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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> European Court of Human Rights >> Hirsi Jamaa v Italy - 27765/09 - HEJUD [2012] ECHR 1845 (23 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/2012/1845.html Cite as: (2012) 55 EHRR 21, [2012] ECHR 1845, 55 EHRR 21, 33 BHRC 244 |
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GRAND CHAMBER
Case of Hirsi Jamaa and Others v. Italy
(Application no. 27765/09)
Judgment
Strasbourg
23 February 2012
This judgment is final but may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Hirsi Jamaa and Others v. Italy,
The European Court of Human Rights, sitting as a Grand Chamber composed of:
Nicolas Bratza, President,
Jean-Paul Costa,
Françoise Tulkens,
Josep Casadevall,
Nina Vajić,
Dean Spielmann,
Peer Lorenzen,
Ljiljana Mijović,
Dragoljub Popović,
Giorgio Malinverni,
Mirjana Lazarova Trajkovska,
Nona Tsotsoria,
Işıl Karakaş,
Kristina Pardalos,
Guido Raimondi,
Vincent A. de Gaetano,
Paulo Pinto de Albuquerque, judges,
and Michael O’Boyle, Deputy Registrar,
Having deliberated in private on 22 June 2011 and on 19 January 2012,
Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on the last-mentioned date:
PROCEDURE
There appeared before the Court:
(a) for the Government
Mrs S. Coppari,
co-Agent,
Mr G. Albenzio, Avvocato dello Stato;
(b) for the applicants
Mr A.G. Lana,
Mr A. Saccucci,
Counsel,
Mrs A. Sironi,
Adviser
;
(c) for the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees, third-party intervener
Mrs M. Garlick,
Head of Unit, Policy and Legal Support,
Europe Office, Counsel,
Mr C. Wouters,
Principal Adviser on Refugee Law,
National Protection Division,
Mr S. Boutruche, legal adviser for the Policy
and Legal Support Unit, Europe Office Advisers.
The Court heard addresses by Mrs Coppari, Mr Albenzio, Mr Lana, Mr Saccucci and Mrs Garlick and their replies to judges’ questions.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
A. Interception and push-back of the applicants to Libya
All their personal effects, including documents confirming their identity, were confiscated by the military personnel.
B. The applicants’ fate and their contacts with their representatives
Fourteen of the applicants (appearing on the list) were granted refugees status by the office of the UNHCR in Tripoli between June and October 2009.
(i) Mr Ermias Berhane (no. 20 on the list) managed to land, unlawfully, on the Italian coast. On 21 June 2011 the Crotone Refugee Status Board granted him refugee status;
(ii) Mr Habtom Tsegay (no. 19 on the list) is currently at Chucha camp in Tunisia. He plans to return to Italy;
(iii) Mr Kiflom Tesfazion Kidan (no. 24 on the list) is resident in Malta;
(iv) Mr Hayelom Mogos Kidane and Mr Waldu Habtemchael (nos. 23 and 13 on the list respectively) are resident in Switzerland, where they are awaiting a response to their request for international protection;
(v) Mr Roberl Abzighi Yohannes (no. 21 on the list) is resident in Benin.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
A. The Italian Navigation Code
“Italian vessels on the high seas and aircraft in airspace not subject to the sovereignty of a State are considered to be Italian territory”.
B. Bilateral agreements between Italy and Libya
[Registry translation]
“Italy and the “Great Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya” undertake to organise maritime patrols using six ships made available on a temporary basis by Italy. Mixed crews shall be present on ships, made up of Libyan personnel and Italian police officers, who shall provide training, guidance and technical assistance on the use and handling of the ships. Surveillance, search and rescue operations shall be conducted in the departure and transit areas of vessels used to transport clandestine immigrants, both in Libyan territorial waters and in international waters, in compliance with the international conventions in force and in accordance with the operational arrangements to be decided by the two countries.”
Furthermore, Italy undertook to cede to Libya, for a period of three years, three unmarked ships (Article 3 of the Agreement) and to encourage the bodies of the European Union (EU) to conclude a framework agreement between the EU and Libya (Article 4 of the Agreement).
Finally, under Article 7 of the bilateral agreement, Libya undertook to “coordinate its actions with those of the countries of origin in order to reduce clandestine immigration and ensure the repatriation of immigrants”.
On 4 February 2009 Italy and Libya signed an Additional Protocol in Tripoli, intended to strengthen bilateral cooperation in the fight against clandestine immigration. That Protocol partially amended the agreement of 29 December 2007, in particular through the inclusion of a new Article, which stated:
“The two countries undertake to organise maritime patrols with joint crews, made up of equal numbers of Italian and Libyan personnel having equivalent experience and skills. The patrols shall be conducted in Libyan and international waters under the supervision of Libyan personnel and with participation by Italian crew members, and in Italian and international waters under the supervision of Italian personnel and with participation by the Libyan crew members.
Ownership of the ships offered by Italy, within the meaning of Article 3 of the Agreement of 29 December 2007, shall be definitively ceded to Libya.
The two countries undertake to repatriate clandestine immigrants and to conclude agreements with the countries of origin in order to limit clandestine immigration.”
III. RELEVANT ASPECTS OF INTERNATIONAL AND EUROPEAN LAW
A. 1951 Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Refugees
Article 1
“For the purposes of the present Convention, the term ‘refugee’ shall apply to any person who ... owing to well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the country of his former habitual residence as a result of such events, is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to return to it.”
Article 33 § 1
“1. No Contracting State shall expel or return (‘refouler’) a refugee in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion.”
“... a cardinal protection principle enshrined in the Convention, to which no reservations are permitted. In many ways, the principle is the logical complement to the right to seek asylum recognized in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It has come to be considered a rule of customary international law binding on all States. In addition, international human rights law has established non-refoulement as a fundamental component of the absolute prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. The duty not to refoule is also recognized as applying to refugees irrespective of their formal recognition, thus obviously including asylum-seekers whose status has not yet been determined. It encompasses any measure attributable to a State which could have the effect of returning an asylum-seeker or refugee to the frontiers of territories where his or her life or freedom would be threatened, or where he or she would risk persecution. This includes rejection at the frontier, interception and indirect refoulement, whether of an individual seeking asylum or in situations of mass influx.”
B. 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (“the Montego Bay Convention”)
Article 92
Status of Ships
“1. Ships shall sail under the flag of one State only and, save in exceptional cases expressly provided for in this Convention, shall be subject to its exclusive jurisdiction on the high seas ...”
Article 94
Duties of the Flag State
“1. Every State shall effectively exercise its jurisdiction and control in administrative, technical and social matters over ships flying its flag.
...”
Article 98
Duty to render assistance
“1. Every State shall require the master of a ship flying its flag, in so far as he can do so without serious danger to the ship, the crew or the passengers:
a) to render assistance to any person found at sea in danger of being lost;
b) to proceed with all possible speed to the rescue of persons in distress, if informed of their need of assistance, in so far as such action may reasonably be expected of him;
...”
