Case summaries

Slovakia - Migration Office, 27 April 2010, M. v Ministry of the Interior of the Slovak Republic, 1Sža/36/2010
Country of applicant: Pakistan

It does not follow from any of the provisions of the Asylum Act or the Administrative Procedure Code that the Respondent must deliver a decision to an asylum applicant in his or her mother tongue or a language that he or she understands.

Date of decision: 27-04-2010
Germany - Federal Administrative Court, 27 April 2010, 10 C 5.09
Country of applicant: Turkey

The facilitated standard of proof of Art 4.4 of the Qualification Directive was deemed to be applicable both in the decision-making on the granting of refugee status and in the decision-making on the granting of subsidiary protection. The "reduced standard of probability" (of sufficient safety), as it has been developed by the German asylum jurisprudence, is no longer relevant for the examination of refugee status or subsidiary protection. In case of a concrete danger of torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment the prohibition of deportation of Section 60 (2) of the Residence Act applies unconditionally, this includes deportations to signatory states of the European Court on Human Rights.

Date of decision: 27-04-2010
Germany - Federal Administrative Court, 27 April 2010, 10 C 4.09
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

This case concerns the criteria for determining a serious individual threat and the necessary level of indiscriminate violence in an internal armed conflict.In order for Art 15 (c) of the Qualification Directive to apply, it is necessary to determine the level of indiscriminate violence in the territory of an internal armed conflict. When determining the necessary level of indiscriminate violence, not only acts which contravene international law, but any acts of violence which put life and limb of civilians at risk, have to be taken into account. In the context of Art 4.4 of the Qualification Directive, an internal nexus must exist between the serious harm (or threats thereof) suffered in the past, and the risk of future harm.

Date of decision: 27-04-2010
UK - Court of Appeal, 23 April 2010, HH (Somalia) & Others v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] EWCA Civ 426
Country of applicant: Somalia

In this case the Court applied the CJEU’s decision in Elgafaji and the UK Court of Appeal’s decision in QD and AH (see separate summary on EDAL) and considered whether UK Immigration Tribunals had jurisdiction to consider Art 15 (c) in cases where removal directions had not been set. The specific issue concerned the risk of indiscriminate violence en route from Mogadishu to a safe area. It further considered and made important obiter comments on the ambit of Art 15 (c).

Date of decision: 23-04-2010
Ireland - High Court, 23 April 2010, W.M.M. v Refugee Appeals Tribunal [2010] IEHC 171
Country of applicant: Nigeria

The Refugee Appeals Tribunal had found that state protection was available to an applicant who claimed to have suffered many years of sexual abuse by her father and his associates in Nigeria. The High Court quashed the decision on the basis that, as the Tribunal decision had not made a clear finding as to credibility, it was not clear that the Tribunal had considered the personal circumstances and, in particular, the past persecution of the applicant in considering the availability of state protection.

Date of decision: 23-04-2010
Germany - High Administrative Court Hamburg, 22 April 2010, 4 Bf 220/03.A
Country of applicant: Ivory Coast

Refugee protection was not granted, since the applicant, as a member of the particular social group of "Djoula living in the South of  Côte d’Ivoire" (Art 10.1(d) Qualification Directive) was not subject to political persecution when he left Côte d’Ivoire in 2001. The court found that group persecution was not established due to the insufficient frequency of acts of persecution against members of this group and therefore in case of return, the applicant would not face such group persecution.

Date of decision: 22-04-2010
Austria - Asylum Court, 19 April 2010, S23 412.630-1/2010-2E
Country of applicant: Russia (Chechnya)

In appealing a decision to transfer the wife and children of an asylum applicant to Poland, the applicants relied on the humanitarian provision in Art 15 Dublin Regulation. They also noted Art 3(2) of the Dublin Regulation states separation of family members should be avoided and that such a separation would violate Art 8 ECHR. The Austrian Asylum Court allowed the appeal on the basis of Austrian asylum law, under which family members of an asylum applicant have the right to receive the same status as the applicant.

Date of decision: 19-04-2010
Sweden - Migration Court of Appeal, 19 April 2010, UM 6770-09
Country of applicant: Turkey

The applicant could not provide sufficient proof of her claims that she had been subject to honour-related violence. The information was not found credible and did not constitute a permanent impediment for the enforcement of an expulsion order.

Date of decision: 19-04-2010
Germany - Administrative Court Karlsruhe, 16 April 2010, A 10 K 523/08
Country of applicant: Iraq

Threats from terrorists against a person who has worked for the international forces in Iraq do not justify the granting of refugee status. Iraqi citizens who have cooperated with the occupying forces do not form a “social group” within the meaning of the Qualification Directive. However, the applicant is entitled to subsidiary protection since there is an armed conflict in the Nineveh region and because the threats by terrorists experienced in the past constitute individual “risk-enhancing” circumstances.

Date of decision: 16-04-2010
France - CNDA, 14 April 2010, Mr. K., n°09004366
Country of applicant: Russia (Chechnya)

Even though the threats did not originate from the political opinions actually held or imputed to the applicant, they have to be considered as persecution for political grounds within the meaning of the 1951 Refugee Convention, as interpreted in light of Article 10.1(e) of the Qualification Directive, considering the nature of the persecutors, their goals and their methods.

Date of decision: 14-04-2010