Case summaries

ECtHR - Louled Massoud v. Malta, Application No. 24340/08
Country of applicant: Algeria

Unlawful detention of an Algerian citizen in Malta for more than 18 months.

Date of decision: 27-10-2010
Germany – High Administrative Court Nordrhein-Westfalen, 26 October 2010, 3 A 1627/10.A
Country of applicant: Russia, Russia (Chechnya)

Chechens, who do not have particular characteristics putting them at risk, are not at risk of persecution in the Russian Federation due to their membership of their ethnic group. Therefore it can basically be assumed that other parts of the Russian Federation provide an internal protection alternative.

Date of decision: 26-10-2010
Sweden - Migration Court of Appeal, 25 October 2010, UM 7664-09
Country of applicant: Mongolia

If necessary medicines are not accessible through legal means in the country of origin adequate care is not available. 

Date of decision: 25-10-2010
Finland - Helsinki Administrative Court, 25 Oct 2010, 10/1389/1
Country of applicant: Iran

Subsidiary protection was granted on grounds that the applicant, from Iran, could be at risk inhuman or degrading treatment. The applicant based his asylum claim on the political activities of his brother in his country of asylum, as well as his own participation in protests in Iran. The Court found that after having spent two years in Finland as an asylum seeker it was likely that the applicant would be of special interest to the Iranian authorities.

Date of decision: 25-10-2010
Spain – Supreme Court, 22 October 2010, 1660/2006
Country of applicant: Colombia

This decision concerns an appeal lodged before the Supreme Court against the decision of the High National Court, confirming the Ministry of Interior’s decision to revoke the refugee status of the appellant and her children. This revocation was issued following the voluntary return of the applicant’s husband to Colombia, his country of origin.

Date of decision: 22-10-2010
Ireland - High Court, 22 October 2010, J.E. v Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform [2010] IEHC 372
Country of applicant: Nigeria

This applicant in this case was HIV positive. He was receiving treatment in Ireland while he was an asylum-seeker. Challenging a deportation order made against him, he claimed that he would be exposed to serious discrimination and stigmatisation in Nigeria and would have difficulty accessing treatment in public hospitals because of discriminatory attitudes of medical staff towards persons with HIV/AIDS.

The Court held that an inferior standard of medical treatment resulting from discriminatory attitudes towards a particular social group does not amount to persecution for a 1951 Refugee Convention reason unless it was associated with an unwillingness or inability on the part of the relevant authorities to protect members of the group from such ill-treatment.

The Court also found that it is only in exceptional cases that stigmatisation and discrimination on the part of even a large number of individuals constituted ill-treatment which comes within the scope of the prohibition in section 5 of the Refugee Act 1996 or the protection of Art 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights and probably would require a minimum level of severity and clear evidence that the ill-treatment was so endemic and institutionalised as to raise a presumption that it was official policy or condoned by state authorities.

Date of decision: 22-10-2010
Germany - High Administrative Court of Bavaria, 21 October 2010, 13a B 08.30304
Country of applicant: Iraq

The applicant is not entitled to protection from deportation within the meaning of Section 60 (7) (2) of the Residence Act / Art 15 (c) of the Qualification Directive as the levels of indiscriminate violence in his home area are not characterised by a sufficient "density of danger".

Date of decision: 21-10-2010
Belgium – Council for Alien Law litigation, 20 October 2010, Nr. 49.821
Country of applicant: Macedonia

This case concerned the concept of “particular social group." The CALL held that persons of the same sex can, in certain societies, be considered as a “particular social group.” The applicant, a victim of forced prostitution, was granted international protection on the basis of her belonging to the social group of women.

Date of decision: 20-10-2010
ECtHR – Dbouba v. Turkey, Application No. 15916/09, 13 October 2010
Country of applicant: Tunisia
The applicant, a Tunisian national who has been recognised as a refugee by the UNHCR, faced deportation by Turkey to Tunisia, where he risks ill-treatment and the death penalty. He has not had access to an effective remedy with regards to this, nor has he been allowed to challenge the lawfulness of his detention. By virtue of the applicant’s proposed return to Tunisia the Court found a violation of Article 3 ECHR in conjunction with Article 13. The Court also found a violation of articles 5(1), 5(2), 5(4) and 5(5) ECHR.
 
Date of decision: 13-10-2010
ECtHR- D.B. v. Turkey, Application no. 33526/08, 13 October 2010
Country of applicant: Turkey

The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has ruled that Turkey had violated Article 5 para 1 and 4 of the Convention with regards to the applicant’s unlawful detention and lack of remedy to challenge the lawfulness of his deprivation of liberty. Further, it found a violation of Article 34.

Date of decision: 13-10-2010