CJEU - C-542/13, Mohamed M’Bodj v État belge
| Country of Domestic Proceedings: | Belgium |
| Country of applicant: | Mauritania |
| Court name: | Grand Chamber of the CJEU |
| Date of decision: | 18-12-2014 |
| Citation: | C-542/13 |
Keywords:
| Keywords |
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Humanitarian considerations
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Description
“Factors relevant to the consideration of a decision to grant humanitarian protection. Humanitarian protection is a concept that encompasses all activities aimed at obtaining full respect for the rights of the individual in accordance with the letter and spirit of human rights, refugee and international humanitarian law. Protection involves creating an environment conducive to respect for human beings, preventing and/or alleviating the immediate effects of a specific pattern of abuse, and restoring dignified conditions of life through reparation, restitution and rehabilitation.” The grant of permission tothird country nationals or stateless persons toremain in Member States for reasons not due to a need for international protection but on a discretionary basis on compassionate or humanitarian groundsis not currently harmonised at a European level. However per Art. 15 Dublin II Reg., even where it is not responsible under the criteria set out in the Regulatiosn, aMember Statemay bring together family members, as well as other dependent relatives, on humanitarian grounds based in particular on family or cultural considerations. |
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Serious harm
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Description
In order to be eligible for subsidiary protection, a third country national or stateless person must demonstrate that 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, s/he would face a real risk of serious harm as defined in QD Art. 15 and that s/he is unable, or owing to such risk, unwilling to avail her/himself of the protection of that country. Per Art.15:"(a) death penalty or execution; or (b) torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment of an applicant in the country of origin; or (c) serious and individual threat to a civilian's life or person by reason of indiscriminate violence in situations of international or internal armed conflict." “Risks to which a population of a country or a section of the population is generally exposed do normally not create in themselves an individual threat which would qualify as serious harm.” |
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Protection
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Description
A concept that encompasses all activities aimed at obtaining full respect for the rights of the individual in accordance with the letter and spirit of human rights, refugee and international humanitarian law. According to Article 2(a) of the Qualification Directive, international protection meansrefugee and subsidiary protection status as defined in (d) and (f). According to Recital 19 of the Qualification Directive “Protection can be provided not only by the State but also by parties or organisations, including international organisations, meeting the conditions of this Directive, which control a region or a larger area within the territory of the State”. According to Annex II of the Asylum Procedures Directive, in the context of safe countries of origin, protection may be provided against persecution or mistreatment by: “(a) the relevant laws and regulations of the country and the manner in which they are applied; (b) observance of the rights and freedoms laid down in the ECHR and/or the International Covenant for Civil and Political Rights and/or the Convention against Torture, in particular the rights from which derogation cannot be made under Article 15(2) of the said European Convention; (c) respect of the non-refoulement principle according to the Geneva Convention; (d) provision for a system of effective remedies against violations of these rights and freedoms. |
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Torture
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Description
“Any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him/her or a third person information or a confession, punishing him/her for an act s/he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him/her or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity. It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions.” |
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Reception conditions
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Description
The full set of measures that Member States grant to asylum seekers in accordance with Directive 2003/9/EC. |
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Health (right to)
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Description
Member States shall ensure that applicants receive the necessary health care which shall include, at least, emergency care and essential treatment of illness. Member States shall also ensure that beneficiaries of refugee or subsidiary protection status have access to health care under the same eligibility conditions as nationals of the Member State that has granted such statuses. |
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Vulnerable person
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Description
Persons in a vulnerable position, such as"Minors, unaccompanied minors, disabled people, elderly people, pregnant women, single parents with minor children and persons who have been subjected to torture, rape or other serious forms of psychological, physical or sexual violence. Note: Directive 2011/36/EU defines a position of vulnerability as a situation in which the person concerned has no real or acceptable alternative but to submit to the abuse involved." |
Headnote:
The CJEU ruling concerned the scope of protection available under EU law to third country nationals suffering from serious illness whose removal would amount to inhuman or degrading treatment. The CJEU ruled that, although the removal of a seriously ill person could in exceptional circumstances amount to a breach of Article 3 ECHR, the Qualification Directive (2004/83/EC) is to be interpreted as not requiring a Member State to grant the social welfare and health care benefits to a third country national who has been granted leave to reside in the territory of that Member State under national legislation.
