COUNCIL
CONSEIL
OF
EUROPE DE L'EUROPE
EUROPEAN COMMISSION OF HUMAN RIGHTS
DECISION
AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application No. 31416/96
by Arthur U Pendragon
against the United Kingdom
The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in
private on 19th October 1998, the following members being present:
MM S. TRECHSEL, PRESIDENT
J.-C. GUES
M. P. PELLONPAA
E. BUSUTTIL
G. JORUNDSSON
A. S. GOZUBUYUK
A. WEITZEL
J.-C. SOYER
H. DANELIUS
MRS G. H. THUNE
MM. F. MARTINEZ
C. L. ROXZAKIS
MRS J LIDDY
MM. L. LOUCAIDES
M. A. NOWICKI
I. GABRAL BARRETO
N. BRATZA
I. BEKES
D. SVABY
G. RESS
A. PERENIC
C. BIRSON
P. LORENZEN
E. BIELIORNAS
E. A. ALKEMA
M. VILA AMIGO
MRS M. HION
MM. R. NICOLINI
A. ARABADJIEV
MR. M. de SALVIA, Secretary to the
commission
Having regard to Article 25 of the convention for
the protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;
Having regard to the application introduced on 21
November 1995 by Arthur U. PENDRAGON against the United Kingdom and registered 7 May 1996
under file No. 31416/96
Having regard to
The reports provided for in rule 47 of the rules
of procedure of the commission;
The observations submitted by the respondent
government on 5 November 1997 and the observations in reply submitted by the applicant on
6 March 1998;
Having deliberated;
Decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The applicant is a British Citizen, born in 1954 and
resident in Hampshire. He is represented before the Commission by Mr. P. Leach, a
solicitor for the organisation "Liberty", based in London. The facts of the
case, as submitted by the parties, may be summarised as follows.
A. The Particular circumstances of the case
The applicant is the Honoured Pendragon of the
Glastonbury Order of Druids. In 1995 the applicant wanted to hold a Druid service at the
Summer Solstice on 21 June, at the Hele Stone which is near to the main road and close to
the monument. "Stonehenge" (In recent years the applicant has been denied access
to Stonehenge itself). for the proceeding seven years the applicant had held similar
services at the Sprig and Autumn Equinoxes and Winter Solstice, attracting about 30 people
on each occasion, without causing any disorder.
Stonehenge is a monument that predates the Iron Age
and consist of a circle of stone which are aligned to the Mid Summer sunrise. The sun
rises above the Hele Stone on the date of the Summer Solstice, it is accepted by
pre-historians that the original purpose of Stonehenge was as a scene of gatherings at the
moment of the Mid Summer sunrise. The Iron Age Druids of Britain where highly-respected
healers, judges, prophets and teachers of mystical philosophy. Whilst it appears that
there is no evidence that Iron Age Druids built or presided at Stonehenge, it is likely
that the tribes of the Stonehenge period (about 2000 years before the Iron Age Druids) had
Druid-like figures among their number.
The modern Druid Orders have been reconstructing
rituals, that are favoured by academics as possibly having been performed by the builders
of Stonehenge, since the beginning of this century. These reconstructed rituals have take
place continuously for approximately the last 100 years at Stonehenge, prior to such
assembles being forbidden in the late 1980s.
In the mid 1980s many non-druid people also attended
Stonehenge for the Summer Solstice, often staying, camping and holding Festivals in the
surrounding area. In 1983 and 1984, some 30,000 people attended, and serious disorder
broke out.