C. 1979 International Convention on Maritime Search and Rescue (“SAR Convention”) (amended in 2004)
“Parties shall co-ordinate and co-operate to ensure that masters of ships providing assistance by embarking persons in distress at sea are released from their obligations with minimum further deviation from the ship’s intended voyage, provided that releasing the master of the ship from these obligations does not further endanger the safety of life at sea. The party responsible for the search and rescue region in which such assistance is rendered shall exercise primary responsibility for ensuring such co-ordination and co-operation occurs, so that survivors assisted are disembarked from the assisting ship and delivered to a place of safety, taking into account the particular circumstances of the case and guidelines developed by the Organization (International Maritime Organisation). In those cases, the relevant parties shall arrange for such disembarkation to be effected as soon as reasonably practicable.”
D. Protocol against the Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air, supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (“the Palermo Protocol”) (2000)
“1. Nothing in this Protocol shall affect the other rights, obligations and responsibilities of States and individuals under international law, including international humanitarian law and international human rights law and, in particular, where applicable, the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees and the principle of non-refoulement as contained therein.”
E. Resolution 1821 (2011) of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
“1. The surveillance of Europe’s southern borders has become a regional priority. The European continent is having to cope with the relatively large-scale arrival of migratory flows by sea from Africa, reaching Europe mainly through Italy, Malta, Spain, Greece and Cyprus.
2. Migrants, refugees, asylum seekers and others risk their lives to reach Europe’s southern borders, mostly in unseaworthy vessels. These journeys, always undertaken illicitly, mostly on board flagless vessels, putting them at risk of falling into the hands of migrant smuggling and trafficking rings, reflect the desperation of the passengers, who have no legal means and, above all, no safer means of reaching Europe.
3. Although the number of arrivals by sea has fallen drastically in recent years, resulting in a shift of migratory routes (particularly towards the land border between Turkey and Greece), the Parliamentary Assembly, recalling, inter alia, its Resolution 1637 (2008) on Europe’s boat people: mixed migration flows by sea into southern Europe, once again expresses its deep concern over the measures taken to deal with the arrival by sea of these mixed migratory flows. Many people in distress at sea have been rescued and many attempting to reach Europe have been pushed back, but the list of fatal incidents - as predictable as they are tragic - is a long one and it is currently getting longer on an almost daily basis.
4. Furthermore, recent arrivals in Italy and Malta following the turmoil in North Africa confirm that Europe must always be ready to face the possible large-scale arrival of irregular migrants, asylum seekers and refugees on its southern shores.
5. The Assembly notes that measures to manage these maritime arrivals raise numerous problems, of which five are particularly worrying:
5.1. despite several relevant international instruments which are applicable in this area and which satisfactorily set out the rights and obligations of states and individuals applicable in this area, interpretations of their content appear to differ. Some states do not agree on the nature and extent of their responsibilities in specific situations and some states also call into question the application of the principle of non-refoulement on the high seas;
5.2. while the absolute priority in the event of interception at sea is the swift disembarkation of those rescued to a “place of safety”, the notion of “place of safety” does not appear to be interpreted in the same way by all member states. Yet it is clear that the notion of “place of safety” should not be restricted solely to the physical protection of people, but necessarily also entails respect for their fundamental rights;
5.3. divergences of this kind directly endanger the lives of the people to be rescued, in particular by delaying or preventing rescue measures, and they are likely to dissuade seafarers from rescuing people in distress at sea. Furthermore, they could result in a violation of the principle of non-refoulement in respect of a number of persons, including some in need of international protection;
5.4. although the European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Member States of the European Union (Frontex) plays an ever increasing role in interception at sea, there are inadequate guarantees of respect for human rights and obligations arising under international and European Union law, in the context of the joint operations it co-ordinates;
5.5. finally, these sea arrivals place a disproportionate burden on the states located on the southern borders of the European Union. The goal of responsibilities being shared more fairly and greater solidarity in the migration sphere between European states is far from being attained.
6. The situation is rendered more complex by the fact that these migratory flows are of a mixed nature and therefore call for specialised and tailored protection-sensitive responses in keeping with the status of those rescued. To respond to sea arrivals adequately and in line with the relevant international standards, the states must take account of this aspect in their migration management policies and activities.
7. The Assembly reminds member states of their obligations under international law, including the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5), the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 1982 and the 1951 Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, and particularly reminds them of the principle of non-refoulement and the right to seek asylum. The Assembly also reiterates the obligations of the states parties to the 1974 International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea and the 1979 International Convention on Maritime Search and Rescue.
8. Finally and above all, the Assembly reminds member states that they have both a moral and legal obligation to save persons in distress at sea without the slightest delay, and unequivocally reiterates the interpretation given by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), which states that the principle of non-refoulement is equally applicable on the high seas. The high seas are not an area where states are exempt from their legal obligations, including those emerging from international human rights law and international refugee law.
9. Accordingly, the Assembly calls on member states, when conducting maritime border surveillance operations, whether in the context of preventing smuggling and trafficking in human beings or in connection with border management, be it in the exercise of de jure or de facto jurisdiction, to:
9.1. fulfil without exception and without delay their obligation to save people in distress at sea;
9.2. ensure that their border management policies and activities, including interception measures, recognise the mixed make-up of flows of individuals attempting to cross maritime borders;
9.3. guarantee for all intercepted persons humane treatment and systematic respect for their human rights, including the principle of non-refoulement, regardless of whether interception measures are implemented within their own territorial waters, those of another state on the basis of an ad hoc bilateral agreement, or on the high seas;
9.4. refrain from any practices that might be tantamount to direct or indirect refoulement, including on the high seas, in keeping with the UNHCR’s interpretation of the extraterritorial application of that principle and with the relevant judgments of the European Court of Human Rights;
9.5. carry out as a priority action the swift disembarkation of rescued persons to a “place of safety” and interpret a “place of safety” as meaning a place which can meet the immediate needs of those disembarked and in no way jeopardises their fundamental rights, since the notion of “safety” extends beyond mere protection from physical danger and must also take into account the fundamental rights dimension of the proposed place of disembarkation;
9.6. guarantee access to a fair and effective asylum procedure for those intercepted who are in need of international protection;
9.7. guarantee access to protection and assistance, including to asylum procedures, for those intercepted who are victims of human trafficking or at risk of being trafficked;
9.8. ensure that the placement in a detention facility of those intercepted - always excluding minors and vulnerable categories - regardless of their status, is authorised by the judicial authorities and occurs only where necessary and on grounds prescribed by law, that there is no other suitable alternative and that such placement conforms to the minimum standards and principles set forth in Assembly Resolution 1707 (2010) on the detention of asylum seekers and irregular migrants in Europe;
9.9. suspend any bilateral agreements they may have concluded with third states if the human rights of those intercepted are not appropriately guaranteed therein, particularly the right of access to an asylum procedure, and wherever these might be tantamount to a violation of the principle of non-refoulement, and conclude new bilateral agreements specifically containing such human rights guarantees and measures for their regular and effective monitoring;
9.10. sign and ratify, if they have not already done so, the aforementioned relevant international instruments and take account of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) Guidelines on the Treatment of Persons Rescued at Sea;
9.11. sign and ratify, if they have not already done so, the Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings (CETS No. 197) and the so-called “Palermo Protocols” to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (2000);
9.12. ensure that maritime border surveillance operations and border control measures do not affect the specific protection afforded under international law to vulnerable categories such as refugees, stateless persons, women and unaccompanied children, migrants, victims of trafficking or at risk of being trafficked, or victims of torture and trauma.
