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Austria - Constitutional Court, 7 March 2012, U1558/11
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

Under Austrian Asylum law, if a minor age cannot be excluded following an age assessment and doubts still exist in favour of the applicant, the authorities have to treat him or her as a minor. In this case, the age of the applicant had not been confirmed as being the age of maturity with absolute certainty and the applicant should therefore have been treated as a minor. The fact that only a copy of the birth certificate was submitted is not a sufficient basis to doubt its authenticity.

Date of decision: 07-03-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 6
Germany - Administrative Court Baden-Württemberg, 6 March 2012, A 11 S 3070/11
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

The actual risk of inhuman treatment or punishment by the Taliban because of desertion from one of their forced recruitment training camps can justify a deportation ban according to clause 60 (2) of the Residence Act (Article 15(b) of the Qualification Directive) in the case of Afghanistan.
Targeted criminal violence is defined in Article 15 (b) of the Qualification Directive (clause 60 (2) of the Residence Act) but not in Article 15 (c) of the Qualification Directive (clause 60 (7) p. 2 of the Residence Act), because in this context there is no specific risk of an internal armed conflict, i.e. “indiscriminate violence”.  

Date of decision: 06-03-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 8,Art 15,Art 6,Art 4.4,Art 5.1,Art 5.2,Article 3
Czech Republic - Supreme Administrative Court, 6 March 2013, J. J. v. Ministry of the Interior, 3 Azs 6/2011-96
Country of applicant: Nigeria

If a subsequent application for international protection is submitted, the administrative authority must evaluate whether the applicant has presented any new facts that, through no fault of the applicant, had not been the subject of examination in the previous proceeding. Otherwise, the application is inadmissible and the proceedings must be stopped.

Date of decision: 06-03-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 9.2,Art 3.3,Art 23.4 (h),Art 25.2 (f),Art 32.3,Art 33,Art 32.1
Germany - Federal Administrative Court, 1 March 2012, 10 C 7.11
Country of applicant: Togo

1. Changes in the home country are only considered to be sufficiently significant and non-temporary if the refugee’s fear of persecution can no longer be regarded as well-founded.
2. Based on the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) which applies to the concept of “real risk” according to Article 3 ECHR (European Convention on Human Rights), a uniform standardof probability is applied to assessing the likelihood of persecution in the context of refugee protection; this corresponds to the standard of substantial probability. 

Date of decision: 01-03-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 4.1,Art 9,Art 10,Art 4,Art 3,Art 11,Art 1C (5),Art 2 (c),Art 1C (6),Art 14.2,Article 3
Netherlands - ABRvS, 29 February 2012, 201106216/1/V1
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

The conclusion can be drawn on the basis of the B. and D. judgment that, based on the description of Hizb-e Wahdat in the official report as a violent organisation, a policy of presuming 'personal and knowing participation' on the part of aliens who have fulfilled specific roles within the organisation is consistent with Article 12(2) of the Qualification Directive.

Date of decision: 29-02-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 12.2,Art 1F
Spain - Supreme Court, 24 February 2012, Nº 1197/2011
Country of applicant: Nigeria

The case refers to an appeal to the Supreme Court brought by the appellant against the High National Court’s decision to deny asylum.

The appellant is a Nigerian national and claims to have left her country because of armed confrontations between the group she belonged to (the Massob) and other armed groups.After a demonstration organised by the Massob to demand freedom and independence for the group, the government retaliated against the demonstrators, killing several people.Therefore, she decided to flee the country with her husband and one year old daughter.During the crossing in a small boat from Morocco to Spain, her daughter died.On these grounds the Supreme Court recognised the appellant’s right to remain in Spain on grounds of humanitarian considerations.

Date of decision: 24-02-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 1A (2),Art 4.5,Art 4.5 (e)
ECtHR - Hirsi Jamaa and Others v Italy [GC], Application No. 27765/09
Country of applicant: Eritrea, Somalia

The case concerned Somali and Eritrean migrants travelling from Libya who had been intercepted at sea by the Italian authorities and sent back to Libya. Returning them to Libya without examining their case exposed them to a risk of ill-treatment and amounted to a collective expulsion.

Date of decision: 23-02-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 1,Art 33.1,Article 19,Article 1,Article 3,Article 13
Slovakia - Constitutional Court of the Slovak Republic, 20 February 2012, Petition for constitutional protection by K.H., IV. ÚS 308/2011-90
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

The procedure of the Court did not include decisive evidence for an assessment of whether, as a ground for revoking protection status, the complainant represented a danger to the security of the Slovak Republic, thereby infringing the complainant’s right to respond to all of the evidence, under Article 48(2) of the Constitution of the Slovak Republic and under Article 38(2) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms in conjunction with Article 13(4) of the Constitution of the Slovak Republic and Article 4(4) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms. The basis on which the competent authorities reach a decision must be clear from the administrative authority’s file and from the court file, even where no explicit reason is provided in the statement of reasons for their decision.

Date of decision: 20-02-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 4,Article 37,Article 38,Art 6.1
Belgium - Council of State, 16 February 2012, No. 218075
Country of applicant: Unknown

The real risk of suffering the type of serious harm envisaged in Article 15(b) of the Qualification Directive (torture and inhuman or degrading treatment) may be established by an Applicant who proves that he is a member of a group systematically targeted for such harm and who does not put forward any other circumstances relating to his individual case. 

Date of decision: 16-02-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 15 (c),Art 15 (b),Article 3
Slovenia - Administrative Court of the Republic of Slovenia, 14 february 2012, I U 42/2012,
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

When reaching a decision, the Defendant should have protected the best interest of the child. Taking into account the fact that the Applicant is a minor and providing legal representation for a minor applicant, are necessary elements in the process of demonstrating and establishing the facts. The principle of protecting the best interest of the child has to be enforced when assessing the risk that the absolute rights of the child might be violated if he is returned to his country of origin and needs to be reflected in the Defendant’s burden of proof as well as in the rules and standards of  evidence (in relation to subsidiary protection).

The Defendant should already have started searching for parents during the procedure for international protection and not only once the procedure for removing the child from the state has begun.   

Threats and violence against a person’s family members can be considered as acts of persecution where that person is connected to the facts which previously led to the violence..

The Plaintiff needs to state all circumstances known to him in relation to his persecution; however he does not need to establish a material and legal connection between the persecution and the reasons for persecution.

The fact that somebody is a child in Afghanistan can mean that he belongs to particular social group.

Date of decision: 14-02-2012
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 17,Recital 12,Art 20,Article 24,Art 24.2,Art 24.3,Art 20.5,3.,Article 3,UN Convention on the Rights of the Child