Case summaries

Czech Republic - Supreme Administrative Court, 24 July 2013, D.B. v The Ministry of the Interior, 4 Azs 13/2013-34
Country of applicant: Mongolia

The application cannot be rejected as manifestly unfounded on the grounds that the Applicant comes from a safe country of origin, if she demonstrably claims and proves, with documented evidence, facts that are relevant to international protection. Domestic violence is such a relevant fact if the Applicant is not provided with efficient protection against such actions.

Date of decision: 24-07-2013
ECtHR - M.A. v Cyprus, Application No. 41872/10
Country of applicant: Syria

The case concerns a Syrian Kurd’s detention by Cypriot authorities and his intended deportation to Syria after an early morning police operation on 11 June 2010 removing him and other Kurds from Syria from an encampment outside government buildings in Nicosia in protest against the Cypriot Government’s asylum policy.

The Court found a violation of Article 13 (right to an effective remedy) of the European Convention on Human Rights taken together with Articles 2 (right to life) and 3 (prohibition of inhuman and degrading treatment) due to the lack of an effective remedy with automatic suspensive effect to challenge the applicant’s deportation; a violation of Article 5 §§ 1 and 4 (right to liberty and security) of the Convention due to the unlawfulness of the applicant’s entire period of detention with a view to his deportation without an effective remedy at his disposal to challenge the lawfulness of his detention. 

Date of decision: 23-07-2013
Ireland - High Court, 18 July 2013, A.A. v Minister for Justice and Law Reform & Ors. [2013] IEHC 355
Country of applicant: Somalia, Tanzania

The Minister based a subsidiary protection decision and deportation order examination on the premise that the Applicant was a Tanzanian national based on records that were provided by the UK Border Agency to that effect, in circumstances where the Applicant claimed that he was Somali; that the Tanzanian identity was false; and he claimed that two language reports which were supportive of his claim of Somali nationality and submitted in a separate application for a subsequent asylum claim should have been considered by the Minister in the making of his subsidiary protection and deportation decisions.

The High Court held that the language reports were added to the decision making process by virtue of being referenced in (but not attached to) correspondence concerning the subsidiary protection application and representations against deportation; that they were not considered by the Minister; and that the failure to do so breached the Applicant’s right to a fresh consideration of his credibility, and the Minister’s obligation to consider relevant facts.

Consequently the subsidiary protection decision and the deportation were quashed and remitted.

Date of decision: 18-07-2013
Germany - Administrative Court Gelsenkirchen, 18 July 2013, 5a K 4418/11.A
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

The risk of arranged marriage is widespread in Afghanistan, particularly for underage girls, which means that it may constitute grounds for refugee status for women.  
In the examination of Article 8 of Directive 2004/83/EC, it is important to take into account the fact that family members may only return together with their children and spouses on the grounds of the protection of marriage and family. 

Date of decision: 18-07-2013
UK - Scottish Court of Session, M.AB.N. & Anor v The Advocate General for Scotland Representing The Secretary of State for the Home Department & Anor, [2013] CSIH 68
Country of applicant: Somalia

This case concerned the evidential standing in asylum hearings of linguistic analysis reports by the Swedish company SPRAKAB.

Date of decision: 12-07-2013
UK - Court of Appeal, AA-R (Iran) v Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2013] EWCA Civ 835
Country of applicant: Iran

The issue in this case was “complicity” – the Court analysed the facts of the applicant’s involvement in a violent paramilitary force in Iran to determine whether he was complicit in crimes against humanity, so as to be excluded from international protection. 

Date of decision: 12-07-2013
ECtHR - Firoz Muneer v. Belgium, Application no. 56005/10, 11 July 2013
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

The case examines the allegations of an Afghan national that the extension of his detention for an additional two months had been unlawful and contrary to Article 5(1) of the Convention and that he had not had at his disposal an effective remedy for the review of his detention in violation of Article 5(4) ECHR. 

Date of decision: 11-07-2013
Hungary - Metropolitan Court, 11 July 2013, M.A.A. v Office of Immigration and Nationality (OIN), 6.K.31830/2013/6
Country of applicant: Syria

It must be noted that the Applicant’s occupation as a pharmacist meant that according to the country of origin information, he could be a target group for the country`s security forces if they suspected that assistance was being provided to the insurgents. This was considered to constitute the Applicant`s imputed political opinion to be taken into consideration in light of the right to asylum, in other words, circumstances to be considered pursuant to the Geneva Convention.

Date of decision: 11-07-2013
Germany - Administrative Court Gießen, 11 July 2013, 5 K 1316/12.GI.A
Country of applicant: Pakistan

Ahmadis, for whom the practise and possibly also the promotion of their faith in public are elements which define their identity and as such are essential, are very likely to be at risk of political persecution in Pakistan. The “relationship consideration” demanded by the Federal Administrative Court, whereby the number of members of a particular group is compared with the number of actual threatening acts of persecution, seems virtually impossible in this case.

Date of decision: 11-07-2013
Slovenia - Supreme Court of the Republic of Slovenia, 10 July 2013, I Up 250/2013
Country of applicant: Somalia

The International Protection Act's (ZMZ) definition of family members is not inconsistent with the Constitution of the Republic of Slovenia nor with Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights  (ECHR).

The ZMZ does not give the body that decides on international protection the discretion to broaden the circle of family members in special circumstances, nor are such obligations or discretions given by EU legislation or the ECHR.

Date of decision: 10-07-2013