10. The Assembly is concerned about the lack of clarity regarding the respective responsibilities of European Union states and Frontex and the absence of adequate guarantees for the respect of fundamental rights and international standards in the framework of joint operations co-ordinated by that agency. While the Assembly welcomes the proposals presented by the European Commission to amend the rules governing that agency, with a view to strengthening guarantees of full respect for fundamental rights, it considers them inadequate and would like the European Parliament to be entrusted with the democratic supervision of the agency’s activities, particularly where respect for fundamental rights is concerned.
11. The Assembly also considers it essential that efforts be made to remedy the prime causes prompting desperate individuals to risk their lives by boarding boats bound for Europe. The Assembly calls on all member states to step up their efforts to promote peace, the rule of law and prosperity in the countries of origin of potential immigrants and asylum seekers.
12. Finally, in view of the serious challenges posed to coastal states by the irregular arrival by sea of mixed flows of individuals, the Assembly calls on the international community, particularly the IMO, the UNHCR, the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the Council of Europe and the European Union (including Frontex and the European Asylum Support Office) to:
12.1. provide any assistance required to those states in a spirit of solidarity and sharing of responsibilities;
12.2. under the auspices of the IMO, make concerted efforts to ensure a consistent and harmonised approach to international maritime law through, inter alia, agreement on the definition and content of the key terms and norms;
12.3. establish an inter-agency group with the aim of studying and resolving the main problems in the area of maritime interception, including the five problems identified in the present resolution, setting clear policy priorities, providing guidance to states and other relevant actors, and monitoring and evaluating the use of maritime interception measures. The group should be made up of members of the IMO, the UNHCR, the IOM, the Council of Europe, Frontex and the European Asylum Support Office.”
F. European Union law
1. Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (2000)
Protection in the event of removal, expulsion or extradition
“1. Collective expulsions are prohibited.
2. No one may be removed, expelled or extradited to a State where there is a serious risk that he or she would be subjected to the death penalty, torture or other inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
2. 1985 Schengen Agreement
“In regard to the movement of persons, the Parties shall endeavour to abolish the controls at the common frontiers and transfer them to their external frontiers. To that end, they shall endeavour to harmonise in advance, where necessary, the laws and administrative provisions concerning the prohibitions and restrictions which form the basis for the controls and to take complementary measures to safeguard security and combat illegal immigration by nationals of States that are not members of the European Communities.”
3. Council Regulation (EC) no. 2007/2004 of 26 October 2004 establishing a European Agency for the Management of Operational Coordination at the External Borders of the Member States of the European Union (FRONTEX)
“(1) Community policy in the field of the EU external borders aims at an integrated management ensuring a uniform and high level of control and surveillance, which is a necessary corollary to the free movement of persons within the European Union and a fundamental component of an area of freedom, security and justice. To this end, the establishment of common rules on standards and procedures for the control of external borders is foreseen.
(2) The efficient implementation of the common rules calls for increased coordination of the operational cooperation between the Member States.
(3) Taking into account the experiences of the External Borders Practitioners’ Common Unit, acting within the Council, a specialised expert body tasked with improving the coordination of operational cooperation between Member States in the field of external border management should therefore be established in the shape of a European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Member States of the European Union (hereinafter referred to as the Agency).
(4) The responsibility for the control and surveillance of external borders lies with the Member States. The Agency should facilitate the application of existing and future Community measures relating to the management of external borders by ensuring the coordination of Member States’ actions in the implementation of those measures.
(5) Effective control and surveillance of external borders is a matter of the utmost importance to Member States regardless of their geographical position. Accordingly, there is a need for promoting solidarity between Member States in the field of external border management. The establishment of the Agency, assisting Member States with implementing the operational aspects of external border management, including return of third-country nationals illegally present in the Member States, constitutes an important step in this direction.”
4. Regulation (EC) No. 562/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 March 2006 establishing a Community Code on the rules governing the movement of persons across borders (Schengen Borders Code)
“This Regulation shall apply to any person crossing the internal or external borders of Member States, without prejudice to:
(a) the rights of persons enjoying the Community right of free movement;
(b) the rights of refugees and persons requesting international protection, in particular as regards non-refoulement.”
5. Council Decision of 26 April 2010 supplementing the Schengen Borders Code as regards the surveillance of the sea external borders in the context of operational cooperation coordinated by the European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Member States of the European Union (2010/252/EU)
“Rules for sea border operations coordinated by the Agency [FRONTEX]
1. General principles
1.1. Measures taken for the purpose of the surveillance operation shall be conducted in accordance with fundamental rights and in a way that does not put at risk the safety of the persons intercepted or rescued as well as of the participating units.
1.2. No person shall be disembarked in, or otherwise handed over to the authorities of, a country in contravention of the principle of non-refoulement, or from which there is a risk of expulsion or return to another country in contravention of that principle. Without prejudice to paragraph 1.1, the persons intercepted or rescued shall be informed in an appropriate way so that they can express any reasons for believing that disembarkation in the proposed place would be in breach of the principle of non-refoulement.
1.3. The special needs of children, victims of trafficking, persons in need of urgent medical assistance, persons in need of international protection and other persons in a particularly vulnerable situation shall be considered throughout all the operation.
1.4. Member States shall ensure that border guards participating in the surveillance operation are trained with regard to relevant provisions of human rights and refugee law, and are familiar with the international regime on search and rescue.”
IV. INTERNATIONAL MATERIAL CONCERNING INTERCEPTIONS ON THE HIGH SEAS CARRIED OUT BY ITALY AND THE SITUATION IN LIBYA
A. Press Release of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
“UNHCR expressed deep concern Thursday over the fate of some 230 people who were rescued Wednesday by Italian patrol boats in the Maltese Search and Rescue Region (SAR) of responsibility and sent back to Libya without proper assessment of their possible protection needs. The rescue took place about 35 nautical miles south-east of the Italian island of Lampedusa, but within the Maltese SAR zone.
The diversion to Libya followed a day of heated discussions between Maltese and Italian authorities about who was responsible for the rescue and disembarkation of the people on the three boats, which were in distress. Although closer to Lampedusa, the vessels were in the Maltese search and rescue area of responsibility.
While no information is available on the nationalities of those aboard the vessels, it is likely that among them are people in need of international protection. In 2008, an estimated 75 percent of sea arrivals in Italy applied for asylum and 50 percent of them were granted some form of protection.
