Germany - Administratvive Court Münster, 11 K 413/09.A, 15 March 2010
Keywords:
| Keywords |
|
Assessment of facts and circumstances
{ return; } );"
>
Description
The duty of the state to carry out an individual assessment of all relevant elements of the asylum application according to the provisions of Article 4 of the Qualification Directive, including considering past persecution and credibility; and the duty of the applicant to submit as soon as possible all statements and documentation necessary to substantiate the application. |
|
Country of origin information
{ return; } );"
>
Description
"Information used by the Member States authorities to analyse the socio-political situation in countries of origin of applicants for international protection (and, where necessary, in countries through which they have transited) in the assessment, carried out on an individual basis, of an application for international protection.” It includes all relevant facts as they relate to the country of origin at the time of taking a decision on the application, obtained from various sources, including the laws and regulations of the country of origin and the manner in which they are applied, regulations of the country of origin, plus general public sources, such as reports from (inter)national organisations, governmental and non-governmental organisations, media, bi-lateral contacts in countries of origin, embassy reports, etc. This information is also used inter alia for taking decisions on other migration issues, e.g. on return, as well as by researchers. One of the stated aims of the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) is to progressively bring all activities related to practical cooperation on asylum under its roof, to include the collection of Country of Origin Information and a common approach to its use. |
|
Persecution Grounds/Reasons
{ return; } );"
>
Description
Per Article 1A ofthe1951 Refugee Convention, one element of the refugee definition is that the persecution feared is “for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion“. Member States must take a number of elements into account when assessing the reasons for persecution as per Article 10 of the Qualification Directive. |
|
Personal circumstances of applicant
{ return; } );"
>
Description
The range of factors such as background, gender, age, and individual position which must to be taken into account in the assessment of an application for international protection per Article 4(3)(c) of the Qualification Directive. |
|
Subsidiary Protection
{ return; } );"
>
Description
The protection given to a third-country national or a stateless person who does not qualify as a refugee but in respect of whom substantial grounds have been shown for believing that the person concerned, if returned to his or her country of origin, or in the case of a stateless person, to his or her country of former habitual residence, would face a real risk of suffering serious harm as defined in Article 15 of 2004/83/EC, and to whom Article 17(1) and (2) of 2004/83/EC do not apply, and is unable, or, owing to such risk, unwilling to avail himself or herself of the protection of that country.” “Note: The UK has opted into the Qualification Directive (2004/83/EC) but does not (legally) use the term Subsidiary Protection. It is believed that the inclusion of Humanitarian Protection within the UK Immigration rules fully transposes the Subsidiary Protection provisions of the Qualification Directive into UK law. |
|
Membership of a particular social group
{ return; } );"
>
Description
One of the grounds of persecution specified in the refugee definition per Article 1A ofthe1951 Refugee Convention. According to the Qualification Directive, membership of a particular social group means members who share an innate characteristic, or a common background that cannot be changed, or share a characteristic or belief that is so fundamental to identity or conscience that a person should not be forced to renounce it, and that group has a distinct identity in the relevant country, because it is perceived as being different by the surrounding society. Depending on the circumstances in the country of origin, a particular social group might include a group based on a common characteristic of sexual orientation. Sexual orientation cannot be understood to include acts considered to be criminal in accordance with national law of the Member States: Gender related aspects might be considered, without by themselves alone creating a presumption for the applicability of this concept. |
|
Gender Based Persecution
{ return; } );"
>
Description
‘Gender-related persecution’ is used to encompass the range of different claims in which gender is a relevant consideration in the determination of refugee status. Gender refers to the relationship between women and men based on socially or culturally constructed and defined identities, status, roles and responsibilities that are assigned to one sex or another. Gender is not static or innate but acquires socially and culturally constructed meaning over time. Gender-related claims may be brought by either women or men, although due to particular types of persecution, they are more commonly brought by women. Gender-related claims have typically encompassed, although are by no means limited to, acts of sexual violence, family/domestic violence, coerced family planning, female genital mutilation, punishment for transgression of social mores, and discrimination against homosexuals." |
Headnote:
A single woman from Nigeria (Urhobo) was eligible for protection from deportation under Section 60 (7) sentence (1) of the Residence Act due to a threat of female genital mutilation (FGM) and forced marriage. The economic and social situation in Nigeria is difficult and tense even for the vast majority of the population. The situation is much worse for single women as women in Nigeria are exposed to multiple discrimination. To a large extent they are under legal incapacity, so that in practice they are only in a position to protect their own interests if they are supported by their family.
Facts:
The applicant is Nigerian citizen of Catholic belief and belongs to the Urhobo ethnic group. She entered Germany in December 2008 by plane from Lagos and applied for asylum. The applicant presented her claim as follows: She studied in Benin from 2002 to 2006. After finishing her studies, her father told her that he had found a husband for her. He was an older Muslim with five wives. In December 2006, her father brought her to the man’s house and left her there. At first, she tried to talk to this man, however, this was pointless. He beat and raped her. After three weeks she escaped. With a friend’s support she went to Lagos. After some time, however, her father and the man discovered her whereabouts and she managed to find a different hiding place. Due to the increasing threat she no longer felt safe in Lagos and decided to leave the country. Furthermore, she was at risk of being circumcised. This is a tradition among the Urhobos and is also performed in her family.
The asylum authorities rejected her application. The applicant appealed this decision.
