts of the kind prohibited by the 
            Convention. They could just as well have resulted from an occupational 
            or domestic accident, for example. The author had submitted no medical 
            certificate indicating that he was still traumatized by the incident 
            as he stated in his communication.  
          
          
             5.6 The State party also 
            said that no causal link could be established between the incident 
            related – the author's suffering at the hands of MPLA soldiers, 
            which dated from 1987 – and his departure for Switzerland.  
          
          
             5.7 As regards the situation 
            in the country, Angola was no longer in a state of civil war or widespread 
            violence. The peace process had passed a milestone with the establishment 
            on 11 April 1997 of a Government of unity and national reconciliation. 
            The author's claim to have been arrested and beaten by MPLA soldiers 
            on 16 February 1997 for being in possession of a compromising video 
            cassette seemed somewhat improbable in the light of the moves towards 
            national reconciliation made by the various opposition groups, including 
            MPLA and UNITA.  
          
          
             5.8 CRA had concluded 
            it would be unreasonable to require the author to be returned to areas 
            under UNITA control or close to the demarcation lines. Elsewhere, 
            failing specific risks, there were adequate safeguards of his safe 
            return at least to the capital or a number of large urban conglomerations 
            along the coast. Living conditions in Luanda, where there were serious 
            problems, were nevertheless not such as to rule out on humanitarian 
            grounds the return of young, single people in good health.  
          
          
             5.9 Lastly, the author 
            said that he belonged to an ethnic minority, the Bakongo, whose members 
            CRA itself acknowledged to face certain dangers. CRA had indeed stated 
            that Bakongos and members of other ethnic groups could not get back 
            to their home districts from Luanda without some danger. But it had 
            also said that, contrary to rumour and despite rivalries more social 
            than ethnic in nature, there was no indication that, since the signature 
            of the Lusaka Protocol, the governmental authorities had taken any 
            steps that directly or indirectly discriminated against or persecuted 
            minority population groups in Angola, including the Bakongo, members 
            of whom were to be found throughout the State apparatus.  
          
          
             5.10 The fact that Bakongos 
            had previously lived in Luanda or still had family ties there was 
            one factor that entered into consideration in deciding whether or 
            not they could find refuge within the country and survive, socially 
            and economically, in the capital.  
          
          
             5.11 In the present case, 
            the author had not shown that returning to his country of origin would 
            put him in any specific danger. He was young and in good health, and 
            according to his own statements would be able to re-establish an existence 
            in Luanda since he had already lived there and could count on his 
            family for support.  
          
          
             5.12 Even if the Committee 
            concluded that the human rights situation in Angola, including the 
            unfortunate position that the author claimed for his ethnic minority, 
            was serious and gave rise to concern, such a finding would not, in 
            the absence of supplementary indications, be sufficient to establish 
            that the author was in personal danger of being tortured.  
          
          
             5.13 In the light of the 
            foregoing, the State party considered that returning the author to 
            Angola would not constitute a violation of the Convention.  
          
 
       Author's 
        comments 
      
      
        
          
             6. By letter dated 17 
            March 1998, the author indicates that the situation in Angola is very 
            unstable and that the country is still at war. If he were expelled, 
            he would thus be in physical danger.  
          
 
       Issues and 
        proceedings before the Committee 
      
      
        
          
             7. Before considering 
            any claims contained in the communication, the Committee against Torture 
            must decide whether or not it is admissible under article 22 of the 
            Convention. The Committee has ascertained, as it is required to do 
            under article 22, paragraph 5 (a), of the Convention, that the same 
            matter has not been and is not being examined under another procedure 
            of international investigation or settlement. The Committee also notes 
            that all domestic remedies have been exhausted, and finds there are 
            no further obstacles to its declaring the communication admissible. 
            Since the State party and the author have both made comments regarding 
            the substance of the communication, the Committee will proceed to 
            consider the communication on its merits.  
          
          
             8.1 The Committee must 
            decide whether sending the author back to Angola would violate Switzerland's 
            obligation under article 3 of the Convention not to expel or return 
            (refouler) an individual to another State if there are substantial 
            grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being subjected 
            to torture.  
          
          
             8.2 The Committee must 
            decide, pursuant to article 3, paragraph 1, if there are substantial 
            grounds for believing that the author would be in danger of being 
            tortured if sent back to Angola. To do so, it must take account of 
            all relevant considerations as called for by article 3, paragraph 
            2, including the existence of a consistent pattern of gross, flagrant 
            or mass violations of human rights. The aim, however, is to determine 
            whether the individual concerned would personally risk torture in 
            the country to which he or she would return. It follows that the existence 
            of a consistent pattern of gross, flagrant or mass violations of human 
            rights in a country does not as such constitute sufficient grounds 
            for determining whether the particular person would be in danger of 
            being subjected to torture upon his return to that country; additional 
            grounds must be adduced to show that the individual concerned would 
            be personally at risk. Similarly, the absence of a consistent pattern 
            of gross violations of human rights does not mean that a person cannot 
            be considered to be in danger of being subjected to torture in his 
            or her particular circumstances.  
          
          
             8.3 The Committee observes 
            that past torture is one of the elements to be taken into account 
            when examining a claim under article 3 of the Convention, but its 
            purpose in considering the communication is to decide whether, if 
            the author were returned to Angola, he would now risk being tortured. 
             
          
          
             8.4 In the case in point 
            the Committee notes the author's claim to have been tortured in 1987 
            and beaten upon his arrest in February 1997. The author has however, 
            supplied no evidence, whether medical certificates or other, attesting 
            to acts of torture or ill-treatment or the sequelae of such. In particular, 
            the Committee notes that the author has supplied no detailed information 
            on how he was treated when arrested in February 1997, although it 
            was that arrest that prompted him to leave for Switzerland.  
          
          
             8.5 The author bases his 
            fear of torture on the fact that he is still being sought by MPLA 
            soldiers because of the video cassette. The Committee notes, however, 
            that he has put forward no reason to suggest that he is indeed still 
            wanted. Neither does he make any allusion to the circumstances of 
            his family, including his father, who, according to the author, was 
            also wanted in connection with the video cassette.  
          
          
             8.6 The Committee notes 
            that the situation in Angola, given the peace process, is still difficult, 
            as recently stated in a report by the Secretary-General on the United 
            Nations Observer Mission in Angola (MONUA). The same report states 
            that human rights violations, including torture, which are attributed 
            to the national police among other parties, continue to take place. 
            But it also says that significant progress has been made and that 
            the Government and UNITA have agreed on important points which should 
            enable the peace process to advance. It would therefore seem that 
            the situation in the country has not deteriorated since the author 
            left.  
          
          
             8.7 The Committee points 
            out that, for the purposes of article 3 of the Convention, the individual 
            concerned must face a foreseeable, real and personal risk of being 
            tortured in the country to which he is returned. On the basis of the 
            above considerations, the Committee is of the opinion that such a 
            risk has not been established.  
          
          
             8.8 In the light of the 
            foregoing, the Committee considers that the information before it 
            does not show substantial grounds for believing that the author runs 
            a personal risk of being tortured if sent back to Angola.  
          
          
             9. The Committee against 
            Torture, acting under article 22, paragraph 7, of the Convention against 
            Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, 
            concludes that the facts before it do not indicate a breach of article 
            3 of the Convention.  
          
 
       
      
[Text adopted 
        in French (original version) and translated into English, Spanish and 
        Russian.]