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Greece - Single-member First Instance Court of Kos, 13 May 2013, Application No. 390/2013
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

This case concerned an application for a licence for a civil marriage with a Greek citizen where there was an inability to provide a certificate of being unmarried or a birth certificate because of disrupted relationship with homeland and in the context of the submission of a sworn statement regarding the absence of any impediment to marriage. The case considered the balance between the safeguards of family law and a State's obligation to protect the fundamental rights of refugees. Under the principle of proportionality, the private and family life of the individual is inviolable, bearing in mind that the lack of evidence of being unmarried should not prevent the him from being granted a licence to enter into a civil marriage with his partner, the mother of their two minor children which he has already voluntarily recognised. It is possible to substitute in concreto the said evidence with a simple sworn statement and, therefore, the Applicant does satisfy the legal requirements for the granting of a marriage licence.

Date of decision: 13-05-2013
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 7,Article 9,Article 18,Article 8,Art 5,Article 8,Article 13
Austria - Asylum Court (AsylGH), 2 May 2013, D20 300128-1/2011/24E, D20 307779-1/2011/27E, D20 307778-1/2011/22E, D20 426616-1/2012/7E
Country of applicant: Russia

Owing to a violation of the right to respect for private life, the expulsion of the Applicants was declared permanently unlawful. On the grounds of Art 8 of the ECHR, the Asylum Court emphasised the significance of illnesses and their treatment (outside the context of Art 3 of the ECHR) in the host country and in doing so also referred to the disadvantagouss effects of the discontinuation of  psychotherapy by the applicant mother on the child. With reference to the best interest of the child, the Asylum Court made it clear that, in the case of children, roots to the host country could be developed more quickly than for adults, in particular if especially formative parts of childhood and young adolescence were spent in the host country.

Date of decision: 02-05-2013
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 24,Article 3,Article 8
Greece - Athens Court of Appeal, 25 April 2013, Application No. 57/2013
Country of applicant: Turkey

Application from the Turkish Authorities to have the Greek Judicial Authorities issue an extradition notice against A.F., a Turkish citizen seeking asylum in Greece.

The Court ruled against the Turkish Authorities' extradition request, deciding that if the person in question were extradited to Turkey there would be a risk that her situation would be made worse because of her political beliefs and because of her pending application to have her refugee status recognised by the Greek state.

Date of decision: 25-04-2013
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 33,Art 19.2,Article 3,Article 5,Article 6,Article 8,Article 14
Germany - Federal Administrative Court, 18 April 2013, 19 C 9.12
Country of applicant: Iraq

In principle both parents may claim the right to join an unaccompanied minor refugee.  

This right to join a child will only apply up until the point that the latter comes of age.

Parents may present a claim for a visa by means of an application for temporary legal protection before the child comes of age. 

Date of decision: 18-04-2013
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 7,Art 24.3,(f),3.,Article 8
Austria - Labour and Social Court (ASG), Vienna, 17 April 2013, 24 Cgs 242/12x-17
Country of applicant: Unknown

Recalling the direct applicability of the Qualification Directive (Article 28, 29, recital 34), the Labour and Social Court of Vienna held that the refusal of a care allowance for beneficiaries of subsidary protection status was unlawful. The (minimum) core benefits to be granted to beneficiaries of subsidary protection status are to include at least support in the event of illness, whereby in accordance with Community law, the Austrian care allowance represented such support in the event of illness.

Date of decision: 17-04-2013
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 28,Art 29,Art 38,ECHR (Sixth Protocol),ECHR (Thirteenth Protocol),Recital 34,Article 2,Article 3
Poland - Regional Administrative Court in Warsaw, 3 April 2013, IV SA/Wa 2486/12
Country of applicant: Russia

This judgment overturned the decision of the Polish Refugee Board on examination of a manifestly unfounded application, on refusal to accord refugee status, provide subsidiary protection or grant a permit for tolerated stay, and on deportation from the Republic of Poland

In the proceedings, the foreigner stressed that he had left his country of origin as a child and currently has no family there, and that his entire family resides legally in Poland (they were granted a permit for tolerated stay in refugee proceedings). As the decision on refusal of protection is linked to the decision on deportation, refusal of protection would result in the Applicant being unable to see his family for many years. Therefore, in the Applicant’s opinion, the decision on deportation constituted interference in his family life, since it would result in him being separated from his family.

