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France - Council of State, 13 February 2012, n° 356457
Country of applicant: Armenia

An administrative authority seriously and manifestly illegally violated the right to asylum by refusing on principle to register an asylum application on the sole ground that the party concerned would not be accompanied by an interpreter for an additional interview. That situation constituted an emergency situation pursuant to article L. 521-2 of the French Code of Administrative Justice.

Date of decision: 13-02-2012
Ireland - High Court, 11 January 2012, P.I., E.I. (An Infant) and J.N.I. (An Infant) v Minister for Justice and Equality, [2012] IEHC 7
Country of applicant: Unknown

This was an application for an interim injunction preventing the removal of the applicants pending the outcome of their application for leave to apply for judicial review.  The underlying leave application raised several different points, of these, one was deemed arguable: that Ireland’s deportation regime involving a lifetime ban on re-entry is contrary to the ECHR and Irish Constitution.

Date of decision: 11-01-2012
Ireland – High Court, 29 December 2011, R.A. v Minister for Justice and Equality, Garda National Immigration Bureau, Ireland and Attorney General [2011] IEHC 512
Country of applicant: Pakistan

The applicant sought to rely on her Islamic proxy marriage to her husband, a recognised refugee in Ireland, to resist removal to the UK under the Dublin Regulations. Her application for judicial review failed as she was held to have forfeited her right under Article 7 of the Dublin II Regulation due to delay on her part in asserting that right.

Date of decision: 29-12-2011
Finland - Supreme Administrative Court, 27 December 2011, KHO:2011:114
Country of applicant: Iran

A Muslim asylum seeker and his/her spouse joined Jehovah’s Witnesses in Finland – a religious community.  In their home country, Iran, converting away from Islam can mean a death sentence.  The Administrative Court should not have been allowed to deny the application without an oral hearing in which further information could have been given regarding the Applicants’ conversion to Christianity and the consequences thereof in their home country.

Date of decision: 27-12-2011
CJEU - C-411-10 and C-493-10, Joined cases of N.S. v United Kingdom and M.E. v Ireland
Country of applicant: Afghanistan, Iran, Nigeria

This case concerned the concept of ‘safe country’ within the Dublin system and respect for fundamental rights of asylum seekers. The Court held that EU law prevents the application of a conclusive presumption that Member States observe all the fundamental rights of the European Union. Art. 4 Charter must be interpreted as meaning that the Member States may not transfer an asylum seeker to the Member State responsible within the meaning of the Regulation where they cannot be unaware that systemic deficiencies in the asylum procedure and in the reception conditions of asylum seekers in that Member State amount to substantial grounds for believing that the asylum seeker would face a real risk of being subjected to inhuman or degrading treatment within the meaning of the provision. Once it is impossible to transfer the asylum seeker to the responsible Member State then subject to the sovereignty clause the State can check if another Member State is responsible by examining further criteria under the Regulation. This should not take an unreasonable amount of time and if necessary then the Member State concerned must examine the asylum application. 

Date of decision: 21-12-2011
Finland - Supreme Administrative Court, 7 December 2011, KHO:2011:98
Country of applicant: Russia

According to the residence permit application, the Applicant, born in 1935, has various ailments and he is fully dependent on his daughter who lives in Finland and is a Finnish citizen.  In an interim order, the Administrative Court turned down the Applicant’s non-refoulement argument  and held that judgment would be made on the substantive issue at a later date.  While the substantive issue was still pending at the Administrative Court seeking a stay on the execution of the interim order so that he would not to be deported while the Administrative Court decided on the substantive issue (a ‘repeal’ application).  As according to national legal provisions, a repeal application can only be made on a judgment  which has entered into force, the repeal application was inadmissible. Administrative Court, the Applicant applied to the Supreme

Because the failure to accept the non-refoulement argument might render the appeal on the substantive issue de facto ineffective, in order to guarantee the Applicant’s legal protection, in exceptional circumstances there was reason to carry out a review to determine whether his appeal should be handled  by the Supreme Administrative Court without it being detrimental to the final decision under Section 58 of the Administrative Procedure Act and Section 199 Article 2 of the Aliens Act. 

Date of decision: 07-12-2011
ECtHR - Diallo v Czech Republic, Application No. 20493/07
Country of applicant: Guinea

This case concerned access to an effective remedy in the context of expulsion proceedings from the Czech Republic. It deals with access to an effective remedy and the reliance on Art. 13 ECHR for arguable claims under Article 3 ECHR on the basis that the Appellants would be ill-treated if returned to Guinea. The Court held that there was a violation of Article 13 of the Convention in conjunction with Article 3.

Date of decision: 28-11-2011
ECtHR - M. and Others v. Bulgaria, Application No. 41416/08
Country of applicant: Afghanistan, Armenia

M’s detention pending deportation, for over 2 years and 8 months, was processed without sufficient safeguards against arbitrariness and delay, resulting in four separate violations of the Convention.

Date of decision: 26-10-2011
Ireland - High Court, 6 October 2011, S.L. v Minister for Justice Law Reform, Ireland and the Attorney General, [2011] IEHC 370
Country of applicant: Unknown

The Procedures Directive does not apply to subsidiary protection decisions when a Member State, such as Ireland, does not have a unified asylum procedure.

Date of decision: 06-10-2011
Netherlands - ABRvS, 4 October 2011, 201102753/1/V3

Right to remain arises the moment an alien indicates he would like to be granted asylum. This means that an alien, from that time onwards, cannot be refused access to the territory; he may be refused only 'further access', in other words 'actual further entry' to the territory.

Date of decision: 04-10-2011