A state can breach Article 3 by extraditing or
deporting an individual to a country where, upon their return, they might be subject to torture, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. In
Chahal v United Kingdom [1996] the United Kingdom had initiated deportation proceedings, for national security reasons, on an
Indian citizen. Mr Chahal had associations with the
Sikh separatist movement and there was substantial evidence that upon his return to India, he would be subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3. On this basis, the ECtHR held that, as the assurances of Mr Chahal's safety from the Indian government were not convincing, his deportation would violate Article 3. In
Soering v United Kingdom [1989] the UK government attempted to extradite a German national, who was wanted by the state of
Virginia for the murder of his partner's parents, to the USA. It was held that upon his return, Mr Soering would have been subject to inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment in the form of the '
death row phenomenon', whereby a person sentenced to capital punishment suffers years of mental torment awaiting their execution. The UK was accordingly found in breach of Article 3. == Additional protections ==