“I appeal to the Italian and Maltese authorities to continue to ensure that people rescued at sea and in need of international protection receive full access to territory and asylum procedures,” UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres said.
The incident marks a significant shift in policies by the Italian government and is a source of very serious concern. UNHCR deeply regrets the lack of transparency which surrounded the event.
“We have been working closely with the Italian authorities in Lampedusa and elsewhere to ensure that people fleeing war and persecution are protected in line with the 1951 Geneva Convention,” said Laurens Jolles, UNHCR’s Rome-based representative. “It is of fundamental importance that the international principle of non-refoulement continues to be fully respected.”
In addition, Libya has not signed the 1951 UN Refugee Convention, and does not have a functioning national asylum system. UNHCR urges Italian authorities to reconsider their decision and to avoid repeating such measures.”
B. Letter of 15 July 2009 from Mr Jacques Barrot, Vice-President of the European Commission
“According to information available to the Commission, the migrants concerned were intercepted on the high seas.
Two sets of Community rules must be examined concerning the situation of nationals of third countries or stateless persons attempting to enter, unlawfully, the territory of Member States, some of whom might be in need of international protection.
Firstly, the Community acquis in the field of asylum is intended to safeguard the right of asylum, as set forth in Article 18 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, and in accordance with the 1951 Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and with other relevant treaties. However, that acquis, including the 2005 Asylum Procedures Directive, applies only to asylum applications made on the territory of Member States, which includes the borders, transit areas and, in the context of maritime borders, territorial waters of Member States. Consequently, it is clear from a legal standpoint that the Community acquis in the field of asylum does not apply to situations on the high seas.
Secondly, the Schengen Borders Code (SBC) requires that Member States conduct border surveillance to prevent, inter alia, unauthorised border crossings (Article 12 of EC Regulation No. 562/2006 (SBC)). However, that Community obligation must be fulfilled in compliance with the principle of non-refoulement and without prejudice to the rights of refugees and other people requesting international protection.
The Commission is of the opinion that border surveillance activities conducted at sea, whether in territorial waters, the contiguous zone, the exclusive economic zone or on the high seas, fall within the scope of application of the SBC. In that connection, our preliminary legal analysis would suggest that the activities of the Italian border guards correspond to the notion of “border surveillance” as set forth in Article 12 of the SBC, because they prevented the unauthorised crossing of an external sea border by the persons concerned and resulted in them being returned to the third country of departure. According to the case-law of the European Court of Justice, Community obligations must be applied in strict compliance with the fundamental rights forming part of the general principles of Community law. The Court has also clarified that the scope of application of those rights in the Community legal system must be determined taking account of the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).
The principle of non-refoulement, as interpreted by the ECHR, essentially means that States must refrain from returning a person (directly or indirectly) to a place where he or she could face a real risk of being subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment. Furthermore, States may not send refugees back to territories where their life or freedom would be threatened for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion. That obligation must be fulfilled when carrying out any border control in accordance with the SBC, including border surveillance activities on the high seas. The case-law of the ECHR provides that acts carried out on the high seas by a State vessel constitute cases of extraterritorial jurisdiction and may engage the responsibility of the State concerned.
Having regard to the foregoing concerning the scope of Community jurisdiction, the Commission has invited the Italian authorities to provide it with additional information concerning the actual circumstances of the return of the persons concerned to Libya and the provisions put in place to ensure compliance with the principle of non-refoulement when implementing the bilateral agreement between the two countries.”
C. Report of the Council of Europe’s Committee for the Prevention of Torture
According to the CPT report, Libya could not be considered a safe country in terms of human rights and refugee law; the situation of persons arrested and detained in Libya, including that of migrants - who were also exposed to being deported to other countries - indicated that the persons pushed back to Libya were at risk of ill-treatment.
D. The report by Human Rights Watch
The report was based on interviews with 91 migrants, asylum seekers, and refugees in Italy and Malta, conducted mostly in May 2009, and one telephone interview with a migrant detainee in Libya. Representatives of Human Rights Watch visited Libya in April and met with government officials, but the Libyan authorities would not permit the organisation to interview migrants privately. Moreover, the authorities did not allow Human Rights Watch to visit any of the many migrant detention centres in Libya, despite repeated requests.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees now has access to Misrata Prison, at which clandestine migrants are generally held, and Libyan organisations provide humanitarian services there. However, there is no formal agreement, and thus no guaranteed access. Furthermore, Libya has no asylum law. The authorities make no distinction between refugees, asylum seekers, and other clandestine migrants.
E. Amnesty International’s visit
During that visit, Amnesty International visited Misrata Detention Centre, some 200 kilometres from Tripoli, in which several hundred irregular migrants from other African countries were held in severely overcrowded conditions, and briefly interviewed several of those held there. Many had been detained since they were intercepted while seeking to make their way to Italy or other countries in southern Europe which look to Libya and other North African countries to staunch the flow of irregular migrants from sub-Saharan Africa to Europe.
In its meetings with Libyan government officials, Amnesty International expressed concern about the detention and alleged ill-treatment of hundreds, possibly thousands, of foreign nationals whom the authorities assumed to be irregular migrants, and urged them to put in place proper procedures to identify asylum seekers and refugees and afford them appropriate protection. Amnesty International also urged the Libyan authorities to cease forcible returns of foreign nationals to countries in which they were at risk of serious human rights violations, and to find a better alternative to detention for those foreigners whom they were not able to return to their countries of origin for this reason. Some of the Eritrean nationals who comprised a sizeable proportion of the foreign nationals detained at Misrata told Amnesty International that they had been held there for two years.
V. OTHER INTERNATIONAL MATERIAL DESCRIBING THE SITUATION IN LIBYA
The principal reports are:
(i) Human Rights Watch, “Stemming the Flow: Abuses Against Migrants, Asylum Seekers and Refugees”, September 2006;
(ii) United Nations Human Rights Committee, “Concluding Observations. Libyan Arab Jamahiriya”, 15 November 2007;
(iii) Amnesty International, “Libya - Amnesty International Report 2008”, 28 May 2008;
(iv) Human Rights Watch, “Libya Rights at Risk”, 2 September 2008;
(v) US Department of State, “2010 Human Rights Report: Libya”, 4 April 2010.
VI. INTERNATIONAL MATERIAL DESCRIBING THE SITUATION IN SOMALIA AND ERITREA
The principal reports are:
(i) UNHCR, “Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of Asylum-seekers from Eritrea”, April 2009;
(ii) Amnesty International, “Eritrea - Amnesty International Report 2009”, 28 May 2009;
(iii) Human Rights Watch, “Service for Life, State Repression and Indefinite Conscription in Eritrea”, April 2009;
(iv) Human Rights Watch, “Libya, Don’t Send Eritreans Back to Risk of Torture”, 15 January 2010;
(v) Human Rights Watch, “World Chapter Report”, January 2010.
