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Netherlands - District Court Utrecht, 12 April 2011, AWB 10/43531
Country of applicant: Iraq

To not give the applicant some additional time to submit documents that the authorities are already aware of which may be relevant for the asylum application is a violation of Art 4.1 of the Qualification Directive.

Date of decision: 12-04-2011
Greece - Council of State, 22 March 2011, Application No. 886/2011
Country of applicant: Bangladesh

A foreigner who wishes to be placed under the special protection of refugee status must show the Administration, with reasonable clarity and in an objectively reasoned way, that there are specific facts which cause him to have a fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, social group or political opinion. If such substantive claims have not been submitted, but only general, vague or manifestly unfounded claims; or if specific facts have indeed been cited but these do not establish grounds for refugee status, then there is no obligation to give specific reasons for rejecting the application for asylum. The “Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status” issued by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees is non-binding in nature but contains “best practice” for the relevant authorities when examining asylum applications and, in that way, sets out “soft law”. Granting a residence permit on humanitarian grounds falls within the broad discretionary powers of the relevant authority; but it can, exceptionally, be obligatory if the foreigner would – should he be repatriated to the country of origin – be at risk of torture or other inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

Date of decision: 22-03-2011
Austria - Asylum Court (AsylGH), 10 March 2011, A5 417.766-1/2011
Country of applicant: Somalia

Insofaras the Federal Asylum Agency did not apply an age-appropriate standard when assessing the credibility of the minor Applicant and did not comply with the particular obligation to provide instruction and the duty of care applicable in the case of a minor, the authority committed a gross procedural error.

Date of decision: 10-03-2011
Belgium - Council for Alien Law Litigation, 31 May 2010, Nr. 44.471
Country of applicant: Russia (Chechnya)
When it comes to establishing the facts of a case, the Office of the Commissioner General for Refugees and Stateless Persons (CGRS) cannot limit itself to finding that the applicant has not provided any documentary evidence and that its own research was unsuccessful. This would give the false impression that in asylum matters documentary evidence is a primary or even a determining factor.
Date of decision: 31-05-2010
Hungary - Metropolitan Court, 10 November 2009, O.K.E. v Office of Immigration and Nationality (OIN), 15.K.34.873/2008/13
Country of applicant: Nigeria

The Court obliged the Respondent to conduct new proceedings as it expressed an opinion on the Claimant’s state of health without appointing an expert.

Date of decision: 10-11-2009
Greece - Council of State, 29 June 2009, Application No. 2160/2009
Country of applicant: Bangladesh

The discrepancies between the evidence which the Administration and the asylum Applicant presented to the Council of State created serious doubts about whether the facts invoked by the Applicant to confirm his refugee status were correctly recorded and in general about the lawful examination of the said application in compliance with the procedures stipulated by the provisions of Articles 2(3) and 3(7) of Presidential Decree 61/1999.

Date of decision: 29-06-2009
Greece - Council of State, 5 May 2009, Application No. 1524/2009
Country of applicant: Unknown

The petition for an ab initio examination of the asylum application was rejected by the General Secretary of the Ministry of Public Order (decision being appealed in this case) because the evidence submitted was not deemed to be new and crucial. That ruling in the contested decision was flawed because the General Secretary did not have the authority to decide whether the Applicant had refugee status deeming the evidence submitted (a medical report which linked clinical findings to torture) to not be crucial for granting asylum. Instead, he should have ordered an ab initio examination of the asylum application, making the Administration comply with the relevant procedure. If, during that procedure, it was found that there was a legitimate case, then the Administration should have recognised the Applicant as a refugee.

Date of decision: 05-05-2009
Spain – Supreme Court, 16 February 2009, 6894/2005
Country of applicant: Colombia

The Applicant appealed before the Supreme Court against the decision of the High National Court to reject his application for refugee status. The applicant, his wife and their children claimed asylum alleging persecution on the basis of membership of a particular social group. Their claim was rejected at first instance on the grounds that the facts presented lacked credibility and the applicants could avail themselves of an internal protection alternative. On appeal before the Supreme Court, the decision of the High National Court was revoked and refugee status was granted.

Date of decision: 16-02-2009
Greece - Council of State, 10 February 2009, Application No. 434/2009
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

A permit to stay, granted on humanitarian grounds to a foreigner whose application for asylum has been rejected until such time as it becomes feasible for him to go abroad, is of a temporary nature. It is possible to extend the validity of such a permit if there are exceptional circumstances relating to the prevailing situation in the foreigner's country of origin and/or relating to his personal circumstances. When an application to extend a permit to stay is submitted, the Administration should examine any exceptional grounds that may have been put forward.

Date of decision: 10-02-2009
Slovakia - A.H. – M.F.D. v Ministry of the Interior of the Slovak Republic, 1 October 2008, 8Sža/31/2008
Country of applicant: Iraq

The fact that a party to proceedings has an unknown residence must always be proven in a credible manner, as must the exact determination of an address of residence in the territory of the Slovak Republic, and this obligation rests with the Court, which must exhaust all possibilities in determining whether the participant’s address really is unknown, or whether his address is other than the one known to the Court. Everyone has the right to have their case heard in court in their presence and to be able to comment on all of the evidence (Article 38(2) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms, Article 48(2) of the Constitution of the Slovak Republic).

Date of decision: 01-10-2008