The Druid Orders were recognized by the police and
English Heritage (who control the Stonehenge site), as having responsibility attempted to
organise Lawful and peaceful gatherings at Stonehenge. However, in 1986 English Heritage
closed the site for the summer Solstice and have done so since. following the enactment of
the Public Order Act 1986 (as amended) ("the Act"), various powers conferred on
the police were used to prevent public order disturbances at the time of the Summer
Solstice,
On the 17 of January 1995 the Chief Constable of
Wiltshire applied to the Salisbury District Council for an order under section 14A of the
Act, prohibiting all Trespassory assemblies within a four mile radios from the junction of
the roads adjoining the Stonehenge monument, between 11.59 p.m. on 17 June 1995 and 11.59
p.m. on 21 June 1995. In the ten or so previous years, similar orders had been made, aimed
at preventing gatherings. In his application the Chief Constable stated (interalia):
" My belief at this stage is that there is still
a strong desire on the part of many New Age Travelers, and others, to establish festival
sites on vulnerable pieces of land and, in particular, on the symbolic Stonehenge Monument
site at the Summer Solstice. In 1994 a total of 40 persons attempted to gain access to the
Stonehenge Monument site at the Summers Solstice dawn which signifies a continuing hard
core of individuals intent on gaining access. Whist I am encouraged by the diminishing
confrontations which have occurred at Stonehenge in recent years, in my judgment it is
still necessary to reinforce the messages emanating form our recent successful
operations"
The District Council acceded to the request, and the
Secretary of State was asked as required by the Act, for his consent. On 4 May 1995, the
applicant made written representation through his lawyer to the Secretary of State to
complain about the impact of such an order on his ability to carry out any Druidic
ceremonies near Stonehenge. The Secretary of State considered the representations made on
behalf of the applicant, and gave his consent to the order before it was made on 22 May
1995. In his reply of 9 June 1995 to the applicant's solicitor's the Secretary of State
explained:
"4. The matters raised in your letter were
indeed considered in discussions between this Department, the Council and Wiltshire
Constabulary.
5. Following these discussions, the Secretary of
State was fully satisfied that the application for the order was properly made by the
police within the terms of the section 14A and that the council were entirely justified in
seeking his consent to the order. He also concluded that the proposed order was reasonable
and necessary, and accordingly gave his consent.
6. The Secretary of State did consider what
modifications might be made to the order, in particular as to its duration and the
geographical extent. However, he took the view that the order proposed by the Council, in
the terms proposed, was required to meet the circumstances anticipated by the police
7. I am not sure what "special provisions"
you envisaged might be made for Druids generally, or your client in particular. You will
know that by section 14A (5) an order prohibits any (his emphasis) assembly fitting
the descriptions in that subsection. It would not therefore be possible to limit an order
so that it does not apply to certain categories of tresspassory assembly, other than those
described in subsection (5); in particular, of the landowner.
.....
9. You say that you are nevertheless concerned that
the police may take the view that your client and those wishing to attend the Druid
service cannot attend the are subject to the order, and that any dispute about this may
lead to your client or others being arrested. You ask for an assurance from the council or
the police that the order will not be applied to your client and his followers.
10. The manner in which the order is enforced in
respect of your client, his followers or anyone else is for the Chief Constable and his
officers, acting according to sections 14B and 14C of the Act. This is not something which
is subject to directions from the Home Office."
On 8 May 1995, there was a mass trespass at
Stonehenge and damage to the monument. There was a further trespass on 1 June which
resulted in the monument being invaded by about 30 people.
On 9 June 1995, the applicant brought judicial review
proceedings in the High Court. He challenged the lawfulness of the order made by Salisbury
District Council, on the basis that insufficient weight had been given to his rights to
freedom of religion and/or freedom of the assembly before the order was made. Mr. Justice
Laws rejected the applicant's challenge to the order on the basis to hold an assembly on
the public highway would amount to a civil wrong, that the Secretary of State was entitled
to balance the applicant's rights against those of the wider community and whilst there
was no evidence that the applicant or any of the Druids who might attend his meeting would
cause any trouble or act other than peacefully, under section 14A of the Act, it was
impossible to make an order prohibiting only those intent on trouble or those with
non-peaceful intentions, from Stonehenge.
On 21 June 1995, at 00.11 hrs. the applicant was
arrested outside the Stonehenge perimeter fence in the proximity of the Hele stone, which
was within the 4 mile exclusion zone. There was in excess of 20 people at the service
being held by the applicant, who was in full ceremonial dress. The police approached the
gathering and using a loud hailer made a broadcast that the assembly was contrary to
section 14A of the Act and the participants should leave immediately or be arrested. The
applicant was in addition served with a written notice explaining the four mile exclusion
zone. The police requested the applicant to leave the site; however he refused and was
consequently arrested. The applicant was taken to Salisbury police station, where he
arrived at 00.53 hrs. He was charged at 5.37 hrs. on 21 June 1995 with taking part in a
prohibited assembly contrary to section 14A (5) of the Act (the charge was subsequently
amended to refer to section 14B (2) of the Act). He was detained for approximately 11 ½
hrs. in total and was then taken before the Magistrates and released on unconditional bail
at 11.45 hrs. on 21 June 1995 (several hours after the Summer Solstice Sunrise had taken
place).
