Finland, ECHR, Z and others v. Finland, Application no 42758/23, 16 December 2025
| Country of applicant: | Russia |
| Court name: | The European Court of Human Rights (Second Section) |
| Date of decision: | 16-12-2025 |
| Citation: | ECtHR, Z and others v. Finland, Application no 42758/23, 16 December 2025 |
Keywords:
| Keywords |
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Best interest of the child
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Description
Legal principle required to be applied as a primary consideration when taking measures concerning minors in the asylum process. “Any determination or assessment of best interests must be based on the individual circumstances of each child and must consider the child’s family situation, the situation in their country of origin, their particular vulnerabilities, their safety and the risks they are exposed to and their protection needs, their level of integration in the host country, and their mental and physical health, education and socio-economic conditions. These considerations must be set within the context of the child’s gender, nationality as well as their ethnic, cultural and linguistic background. The determination of a separated child’s best interests must be a multi-disciplinary exercise involving relevant actors and undertaken by specialists and experts who work with children." |
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Inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
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Description
A form of serious harm for the purposes of the granting of subsidiary protection. The Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in Celibici defined cruel or inhuman treatment as ‘an intentional act or omission, that is an act which, judged objectively, is deliberate and not accidental, that causes serious mental or physical suffering or injury or constitutes a serious attack on human dignity.’ “Ill-treatment means all forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, including corporal punishment, which deprives the individual of its physical and mental integrity." |
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Child Specific Considerations
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Description
Application of a child-sensitive process and assessment of protection status, taking into account persecution of a child-specific nature and the specific protection needs of children. “When assessing refugee claims of unaccompanied or separated children, States shall take into account the development of, and formative relationship between, international human rights and refugee law, including positions developed by UNHCR in exercising its supervisory functions under the 1951 Refugee Convention. In particular, the refugee definition in that Convention must be interpreted in an age and gender-sensitive manner, taking into account the particular motives for, and forms and manifestations of, persecution experienced by children. Persecution of kin; under-age recruitment; trafficking of children for prostitution; and sexual exploitation or subjection to female genital mutilation, are some of the child-specific forms and manifestations of persecution which may justify the granting of refugee status if such acts are related to one of the 1951 Refugee Convention grounds. States should, therefore, give utmost attention to such child-specific forms and manifestations of persecution as well as gender-based violence in national refugee status-determination procedures.” See also the best interests principle. |
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Dependant (Dependent person)
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Description
“While there is no internationally recognized definition of dependency, UNHCR uses an operational definition to assist field staff in the work with individual cases: - Dependent persons should be understood as persons who depend for their existence substantially and directly on any other person, in particular because of economic reasons, but also taking emotional dependency into consideration. - Dependency should be assumed when a person is under the age of 18, and when that person relies on others for financial support. Dependency should also be recognized if a person is disabled not capable of supporting him/herself. - The dependency principle considers that, in most circumstances, the family unit is composed of more that the customary notion of a nuclear family (husband, wife and minor children). This principle recognizes that familial relationships are sometimes broader than blood lineage, and that in many societies extended family members such as parents, brothers and sisters, adult children, grandparents, uncles, aunts, nieces and nephews, etc., are financially and emotionally tied to the principal breadwinner or head of the family unit. 14. UNHCR recognizes the different cultural roots and societal norms that result in the variety of definitions of the family unit. It therefore promotes a path of cultural sensitivity combined with a pragmatic approach as the best course of action in the process of determining the parameters of a given refugee family.“ In the context of applications for protection, applications may be made on behalf of dependants in some instances per Art 6 APD. In the context of the Dublin II Regs dependency may be grounds for evoking the humanitarian clause (Art. 15) in order to bring dependent relatives together. In the context of family reunification a condition precedent in the case of some applicants is a relationship of dependency. “The principle of dependency requires that economic and emotional relationships between refugee family members be given equal weight and importance in the criteria for reunification as relationships based on blood lineage or legally sanctioned unions… |
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Family member
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Description
"Generally, persons married to a migrant, or having a relationship legally recognised as equivalent to marriage, as well as their dependent children and other dependants who are recognised as members of the family by applicable legislation. In the context of the Family Reunification Directive 2003/86/EC (and 2003/109/EC, Long-Term Residents), a third-country national, as specified in Article 4 of said Directive and in accordance with the transposition of this Article 4 into national law in the Member State concerned, who has entered the EU for the purpose of Family Reunification… In the context of Asylum, and in particular Council Regulation (EC) 343/2003 (Determining responsible Member State for Asylum claim), this means insofar as the family already existed in the country of origin, the following members of the applicant's family who are present in the territory of the Member States: (i) the spouse of the asylum seeker or his or her unmarried partner in a stable relationship, where the legislation or practice of the Member State concerned treats unmarried couples in a way comparable to married couples under its law relating to aliens; (ii) the minor children of couples referred to in point (i) or of the applicant, on condition that they are unmarried and dependent and regardless of whether they were born in or out of wedlock or adopted as defined under the national law; (iii) the father, mother or guardian when the applicant or refugee is a minor and unmarried." |
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Return
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Description
"In the context of the Return Directive (2008/115/EC), the process of going back - whether in voluntary compliance with an obligation to return, or enforced - to: - one's country of origin; or - a country of transit in accordance with EU or bilateral readmission agreements or other arrangements; or - another third country, to which the third-country national concerned voluntarily decides to return and in which he/she will be accepted. There are subcategories of return which can describe the way the return is implemented, e.g. voluntary, forced, assisted and spontaneous return; as well as sub-categories which describe who is participating in the return, e.g. repatriation (for refugees)." |
Headnote:
Violation of Article 8 regarding the right to respect for family life, arising from a domestic court order for the return of two children from Finland to Russia under the Hague Child Abduction Convention.