THE LAW
I. PRELIMINARY ISSUES RAISED BY THE GOVERNMENT
A. Validity of the powers of attorney and further consideration of the application
1. Issues raised by the Government
(i) no particulars regarding date and place and, in some cases, the fact that the date and the place appeared to have been written by the same person;
(ii) no reference to the application number;
(iii) the fact that the applicants’ identity was indicated solely by family name, first name, nationality, an illegible signature and a fingerprint, which was often partial or difficult to make out;
(iv) no details of the applicants’ dates of birth.
2. The applicants’ arguments
3. The Court’s assessment
B. Exhaustion of domestic remedies
II. THE ISSUE OF JURISDICTION UNDER ARTICLE I OF THE CONVENTION
“The High Contracting Parties shall secure to everyone within their jurisdiction the rights and freedoms defined in Section I of [the] Convention.”
1. The parties’ submissions
(a) The Government
The Italian ships had confined themselves to intervening to assist the three vessels in distress and ensuring the safety of the persons on board. They had then accompanied the intercepted migrants to Libya in accordance with the bilateral agreements of 2007 and 2009. The Government argued that the obligation to save human lives on the high seas, as required under the Montego Bay Convention, did not in itself create a link between the State and the persons concerned establishing the State’s jurisdiction.
(b) The applicants
They pointed out that Article 4 of the Italian Navigation Code expressly provided that vessels flying the Italian flag fell within Italian jurisdiction even when sailing outside territorial waters.
(c) Third party interveners
The third party interveners referred to the Court’s case-law concerning Article 1 of the Convention and the extra-territorial scope of the notion of “jurisdiction”, and to the conclusions of other international authorities. They stressed the importance of avoiding double standards in the field of safeguarding human rights and ensuring that a State was not authorised to commit acts outside its territory which would never be accepted within that territory.
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) General principles governing jurisdiction within the meaning of Article 1 of the Convention
(b) Application to the instant case
III. ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
A. Alleged violation of Article 3 of the Convention on account of the applicants having been exposed to the risk of inhuman and degrading treatment in Libya
1. The parties’ submissions
(a) The applicants
The applicants affirmed that they had quite clearly expressed their wish not to be handed over to the Libyan authorities. They challenged the Government’s contention that such a request could not be considered to be a request for international protection.
In that connection, the applicants referred to the CPT report of April 2010 and the texts and documents produced by the third parties concerning the situation in Libya.
(b) The Government
In the Government’s view, the legal system prevailing on the high seas was characterised by the principle of freedom of navigation. In that context, it was not necessary to identify the parties concerned. The Italian authorities had merely provided the necessary humanitarian assistance. Identity checks of the applicants had been kept to a minimum because no maritime police operation on board the ships had been envisaged.
In that regard, they stated that had the parties concerned asked for asylum, they would have been taken to Italian territory, as had been the case in other high seas operations conducted in 2009.
Though not a party to the United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, Libya had nevertheless authorised the UNHCR and the IOM to open offices in Tripoli, thus allowing numerous applicants to be granted refugee status and guaranteed international protection.
That circumstance, and the fact that the UNHCR and IOM offices were present and active in Tripoli, fully justified Italy’s conviction that Libya was a safe host country for migrants intercepted on the high seas. Moreover, the Government were of the view that recognition of the refugee status granted by the UNHCR to numerous applicants, including some of the applicants in this case, was unequivocal proof that the situation in Libya at the material time was in compliance with international human rights standards.
(c) Third party interveners
The three intervening parties were of the view that there was a “duty to investigate” where there was credible information from reliable sources that detention or living conditions in the receiving State were incompatible with Article 3.
In accordance with the principle of pacta sunt servanda, a State could not evade its obligations under the Convention by relying on commitments arising out of bilateral or multilateral agreements concerning the fight against clandestine immigration.
Given the circumstances, the Libyan government had never granted any formal status to persons registered by the UNHCR as refugees and they were guaranteed no form of protection.
1. The Court’s assessment
(a) Admissibility
(b) The merits
(i) General principles
(α) Responsibility of Contracting States in cases of expulsion
(β) Factors used to assess the risk of being subjected to treatment in breach of Article 3 of the Convention
(ii) Application to the instant case
However, having regard to the absolute character of the rights secured by Article 3, that cannot absolve a State of its obligations under that provision.
It notes that the numerous reports by international bodies and non-governmental organisations paint a disturbing picture of the treatment meted out to clandestine immigrants in Libya at the material time. The conclusions of those documents are moreover corroborated by the CPT report of 28 April 2010 (see paragraph 35 above).
They based that belief on the presumption that Libya had complied with its international commitments as regards asylum and the protection of refugees, including the principle of non-refoulement. They claimed that the Italian-Libyan Friendship Treaty of 2008, in accordance with which clandestine migrants were returned to Libya, made specific reference to compliance with the provisions of international human rights law and other international conventions to which Libya was party.
B. Alleged violation of Article 3 of the Convention on account of the fact that the applicants were exposed to the risk of arbitrary repatriation to Eritrea and Somalia
1. The parties’ submissions
(a) The applicants
(b) The Government
(c) Third party interveners
The United Nations High Commissioner, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International noted the risk, for individuals forcibly repatriated to Eritrea and Somalia, of being subjected to torture and inhuman or degrading treatment and of being exposed to extremely precarious living conditions.
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) Admissibility
(b) Merits
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 4 OF PROTOCOL No. 4
“Collective expulsion of aliens is prohibited.”
1. The parties’ submissions
(a) The Government
(b) The applicants
Their return to Libya, carried out with no prior identification and no examination of the personal circumstances of each applicant, had constituted a removal measure that was, in substance, “collective”.
(c) Third party interveners
After having pointed out that collective expulsions of aliens, including those in an irregular situation, were generally prohibited by international and Community law, the UNHCHR argued that persons intercepted on the high seas should be able to benefit from protection against that kind of expulsion, even though they had not been able to reach a State’s border.
Collective expulsions on the high seas were prohibited having regard to the principle of good faith, in the light of which the Convention provisions must be interpreted. To allow States to push back migrants intercepted on the high seas without complying with the guarantee enshrined in Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 would amount to accepting that States were able to evade their obligations under the Convention by advancing their border control operations.
Moreover, recognition of the extra-territorial exercise of a Contracting State’s jurisdiction over actions having taken place on the high seas would, according to the UNHCHR, entail a presumption that all the rights guaranteed by the Convention and its Protocols would be applicable.
The Columbia Law School Human Rights Clinic submitted that clandestine immigration by sea was not a new phenomenon but that the international community had increasingly recognised the need to identify constraints on State immigration control practices, including interception at sea. The principle of non-refoulement required States to refrain from removing individuals without having assessed their circumstances on a case-by-case basis.
Various bodies of the United Nations, such as the Committee Against Torture, had clearly stated that such practices risked breaching international human rights standards and had emphasised the importance of individual identification and assessment to prevent people being returned to situations where they would be at risk. The Inter-American Commission for Human Rights had recognised the importance of these procedural guarantees in the case of The Haitian Center for Human Rights et al. v. United States (case no. 10 675, report no. 51/96, § 163), in which it had expressed the opinion that the United States had impermissibly returned interdicted Haitian migrants without making an adequate determination of their status, and without granting them a hearing to ascertain whether they qualified as refugees. That decision was of particular significance as it contradicted the earlier position of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Sale v. Haitian Centers Council (113 S. Ct., 2549, 1993).