The applicant was tried before the Salisbury
Magistrates' Court and acquitted on 13 September 1995.
B. Relevant domestic law
Section 14A of the Public Order Act 1986 (as was
amended by section 70 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994) ("the
Act") provides, so far as relevant, as follows:
" (1) If at any time the chief officer of police
reasonably believes that an assembly is intended to be held in any district at a place on
land to which the public has no right of access or only a limited right of access and that
the assembly-
(a) is likely to be held without the permission of
the occupier of the land or to conduct itself in such a way as to exceed the limits ofd
any permission of his or the limits of the public's right of access and
(b) may result-
(i) in serious disruption to the life of the
community, or
(ii) where the land, or a building or monument on it,
is of historical, architectural, archaeological or scientific importance, in significant
damage to the land, building or monument,
he may apply to the council of the district for an
order prohibiting for a specified period the holding of all trespassory assemblies in the
district or part of it, as specified.
(2) On receiving such an application, a council may-
(a) in England and Wales, with the consent of the
Secretary of State make an order either in the terms of the application or with such
modifications as may be approved by the Secretary of State;
......
(5) An order prohibiting the holding of trespasser
assemblies operates to prohibit any assembly which-
(a) is held on land to which the public has no right
of access or only a limited right of access, and
(b) takes place in the prohibited circumstances, that
is to say, without the permission of the occupier of the land or so as to exceed the
limits of any permission of his or the limits of the public's right of access.
(6) No order under this section shall prohibit the
holding of assemblies for a period exceeding 4 days or in an area exceeding an area
represented by a circle with a radius of 5 miles from a specified center.
(9)
...
"assembly" means an assembly of twenty or
more persons."
Section 14b of the Public Order Act 1986 (as amended
by section 70 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994) provides, so far as is
relevant;
"(2) A person who takes part in an assembly
which he knows is prohibited by an order under section 14A is guilty of an offence."
COMPLAINTS
The applicant complains that his rights under article
9, 10 and 11 of the Convention were violated, in that he was prevented from being present
or carrying out a Druid ceremony at Stonehenge at the sunrise of 21 June 1995 and was
arrested and detained in police custody. He complains that the law in the United Kingdom
failed to protect his rights sufficiently under Articles 9, 10, and 11 of the Convention.
Further the application complains of a violation of
Article 14 of the Convention, because by prohibiting all people from celebrating the
Summer Solstice at Stonehenge, Druids were disproportionately discriminated against, since
the Summer Solstice has particular significance for their beliefs.
Finally, the applicant complains that under Article
13 of the Convention that he had no remedy available to him in the law of the United
Kingdom capable of effectively challenging the order made under the Act.
PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION
The application was introduced on 21 November 1995
and registered on 7 May 1996.
On 20 May 1997 the Plenary Commission decided to
transfer the application to it.
On 27 May 1997 the Commission decided to communicate
the application to the respondent Government.
The Government's written observations were submitted
on 5 November 1997, after an extension of the time-limit fixed for that purpose. The
applicant replied on 6 March 1998 after two extensions of the time-limit.
On 12 December 1997 the Commission granted the
applicant legal aid.
THE LAW
1. The Applicant complains that the order made under
section 14A of the Act has denied him his right to freedom of religion, expression and
assembly in breech of Articles 9, 10 and 11 of the Convention.
The Commission recalls that it has previously
declared inadmissible a case concerning Druidic access to Stonehenge (Chappell v. the
United Kingdom, no. 12587/86, Dec. 14.7.97, D.R. 53, p. 241). That case dealt principally
with the complaints raised under the Article 9 of the Convention, although it also
considered the Article 11 issues. In the present case, the commission notes that the
powers exercised by the police derived from the Public Order Act 1986 as amended, and
those powers are concerned principally with limitations on certain types of assembly. In
the present case, the Commission will therefore deal with the case principally under
article 11 of the Convention, whilst having regard to Article 9 and 10 of the convention
(see also No. 25522/94, Dec. 6.4.95, D.R. 81-A, p. 146, at p. 151).
