Netherlands - District Court Haarlem, 1 April 2011, AWB 10/6592

Netherlands - District Court Haarlem, 1 April 2011, AWB 10/6592
Country of Decision: Netherlands
Country of applicant: Afghanistan
Court name: District Court Haarlem
Date of decision: 01-04-2011
Citation: AWB 10/6592

Keywords:

Keywords
Actor of persecution or serious harm
Crime against humanity
Exclusion from protection

Headnote:

This case considered exclusion from refugee status and found that criminal proceedings are not required for the application of Art 12.2 of the Qualification Directive or Art 1F of the Refugee Convention.

Facts:

The applicant’s asylum application was rejected by the Minister. The applicant had also been declared a persona non grata (an unwelcome person).

Both decisions were based on the fact that, according to the Minister, Art 1F of the Refugee Convention was applicable in the applicant’s case. The applicant put forward that the respondent interpreted the phrase ‘’serious grounds to assume’’ erroneously, given the CJEU judgment in the case of Germany v B and D (CJEU, 9 November 2010, C-57/09 en C-101/09). According to the applicant, it followed from this judgment that criminal proceedings are required for the applicability of Art 1F of the Refugee Convention. The applicant had not been convicted of any offence, since the public prosecutor had closed his file and no other country was interested in starting a criminal proceeding against him.

Decision & reasoning:

The District Court held that it does not follow from the judgment in Germany v B and D (CJEU, 9 November 2010, C-57/09 en C-101/09) that criminal proceedings are required for the applicability of Art 1F of the Refugee Convention. In paragraph 104 of this judgment, to which the applicant referred, in answer to the question if a person is only excluded of refugee status when he remains to pose a threat to the receiving state, indeed refers to a double objective, but it does not follow from this paragraph that these are cumulative objectives when excluding a person from refugee status.

The District Court therefore concluded that it does not follow from this judgment that criminal proceedings are required for the application of Art 1F of the Refugee Convention. The respondent rightfully rejected the application with reference to Art 1F of the Refugee Convention.

This conclusion is also applicable to declare a person persona non grata: it is not required to have international criminal proceedings against the person. 

Outcome:

The applicant’s appeal was dismissed.

Relevant International and European Legislation:

Cited Cases:

Cited Cases
CJEU - C-57/09 and C-101/09 Bundesrepublik Deutschland v B and D