UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women - Z.E. and A.E. v. Switzerland, 171/2021, 4 July 2025

UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women - Z.E. and A.E. v. Switzerland, 171/2021, 4 July 2025
Country of applicant: Afghanistan
Court name: Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women
Date of decision: 04-07-2025
Citation: CEDAW/C/91/D/171/2021

Keywords:

Keywords
Inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
Safe third country
Real risk
Discrimination
Gender Based Persecution

Headnote:

The Committee, invoking the principle of non-refoulement and recognising gender-based violence as discrimination under Article 1 of the Convention, determined that removing the author to Greece would violate Articles 2 (c)-(f), 3, and 12 of the Convention due to the state party's failure to conduct an individualized, gender-sensitive, and trauma-informed assessment of the real and foreseeable risks the author faces as a woman experiencing gender-based violence.

Facts:

Author 1 (hereafter, the “author”) is an Afghan national who fled from Iran with her brother (also, “author 2”) and arrived in Greece in September 2018 and received refugee protection in May 2019. During her time in a refugee camp in Lesbos, the author had sustained rape but was not allowed to report the case to the authorities. Furthermore, the author’s husband arrived in Greece with the aim of killing her and her brother. Consequent to these events and losing financial aid and other support upon receiving refugee protection, they were forced to flee Greece and sought asylum in Switzerland in November 2019.

Following an Erodac search, the Swiss authorities sent a readmission request which was accepted by the Greek authorities on 20 November 2020, upon which the State Secretariat for Migration ordered the authors’ removal. On 25 March 2021, the authors appealed to the Federal Administrative Court, arguing that a removal would put author at risk of sexual abuse and inhuman treatment, which was dismissed, stating that Greece is a safe third country. 

Decision & reasoning:

The Committee accepted the contention of the author that her removal to Greece would violate Articles 2 (c)-(f), 3, and 12 of the Convention. The Committee noted that under international human rights law, the principle of non-refoulement imposed a duty on States to refrain from returning a person to a jurisdiction where they might face a real and foreseeable risk of human rights violations, which includes sexual or gender-based violence, torture, or other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment. The Committee also considered that gender-based violence, which impairs the enjoyment of human rights for women is in fact discrimination within the meaning of Article 1 of the Convention. Hence, a State party would violate the Convention if it returned the author without conducting an individualized, gender-sensitive, and trauma-informed assessment to a State where it was foreseeable that she faces a serious gender-based violence, which in this case is Greece.

The Committee rejected the State’s argument that the author’s allegation was thoroughly examined. The Committee noted that while it is generally the duty of the authorities of the concerned State party to evaluate the facts, evidence, and application of national law; it affirms its authority to examine whether the State party’s handling of the author’s asylum application was arbitrary or otherwise flawed, particularly with respect to the assessment of the risk of serious gender-based violence. The Committee noted that although author 1 was interviewed by a woman, the interpreter was a man, thus not providing due consideration for her vulnerable status as a refugee and a victim of sustained gender-based violence with suicide ideation. Therefore, the Committee considered that a more thorough and individualised risk assessment was required in the author’s case. Accordingly, the Committee concluded that the removal of author 1 amounts to a breach of Articles 2 (c)-(f), 3, and 12 of the Convention.

Outcome:

The Committee concluded that the author’s removal would amount to a breach of Articles 2 (c)-(f), 3, and 12 of the Convention. The Committee also recommended that the State party reopen her asylum request and refrain from returning her to Greece.

Other sources:

Legal Provisions Cited

Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women: Art 1, Art 2 (c), (d), (e), and (f), Art 3 and Art 12

Other Sources Cited

CEDAW General recommendation No. 35 (2017)

CEDAW General recommendation No. 32 (2014)

CEDAW General recommendation No. 19 (1992)

CEDAW Case Law Cited

Kayhan v. Turkey (CEDAW/C/34/D/8/2005)

M.A. v. Switzerland (CEDAW/C/80/ D/145/2019)

M.N.N. v. Denmark (CEDAW/C/55/D/33/2011)

N.S.F. v. United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (CEDAW/C/38/D/10/2005)

R.P.B. v. Philippines (CEDAW/C/57/D/34/2011)

R.S.A.A. et al v. Denmark (CEDAW/C/73/D/86/2015)

S.T.H. v. Switzerland (CEDAW/C/87/D/165/2021)

ECtHR Case Law Cited

M.S.S. v. Belgium and Greece (Application No. 30696/09)

N.H. and Others v. France (Application No. 28820/13)