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Jakóbski v Poland

European Court of Human Rights: December 2010 Prisoner – Buddhism – meat-free diet – Article 9

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 August 2011

Ruth Arlow
Affiliation:
Barrister, Deputy Chancellor of the Dioceses of Chichester and Norwich
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Abstract

Type
Case Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 2011

The applicant was convicted of rape in June 2003 and sentenced to eight years' imprisonment. He made numerous requests to be served meat-free meals in accordance with his dietary requirements as a Buddhist. The prison eventually agreed to provide him with a pork-free diet in January 2006, as it did for six Muslim prisoners. In April 2006 a prison doctor considered the applicant's dermatological problems had subsided and that the pork-free diet could be withdrawn. The applicant renewed his requests for a meat-free diet. His request was supported by the Buddhist Mission in Poland. This request was rejected by the prison in October 2006. The applicant was later advised that the only special prison diet available was a pork-free one and that provision of individual diets in conformity with religious requirements was not possible owing to kitchen under-staffing. In March 2009 the applicant was transferred to another prison, where his meat-free diet requests were also refused.

In the European Court of Human Rights ([2010] ECHR 18429/06) the applicant argued a violation of Article 9 and, because other religious groups were permitted special diets in prison, Article 14. The court did not examine arguments under Article 14, as it was satisfied that Article 9 had been violated. Buddhism was a major world religion and religious dietary requirements could be regarded as directly motivated or inspired by religion: Cha'are Shalom Ve Tsedek v France [2000] ECHR 27417/95. Accordingly, the refusal to provide the applicant with a religious meat-free diet was an interference under Article 9(1). In addressing Article 9(2) the court recognised that particular dietary arrangements for one prisoner could have financial implications for institutions and indirect implications for the quality of treatment of other inmates. Nevertheless, a fair balance had not been struck between the competing interests. The applicant's meal requests were for vegetarian food, which did not have to be prepared, cooked and served in any prescribed ways, nor were any special food products required. The court decided that no disruption to the management of the prison would have followed from the applicant's request, nor any decline in the standards of meals served to the other prisoners. [Matthew Gibson]