Facts:
The applicants, a Russian national and his two children, lived in Russia. In September 2022, the first applicant (the father) removed the children (second and third applicant) to Finland without the mother's consent and applied for asylum, claiming political persecution. In January 2023, the mother demanded the children’s return under the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction in Helsinki Court of Appeal.
The father opposed the return, relying on Article 13 § 1 (b) of the Hague Convention, alleging a grave risk of psychological harm due to the children's previous enrolment in a Russian military school. He further argued that the children objected to the return under Article 13 § 2.
Following the dismissal of the mother´s application by the Helsinki Court of Appeal, she filled an appeal to the Supreme Court.
On 27 September 2023, the Supreme Court determined that there was no sufficient evidence of a grave risk, noting the mother's willingness to change the children's school. The return of the children to Russia was ordered on the best interest of the child. The Supreme Court further held that while the older child (12) possessed the maturity for his objections to be considered, the younger child (10) did not.
Although the Finnish Immigration Service granted asylum to the applicants on 12 December 2023, premised on the father’s fear of political persecution, the Supreme Court dismissed a second extraordinary application made by the father against the Supreme Court’s earlier decision. The Supreme Court ruled that the children's asylum status was merely derivative of the father's status and did not constitute a "new fact" regarding a risk of harm to the children themselves, thus maintaining that the granting of asylum did not exempt the State from its international obligations under the Hague Convention.
Decision & reasoning:
Article 8 (Right to respect for family life)
The Court noted that the return order constituted an interference with family life but was lawful and pursued the legitimate aim of protecting the rights of the children and the mother. The ECHR accepted the domestic finding that the asylum status of the applicants did not prove that returning to Russia would expose the children to an "intolerable situation" within the meaning of the Hague Convention (para. 53)
Regarding the children’s objections, the Court noted that the Finnish authorities correctly assessed the children's maturity. Although the older child objected to the return, the Supreme Court provided specific reasons why returning to Russia remained in the child’s best interest. (para. 54)
Moreover, the Court noted its previous case law where it had concluded that the aim of the Hague Convention is to prevent an abducting parent from benefiting from their own wrongdoing and that that Convention associates the best interests of the child with the restoration of the situation as it was before the abduction (status quo ante). Therefore, the fact that return would make contact between the applicants more difficult did not override the necessity of restoring the children's original residence. (para. 55)
In light of that case law, the State’s wide margin of appreciation in this case, and the lack of more specific submissions by the applicants on the insufficiency of the Supreme Court’s reasoning, the Court did not find strong reasons to contradict the domestic findings and concluded that there had been no violation of Article 8. (paras. 55 – 57)
Article 3
The applicants alleged that a return to Russia would subject the children to a risk of ill-treatment under Article 3. The Court considered that these complaints are linked to the examination of Article 8, where it had found that there were no grounds for believing that there was a real risk of exposure to ill-treatment given that the children’s asylum status in Finland was linked to the father’s status. (paras. 59-63)
Outcome:
No violation of the Article 8 of the Convention.
Subsequent proceedings:
The Court reiterates that, in accordance with Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the present judgment will not become final until (a) the parties declare that they will not request that the case be referred to the Grand Chamber; or (b) three months after the date of the judgment, if referral of the case to the Grand Chamber has not been requested; or (c) the Panel of the Grand Chamber rejects any request to refer under Article 43 of the Convention.
Relevant International and European Legislation:
Cited National Legislation:
| Cited National Legislation |
| Finland, Act on Child Custody and Right of Access, laki lapsen huollosta ja tapaamisoikeudesta, lagen angående vårdnad om barn och umgängesrätt, Act no. 361/1983 |
Cited Cases:
| Cited Cases |
| ECtHR, Neulinger and Shuruk v. Switzerland [GC], Application no. 41615/07, § 90, 6 July 2010 |
| ECtHR, X v. Latvia [GC], Application no. 27853/09, §§ 92‑108, 26 November 2013 |
| ECtHR, Adžić v. Croatia (no. 2), Application no. 19601/16, § 82, 2 May 2019 |
| ECtHR, Z. v. Croatia, Application no. 21347/21, § 86, 1 September 2022 |
| ECtHR, K.B. and Others v. Croatia, Application no. 36216/13, § 143, 14 March 2017 |
| ECtHR, Gajtani v. Switzerland, Application no. 43730/07, §§ 106-115, 9 September 2014 |
| ECtHR, G.S. v. Georgia, Application no. 2361/13, § 56, 21 July 2015 |
| ECtHR, Y.S. and O.S. v. Russia, Application no. 17665/17, §§ 104‑105, 15 June 2021 |