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) Admissibility
The economic crisis and recent social and political changes have had a particular impact on certain regions of Africa and the Middle East, throwing up new challenges for European States in terms of immigration control.
(b) The merits
“The Court notes, however, that the detention and deportation orders in issue were made to enforce an order to leave the territory dated 29 September 1999; that order was made solely on the basis of section 7, first paragraph, point (2), of the Aliens Act, and the only reference to the personal circumstances of the applicants was to the fact that their stay in Belgium had exceeded three months. In particular, the document made no reference to their application for asylum or to the decisions of 3 March and 18 June 1999. Admittedly, those decisions had also been accompanied by an order to leave the territory, but by itself, that order did not permit the applicants’ arrest. The applicants’ arrest was therefore ordered for the first time in a decision of 29 September 1999 on a legal basis unrelated to their requests for asylum, but nonetheless sufficient to entail the implementation of the impugned measures. In those circumstances and in view of the large number of persons of the same origin who suffered the same fate as the applicants, the Court considers that the procedure followed does not enable it to eliminate all doubt that the expulsion might have been collective.
That doubt is reinforced by a series of factors: firstly, prior to the applicants’ deportation, the political authorities concerned had announced that there would be operations of that kind and given instructions to the relevant authority for their implementation ...; secondly, all the aliens concerned had been required to attend the police station at the same time; thirdly, the orders served on them requiring them to leave the territory and for their arrest were couched in identical terms; fourthly, it was very difficult for the aliens to contact a lawyer; lastly, the asylum procedure had not been completed.
In short, at no stage in the period between the service of the notice on the aliens to attend the police station and their expulsion did the procedure afford sufficient guarantees demonstrating that the personal circumstances of each of those concerned had been genuinely and individually taken into account.”
That is sufficient for the Court to rule out the existence of sufficient guarantees ensuring that the individual circumstances of each of those concerned were actually the subject of a detailed examination.
VI. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 13 TAKEN TOGETHER WITH ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION AND ARTICLE 4 OF PROTOCOL No. 4
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”
1. The parties’ submissions
(a) The applicants
(b) The Government
The Government contended that the applicants to whom the UNHCR had granted refugee status were able to enter Italian territory at any time and to exercise their Convention rights, including the right to apply to the judicial authorities.
(c) Third party interveners
The interveners considered that the lack of a remedy allowing for identification of the applicants and an individual assessment of their requests for protection and their needs constituted a serious omission, as did the lack of any follow-up investigation to ascertain the fate of the persons returned.
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) Admissibility
(b) Merits
(i) General principles
“The Court considers that the notion of an effective remedy under Article 13 requires that the remedy may prevent the execution of measures that are contrary to the Convention and whose effects are potentially irreversible ... Consequently, it is inconsistent with Article 13 for such measures to be executed before the national authorities have examined whether they are compatible with the Convention, although Contracting States are afforded some discretion as to the manner in which they conform to their obligations under this provision ... .”
(ii) Application to the instant case
In so far as that circumstance is disputed by the Government, the Court attaches more weight to the applicants’ version because it is corroborated by a very large number of witness statements gathered by the UNHCR, the CPT and Human Rights Watch.
VII. ARTICLES 46 AND 41 OF THE CONVENTION
A. Article 46 of the Convention
“1. The High Contracting Parties undertake to abide by the final judgment of the Court in any case to which they are parties.
2. The final judgment of the Court shall be transmitted to the Committee of Ministers, which shall supervise its execution.”
B. Article 41 of the Convention
“If the Court finds that there has been a violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford just satisfaction to the injured party.”
C. Costs and expenses
D. Default interest
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
1. Decides, by thirteen votes to four, to strike the application out of its list in so far as it concerns Mr Mohamed Abukar Mohamed and Mr Hasan Shariff Abbirahman;
2. Decides, unanimously, not to strike the application out of its list in so far as it concerns the others applicants;
3. Holds, unanimously, that the applicants were within the jurisdiction of Italy for the purposes of Article 1 of the Convention;
4. Joins to the merits, unanimously, the preliminary objections raised by the Government concerning the non-exhaustion of domestic remedies and the applicants’ lack of victim status;
5. Declares admissible, unanimously, the complaints under Article 3;
6. Holds, unanimously, that there has been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention on account of the fact that the applicants were exposed to the risk of being subjected to ill-treatment in Libya and rejects the Government’s preliminary objection concerning the applicants’ lack of victim status;
7. Holds, unanimously, that there has been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention on account of the fact that the applicants were exposed to the risk of being repatriated to Somalia and Eritrea;
8. Declares admissible, unanimously, the complaint under Article 4 of Protocol No. 4;
9. Holds, unanimously, that there has been a violation of Article 4 of Protocol No. 4;
10. Declares admissible, unanimously, the complaint under Article 13 taken together with Article 3 of the Convention and Article 4 of Protocol No. 4;
11. Holds, unanimously, that there has been a violation of Article 13 taken together with Article 3 of the Convention and of Article 13 taken together with Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 and rejects the Government’s preliminary objection concerning the non-exhaustion of domestic remedies;
12. Holds unanimously
(a) that the respondent State is to pay the applicants, within three months, the following amounts:
(i) EUR 15,000 (fifteen thousand euros) each, plus any tax that may be chargeable, in respect of non-pecuniary damage, which sums are to be held by the representatives in trust for the applicants;
(ii) EUR 1,575.74 (one thousand, five hundred and seventy-five euros and seventy-four cents) in total, plus any tax that may be chargeable to the applicants, in respect of costs and expenses;
(b) that from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the default period plus three percentage points.
Done in English and in French, and delivered at a public hearing in the Human Rights Building, Strasbourg, on 23 February 2012 pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Michael O’Boyle Nicolas
Bratza
Registrar President
In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74 § 2 of the Rules of Court, the separate opinion of Judge Pinto de Albuquerque is annexed to this judgment.
N.B.
M.O.B.
