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ECtHR - N.D. and N.T. v. Spain [GC], nos. 8675/15 and 8697/15, 13 February 2020
Country of applicant: Ivory Coast, Mali

The Court found no violation of the Convention given that the applicants would have had access to a genuine and effective possibility of submitting arguments against their expulsion had  they entered lawfully into Spain – they did not have any “cogent reasons” for not using the border procedures available at designated entry points. As such, the lack of an individualised procedure for their removal was the consequence of their own conduct.

Date of decision: 13-02-2020
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 1,Art 3,Art 32,Art 33,Art 31,Art 4,Art 16,Art 22,Article 4,Article 18,Article 19,Art 19.1,Art 19.2,Article 47,Article 6,Article 7,Article 8,Article 9,Article 10,Article 1,Article 2,Article 4,Article 5,Article 8,Article 12,Article 13,Art 33.2,Article 1,Article 3,Article 13,Article 13,Article 2,Article 4,Article 14,Article 21,Art 4,Art. 3,Article 67,Article 78
Baden-Württemberg – Higher Administrative Court, 29.11.2019, A 11 S 2374/19, A 11 S 2375/19
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

The ECJ has to decide on the assessment of the existence of a serious individual threat by reason of mere presence in a certain area. It has to decide whether there is a minimal threshold of civilian fatalities that excludes such risk or if a holistic approach taking into account all circumstances special to the case has to be followed to assess the existence of such threat.

Date of decision: 29-11-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 4,Article 52,Article 3,Article 2,Article 15
France - Administrative Court of Appeal of Metz, 26 November 2019, N° RG 19/00909
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

The administrative detention of an Afghan national was imposed on the basis of a procedural error due  to the lack of relevant documentation and unjustified information by the French authorities (Prefect and Prosecutor).

Date of decision: 26-11-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 26,Article 45,Article 47,Article 20,Article 40,Article 46,Article 13,Article 4,Article 14,Article 19
Belgium - X v. Commissioner-General for Refugees and Stateless Persons, 26 November 2019, N° 229 288
Country of applicant: Ivory Coast

The fact that an asylum applicant has already been persecuted in the past or has already suffered serious harm is a serious indication of the well-founded fear of the claimant, or of the real risk of suffering serious harm, unless there is good reason to believe that this persecution or serious harm will not happen again.

When an applicant has suffered female genital mutilation in her country of origin, there is a rebuttable presumption that she will again be the victim of such persecution because of her membership in the social group of Ivorian women.

Date of decision: 26-11-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 2,Article 4,Article 9,Article 10,Article 13
Luxemburg - Administrative Tribunal, A. and B (Iraq) v. Ministry for Migration and Asylum, N° 43536, 6 November 2019
Country of applicant: Iraq

An authority examining an application for international protection by an individual already holding protection status in another Member Statemust check whether the protection of fundamental rights is systematically guaranteed by the country already providing international protection. This especially concerns applicants who are entirely dependent on public aid, and, in particular, on the public health system of the country providing them protection. 

Date of decision: 06-11-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 4,Article 4,Article 3,Article 3,Article 4,Article 18,Article 30
European Court of Human Rights, A.A. v. Switzerland, 5 November 2019, n°32218/17
Country of applicant: Afghanistan

When a national authority assesses the likely persecution of an applicant for religious purposes in case of return to his/her country of origin, the national authority must evaluate, inter allia, the way the applicant will live his/her faith in his/her country of origin. The Court found that because the applicant is of Hazara ethnic origin and he converted to Christianism in Switzerland, he might face persecution in violation of art. 3 ECHR in case of return to Afghanistan. The TAF did not assess with enough seriousness the consequences of the applicant conversion ex nunc.

Date of decision: 05-11-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 3,1.,1. (a),1. (b),2.,2. (a),2. (b),3.,4.,5.,6.,6. (a),6. (b),1.,2.,3.,4.,5.,Article 3,Article 35,Article 41,Article 43,Article 44,Article 4,Article 5,Article 9,Article 10
Belgium, Council of Alien Law Litigation, 30 October 2019, no. 228 238 in case RvV 229 233/IV
Country of applicant: Syria

Given the condition of Greek health care, a person with a neurological condition, who requires medical follow-up and who has a family, may rightfully invoke Article 3 ECHR to block her, and her family’s, transfer to Greece. 

Date of decision: 30-10-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 3,EN - Recast Qualification Directive, Directive 2011/95/EU of 13 December 2011,EN - Recast Reception Conditions Directive, Directive 2013/33/EU of 26 June 2013
ECtHR - N.A. v Finland - Application no. 25244/18
Country of applicant: Iraq

The applicant’s complaint is based on the allegation that her father had not left Finland voluntarily but had been forced to return to Iraq because of the decisions already taken by the Finnish authorities. Those decisions, therefore, engaged the responsibility of Finland for having exposed the applicant’s father to a real risk of death, which ended up happening. Finland’s actions amounted to a violation of Articles 2 and 3 ECHR.

Date of decision: 15-10-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: EN - Qualification Directive, Directive 2004/83/EC of 29 April 2004,EN - Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union,EN - Recast Asylum Procedures Directive 2013/32/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council,EN - Reception Conditions Directive, Directive 2003/9/EC of 27 January 2003,EN - Recast Qualification Directive, Directive 2011/95/EU of 13 December 2011,EN - Recast Reception Conditions Directive, Directive 2013/33/EU of 26 June 2013
C-556/17 - Torubarov, 29 July 2019
Country of applicant: Russia

In order to guarantee that an applicant for international protection has an effective judicial remedy within the meaning of Article 47 of the Charter, a national court or tribunal is required to vary a decision of the first-instance determining body that does not comply with its previous judgment. The court or tribunal must substitute its own decision on the application for international protection by disapplying, if necessary, the national law that prohibits it from proceeding in that way.  

Date of decision: 29-07-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Article 47,EN - Recast Asylum Procedures Directive 2013/32/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council,Recital (18),Recital (50),Recital (60),Article 2,Article 46,Article 51,Article 52,EN - Recast Qualification Directive, Directive 2011/95/EU of 13 December 2011,Article 1,Article 2,Article 13,Article 14,Article 15,Article 18,Article 19
Greece - 7th Appeals Committee, 28 June 2019
Country of applicant: Venezuela

The political, humanitarian and economic crisis in Venezuela can justify subsidiary protection status if the individual’s return to the country of origin, would cause serious harm, characterized by the level of seriousness required to be considered as inhuman and degrading treatment.

Date of decision: 28-06-2019
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 1A (2),Art 33,EN - Recast Asylum Procedures Directive 2013/32/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council,Article 3,Article 15,EN - Recast Qualification Directive, Directive 2011/95/EU of 13 December 2011,UN Convention against Torture,Art. 3