Portugal: Svetlana v. Immigration and Borders Service, 6 December 2017 No. 1526/17.2BELRS

Portugal: Svetlana v. Immigration and Borders Service, 6 December 2017 No. 1526/17.2BELRS
Country of Decision: Portugal
Country of applicant: Russia
Court name: Central Administrative Court of the South
Date of decision: 06-12-2017
Citation: Svetlana. v IBS [2017] 1526/17.2BELRS

Keywords:

Keywords
Responsibility for examining application
Request that charge be taken
Dublin Transfer

Headnote:

The applicant had fled from Russia and sought international protection from Portuguese authorities.

The request was later denied by the Portuguese Immigration and Borders Service, after issuing a take charge request directed to Finland, the responsible State for the assessment of the applicant’s request according to the DRIII, based on her possession of a short stay visa in Finland.

Facts:

The applicant and her family are part of the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ religious community. They had to flee Russia because they were being persecuted by Russian authorities due to their religious beliefs, which go counter Russia’s policy on the annihilation of the Jehovah’s church.

The claimant and her husband landed in Portugal on the 9th May 2017 with a valid visa. They arrived together with the applicant’s twin sister, her brother in law, her niece and her niece’s mother, who are in possession of Temporary Residence Permits (Autorizações de Residência Temporária).

They sought international protection from the Portuguese authorities on the 11th May 2017.

On the 5th June 2017, the Immigration and Borders Service Office for Refugees and Exiles presented a take charge request directed to Finland, which was later accepted by the Finnish State.

On the 19th June 2017, the Immigration and Borders Service’s National Director declared the inadmissibility of the applicant’s request for international protection and demanded her transfer to Finland.

The applicant appealed this decision to the Central Administrative Court of the South.

Decision & reasoning:

The Court assessed the legality of the Immigration and Borders Service decision, which was based on the applicant’s possession of a short stay visa in Finland.

According to Article 12 of the DRIII (Dublin Regulation) and Articles 19º-A/1-a)/2 and 37º/1/2 of the Portuguese Asylum Law (Law 27/2008), Finland is solely responsible for the assessment of the applicant’s request for international protection. The Court decided based on two factors: (i) the claimant’s possession of a short stay visa in Finland; and (ii) Finland’s acceptance of the take charge request.

Regarding the applicant’s right to family unity, only her husband is a member of her family, according to Article 2 of the DRIII. This is in complete harmony with Article 8 of the ECHR.

The proportionality principle only applies to administrative decisions in relation to which the Law allows a standard of free decision. This is not the case since the decision on the inadmissibility of the applicant’s request was delivered thanks to the application of EU Law and Portuguese Law on Asylum.

Outcome:

Appeal denied.

Observations/comments:

Every asylum application lodged within EU territory needs to be examined by the responsible State, and each EU country must be able to determine when it is responsible for handling an asylum claim.

The main objective of the Dublin Regulation is to ensure a quick access to asylum procedures as well as an examination of an application by a single and clearly defined Member State.

This summary was written by Matilde Chora, LLM Student at Queen Mary University London.

Relevant International and European Legislation:

Cited National Legislation:

Cited National Legislation
Law 27/2008
from 30 June 2008:
Administrative Procedures Code
approved by DL 4/2015
from 7 January 2015: