EU Asylum law
sdf
sdf
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 159 |
---|---|
Langue | English |
Catégorie | Droit |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 02.04.2023 / 16.05.2023 |
Lien de web |
https://card2brain.ch/box/20230402_eu_asylum_law
|
Intégrer |
<iframe src="https://card2brain.ch/box/20230402_eu_asylum_law/embed" width="780" height="150" scrolling="no" frameborder="0"></iframe>
|
Inclusion
Elements of the definition (article 1, A (2))
Person outside of the country of origin (foreigner)
Act of persecution (serious harm)
Well-founded fear (real risk)
Reason for persecution (list of 5 criteria)
Causal link
Absence of protection by country of origin
WHat are
Refugees «sur place» ?
when persecutin starts, while you're already in the other country.
Could be problematic with causality, but tribunals say its ok
Act of persecution
threat to life or freedom on account of one of the 5 reasons is always persecution
• Other serious violations of human rights
Persecution still effective and up-to-date?
Accountability theory vs. protection theory
Accountability theory (state agents) vs. protection theory (non-state
actors, if the state is unwilling or unable to provide protection)
Apply protection theory, also non state actors who persecute
Reasons for persecution
Race
Religion
Nationality
Membership of a particular social group
Political opinion
Social group 2 theories?
Protected characteristics approach: group is united by an immutable
characteristic or by a characteristic that is so fundamental to human
dignity that a person should not be compelled to forsake it
Social perception approach: group shares a common characteristic
which makes them a cognizable group or sets them apart from society at large
Dual or multiple nationality?
situation in each of the countries must be examined (as these persons can avail themselves of the protection of another country)
Exclusion (article 1, D, E, F)
D – Persons already receiving UN protection or assistance (examples: UNKRAKorea, UNWRAPalestine)
E – Persons who are not in need of international protection (person has taken residence in the country and enjoys same rights as nationals)
F – Persons that are considered not to be deserving of international protection (unworthy persons)
Crimes against peace, war crime or crimes against humanity (international instruments, e.g. Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court)
Common crimesprotection of the population of the host country
Acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations (Preamble, art. 1, 2 United Nations Charter – position of power of the person?)
Cessation (article 1, C)
- Changes in the situation that have been brought about by the refugee himself (clauses 1-4)
Voluntary re-availment of national protection
Voluntary re-acquisition of nationality
Acquisition of a new nationality
Voluntary re-establishment in the country where persecution was
feared
- Changes in the country where the persecution was feared (clauses 5- 6)
Reasons for becoming a refugee have ceased to exist (Transitory changes not sufficient)
Non-refoulement principle in International Law
Non- refoulement (CG) (weak, art. 33 abs. 2 GC)
Non - refoulement (Human Rights)
Explicit non- refoulement
non- Implicit refoulement
Can you apply art. 13 and 14 ECHR on their own?
no they always have to be applied in connection to something else. For. ex. art. 3 ECHR
detention of a child = problem art. 3 ECHR?
Yes, a small child has no where to go, so its not necessary to detain it.
With a older child maybe not
Art. 3 ECHR because of aids?
Yes but only if the deases is already far advanced.
Conditions have to be very severe. Not enough if you are just treated like everybody else in that country.
non refoulement principles and the dublin system?
also when applying dublin, the non refoulement principles have to be checked.
Parallel case decided by the European court of justice. They also said greece is not safe and this presomption of safty must be possible to prove the opposit.
Also important if the procedures do not work for big familiy for example. (Italy case)
two persons tried to go into spain, where pushed back without procedure.
No procedure so violation of Art. 13 ECHR. but can only be applied with another art.
They were not facing inhuman treatment in the countries of origin and also not in marcco. So a risk of art. 3 can be excluded.
Art. 4 prot. 4 ? The idea of having a collective procedure is prohibited.
Court said art. 4 prot. 4 not appicable, because they did not use the legal options. You can not benefit from art. 4 prot. 4 if you behave illegaly (large groups cross boarder at night).
Only applicable if oyu have used all the legal options. you can not benefit fro ARt. 4 prot. 4 if you behave illegaly. for example in large groups during the night.
Very problematic!
Legal behaviour was never a condition!
When did the EU start to work together in asylum?
First step was mastrich in 1992, where cooperation in the asyulm segment was put in the third pillar. So "only" public international law. Decisions have to be unanimous.
Difficulties with the harmonisation?
Reception coditions, difficult because standards in the EU-contries are so different and the reception conditions cant be better than the conditions in some of the poor countries.
Biggest problems are the asylum procedures, because they are very different
Is it still possible to do asylumshopping?
Kind of, defently for kids.
For others depends, where they arrive and so on.
