Case summaries

The Netherlands – Supreme Court, 29 March 2016, 14/00826

The Supreme Court has requested two preliminary rulings to the Court of Justice of the European Union. The time of onset and the determination of the duration of the suspect’s ‘undesirable declaration’, which is considered equal to an entry ban, are under discussion since this statement had already been issued before the Return Directive was operational.

Date of decision: 29-03-2016
Germany - Administrative Court Minden, 29. March 2016, 10 L 314/16.A
Country of applicant: Nigeria
Keywords: Dublin Transfer

The Administrative Court Minden has temporarily prohibited the Dublin transfer of a Nigerian refugee to Italy due to systematic deficiencies within the local reception conditions.

Date of decision: 29-03-2016
ECtHR - F.G. v. Sweden (no. 43611/11) (Grand Chamber), 23 March 2016
Country of applicant: Iran

An Article 3 compliant assessment requires a full and ex nunc evaluation of a claim.  Where the State is made aware of facts that could expose an applicant to an individual risk of ill-treatment, regardless of whether the applicant chooses to rely on such facts, it is obliged to assess this risk ex proprio motu

Date of decision: 23-03-2016
Germany - Federal Administrative Court, 1 C 10.15, 22 March 2016
Country of applicant: Iran

When a Member State accepts a request by Germany to take charge of an applicant in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 343/2003 of 18 February 2003 (the “Dublin II Regulation”), the applicant may be transferred to that Member State even if he/she limits his/her application to subsidiary protection after the request to take charge has been accepted.

Date of decision: 22-03-2016
UK - R on the Application of CK (Afghanistan) & Others and The Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2016] EWCA Civ 166, 22 March 2016
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

The absence of an individual right of the applicant to challenge the determination of the State responsible to examine their asylum claim on Dublin II grounds does not prohibit the autonomous application of ECHR Article 8 to decisions to remove persons from one Member State to another. However, taking into account the significance of the Regulation and the need to preserve its effectiveness, an especially compelling case would have to be demonstrated to deny removal following a Dublin II decision. When the Secretary of State has certified such human rights claims as clearly unfounded, it must be shown that the same decision could have been reached on reasonable grounds by an immigration judge.

Date of decision: 22-03-2016
Sweden - Migration Court of Appeal, 18 March 2016, UM 425-16
Country of applicant: Unknown

The Court of Appeal concluded that the referral of an appeal under the Dublin III Regulation to an administrative agency breaches an applicant’s right to efficient remedy. 

Date of decision: 18-03-2016
CJEU - C-695/15, Shiraz Baig Mirza v Bevándorlási és Állampolgársági Hivatal
Country of applicant: Pakistan

An asylum applicant can be sent to a Safe Third Country by a Member State who has admitted responsibility under Dublin III in the context of a take back request, where the applicant has left the responsible Member State before a decision on the first asylum application has been taken on its merits.

The absence of information being provided to the sending Member State by the receiving Member State on the latter’s legislation and practice regarding STC does not prevent an asylum applicant being sent to a STC or breach  an applicant’s right to an effective remedy

Where an applicant has been taken back by a responsible Member State there is no obligation on the State to re-open the examination of the application at the exact point where it was left.

Date of decision: 17-03-2016
Spain: Supreme Court. Chamber of Contentious-Administrative Proceedings n. 1182/2016, 16th March 2016, Appeal No. 2563/2015
Country of applicant: Syria

The decision of denying asylum is disproportionate, as the fact that the acts of persecution are indiscriminate and affect a large majority of the population do not exclude the application of the 1951 Convention when the necessary elements of the provision are present. The reports of UNHCR were also noted in the Court’s assessment, particularly regarding the risk groups that the organisation has characterised.

Date of decision: 16-03-2016
Spain: Supreme Court. Chamber of Contentious-Administrative Proceedings n. 1064/2016, 10th March 2016, Appeal No. 1601/2015

The fact that the rejection of the applicant’s application for international protection was not communicated to her in a full decision, but only in the form of a mere administrative act, raised an issue of lack of defence and founded the applicant’s request for access to the original document of the decision.

Date of decision: 10-03-2016
Switzerland - Federal Administrative Court, 10 March 2016, D-5785/2015
Country of applicant: Eritrea

The appeal procedure dealt with the question of whether the complainant is to be classified as a minor according to Article 2 lit. g of the Dublin III Regulation, with the consequence that Article 8 para. 1 of the Dublin III Regulation is applicable and the complainant can therefore remain with her sister in Switzerland. In particular the term “legally present” and the procedure of taking evidence were discussed in depth.

Date of decision: 10-03-2016