Case summaries

UK - Court of Appeal, 29 April 2009, Y and Anor ( Sri Lanka) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009 ] EWCA Civ 362
Country of applicant: Sri Lanka

Art 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights may be engaged in suicide cases where the fear giving rise to the risk of suicide is not objectively well-founded.

Date of decision: 29-04-2009
Czech Republic - Supreme Administrative Court, 29 April 2009, T.K. v Ministry of Interior, 2 Azs 93/2008
Country of applicant: Belarus

The case concerned the inadmissibility of an application for international protection considering the Dublin II criteria and the validity of a visa.

Date of decision: 29-04-2009
Czech Republic - Supreme Administrative Court, 29 April 2009, S.H. v. Ministry of Interior, 2 Azs 13/2009-60
Country of applicant: Kosovo

This case concerned an appeal against a decision of the Ministry of Interior (MOI) refusing a claim for international protection from a Kosovan applicant who argued that his special skill as a kick boxer would place him within the meaning of a particular social group and that he should be afforded the protection within the Refugee Convention. It was found that the applicant did not belong to any particular social group and he could find protection in his country of origin.

Date of decision: 29-04-2009
Austria - Constitutional Court, 27 April 2009, U136/08
Country of applicant: Russia (Chechnya)

The fact that Poland agreed to take charge of the asylum procedure of a whole family is, by itself, not a proper basis for an inadmissibility decision. The hierarchy of the criteria for determining the Member State responsible for the procedure on the merits, set out in Art 5(1) Dublin II Regulation, must be respected. In this case the husband and father of the family had already been admitted to the procedure on the merits and, therefore, Art 8 was applicable prior to Art 14.

Date of decision: 27-04-2009
Belgium – Council for Alien Law Litigation, 27 April 2009, Nr. 26.511
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

The CALL ruled that exclusion clauses are exceptional provisions with very serious consequences and should therefore be applied in a restrictive manner. There is a presumption of responsibility vis-à-vis persons holding high positions in a regime that is guilty of committing serious human rights violations, but such a presumption is refutable. It does not suffice to refer to the general situation in the country of origin at the time when the applicant held the position.

Date of decision: 27-04-2009
France - CNDA, 24 April 2009, Mr. G., n°625816
Country of applicant: Russia, Russia (Chechnya)

The situation which currently prevails in the Republic of Chechnya does not amount to generalised violence resulting from a situation of internal or international armed conflict.

Date of decision: 24-04-2009
Netherlands - AJDCoS, 22 April 2009 , 200809034/1/V2
Country of applicant: Gambia

The case concerns whether or not the accelerated procedure used in the applicant’s claim was consistent with Art 23.4 of the Asylum Procedures Directive which allows for an accelerated procedure. It was found that the accelerated procedure was consistent with the Asylum Procedures Directive because the applicant was found not to be credible.

Date of decision: 22-04-2009
Germany - Federal Administrative Court, 21 April 2009, 10 C 11.08
Country of applicant: Iraq

This case concerned the assessment of "group" persecution against Arab Sunnites in Iraq. In order to establish the existence of group persecution it is necessary to at least approximately determine the number of acts of persecution and to link them to the entire group of persons affected by that persecution ( "density of persecution"). Acts of persecution not related to the characteristics relevant to asylum (reasons for persecution) are not to be included.

Date of decision: 21-04-2009
Czech Republic - Supreme Administrative Court, 15 April 2009, K.K. v Ministry of Interior, 1 As 12/2009-61
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

When a decision on detention is being made it is necessary to consider if the person is a refugee (asylum seeker) and subsequently if expulsion is feasible, and therefore the only permissible purpose of detention.

Date of decision: 15-04-2009
Netherlands - District Court Amsterdam, 7 April 2009, AWB 08/05416
Country of applicant: Sierra Leone

This case concerned the insufficient sourcing of evidence relied upon by the decision maker in dismissing the applicant’s claim for protection. It was found to be a violation of Art 16.1 of the Asylum Procedures Directive where the decision was insufficiently sourced in the applicant’s file. Further that this violation is not remedied by making specific references to those sources before the court. 

Date of decision: 07-04-2009