Belgium – Council for Alien Law Litigation, 16 June 2009, Nr. 28.796
| Country of Decision: | Belgium |
| Country of applicant: | Afghanistan |
| Court name: | Council for Alien Law Litigation |
| Date of decision: | 16-06-2009 |
| Citation: | Nr. 28.796 |
| Additional citation: | Published in: T. Vreemd. 2009 (4), p. 322 |
Keywords:
| Keywords |
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Assessment of facts and circumstances
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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. |
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Subsequent application
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Description
Where a person who has applied for refugee status in a Member State makes further representations or a subsequent application in the same Member State. Member States may apply a specific procedure involving a preliminary examination where a decision has been taken on the previous application or where a previous application has been withdrawn or abandoned. As with all aspects of the procedures directive, the same provisions will apply to applicants for subsidiary protection where a single procedure applies to both applications for asylum and subsidiary protection. |
Headnote:
This case concerned subsequent applications and previous findings. The CALL ruled that, when deciding on a subsequent application, it is not competent to re-judge issues that have been decided in earlier applications. The CALL confirmed that those issues are final, unless evidence is submitted that is of such a nature that it demonstrates in a certain manner that those earlier decisions would have been different had that evidence been submitted at that time.
Facts:
(1) in the first asylum application it had been decided that the applicant’s account was not credible,
(2) the applicant’s statements in the second application were not credible, and
(3) the newly submitted documents were not sufficient to challenge those adverse credibility findings. The applicant filed an appeal against this decision.
Decision & reasoning:
The CALL, however, did not agree and ruled that it was not competent to re-judge the decision in the first asylum application on appeal, when the second asylum application was being considered. They stated that: “The Council does not have the competence to rule again on elements that have already been judged in decisions regarding earlier asylum applications and that, given the fact that those decisions have not been appealed within the time limits legally provided for or that the appeal has been dismissed, should be regarded as final unless an evidentiary element is submitted that is of a nature to demonstrate in a certain manner that those earlier decisions would have been different had the concerned evidentiary element been submitted at the time of those earlier judgments.”
The CALL therefore limited its competence to the judgment of the new elements submitted in the second application. In the case at hand this meant that the CALL considered itself bound by its own decision in the first procedure and considered the findings of that decision as final (principle of res judicata). The CALL ruled that “the applicant’s criticism of the content of these findings cannot, for that reason, be dealt with. The applicant cannot use the possibility to file a second asylum application in order to make a sort of appeal against the final decision on his first asylum application.”
The CALL ruled that almost all the new documents that the applicant had submitted could not be considered as “new elements.” The CALL repeated that new elements in the context of subsequent applications are: all elements that relate to facts or situations that occurred after the last phase of the procedure in which the applicant could have submitted them. From this standpoint, only the applicant’s alleged deteriorated psychological condition and the deteriorated security situation in Pakistan were “new elements”.
Outcome:
The appeal was rejected; both refugee and subsidiary protection status were denied.