Case summaries

  • My search
  • Relevant International and European Legislation
    1
Reset
Netherlands - ABRvS, 25 June 2012, 201103520/1/V3
Country of applicant: Bosnia and Herzegovina

An asylum application within the meaning of the Asylum Procedures Directive, Article 2, introductory paragraph and Article 2(b), has been made if a foreigner notifies the authorities that he would like to apply for asylum. The provision of the Foreigners Act under which a foreigner who has been declared undesirable has no right to remain is in breach of Article 7 of the Asylum Procedures Directive.

Date of decision: 25-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 32,Art 7,Art 34,Art 2 (c),Article 3,Article 6
Germany - Federal Administrative Court, 25 June 2012, 10 B 6.12
Country of applicant: Russia

The shifting of the burden of proof according to Article 4 (4) of the Qualification Directive applies if the Applicant refers to previous acts of persecution or threats as an indicator of the well-foundedness of his fear that persecution would resume if he were to return to his home country.

If it is assumed that the individual concerned was under immediate threat of persecution associated with his ethnicity when he left his home country, then the link is not simply with the ethnicity of the individual concerned (Chechen in this case), but also with the enmity generally expressed by the persecuting security forces against this ethnic group and their presumed political convictions.

Date of decision: 25-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 12,Art 9.3,Art 4.4,Art 10.2,Art 10.1 (c)
Greece - Special Appeal Committee, 22 June 2012, A.G. v. the General Secretary of the former Ministry of Public Order, Application No. 95/56266
Country of applicant: Iran

The Applicant was a homosexual male from Iran who had renounced Islam and was studying the catechism of the Roman Catholic doctrine. It was held that the Applicant had no well-founded (objective) fear of persecution on the grounds of changing his religious beliefs.

Regarding the risks associated with his sexual orientation, the fear that the Applicant expressed was deemed to be well-founded, and it was held that not externalising his sexual orientation to avoid danger would, in and of itself, constitute serious harm to his right to respect for his private life and his right to not be discriminated against. Therefore, his refugee status was recognised and he was granted the international protection in the form of refugee status.

Date of decision: 22-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 1A (2),EN - Asylum Procedures Directive, Council Directive 2005/85/EC of 1 December 2005,Art 10.1 (d),Art 4.4,Art 4.3 (a),Art 1F,Art 9.2 (c),Art 9.1 (a),Article 3,Article 5,Article 8,Article 14,Para 45
Greece - Special Appeal Committee, 20 June 2012, H.K. v. the General Secretary of the (former) Ministry of Public Order, Application No. 95/48882
Country of applicant: Iran

This case involved recognition of refugee status under Article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention on grounds of religious beliefs.

More specifically, it was held that the arrest and torture the Applicant suffered at the hands of his father and the State authorities because of his Christian faith, the risk of being executed for apostasy because he was baptised in Greece, and the risk of being arrested and maltreated again should he return to Iran, constituted persecution under Article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention, the actor of persecution being the State. Furthermore, being forced to conceal one's religious beliefs and/or proclaim belief in another religionin order to avoid persecution and/or deprivation of basic rights constitutes a breach of religious freedom under Article 9 of the ECHR and also the related case law of the ECtHR.

Date of decision: 20-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: EN - Qualification Directive, Directive 2004/83/EC of 29 April 2004,Art 1A (2),EN - Asylum Procedures Directive, Council Directive 2005/85/EC of 1 December 2005,Art 1F,Para 38,Para 41,Para 42,Para 39,Para 96,Art 1D,Para 51,Art 1E,Art 25.2,Art 25.3,Article 9,Article 15
Austria - Constitutional Court, 18 June 2012, U713/11
Country of applicant: Nigeria

The expulsion of an asylum seeker after asylum proceedings lasting approximately eight years without any culpable delay by the Applicant, during which he established a family and also integrated well in other respects, infringes his right to a private and family life.

Date of decision: 18-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 7,Article 5,Article 8
Austria - Constitutional Court, 15 June 2012, G41/12
Country of applicant: Mongolia

The application by the Applicant for the assignment of a legal adviser for the appeal proceedings was rejected by the Asylum Court because it was late, as the Applicant had only submitted the application after the expiry of the one-month transition period. The Constitutional Court annulled the corresponding transitional regulation on grounds of unconstitutionality: a deadline of only one month was too short to deal with the lack of understanding of asylum seekers of the language and law.

Date of decision: 15-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 39,Art 15,Article 47,Article 13,Article 3,Article 6,Article 8
Austria - Constitutional Court, 14 June 2012, 2011/21/0278
Country of applicant: Ukraine

An exclusion order was issued to the Applicant and therefore a measure within the meaning of the Returns Directive. Without undertaking an oral hearing, the appeals authority confirmed the issue of the exclusion order, but reduced its duration. In accordance with Art 47 Para. 2 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, the appeals authority was however obliged to undertake an oral hearing.

Date of decision: 14-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: EN - Permanent Residence Directive,Article 47,Article 51,Article 3,Article 6,Article 8
Polska: V SA/Wa 2332/11 - Wyrok WSA w Warszawie, 13 czerwca 2012, S.B. against Rady do Spraw Uchodźców
Country of applicant: Russia

The third action in a row brought by a foreign woman for refugee status ended in the issue of a judgment dismissing the case as it was found that the basis for the application was the same as in the previous cases and the application was therefore inadmissible. The Court overturned the negative decision by the Polish Council for Refugees, as the new application by the foreign woman stated that she had divorced her then husband and had been in a relationship for a year with a Polish citizen, which might cause persecution on religious grounds were she to return to her country of origin.

Date of decision: 13-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 9,Art 10,Art 5,Art 4,Art 25,Art 23,Art 1A,Art 32,UNHCR Handbook,EN - Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms
Sweden - Migration Court of Appeal, 11 June 2012, UM 9681-10, MIG 2012:9
Country of applicant: Senegal

If there is a country that meets the criteria for being a 'safe third country', an asylum application may be rejected. If the application is not rejected, the examination must take place in accordance with the asylum-seeker's application, and the applicant may not be denied leave to remain with reference to a safe third country.

Date of decision: 11-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 27,Art 25.2 (c)
Austria – Constitutional Court, 11 June 2012, U653/12
Country of applicant: Russia

The decision to expel an orphaned minor to Poland when he had a legal guardian in Austria gave rise to a real risk of a violation of Art 8 ECHR. The Asylum Court made its decision without providing clear reasons. The applicant’s family ties in the home country and in Austria must be considered, regardless of the duration of the applicant’s stay in Austria. The sovereignty clause must be applied when there is a real risk of a violation of Art 8 ECHR.

Date of decision: 11-06-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 9.2,2.,Article 6,Article 15,Article 8