Belgium - Council for Alien Law Litigation, 24 June 2010, Nr. 45.397
Keywords:
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First country of asylum
{ return; } );"
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Description
"A country can be considered to be a first country of asylum for a particular applicant for asylum if: (a) he/she has been recognised in that country as a refugee and he/she can still avail himself/herself of that protection; or (b) he/she otherwise enjoys sufficient protection in that country, including benefiting from the principle of non-refoulement; provided that he/she will be re-admitted to that country." Member States may consider an application for asylum as inadmissible if a country which is not a Member State is considered as a first country of asylum for the applicant. |
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Safe third country
{ return; } );"
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Description
Any other country, not being the country of origin, in which an asylum seeker has found or might have found protection. Note: The notion of safe third country (protection elsewhere/first asylum principle) is often used as a criterion of admissibility to the refugee determination procedure. |
Headnote:
Facts:
Decision & reasoning:
(1) there is a realistic possibility of residence,
(2) there is a realistic possibility of return,
(3) there is no fear for persecution or serious harm, and
(4) there is no risk of refoulement.
The CALL disagreed entirely with this approach. In its reasoning the CALL firstly examined in which countries the well-founded fear of persecution should be assessed. Referring to Belgian law and to Art 2 (k) of the Qualification Directive, the CALL concluded that this was the country of nationality (or, for stateless persons, the country of their former habitual residence). In the case at hand it was undisputed that Iraq was the country of the applicant’s nationality. The CALL subsequently held that the concepts of “safe third country” and “first country of asylum” have no grounds in Belgian law and that Art 26 and 27 of the Procedures Directive have no direct effect. Also the CGRS’s concept of “real residence alternative” found no ground in Belgian law or any international rule with direct effect. The applicant’s application had to be examined in Iraq, his country of nationality. Given the lack of information in the case file regarding the situation in Iraq (and the fact that the CALL had no investigative powers), the CALL quashed the decision of the CGRS and sent the case back for further examination.
Outcome:
The decision of the CGRS was quashed and the case was sent back to the CGRS for further investigation and a new decision.
Subsequent proceedings:
On the 9 February 2011 the CGRS granted subsidiary protection to the applicant, implicitly confirming the CALL’s reasoning.
Observations/comments:
This decision was taken by the General Assembly of the CALL, in which all the judges – from both the Dutch and French language chambers – sit. The purpose of such decisions is to ensure the unity of the CALL’s caselaw.