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France - The National Court for Right of Asylum, 11 April 2014, M.A, No 13020725
Country of applicant: Russia

The provisions of the Asylum Procedures Directive have been fully transposed into the CESEDA. A decision of the OFPRA based on all the documents/ evidence submitted by the applicant in support of his subsequent application without an interview does not infringe Article 41(2) of the Charter. When OFPRA considered the subsequent application, it was legitimate for it to have rejected the application without any interview since the new documents/ evidence provided were without merits. The Court found that M.A’s application must be rejected without any need to re-examine the facts he submitted, including those in his first application. The application of M.A was rejected.

Date of decision: 11-04-2014
Relevant International and European Legislation: 1951 Refugee Convention,EN - Asylum Procedures Directive, Council Directive 2005/85/EC of 1 December 2005,Art 23,Art 12,Art 12.1,Art 23.4,Art 23.4 (j),Art 23.4 (h),Art 23.4 (0),Art 23.4 (i),Art 23.4 (c),Art 28,Art 12.2 (c),European Union Law,International Law,Art 12.2,EN - Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union,Article 41,EN - Recast Asylum Procedures Directive 2013/32/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council,Art 12.2 (a),Art 12.3,Art 23.4 (a),Art 23.4 (b),Art 23.4 (d),Art 23.4 (e),Art 23.4 (f),Art 23.4 (g),Art 23.4 (k),Art 23.4 (l),Art 23.4 (m),Art 23.4 (n),Art 28.2,EN - Recast Qualification Directive, Directive 2011/95/EU of 13 December 2011
Ireland - Supreme Court, 18 October 2007, A.N. v Minister for Justice Equality and Law Reform [2007] IESC 44
Country of applicant: Nigeria

The Minister for Justice issued a mother and her 5 children with deportation orders as failed asylum seekers pursuant to section 3(2)(f) of the (Irish) Immigration Act 1999. The only application for asylum was in the mother’s name. The children had not been issued with refugee status determinations at all and were not mentioned in the decision.  The minor applicants challenged the deportation orders on the basis that their designation as failed asylum seekers was wrong in law. They had never made asylum applications. The High Court granted the applicants leave to seek judicial review but later refused the substantive relief of orders of certiorari quashing the deportation orders on the basis that the mother’s application had covered the children. The applicants appealed to the Supreme Court as the Court deemed the issue a point of law of exceptional public importance. The Supreme Court set aside the High Court judgment and made an order of certiorari quashing the children’s deportation orders, finding that there was no record of any decision refusing asylum applications on behalf of the children. The Court held that such a refusal was a fundamental prerequisite to the Minister’s power to make a deportation order under section 3(2)(f) of the Immigration Act 1999.  Finnegan J. also held that where an application by a parent of a minor is unsuccessful, the child is entitled to apply for asylum based on his own circumstances and that where a child’s parents are successful, the child should benefit by virtue of the principle of family unity. The principle of family unity operates for the benefit of the minor and not against him.

Date of decision: 18-10-2007
Relevant International and European Legislation: Art 23,UNHCR Handbook,Art 6.4 (a),Art 6.4 (c),Art 23.4 (0),Para 184,Para 185,Para 213,Para 214,Para 215,Para 216,Para 217,Para 218