Article 11 of the Convention provides as follows:
"1. Everyone has the right to freedom of
peaceful assembly and to freedom of association with others including the right to form
and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.
2. No restrictions shall be placed on the exercise of
these rights other than such as are prescribed by Law and are necessary in a democratic
society [ inter alia ] ... for the prevention of disorder or crime
...."
The Government accept that the order interfered with
the applicant's right to freedom of peaceful assembly, but contend that such interference
was justified as pursuing a legitimate aim an necessary in a democratic society. In
particular, They point out that the Act sets up a number of safeguards against an
unnecessary resort to section 14A, namely the requirement that the Chief Constable, the
local council and the Secretary of State must all agree on the order and its terms. The
order was necessary because the other powers in the act did not provide adequate
protection against a threatened mass invasion of private and public property by disorderly
elements causing danger to the public or sections of it, resulting in disorder, to the
detriment and damage of a prehistoric site of incalculable importance and resulting in
interference with the rights and freedom of the members of the public.
The applicant underlines that Article 11 declares a
right, but contends that that right is absent from domestic law. He basis this contention
on the findings in the case of DPP v. Jones and Lloyd ( [1997] 2 All ER 119): the
Divisional Court in that case held that use of the highway for the purposes incidental to
passage and repassage is limited where an order has been made under section 14A such that
a peaceful assembly of twenty or more persons can become "trespassory". an
appeal against that decision is pending before the House of Lords. He considers that the
question whether the order complies with the requirements of Article 11 para. 2 of the
Convention does not arise because domestic law rests on the premise that no right to
peaceful assembly exists in English law.
The Commission recalls that under Article 11 of the
Convention, the right to freedom of peaceful assembly may only be restricted if such
restrictions are " prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society [ inter
alia ] ... for the prevention of disorder or crime...".
The applicant's arrest and subsequent detention
interfered with his right to freedom of peaceful assembly.
The commission does not accept the relevance of the
applicant's submissions as to the case of DPP V. Jones and Lloyd. The question for the
Commission is not whether or not domestic Law contains a particular right ( the Convention
does not require incorporation of its substantive provisions into domestic Law- see the
Court's comments in the context of Article 13 in the case of James and others V. the
United Kingdom, series A no. 98, p. 47, para. 85), but rather whether the applicant's
Convention right was respected. The Commission notes that the applicant was ultimately not
convicted before the Salisbury Magistrates Court, and that the case of DPP V Jones and
Lloyd was decided later.
The Commission must therefore determine whether the
interference with the applicant's rights was compatible with Article 11 para. 2 of the
Convention
The Commission recalls that a norm cannot be regarded
as a "Law" for the purposes of Article 11 para. 2 of the convention unless it is
"formulated with sufficient precision to enable the citizen - if need be, with
appropriate advise - to foresee, to a degree that is reasonable in the circumstances, the
consequences which a given action may entail" (see, for a case in the context of
Article 11 of the series A no. 202, p. 21, para. 45). In the present case, the provisions
of section 14A of the Act were known to the applicant, and they set up a clear procedure
which had to be complied with before the order could be drawn up, involving input from the
local council, the Chief Constable and the Secretary of State. The applicant was able to
challenge it in Court before it entered into force. Further, the order was limited in both
time and space: it was valid for four days, and applied to an area of four miles around
Stonehenge. It has not been suggested in the present case that the police powers of arrest
were not prescribed by Law.
The Commission thus consider that the restriction on
the applicant's freedom of assembly was "prescribed by law" within the meaning
of Article 11 para. 2 of the Convention
The Commission has no doubt as to the need to protect
Stonehenge, and accepts that the disorder at the site in previous years and immediately
before the order was made could justify steps of a preventive nature. The aim pursued by
the restriction was therefore compatible with Article 11 para. 2 of the Convention.
There remains the question of whether the steps taken
were "necessary in a democratic society", that is, whether they were
proportional to the aim of preventing disorder, in particular given that the applicant
himself ( and his assembly) was not likely to create disorder, and that given that he
wished to use the site for the purpose for which it was in all likelihood originally
intended. Further, the applicant did not expect to have access to the site itself, but
would have been content to remain close to the Hele Stone, on the verge of a trunk road
and outside the perimeter fence of the monument.
