Germany – Administrative Court Magdeburg Chamber 8, 26 January 2016, 8A 108/ 16
| Country of Decision: | Germany |
| Court name: | Administrative Court Magdeburg |
| Date of decision: | 26-01-2016 |
| Citation: | 8A 108/ 16 |
Keywords:
| Keywords |
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Detention
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Description
"Restriction on freedom of movement through confinement that is ordered by an administrative or judicial authority(ies) in order that another procedure may be implemented. In an EU asylum context, this means confinement of an asylum seeker by a Member State within a particular place, where the applicant is deprived of his or her freedom of movement. This may occur during any stage of or throughout the asylum process, from the time an initial application is made up to the point of removal of an unsuccessful asylum seeker. In an EU Return context, Member States may only detain or keep in a detention facility a third-country national who is the subject of return procedures in order to prepare the return and/or carry out the removal process, in particular when: (a) there is a risk of absconding; or (b) the third-country national concerned avoids or hampers the preparation of return or the removal process. Any detention shall be for as short a period as possible and only maintained as long as removal arrangements are in progress and executed with due diligence." |
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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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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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Responsibility for examining application
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Description
The Member State responsible for examining an application for asylum is determined in accordance with the criteria contained in Chapter III Dublin II Regulation in the order in which they are set out in that Chapter and on the basis of the situation obtaining when the asylum seeker first lodged his application with a Member State. |
Headnote:
Due to systemic deficiencies in the Maltese asylum system, a responsibility on the part of the German authorities to examine the asylum application exists by virtue of the sovereignty clause in the Dublin III Regulation.
Facts:
The applicant challenges the decision of the defendant (Federal Office for Migration and Refugees) from 14/12/2015, in which, according to § 27 a of the Asylum Act, both the asylum application was rejected as inadmissible, because of the responsibility to examine the application for asylum by Maltese authorities, as well as the deportation to Malta. The applicant refers in his claim to the systemic deficiencies in the Maltese asylum system and desires that the Federal Republic of Germany examines his asylum application (Selbsteintrittsrechts) and seeks also the annulment of the decision of the defendant from 14/12/2015.
Decision & reasoning:
The Federal Office was wrong to come to the conclusion that the application for asylum in Germany is inadmissible and was consequently also wrong to order the deportation to Malta. The claimant is therefore entitled to have his asylum application examined in the Federal Republic of Germany. The claimant has an entitlement to have his asylum application examined in Germany based on the sovereignty clause.
Despite the general responsibility of Malta pursuant to Article 27a of the Asylum Procedure Act, the applicant is entitled to the consideration and decision of his application for asylum in Germany. This is due to the so called systemic deficiencies in the Maltese asylum procedure and reception conditions, after which the applicant may suffer from inhuman or degrading treatment in the sense of article 3 ECHR if he is deported back to Malta. (see decision from 07.01.2016 8B 107/16)
The criterion for the existence of systemic deficiencies requires at least a considerable likelihood. Hence, the presumption of systemic deficiencies requires that the asylum procedure or the terms of reception conditions in the member state concerned are regularly so deficient that it may be presumed that there is a considerable likelihood that the person seeking asylum is at risk of suffering from inhuman or degrading treatment. (Federal Administrative Court, decision from 19.03.2014, 10 B 6.14, juris)
Serious indications of the existence of systemic deficiencies are based on the current detention practice of Dublin returnees in Malta. (See Decision from 05. 11. 2015, 10 A 5157/ 15 juris). Indeed, the detention of a person does not violate as such article 3 ECHR. However, article 3 ECHR requires member states to make sure that the conditions of detention respect human dignity and that the nature and method of execution of the measure does not subject prisoners to more suffering and hardship than the unavoidable amount of sufferance experienced by detainees and that their health and well-being are adequately ensured taking into account the practical needs of detention. (See ECtHR Decisions from 21. 01. 2011 – 30696/ 09- para 221, and 15. 07. 2002 - 47095/99 – para 95).
Outcome:
The claim is admissible and well-founded.
Subsequent proceedings:
Similarly in this matter: decisions of the Administrative Court Magdeburg Chamber from 25.11.2014 (5 A 118/13, 5 A 191/12 und 5 A 201/12) and from 19.10.2015 (5 A 180/15). These are followed by the proceedings in the principal action before the Court which may for further justification refer to the aforementioned decisions (§ 117 (5) of the Code of Administrative Court Procedure analogue).
Observations/comments:
This case summary was written by Ana-Maria Bucataruan, an LLM student in Immigration Law at Queen Mary University, London.
The summary was proof read by Ann-Christin Bölter, LLM student in Immigration Law at Queen Mary University, London.
Relevant International and European Legislation:
Cited National Legislation:
Cited Cases:
| Cited Cases |
| CJEU - C-411-10 and C-493-10, Joined cases of N.S. v United Kingdom and M.E. v Ireland |
| ECtHR - M.S.S. v Belgium and Greece [GC], Application No. 30696/09 |
| Kalachnikov v. Russia (no. 47095/99) |
Other sources:
AIDA Report Malta - February 2015