Germany - Administrative Court of Aachen, 17 November 2015, Az. 8 K 658/15.A

Germany - Administrative Court of Aachen, 17 November 2015, Az. 8 K 658/15.A
Country of Decision: Germany
Court name: Administrative Court of Aachen
Date of decision: 17-11-2015
Citation: Case No. Az. 8 K 658/15.A

Keywords:

Keywords
Effective access to procedures
Effective remedy (right to)
Inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
Right to remain pending a decision (Suspensive effect)
Reception conditions
Dublin Transfer
Access to the labour market
Material reception conditions

Headnote:

The question remains open and needs to be clarified in legal proceedings, whether there are systemic flaws in the Bulgarian asylum procedure and conditions of admission, such as pose a risk of infringement of Article 4 Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (CFR) (cf. Article 3(2) Regulation No. 604/2013(Dublin III)) – in particular in the case of a return under the Dublin system.

Facts:

The Applicant of unclear origin stated that he travelled from Turkey to Bulgaria and from there to Germany. For this reason, according to the first sentence of Art. 13(1) Dublin III, Bulgaria is the responsible State for processing the applicant's asylum application. On 1 August 2015, the German Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (the Federal Office) issued a decision to deport the Applicant to Bulgaria. The Applicant appealed this decision and applied for a declaration of the suspensive effect of his appeal.

Decision & reasoning:

The Federal Office rejected the asylum application of the applicant on the grounds that Bulgaria is the responsible member State (MS) for processing the asylum application. The Administrative Court ordered the suspensive effect of the Claim 8 K 658/15 against the rejection of the Federal Office, and the question remains unsettled, as to whether Bulgaria’s responsibility for the execution of the asylum procedure of the Applicant  under Art. 13(1) Dublin III is in conflict with Article 3(2)(2) Dublin III.

The Court held that the so-called transfer deadline according to Art. 29(1)(1) Dublin III ( i.e. a transfer must occur within 6 months) cannot expire while interim protection proceedings are pending.

According to Article 3(2) Dublin III, a transfer to another MS may not occur, where the asylum system and conditions of admission show systemic flaws, which entail a risk of violation Article 4 of the CFR. The “principle of mutual trust” (cf. Art.78. AEUV) applies. There is a presumption that the treatment afforded to foreigners, who are entitled to a protection status, complies with fundamental rights in every Member States. While it is a rebuttable presumption, the hurdle for rebutting the presumption is high due to the important goal of the Common European Asylum System (CEAS). Not every potential breach of a fundamental right or most minor violation will be sufficient (cf. ECJ, Decision of 21 December 2011 C-411/10 and C-493/19, C-411/10, CJEU, Decision of 10 December 2013 C-394/12, FCC Decision of 19 March 2014-10 B 6/14.

Systemic flaws are those flaws that are either already embedded in the asylum and admission regime and which affect all asylum seekers or certain groups of asylum seekers and not just in random or individual cases, but foreseeably and regularly, or; may arise by way of factual circumstances, which result in a theoretically properly designed asylum and conditions of admission being unable to fulfill its intended function in its entirety or in large part and render it largely ineffective.

Systemic flaws, must also affect individually the particular asylum seeker. It is not enough, that merely abstract structural flaws are established.

 The Court considered a UNHCR report of June 2015, and found the information contained in the report to be contradictory. It is unclear from the UNHCR Report, whether in the case of a return after a 3 months’ and 10 days’ period after the registration of the application, an asylum seeker would be detained and only permitted to lodge a subsequent application or whether he would be taken into a reception facility and the original asylum application be resumed.

In the first case, therefore, there may be serious indications that systemic flaws exist in the Bulgarian asylum procedure, as a full examination of the merits of the asylum application of those concerned would not take place in any MS. The Court will have to clarify in the main proceedings whether systemic flaws exist in Bulgaria in the main proceedings.

Outcome:

Application for the suspensive effect of the decision of the German Federal Office for Migration and Refugees of 1 April 2015 to transfer the applicant is granted.

Subsequent proceedings:

The principal proceedings will be conducted before the Administrative Court of Aachen under case no. 8 K 658/15.A.

Observations/comments:

This case summary was written by Avril Rushe, a BPTC student at BPP University. 

This case summary was proof read by Iryna Valdayeva, a student at BPP University. 

Relevant International and European Legislation:

Cited National Legislation:

Cited National Legislation
Germany – AsylvfG ( Asylum Procedure Act) – §27
Germany – AsylvfG ( Asylum Procedure Act) – §34
Germany – VwGO – ( Code of Administrative Court Procedure) § 80

Cited Cases:

Cited Cases
CJEU - C-394/12, Shamso Abdullahi v Bundesasylamt
CJEU - C-411-10 and C-493-10, Joined cases of N.S. v United Kingdom and M.E. v Ireland
ECtHR - Tarakhel v. Switzerland, Application no. 29217/12
Germany- Higher Administrative Court of Saxony, 5. October 2015, 5 B 259/15.A

Other sources:

UNHCR, updated answers to questions from UNHCR Germany in connection with transfers in the Dublin system, June 2015.