LIST OF APPLICANTS
|
Name of applicant |
Place and date of birth |
Applicant’s current situation |
1. |
JAMAA Hirsi Sadik |
Somalia, 30 May 1984 |
Refugee status granted on 25 June 2009 (N. 507-09C00279) |
2. |
SHEIKH ALI Mohamed |
Somalia, 22 January 1979 |
Refugee status granted on 13 August 2009 (N. 229-09C0002) |
3. |
HASSAN Moh’b Ali |
Somalia, 10 September 1982 |
Refugee status granted on 25 June 2009 (N. 229-09C00008) |
4. |
SHEIKH Omar Ahmed |
Somalia, 1 January 1993 |
Refugee status granted on 13 August 2009 (N. 229-09C00010) |
5. |
ALI Elyas Awes |
Somalia, 6 June 1983 |
Refugee status granted on 13 August 2009 (N. 229-09C00001) |
6. |
KADIYE Mohammed Abdi |
Somalia, 28 March 1988 |
Refugee status granted on 25 June 2009 (N. 229-09C00011) |
7. |
HASAN Qadar Abfillzhi |
Somalia, 8 July 1978 |
Refugee status granted on 26 July 2009 (N. 229-09C00003) |
8. |
SIYAD Abduqadir Ismail |
Somalia, 20 July 1976 |
Refugee status granted on 13 August 2009 (N. 229-09C00006) |
9. |
ALI Abdigani Abdillahi |
Somalia, 1 January 1986 |
Refugee status granted on 25 June 2009 (N. 229-09C00007) |
10. |
MOHAMED Mohamed Abukar |
Somalia, 27 February 1984 |
Died on unknown date |
11. |
ABBIRAHMAN Hasan Shariff |
Somalia, date unknown |
Died in November 2009 |
12. |
TESRAY Samsom Mlash |
Eritrea, date unknown |
Whereabouts unknown |
13. |
HABTEMCHAEL Waldu |
Eritrea, 1 January 1971 |
Refugee status granted on 25 June 2009 (N. 229-08C00311); resident in Switzerland |
14. |
ZEWEIDI Biniam |
Eritrea, 24 April 1973 |
Resident in Libya |
15. |
GEBRAY Aman Tsyehansi |
Eritrea, 25 June 1978 |
Resident in Libya |
16. |
NASRB Mifta |
Eritrea, 3 July 1989 |
Resident in Libya |
17. |
SALIH Said |
Eritrea, 1 January 1977 |
Resident in Libya |
18. |
ADMASU Estifanos |
Eritrea, date unknown |
Whereabouts unknown |
19. |
TSEGAY Habtom |
Eritrea, date unknown |
Held at Chucha Detention Camp, Tunisia |
20. |
BERHANE Ermias |
Eritrea, 1 August 1984 |
Refugee status granted on 25 May 2011; resident in Italy |
21. |
YOHANNES Roberl Abzighi |
Eritrea, 24 February 1985 |
Refugee status granted on 8 October 2009 (N. 507-09C001346); resident in Benin |
22. |
KERI Telahun Meherte |
Eritrea, date unknown |
Whereabouts unknown |
23. |
KIDANE Hayelom Mogos |
Eritrea, 24 February 1974 |
Refugee status granted on 25 June 2009 (N. 229-09C00015); resident in Switzerland |
24. |
KIDAN Kiflom Tesfazion |
Eritrea, 29 June 1978 |
Refugee status granted on 25 June 2009 (N. 229-09C00012); resident in Malta |
CONCURRING OPINION
OF JUDGE PINTO DE ALBUQUERQUE
The Hirsi case is about the international protection of refugees, on the one hand, and the compatibility of immigration and border control policies with international law, on the other hand. The ultimate question in this case is how Europe should recognise that refugees have “the right to have rights”, to quote Hannah Arendt[1]. The answer to these extremely sensitive political problems lies in the intersection between international human rights law and international refugee law. Although I agree with the Grand Chamber’s judgment, I would like to analyse the present case in the context of a principled and comprehensive approach to these problems which takes account of the intrinsic link between those two fields of international law.
The prohibition of refoulement of refugees
Provision is made in international refugee law for the prohibition of refoulement of refugees (Article 33 of the 1951 United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and Article 2 § 3 of the 1969 Organisation of African Unity Convention Governing the Specific Aspects of Refugee Problems), as well as in universal human rights law (Article 3 of the 1984 UN Convention Against Torture and Article 16 § 1 of the 2006 UN International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance) and regional human rights law (Article 22 § 8 of the 1969 American Convention on Human Rights, Article 12 § 3 of the 1981 African Charter of Human Rights and People’s Rights, Article 13 § 4 of the 1985 Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture and Article 19 § 2 of the 2000 Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union). There is no such explicit prohibition in the European Convention on Human Rights, but the principle has been acknowledged by the Court as extending beyond the similar guarantee under international refugee law.
Under the European Convention, a refugee cannot be subjected to refoulement to his or her country of origin or any other country where he or she risks incurring serious harm caused by any identified or unidentified person or public or private entity. The act of refoulement may consist in expulsion, extradition, deportation, removal, informal transfer, “rendition”, rejection, refusal of admission or any other measure which would result in compelling the person to remain in the country of origin. The risk of serious harm may result from foreign aggression, internal armed conflict, extrajudicial death, enforced disappearance, death penalty, torture, inhuman or degrading treatment, forced labour, trafficking in human beings, persecution, trial based on a retroactive penal law or on evidence obtained by torture or inhuman and degrading treatment, or a “flagrant violation” of the essence of any Convention right in the receiving State (direct refoulement) or from further delivery of that person by the receiving State to a third State where there is such a risk (indirect refoulement)[2].
In fact, the non-refoulement obligation can be triggered by a breach or the risk of a breach of the essence of any European Convention right, such as the right to life, the right to physical integrity and the corresponding prohibition of torture and ill-treatment[3] or the “flagrant violation” of the right to fair trial[4], the right to liberty[5], the right to privacy[6] or of any other Convention right[7].
The same standard applies to universal human rights law in the light of the Convention Against Torture[8], the Convention on the Rights of Children[9] and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights[10]. In line with this standard, the United Nations General Assembly has already declared that “no one shall be involuntarily returned or extradited to a country where there are substantial grounds for believing that he or she may become a victim of extra-legal, arbitrary or summary execution”[11], and “No state shall expel, return (refouler) or extradite a person to another state where there are substantial grounds to believe that he would be in danger of enforced disappearance”[12].
Although the concept of refugee contained in Article 33 of the United Nations Refugee Convention is less extensive than the one under international human rights law, international refugee law has evolved by assimilating the broader human rights standard and thus enlarging the Convention concept of refugee (incorrectly called de jure refugees) to other individuals who are in need of complementary international protection (incorrectly called de facto refugees). The best examples are Article I § 2 of the Organisation of African Union Convention, Article III § 3 of the 1984 Cartagena Declaration, Article 15 of the Council of the European Union Directive 2004/83/EC of 29 April 2004 on minimum standards for the qualification and status of third country nationals or stateless persons as refugees or as persons who otherwise need international protection and the content of the protection granted and the Recommendation (2001) 18 of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe on subsidiary protection.
In any case, neither international refugee law nor international human rights law distinguishes the regime applicable to refugees from the one applicable to individuals benefiting from complementary protection. The content of international protection, including the guarantee of non-refoulement, is strictly identical for both categories of persons[13]. There is no legitimate reason to protect “de jure refugees” better than “de facto refugees”, since they all share the same need for international protection. Any difference of treatment would result in the creation of a second class of refugees, subject to a discriminatory regime. The same conclusion applies to situations of mass influx of refugees. Groups of refugees cannot be subject to a diminished status based on an “inherent” mass-influx exception to “genuine” refugee status. To provide reduced, subsidiary protection (for example, with less extensive entitlements regarding access to residence permits, employment, social welfare and health care) for people who arrive as part of a mass influx would be unjustified discrimination.
