Butenko Daniil, Dimitrova Slavka, Gröning Linda
Centre for Research and Education in Forensic Psychiatry, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen 5036, Norway; Faculty of Law, University in Bergen, Bergen 5010, Norway.
Law Faculty, Burgas Free University, Burgas 8001, Bulgaria.
Int J Law Psychiatry. 2023 Sep-Oct;90:101920. doi: 10.1016/j.ijlp.2023.101920. Epub 2023 Aug 30.
Ukraine is actively denouncing and abandoning its Soviet legacy, with the legal process of decommunization being at the forefront of this process. However, despite Ukraine's ongoing judiciary reformation process amplified by the signing of the Association Agreement between Ukraine and the European Union, Ukraine's legal system still contains inherited Soviet legal deficiencies that allow for human rights violations. Some of the most glaring deficiencies relate to the rules and regulations for assigning and conducting forensic psychiatric examinations in cases of administrative offenses. With an aim to aid Ukraine in eliminating present legal deficiencies that allow for violations of human rights, here we discuss current definitions, rules, and regulations concerning appointment and execution of forensic psychiatric examinations in cases of administrative law violations. We place particular emphasis in our discussion on the European Court for Human Rights case "Zaichenko v Ukraine, No 2", and the reform bill that followed this case. This case is an 'in vivo' illustration of how Ukraine's legal deficiencies have created grounds for the violation of individual human rights. Our assessment of the current rules and regulations for assigning and conducting forensic psychiatric examinations in proceedings of administrative offenses reveals that the legal deficiencies persist. The proposed reform bill is thus a highly warranted initiative, which however has several issues in its formulations and fails to address a few of the worst existing deficiencies. Ukraine's legislators must do further work to put through reforms that will safeguard individuals from unjustified forensic psychiatric examinations.
乌克兰正在积极谴责并摒弃其苏联遗产,去共产主义化的法律进程处于这一进程的前沿。然而,尽管乌克兰通过签署与欧盟的《联系国协定》而不断推进司法改革进程,但乌克兰的法律体系仍存在继承自苏联的法律缺陷,这些缺陷导致了人权侵犯行为。一些最明显的缺陷涉及行政违法行为案件中法医精神病学检查的指派和进行的规则与条例。为了帮助乌克兰消除当前存在的允许侵犯人权的法律缺陷,在此我们讨论行政违法行为案件中法医精神病学检查的任命和执行的现行定义、规则与条例。我们在讨论中特别强调欧洲人权法院的“扎伊琴科诉乌克兰案,第2号”以及该案件之后的改革法案。该案件是乌克兰法律缺陷如何为人权侵犯创造条件的一个“实际”例证。我们对行政违法行为诉讼中法医精神病学检查的指派和进行的现行规则与条例的评估表明,法律缺陷依然存在。因此,拟议的改革法案是一项非常必要的举措,然而它在表述上存在若干问题,并且未能解决一些最严重的现有缺陷。乌克兰的立法者必须进一步努力推动改革,以保护个人免受不合理的法医精神病学检查。