Main objectives of Dublin
Establishment of a mechanism for determining the member state responsible for examining an application for international protection
“One chance only”
No “asylum shopping”
No “refugees in orbit
All member states are considered to be safe (rebuttable presumption),
(relative) equivalence of national asylum systems( Became rebuttalbe after the greece cases)
(Modified) responsibility principle:
The member state responsible for the physical presence of a person on the territory of the EU is responsible for his / her asylum procedure
Exceptions for minors and family members (fundamental rights)
take back or take charge procedure?
the take charge procedure applies)
or take back procedure (if you already have a running asylum procedure, you have a number an so on)ere you dont have to examin the criteria, because the other country probably already does. Unless the person invoques human rights, like saying my husband is in another country. minors and family
Personal scope of dublin
Third-country national or stateless person applying for international protection (refugee status or subsidiary protection status according to the Qualification Directive)
EU citizens are not “dublinized”
Persons who already obtained a status (refugee status or subsidiary
protection) are outside the scope (CJEU, Ahmed)
determin memberstate in charge?
Minors (art. 8) See CJEU, MA, BT, DA
Family members (art. 9, 10, 11)
Residence documents or visas (art. 12) See CJEU, Jafari
Illegal entry (art. 13 (1))irregularly crossing of an external border,
i.e. person coming from a third countrySee CJEU, A.S., Jafari
Illegal stay (art. 13 (2))
Visa waived entry (art. 14)
“Entry” in transit area of an airport (art. 15)
question if the forläufige Aufnahme counts as international protection.
Only one part of our vorläufige Aufnahme is international protections. Like the art. 3 EMRK cases. They have to check what kind of admission provisoire is it?
In Switzerland we have more than international protection, like keeping people for humanitarian reasons. Women with retarded child or something like that.
fake visa?
fake passport but real visa art. 12 applies.
Fake visa, art. 12 does not apply,
what happens if no memeberstate is designated in charge by the directive?
If no responsible member state can be designated: first member state in which the application was lodged (art. 3 para. 2)
is it possible to appeal the incorrect allocation of responsibility as a single person?
yes. art. 27
Exceptions to the responsibility according to Chapter III
Safe third country (art. 3 par. 3)See CJEU, Mirza
Best interests of the child (art. 6)
Dependent person (art. 16) See CJEU, K.
Discretionary clauses (art. 17)
Cessation of responsibility
Art. 13 para. 1: 12 months after the date on which the irregular border crossing took place
Art. 19 para. 1: residence document
Art. 19 para. 2: person has left the territory of the MS for at least 3
months (CJEU, Karim)
Art. 19 para. 3: person was removed / returned
Take charge procedure
how much time?
Request: 3 months (Eurodac hit: 2 months), art. 21 para. 1
Reply: 2 months, art. 22 para. 1
Transfer: 6 months, art. 29 para. 1
Take back procedure
Request: 2 months, art. 23 para. 2, art. 24 para. 2
Reply: 1 month (Eurodac hit: 2 weeks) art. 25 para. 1
Transfer: 6 months, art. 29 para. 1
obstacles to trasfer?
(Collective) obstacles to a transfer: substantial grounds for believing that there are systemic flaws in the asylum procedure and in the reception conditions for applicants in the responsible member state, resulting in a risk of inhuman or degrading treatment
Individual obstacles to transfer also have to be examined, for example medical reasons (CJEU, C.K.)
Procedural guarantees (procedure directive)
Art. 4: Right to information
Art. 5: Personal interview
Art. 6: Guarantees for minors
Art. 26: Notification of a transfer decision
Art. 27: Remedies
What is eurodac?
The fingerprint system in witch applicants are put into via fingerprint so you can check for other applications for asylum
Categories of data in eurodac
Category I: Applicants for international protection (art. 9), data stored for 10 years (art. 12)
Category II: Third country nationals apprehended when illegally crossing an external border (art. 14), data stored for 18 months (art. 16)
Category III: illegally staying third country nationals (art. 17), comparison with cat. I and II, no storage
minimal age to take fingerprints?
14, but there are plans to change that
Do you have a right to ask for refugee status if subsidiary status has already been granted.
Art. 46 para. 2 says where the 2 statuses are really identical you can consider the appeal unfounded. but there is probably no state where they are really the same.
main diffrences:
- lenght of residence permit
- social benefits
- family reunification
is admission provisoire better than refugee status in switzerland?
no, you get less financial support and you can not move without permission
Explain the diffrent phases of european asylum law and the diffrences and what phase we are in right now.
We are supposed to be in phase 2 but actually we are basically applying the stuff from phase 1, but we are on the way to a 3rd phase where we’ll have regulations and with thta not anymore mimimum garanties.
Regulations dont have to be transposed into domestic law.
So there will be less diffrences, just because of the person executing the regulations. Can be more strict or less.
definition of refugee
qualification directive, diffrences with geneva convention.
qualification directive only for third country nationals, not for EU-People
Exclusion reasons from art. 12 qualification directive go further than the ones in the GC
in the qualification directive also people who help other people to commit a crime are excluded.
The same thing applies to subsidiairy protection.
Here the qualification directive created some exceptions to the non-refoulement principle. Also a problem, non-refoulement is absolut.