Decision & reasoning:
The applicant was neither entitled to asylum under German law nor to refugee status. However, the applicant was eligible for protection from deportation under Section 60 (7) sentence (1) of the Residence Act. The court stated:
Forced marriage and female genital mutilation in Nigeria do not constitute suitable reasons to justify the assumption of political persecution. Notwithstanding the severity of such an infringement to physical integrity, the danger of circumcision does not constitute political persecution because of membership of a particular social group. Political persecution, according to the case law of the Federal Constitutional Court regarding the constitutional right to asylum (also applicable under Section 60 (1) of the Residence Act), exists when the individual is targeted through the violation of a legal right that is protected under asylum law, singling him/her out from the overall peaceful order of the state because of the intensity of the infringement. In the present case, the exclusion of the applicant from the overall peaceful order of the state was missing. Still, undergoing circumcision is very important to finding an appropriate place in the society. Assuming, according to local understanding, that circumcision aims at including the girls and women concerned as fully fledged members of society and, by this, providing the family with social recognition, while, in contrast, the refusal to undergo circumcision would exclude the persons concerned and their families from society, one cannot suppose that circumcision has an excluding character. It is rather the uncircumcised woman, who is not respected and excluded, socially and economically. The disapproval may even result in the women’s and girls’ exclusion by their families and the village community. This exclusion may potentially have a severe negative impact on the person’s life and limb, particularly when a minor originating from a poor family has to try to make a living under the difficult circumstances for single women in Nigeria, without support of her extended family.
However, this exclusion of uncircumcised women, that might even threaten their existence, does not justify the conclusion that they are politically persecuted, because the Nigerian state cannot be held responsible for the risks to life and limb as a result of their exclusion from family and the village community. Hunger, lack of shelter, insufficient health care etc. are not rights violations originating from the state or rights violations the state might be held responsible for, inflicted intentionally on a specific woman because of her refusal to be circumcised, but are a consequence of the social and economic circumstances.
These explanations imply at the same time that even the forced marriage with a Muslim, invoked by the applicant in the context of circumcision, cannot be attributed the character of political persecution. Although forced marriages are still widespread in Nigeria, but not quite as much as circumcisions, they are also rooted in traditional self-image and have their origin in archaic-patriarchal ideas. In any case, an exclusion from the overall peaceful order of the state is missing, since the forced marriage is part of the tradition and the social circumstances, as is also demonstrated in the present case of the applicant.
However, the applicant is eligible for protection from deportation under Section 60 (7) (1) of the Residence Act. There is a high likelihood that in case of her return she would be in extreme danger, due to her personal circumstances, taking into consideration the conditions of life in Nigeria. For unmarried women, due to the generally difficult economic situation combined with the relevance of family and clan ties in Nigerian society, it is extremely difficult to settle down elsewhere without the support of her family. A woman who turns away from her extended family or who is an outcast is threatened by social and socio-economic marginalisation. For single women, it is generally very difficult to find shelter and a professional occupation.
The applicant has escaped from the threat of circumcision and the forced marriage with an older Muslim, arranged by her father. In case of return to Nigeria, she would be at risk of falling victim to violent attacks and threats by her father, who is willing to return the applicant by use of force to the man to whom she is committed to by marriage. Furthermore, the applicant is at risk of falling victim to circumcision.
Outcome:
The asylum authorities were obliged to grant the applicant protection from deportation under Section 60 (7) sentence (1) of the Residence Act.
Subsequent proceedings:
Not known.
Observations/comments:
It is disputed whether a risk of female genital mutilation (FGM) because of membership of a particular social group constitutes political persecution. In the present decision, and in the following decisions cited by the court, FGM did not constitute political persecution: Administrative Court Münster, 23 August 2006, 11 K 473/04.A; Administrative Court Münster, 11. October 2007, 1154/04.A; Administrative Court München, 13 July 2005, M 26 K 00.50542.
However the following cases, also cited by the court, found that FGM did constitute political persecution: High Administrative Court Hessen, 23 March 2005. 3 UE 3457/04.A; Administrative Court Stuttgart, 10 June 2005, A 10 K 13121/03; Administrative Court Köln, 3 March 2005,16 K 586/01.A, as well as the Administrative Court Aachen, 10 May 2010, 2 K 562/07.A (summarised EDAL).
Section 60 (7) of the Residence Act
(7) A foreigner should not be deported to another state in which a substantial concrete danger to his or her life and limb or liberty applies. A foreigner shall not be deported to another state in which he or she will be exposed, as a member of the civilian population, to a substantial individual danger to life or limb as a result of an international or internal armed conflict. Dangers pursuant to sentence 1 or sentence 2 to which the population or the segment of the population to which the foreigner belongs are generally exposed shall receive due consideration in decisions pursuant to Section 60a (1), sentence 1.
(Available at www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_aufenthg/englisch_aufenthg.html#p0718
Relevant International and European Legislation:
Cited Cases:
| Cited Cases |
| Germany - Administrative Court Köln, 3 March 2005, 16 K 586/01.A |
| Germany - Administrative Court München, 13 July 2005, M 26 K 00.50542 |
| Germany - Administrative Court Münster, 23 August 2006, 11 K 473/04.A |
| Germany - Administrative Court Münster, 11 October 2007, 1154/04.A |
| Germany - Administrative Court Stuttgart, 10 June 2005, A 10 K 13121/03 |
| Germany - High Administrative Court Hessen 23 March 2005, 3 UE 3457/04.A |
Follower Cases:
| Follower Cases |
| Germany - Administrative Court Aachen, 10 May 2010, 2 K 562/07.A |