Footnotes:
1 See above Art 1 OP, §§ 44–46.
2 UNGA, Res 57/199 of 18 December 2002, Art 1.
3 Report of the Working Group on a Draft Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment on its ninth session [2001] UN Doc E/CN.4/2001/67, Annex I.
5 Report of the Working Group on a Draft Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment on its tenth session [2002] UN Doc E/CN.4/2002/78, Annex II E.
6 E/CN.4/2001/67 (n 3) para 29.
7 E/CN.4/2002/78 (n 5) paras 37ff.
8 ibid, para 40. See above § 5.
9 E/CN.4/2002/78 (n 5) para 50 and Annex I.
12 See above Art 12 OP, § 3.
13 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 45: ‘The national preventive mechanism should ensure that important concrete and contextual observations arising from its visits to institutions and stemming from other reliable sources, its recommendations and the responses from the authorities are categorized, filed and systematically processed for use in dialogue with the authorities, in the ongoing planning of work and in the further development of its strategies.’
15 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 21.
17 See also below Art 20 OP, § 33.
18 In this sense, the Preamble refers twice to ‘regular visits to places of detention’ and Article 1 OP refers to ‘a system of regular visits undertaken by … national bodies’. Principle 29 of the Body of Principles also provides that ‘places of detention shall be visited regularly by qualified and experienced persons appointed’: see UNGA, ‘Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment’, Res 43/173 of 9 December 1988 (Body of Principles), Principle 29; The SPT stated in its Guidelines that the State should ‘ensure that the NPM is able to carry out visits in the manner and with the frequency that the NPM itself decides (SPT, ‘Guidelines on National Preventive Mechanisms’ (2010) UN Doc CAT/OP/12/5, para 25) and that the NPM should ‘establish a work plan or programme which, over time, encompasses visits to all, or any, suspected, places of deprivation of liberty’ in the realm of the OP (para 33; see also SPT, ‘Report on the Visit for the Purpose of Providing Advisory Assistance to the National Preventive Mechanism of Honduras, Report for the National Preventive Mechanism’ (2010) UN Doc CAT/OP/HND/3, para 18).
19 In this sense, CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 46.
21 See SPT, ‘Report on the Visit for the Purpose of Providing Advisory Assistance to the National Preventive Mechanism of the Federal Republic of Germany, Report to the National Preventive Mechanism’ (2013) UN Doc CAT/OP/DEU/2, para 49; see also below Art 20 OP, § 29.
22 See CAT/OP/HND/3 (n 18) para 18; CAT/OP/DEU/2 (n 21) para 50; SPT, ‘Visit to Armenia Undertaken from 3 to 6 September 2013: Observations and Recommendations Addressed to the National Preventive Mechanism, Report to the National Preventive Mechanism’ (2017) UN Doc CAT/OP/ARM/2, para 39).
23 CAT/OP/12/5 (n 18) para 34.
24 See below Art 20 OP, 3.2.2.
25 SRT (Nowak), ‘Report of the Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment’ (2006) UN Doc A/61/259, para 72: ‘Preventive visits to places of detention have a double purpose. The very fact that national or international experts have the power to inspect every place of detention at any time without prior announcement, have access to prison registers and other documents, are entitled to speak with every detainee in private and to carry out medical investigations of torture victims has a strong deterrent effect. At the same time, such visits create the opportunity for independent experts to examine, at first hand, the treatment of prisoners and detainees and the general conditions of detention.’
26 SPT, ‘Report on the Visit for the Purpose of Providing Advisory Assistance to the National Preventive Mechanism of Moldova, Report to the National Preventive Mechanism’ (2013) UN Doc CAT/OP/MDA/2, para 23.
27 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 22. See also CAT/OP/HND/3 (n 18) para 18; CAT/OP/DEU/2 (n 21) para 50;
29 Veronica Filippeschi, ‘National Preventive Mechanisms: Role and Developments’ in ACAT, A World of Torture: ACAT 2016 Report (ACAT 2016) 170.
30 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 31.
32 Filippeschi (n 29) 170; see also APT, Monitoring Places of Detention: A Practical Guide (APT 2004).
33 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 31; see also CAT/OP/HND/3 (n 18) para 28; CAT/OP/MDA/2 (n 26) para 31; SPT, ‘Report on the Visit for the Purpose of Providing Advisory Assistance to the National Preventive Mechanism of Senegal, Report for the National Preventive Mechanism’ (2013) UN Doc CAT/OP/SEN/2, para 56; CAT/OP/DEU/2 (n 21) para 70; CAT/OP/ARM/2 (n 22) para 59; APF, APT, and OHCHR, ‘Preventing Torture: An Operational Guide for National Human Rights Institutions’ (2010) 91.