Facts:
Mr M’Bodj, a Mauritanian national, was granted a residence permit in Belgium for medical reasons (a major eye disability), on the basis that his removal to Mauritania would subject him to a real risk of inhuman or degrading treatment due to the lack of adequate medical treatment. Under Belgian law transposing the Qualification Directive, he had been granted neither refugee status nor subsidiary protection, and subsequently denied income allowance and income support. Domestic litigation concerning Mr M’Bodj’s entitlement under EU law to such an allowance reached the Belgian Constitutional Court, which referred two questions to the CJEU.
Questions referred for a preliminary ruling
1. Must Articles 2(e) and (f), 15, 18, 28 and 29 of [the Qualification Directive] be interpreted as meaning that not only a person who has been granted, at his request, subsidiary protection status by an independent authority of the Member State must be entitled to benefit from the social welfare and health care referred to in Articles 28 and 29 of that directive, but also a foreign national who has been authorised by an administrative authority of a Member State to reside in the territory of that Member State and who suffers from an illness occasioning a real risk to his life or physical integrity or a real risk of inhuman or degrading treatment in the case where there is no appropriate treatment in his country of origin or in the country in which he resides?
2. If the answer to the first question is that the two categories of persons who are there described must be capable of benefiting from the social welfare and health care referred to therein, must Articles 20(3), 28(2) and 29(2) of [the Qualification Directive] be interpreted as meaning that the obligation imposed on Member States to take into account the specific situation of vulnerable persons such as disabled people implies that the latter must be granted the allowances provided for by the Law of 27 February 1987 concerning allowances for disabled people, in view of the fact that social assistance which takes account of the handicap may be granted pursuant to the Basic Law of 8 July 1976 on public social welfare centres?
Decision & reasoning:
In its assessment of the first question, which raises eligibility for subsidiary protection status, the Court notes that a third country national with a deteriorating state of health, which is not the result of an intentional deprivation of health care, is not covered by 15(a) and (c) of the Qualification Directive[31].
Nor would this person be covered by Article 15(b) of said Directive for several reasons.
- Firstly, because the inhumane or degrading treatment specified in 15 (b) is only applicable where it occurs in the applicant’s country of origin [33].
- Secondly, in light of Article 6 of the Qualification Directive serious harm is inflicted by a third party and “cannot therefore simply be the result of general shortcomings in the health system of the country of origin.” According to the Court this is further clarified in the Recitals whereby an intentional deprivation of health care by a third party is required for the person to be granted subsidiary protection [35-37].
- Thirdly, the Court submits that whilst the ECtHR jurisprudence points towards a violation of Article 3 if a person suffering from a serious illness were to be removed to a country where facilities for the illness were inferior to the hosting State (N v UK), this does “not mean that that person should be granted leave to reside in a Member State by way of subsidiary protection under the Qualification Directive [39-40].”
In light of the Courts’ submissions that an applicant suffering from a serious illness cannot fall under 15(b), unless the applicant is intentionally deprived of health care in his country of origin, the Court further advances that Article 3 of the Qualification Directive, allowing Member States to introduce or retain more favourable standards for persons who qualify for subsidiary protection, does also not apply to such an applicant [42-43].
The Court, thus, surmises that the legislation referred to by the Belgian State “cannot be regarded, for the purpose of Article 3 Qualification Directive, as introducing a more favourable standard for determining who is eligible for subsidiary protection. Third country nationals granted leave to reside under such legislation are not, therefore, persons with subsidiary protection status to whom social welfare and health care would apply [46].”
Having regard to the reply given to the first question, the Court found no need to reply to the second question.
