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Portugal - A v. Immigration and Borders Service, No. 61/20.6BELSB, 2 July 2020

The Court concluded that Italy had already accepted the take back request and therefore Portugal should proceed with the applicant’s transfer in accordance with the Dublin Regulation III. Since Italy had already rejected the applicant’s first request for international protection there, it should be the one responsible for returning the applicant back to their home country.

As the applicant is not a vulnerable person, the transfer order to Italy does not violate the non-refoulement principle.

Date of decision: 02-07-2020
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 3,Article 3,Article 2,Article 3
Netherlands, Council of State, 27 May 2020, no. 201906353/1/V3. ECLI:NL:RVS:2020:1281

The Dutch Council of State does not consider ‘the best interest of the child’-criteriοn automatically fulfilled, in the context of a Dublin transfer, when an unaccompanied minor can be transferred to an adult family member in another MS. In turn, it considers that the authorities have to substantially and individually investigate whether the best interest of the child is respected when transferring. 

Date of decision: 27-05-2020
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 24,Recital (13),Recital (16),Article 2,Article 6,Article 8
Portugal - I. v. Immigration and Borders Service, No. 2364/18.0BELSB, 14 May 2020
Country of applicant: Sierra Leone

Since there is a high risk of exposure to inhuman and degrading treatment under Article 3 ECHR and Article 4 CFREU, Portugal should not allow the applicant’s transfer to Italy. The Court also found that there had been a violation of his right to a prior hearing, and that there is no obligation under EU Law of asylum seekers’ transfer once the DRIII is applied.

Date of decision: 14-05-2020
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 3,Article 2,Article 3,Article 17
Germany - Administrative Court of Trier, 27 March 2019, 7 L 1027/19.TR
Country of applicant: Syria

There is a case of urgent necessity concerning interim measures according to § 123 VwGO obliging a Member State to accept a take charge request regarding  the asylum applications of family members of a person entitled to subsidiary protection in that state when the decision on an asylum application of these family members is imminent in the requesting state. 

Date of decision: 27-03-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 47,Article 2,Article 9,Article 11,Article 17,Article 20,Article 21,Article 27
Germany – Administrative Court Regensburg, Order of 9 January 2019 – RN 6 S 18.50495
Country of applicant: Sierra Leone

The extension of the transfer period in accordance with Art. 29 para. 2 sentence 2 Dublin Regulation (EU) No. 604/2013 (Dublin III Regulation) requires that the asylum applicant absconds, which has to be proven by the transferring authority.

Absconding is only the case, if the asylum applicant cannot be reached by the competent authorities for an (undefined) longer period of time. The intention to evade the authorities does not have to be proven. The circumstances of the individual case are decisive.

Date of decision: 09-01-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 13,Article 2,Article 13,Article 17,Article 25,Article 29,Article 5
Germany – Administrative Court Muenster, 20 December 2018, 2 L 989/18.A
Country of applicant: Syria

Article 8 (1) of the Dublin III Regulation provides for a subjective right to family reunification, both for the applicant himself and for the family members present in the Member State responsible. This right is also justiciable to the extent that denial of transfer affects the rights to family unity and the best interest of an unaccompanied minor.

The expiry of the time limit for the submission of a take charge request pursuant to Article 21 (1) of the Dublin III Regulation, as well as for the submission of a request to review the rejection of a take charge request (so-called "remonstration") pursuant to Article 5 (2) of the Implementing Regulation to the Dublin II Regulation, does not reverse the responsibility back to the requesting Member State if the failure to comply with the time limit cannot be attributed to the applicant and family unity and the best interests of the child take precedence over the procedural rules on time limits.

Due to the paramount importance of the right to family unit and the best interests of the child, the discretion under Article 17(2) of the Dublin III Regulation translates into a legal obligation of the Member State to invoke the sovereignty clause where there are close family ties. Beyond such family ties, no further special relationship or interdependency is required.

Whether a minor is "unaccompanied" within the meaning of Article 2 lit. j of the Dublin III Regulation depends on the domestic law in the Member State where the minor is present.

 

Date of decision: 20-12-2018
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 7,Article 24,Article 47,Article 51,1.,Article 2,Article 6,Article 8,Article 9,Article 10,Article 11,Article 12,Article 13,Article 14,Article 15,Article 17,Article 19,Article 20,Article 21,Article 22,Article 27,Article 29,UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
CJEU - Joined Cases C‑47/17 and C‑48/17 , X and X v Staatssecretaris van Veiligheid en Justitie
Country of applicant: Eritrea, Syria

The CJEU ruled on the time limit for Member States to respond to requests for re-examination of "take charge" or "take back" requests and clarified that Member States should endeavour to respond within two weeks; if they do not the requesting Member State retains responsibility. 

Date of decision: 13-11-2018
Relevant International and European Legislation: Recital (4),Recital (5),Recital (7),Recital (12),Article 2,Article 3,Article 13,Article 17,Article 18,Article 20,Article 21,Article 22,Article 23,Article 25,Article 29
Portugal - J v. Immigration and Borders Service, No. 263/18.5 BELSB, 11 July 2018
Country of applicant: Ghana

The Court considered that the decision-maker should have had taken into consideration the applicant’s alleged vulnerable situation, and as a result ordered the case’s remittal to the Central Administrative Court of Lisbon so evidence could be collected on this.

Date of decision: 11-07-2018
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 4,Article 3,Article 2,Article 3
Court of The Hague, 20 April 2018, NL 18.5178
Country of applicant: Palestinian Territory

The State Secretary has to carefully weigh interests when deciding about the application of Article 17 (discretionary clauses) of the Dublin Regulation where it concerns an adult applicant whose family members are beneficiaries of international protection in this Member State. The fact that an earlier request for family reunification has been refused, does not imply that the potentially destabilizing effect of a Dublin transfer no longer has to be taken into consideration.

Date of decision: 20-04-2018
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 7,Article 33,Article 4,Recital (14),Recital (17),Article 2,Article 3,Article 9,Article 13,Article 17,Article 22
France - Court of Cassation, Decision No. 1130 FS-P+B+R+I, 27 September 2017
Country of applicant: Sri Lanka

An applicant may not be detained with a view to carrying out a transfer under the Dublin Regulation, in the absence of objective criteria for assessing the existence of a significant risk of absconding, defined in a binding legal provision of general application.

Date of decision: 27-09-2017
Relevant International and European Legislation: European Union Law,EN - Dublin III Regulation, Council Regulation (EC) No. 604/2013 of 26 June 2013 (recast Dublin II Regulation),Article 2,Article 28,EN - Recast Reception Conditions Directive, Directive 2013/33/EU of 26 June 2013,Article 28,Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union 2010/C 83/01,Article 267 § 1 (b)