The Commission accepts that the applicant's assembly
would have been legitimate, and that the assembly was of a religious nature, such that
Article 9 of the Convention may also be relevant. However, as the Commission has held on a
number of occasions, public order concerns may justify a prohibition in a given case (see,
for example, No. 8440/78, Dec. 16.7.80, D R 21, p. 138, concerning a two month ban on
public processions other than customary ones in London, or No. 25522/94, Dec. 6.4.95, D R
91-A, p. 146, concerning a general ban on demonstrations concerning Northern Ireland in
Trafalgar Square, in London). In the present case, as in the above mentioned case of
Chappell V. the United Kingdom, the Commission notes that there had been considerable
disorder at Stonehenge in previous years and more recently (indeed, the facts of DPP V.
Jones and Lloyd relate to a non-religious assembly in May 1995), and it can not be
considered to be an unreasonable response to prohibit assemblies at Stonehenge for a given
period. Whilst accepting that the limitations to the order (four days' restrictions for
four miles around Stonehenge) do not benefit the applicant, the Commission must have
regard to them in assessing the overall proportionality of the restriction on the
applicant's Article 11 rights. In this respect, the Commission notes that the ban did not
affect groups of less than 20 persons and that it was open to the applicant to practice
his religion or belief in a smaller group, even within the four mile exclusion zone.
Bearing all these factors in mind, the Commission
considers that the interference with the applicant's right to freedom of assembly can
reasonably be regarded as "necessary in a democratic society ... for the prevention
of disorder" within the meaning of Article 11 para. 2 of the Convention.
It follows that this part of the application is
manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27 para. 2 of the Convention.
2. The Applicant also complains that the prohibition
on celebrating the Summer Solstice in the immediate vicinity of Stonehenge
disproportionately effected Druids, for whom the Summer Solstice had particular
significance and that this constituted discrimination in contravention of Article 14 of
the Convention.
Article 14 of the Convention provides as follows:
"The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set
forth in this Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any ground such as
sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social
origin, association with a national minority property, birth or other status."
The Commission notes that there is no evidence that
Druids were treated in any way differently from any other groups of people wishing or
attempting to observe the Summer Solstice in the vicinity of Stonehenge. Whilst the
Commission recognises that Druids may hold particular beliefs associated with the Summer
Solstice the Commission finds that the ban on observing the Summer Solstice in the
vicinity of Stonehenge cannot be said to have had a disproportionate effect on Druids as
opposed to other groups who wanted to observe the Summer Solstice due to different beliefs
or purely secular reasons. Nor does the commission find any evidence of any discriminatory
treatment of the applicant in connection with his arrest or detention. Finally, the
Commission recalls its decision in No. 12587/86 (cited above) where individuals and
organisations interested in Stonehenge consulted with the authorities to try and find
alternative solutions to the ban. In the present case the Commission notes the applicant
has not suggested any alternative solution to the ban which could accommodate his
religious needs without attracting massive groups of visitors likely to endanger
Stonehenge. In these circumstances, the Commission finds that there is no evidence of
discrimination against the applicant in the enjoyment of his conventional rights.
It follows that this part of the application is
manifestly ill-founded with in the meaning of Article 27 para. 2 of the Convention.
3. The applicant further complains that there was no
possibility of effectively challenging the order made under the Act and this constituted a
violation of Article 13 of the Convention.
Article 13 of the Convention provides as follows:
"Everyone whose rights and freedoms are set
forth in this Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy before a national
authority notwithstanding that the violation has been committed by persons acting in an
official capacity"
The Commission recalls that the guarantees of Article
13 apply only to a grievance which can be regarded as "arguable" (cF. Eur. Court
HR, Powell and Rayner v. the United Kingdom judgement of 21 February 1990, series A no.
172, p. 14, para. 31). In the present case the Commission has rejected the substantive
claims as disclosing no appearance of a violation of the convention. For similar reasons
they cannot be regarded as "arguable".
It follows that this part of the application is
manifestly ill founded with in the meaning of Article 27 para. 2 of the Convention.
For these reasons the commission, by a majority,
DECLARES THE APPLICATION INADMISSIBLE.
This document was signed by M. de Salvia and S.
Trechsel secretary and President of the Commission respectively
ooOoo