Outcome:
The Court ruled: Articles 28 and 29 of Council Directive 2004/83/EC of 29 April 2004 on minimum standards for the qualification and status of third country nationals or stateless persons as refugees or as persons who otherwise need international protection and the content of the protection granted, read in conjunction with Articles 2(e), 3, 15, and 18 of that directive, are to be interpreted as not requiring a Member State to grant the social welfare and health care benefits provided for in those measures to a third country national who has been granted leave to reside in the territory of that Member State under national legislation such as that at issue in the main proceedings, which allows a foreign national who suffers from an illness occasioning a real risk to his life or physical integrity or a real risk of inhuman or degrading treatment to reside in that Member State, where there is no appropriate treatment in that foreign national’s country of origin or in the third country in which he resided previously, unless such a foreign national is intentionally deprived of health care in that country.
Observations/comments:
The Advocate General Bot opinion on the case is available here. His conclusion was that Article 2(e) of the Directive 2004/83/EC must be interpreted as precluding a Member State from regarding as a ‘person eligible for subsidiary protection’ a third country national suffering from a serious illness who, if returned to his country of origin, would face a real risk of being subjected to inhuman or degrading treatment because of the lack of appropriate medical treatment in his country.
He noted that although, in certain specific circumstances, the suffering caused by an illness might constitute inhuman or degrading treatment, the fact remains that one of the key criteria for eligibility for subsidiary protection, namely the identification of those responsible for inflicting harm against whom protection is needed, is not fulfilled. [49]. Moreover, refugee or subsidiary protection status may be granted, therefore, only in cases where the public authorities in the country of origin have not taken any steps to provide such protection, either because they are responsible for the persecution, or because they encourage or tolerate persecution by militia or other private groups. [51]
Protection might though be provided by a Member State on a discretionary basis on compassionate or humanitarian grounds, based on compliance with Article 3 of the ECHR and Articles 4 and 19(2) of the Charter. If protection is provided on that basis, it is the implementation of the decision by the host Member State to remove the person concerned, in conjunction with the lack of appropriate medical resources in the country of origin, which may constitute inhuman treatment. The EU legislature clearly wished to exclude cases based on humanitarian grounds from the scope of Directive 2004/83 [61-62].
Leave to reside such as that granted to Mr M’Bodj, on the basis of Article 9b of the Law of 15 December 1980, is, therefore, not capable of constituting a subsidiary form of international protection for the purpose of Article 2(e) of Directive 2004/83. Therefore, the granting of subsidiary protection status by a Member State to an individual in a situation such as that of Mr M’Bodj would not be compatible with the provisions or objectives of the Directive.[67-70]
Case comment:
Could EU law save Paddington Bear? The CJEU develops a new type of protection, Steve Peers, December 2014
http://eulawanalysis.blogspot.be/2014/12/could-eu-law-save-paddington-bear-cjeu.html
Cited National Legislation:
| Cited National Legislation |
| Belgium - Vreemdelingenwet/loi sur les étrangers 15/12/1980 (Aliens Act) |
| Belgium - Law of 27 February 1987 concerning disability allowances |
Cited Cases:
| Cited Cases |
| CJEU - C-364/11 Mostafa Abed El Karem El Kott, Chadi Amin A Radi, Hazem Kamel Ismail v Bevandorlasi es Allampolgarsagi Hivatal (BAH) |
| ECtHR - N v United Kingdom (Application no. 26565/05) |
| CJEU - C-465/07 Meki Elgafaji, Noor Elgafaji v Staatssecretaris van Justitie |
| CJEU - C-57/09 and C-101/09 Bundesrepublik Deutschland v B and D |
| CJEU - C-285/12, Aboubacar Diakité v Commissaire général aux réfugiés et aux apatrides |
| CJEU - C-28/05, G.J. Dokter, Maatschap Van den Top, W. Boekhout v. Minister van Landbouw, Natuur en Voedselkwaliteit |