The Court found that the authority should properly examine and address the allegations made by the Applicant and thus consider the foreigner’s individual and family circumstances in the context of the possible application of Article 8 of the Convention, including the length of his stay in Poland, the possible obstacles to him living in his country of origin, and the likely effects on the Applicant’s family if the family was to be separated by the Applicant moving to another country.

Date of decision: 03-04-2013
Relevant International and European Legislation: Recital 10,Article 7,Article 8,UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
ECtHR - Samsam Mohammed Hussein and Others v the Netherlands and Italy, Application No. 27725/10 - Admissibility Decision
Country of applicant: Somalia

This inadmissibility decision concerned the transfer of Mrs. Hussein and her children to Italy from the Netherlands under the Dublin II Regulation. The Court found the applicant’s complaints under Article 3 ECHR and Article 13 ECHR as manifestly unfounded within the meaning of Article 35(3)(a) of the Convention. The Court found that though there were shortcomings in Italy it did not disclose systemic failures to provide support for asylum seekers there. 

Date of decision: 02-04-2013
Relevant International and European Legislation: EN - Qualification Directive, Directive 2004/83/EC of 29 April 2004,EN - Asylum Procedures Directive, Council Directive 2005/85/EC of 1 December 2005,ECHR (Frist Protocol),EN - Reception Conditions Directive, Directive 2003/9/EC of 27 January 2003,Article 5,Article 14,Article 3,Article 8,Article 13,Article 15,ECHR (Fourth Protocol)
Slovenia - Administrative Court of the Republic of Slovenia, 28 March 2013, I U 1675/2012
Country of applicant: Tunisia

In the present case certain formal conditions for dismissing the application through an accelerated procedure as defined in Article 54 of International Protection Act (ZMZ) were not taken into account. The Ministry of the Internal (MI) did not take a stance as regards the circumstances that the Applicant claimed as the grounds for leaving his country of origin and applying for international protection.

Date of decision: 28-03-2013
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 15,Art 23.1,Article 3
ECtHR - I.K. v Austria, Application No. 2964/12
Country of applicant: Russia (Chechnya)

The case concerns the examination of an asylum claim by the Austrian authorities and assessment of a real risk that the applicant would be subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 of the ECHR if expelled to Russia. 

Date of decision: 28-03-2013
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 3,Article 8
Spain - Supreme Court, 27 March 2013, Nº 1971/2013
Country of applicant: Western Sahara

The case refers to an appeal to the Supreme Court brought by the Appellant against the High National Court’s judgment to uphold the Ministry of the Interior's decision to deny asylum. The Appellant is of Sahrawi origin. In the application he claims that one day the Moroccan police forces began to dismantle the Gdeim Izik (El Aaiun) camp, where the Applicant was living, violently suppressing the Sahrawi people who were there.

 

The appeal progressed because the denial was agreed via an accelerated procedure – similar to a “dismissal” – using Article 21.2o of Act 12/2009 (when someone alleges contradictory, implausible or insufficient infomation, or information that contradicts verified knowledge about the country of origin, clearly showing that their application is unfounded).

 

 The Supreme Court maintained that although this is classed as a “refusal” (“denegación”), in actual fact it has the scant guarantees of “inadmissibility”:  the application was rejected without having been fully analysed by the Interministerial Asylum and Refugee Commission or via an urgent procedure.

Date of decision: 27-03-2013
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 12,Art 8,Art 39,Art 25,Art 30,Article 18,Article 19,Art 21,Article 3