34 APT, ‘Detention Monitoring Briefings, Briefing No 1: Making Effective Recommendations’ (APT 2008).
35 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 31.
36 UNGA, Res 57/199 of 18 December 2002, Art 2(2): ‘The Subcommittee on Prevention shall carry out its work within the framework of the Charter of the United Nations and shall be guided by the purposes and principles thereof, as well as the norms of the United Nations concerning the treatment of people deprived of their liberty’.
37 SPT, ‘Report on the Visit to Sweden’ (2008) UN Doc CAT/OP/SWE/1, para 40; see also CAT/OP/HND/3 (n 18) para 28; SPT, ‘Report on the Visit to Benin’ (2011) UN Doc CAT/OP/BEN/1, para 317(g).
38 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 34.
39 APT (ed), Guide: Establishment and Designation of National Preventive Mechanisms (APT 2006) 65.
40 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 34.
41 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 34.
43 See below Art 20, § 54. The SPT welcomes it when an NPM strives for non-bureaucratic approaches, making recommendations relating to specific concerns to the authorities responsible for those places they visit; see SPT, ‘Report on the Visit for the Purpose of Providing Advisory Assistance to the National Preventive Mechanism of the Federal Republic of Germany, Report to State Party’ (2013) UN Doc CAT/OP/DEU/1, para 14; see also CAT/OP/DEU/2 (n 21) para 11.
44 Birk and others (n 42) 52, with example; see also below Art 20, § 53.
46 Only Article 23 OP refers to report of the NPMs, namely their annual reports that the States parties have to publish and disseminate.
47 CAT/OP/12/5 (n 18) para 36.
48 In this sense, CAT/OP/HND/3 (n 18) para 28; CAT/OP/MDA/2 (n 26) para 31, CAT/OP/ARM/2 (n 22) paras 58–59; SPT, ‘Report on the Visit for the Purpose of Providing Advisory Assistance to the National Preventive Mechanism of Ecuador, Report for the National Preventive Mechanism’ (2015) UN Doc CAT/OP/ECU/2, para 55; CAT/OP/SEN/2 (n 33) para 55.
49 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 30.
50 CAT/OP/SEN/2 (n 33) para 55; see also Birk and others (n 42) 31.
51 SPT, ‘Third Annual Report of the Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment’ (2010) UN Doc CAT/C/44/2, para 50.
52 CAT/OP/12/5 (n 18) para 35: ‘The NPM should make proposals and observations to the relevant State authorities regarding existing and draft policy or legislation which it considers to be relevant to its mandate.’
53 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 40.
54 APT and IIDH, Optional Protocol to the UN Convention Against Torture: Implementation Manual (rev edn, APT and IIDH 2010) 247.
55 CAT/OP/12/5 (n 18), para 28.
56 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 40.
57 ibid. As concrete examples, the SPT brought forward that the NPMs should ensure that the relevant legislative framework encompasses an absolute prohibition of torture and a definition of torture in accordance with the provisions in Article 1 CAT, and that the penalties for infractions are commensurate with the gravity of the offence. Furthermore, the term ‘place of detention’ should be defined in national law, bearing in mind the principles set out in the OP and the protection of human rights. NPMs should also dedicate themselves to the establishment of ‘a national register of allegations of torture, any investigation or criminal proceedings undertaken and the outcome thereof’, as well as of ‘an independent body with the capacity to assess allegations of torture and ill-treatment in accordance with the [so-called Istanbul Protocol]’: see CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 39; see also OHCHR, Istanbul Protocol: Manual on the Effective Investigation and Documentation of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (United Nations Publication 2004).
58 CAT/OP/HND/3 (n 18) para 14; CAT/OP/MDA/2 (n 26) para 17; CAT/OP/ARM/2 (n 22) para 35; in that sense, CAT/OP/HND/3 (n 18) para 14; CAT/OP/DEU/2 (n 18) para 33.
59 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 9(b) with reference to UNGA, ‘Principles Relating to the Status of National Institutions’, Res 48/134 of 20 December 1993 (Paris Principles).
60 ibid, para 9(c) with reference to Paris Principles (n 57).
61 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11), para 9(d) with reference to Art 11 CAT.
62 ibid, para 9(e) with reference to Art 10(2) CAT.
63 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11), para 9(f) with reference to Paris Principles (n 57).
64 ibid, para 9(g) with reference to Art 10(1) CAT.
65 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11), para 9(h) with reference to Paris Principles (n 57).
67 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11), para 9(j) with reference to CAT/OP/12/5 (n 18) para 6.
68 CAT/OP/1/Rev.1 (n 11) para 9(k).