A person does not become a refugee because of recognition, but is recognised because he or she is a refugee[14]. As the determination of refugee status is merely declaratory, the principle of non-refoulement applies to those who have not yet had their status declared (asylum seekers) and even to those who have not expressed their wish to be protected. Consequently, neither the absence of an explicit request for asylum nor the lack of substantiation of the asylum application with sufficient evidence may absolve the State concerned of the non-refoulement obligation in regard to any alien in need of international protection[15]. No automatic negative conclusions can be drawn from the lack of an asylum application or the lack of sufficient evidence supporting the asylum application, since the State has a duty to investigate, of its own motion, any situation of need for international protection, especially when, as the Court has stressed, the facts which constitute the risk to the applicant “were well known before the transfer of the applicant and were freely ascertainable from a wide number of sources”.
Although the obligation in the UN Refugee Convention is subject to exceptions on national security and public safety grounds, no such exceptions can be found in European human rights law[16], nor in universal human rights law[17]: there is no personal, time or space limit to its application. Thus, it applies even in exceptional circumstances, including in a declared state of emergency.
Since refugee status determination is instrumental in protecting primary human rights, the nature of the prohibition of refoulement depends on the nature of the human right being protected by it. When there is a risk of serious harm as a result of foreign aggression, internal armed conflict, extrajudicial death, forced disappearance, death penalty, torture, inhuman or degrading treatment, forced labour, trafficking in human beings, persecution, or trial based on a retroactive penal law or on evidence gathered by torture or inhuman and degrading treatment in the receiving State, the obligation of non-refoulement is an absolute obligation of all States. When there is a risk of a violation of any European Convention right (other than the right to life and physical integrity and the principle of legality in criminal law) in the receiving State, the State may derogate from its duty to provide for international protection, depending on the assessment of the proportionality of the competing values involved. There is an exception to this proportionality test: when the risk of a violation of any European Convention right (other than the right to life and physical integrity and the principle of legality in criminal law) in the receiving State is “flagrant” and the very essence of that right is at stake, the State is unavoidably bound by the obligation of non-refoulement.
With this extension and content, the prohibition of refoulement is a principle of customary international law, binding on all States, even those not parties to the UN Refugee Convention or any other treaty for the protection of refugees. In addition, it is a rule of jus cogens, on account of the fact that no derogation is permitted and of its peremptory nature, since no reservations to it are admitted (Article 53 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties and Article 42 § 1 of the Refugee Convention and Article VII § 1 of the 1967 Protocol).
This is now the prevailing position in international refugee law as well[18].
Thus, the exceptions provided for in Article 33 § 2 of the UN Refugee Convention cannot be invoked in respect of primary human rights from which no derogation is permitted (right to life and physical integrity and the principle of legality in criminal law). Furthermore, an individual who comes under the ambit of Article 33 § 2 of the Refugee Convention will nevertheless benefit from the protection provided by more generous international human rights law, such as the European Convention on Human Rights. Those exceptions can be applied only with regard to primary human rights, from which derogation is permitted, by those States parties to the Refugee Convention which have not ratified any more generous treaty. Even in that case, the exceptions must be interpreted restrictively and applied only when the particular circumstances of the case and the individual characteristics of the person show that he or she represents a danger to the community or national security[19].
The prohibition of refoulement is not limited to the territory of a State, but also applies to extra-territorial State action, including action occurring on the high seas. This is true under international refugee law, as interpreted by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights[20], the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees[21], the United Nations General Assembly[22], and the House of Lords[23], and under universal human rights law, as applied by the United Nations Committee Against Torture[24] and the United Nations Human Rights Committee[25].
Renowned international law scholars have followed this approach[26].
The fact that some supreme courts, such as the United States Supreme Court[27] and the High Court of Australia[28], have reached different conclusions is not decisive.
It is true that the statement of the Swiss delegate to the conference of plenipotentiaries that the prohibition of refoulement did not apply to refugees arriving at the border was supported by other delegates, including the Dutch delegate, who noted that the conference was in agreement with this interpretation[29]. It is also true that Article 33 § 2 of the UN Refugee Convention exempts from the prohibition of refoulement a refugee who constitutes a danger to the security of a country “in which he is” and refugees on the high seas are in no country. One might be tempted to construe Article 33 § 1 as containing a similar territorial restriction. If the prohibition of refoulement were to apply on the high seas, it would create a special regime for dangerous aliens on the high seas, who would benefit from the prohibition, while dangerous aliens residing in the country would not.
With all due respect, the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation contradicts the literal and ordinary meaning of the language of Article 33 of the UN Refugee Convention and departs from the common rules of treaty interpretation. According to Article 31 § 1 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, a treaty provision should be interpreted in accordance with the ordinary meaning to be given to the terms of the treaty in their context and in the light of its object and purpose. When the meaning of a treaty is clear from its text when read in the light of its letter, object and purpose, supplementary sources, such as the preparatory works, are unnecessary[30]. The historical supplementary source is even less necessary when it is itself not clear, as in this case, since the Ad Hoc Committee responsible for the drafting of the Convention defended the view that the obligation of non-refoulement includes refugees who have not yet entered the territory[31], the US representative affirmed during the drafting of Article 33 that it should not matter if the refugee had crossed the border or not[32], the Dutch representative formulated his reservation only in respect of “large groups of refugees seeking access to its territory” and the president of the conference of plenipotentiaries merely “ruled that the interpretation given by the Netherlands representative should be placed on record”, that is, that the possibility of mass migrations across frontiers was considered by the Netherlands not to be covered by Article 33[33].
Unlike other provisions of the UN Refugee Convention, the applicability of Article 33 § 1 does not depend on the presence of a refugee in the territory of a State. The only geographical restriction in Article 33 § 1 refers to the country to which a refugee may be sent, not the place where he or she is sent from. In addition, the French term of refoulement includes the removal, transfer, rejection or refusal of admission of a person[34]. The deliberate insertion of the French word in the English version has no other possible meaning than to stress the linguistic equivalence between the verb return and the verb refouler. Furthermore, the preamble of the Convention states that it endeavours to “assure refugees the widest possible exercise of these fundamental rights and freedoms” and this purpose is reflected in the text of Article 33 itself through the clear expression “in any manner whatsoever” (de quelque manière que ce soit), including all types of State actions to expel, extradite or remove an alien in need of international protection. Lastly, no argument can be drawn from the territorial reference in Article 33 § 2 (“the country in which he is”) in support of rejecting the extra-territorial application of Article 33 § 1, because Article 33 § 2 merely provides for an exception to the rule formulated in Article 33 § 1. The scope of application of a rule beneficial to refugees should not be limited by a territorial reference foreseen in the exception to the rule. Such a “spill-over effect” of the detrimental exception to a favourable rule is unacceptable.
According to Article 31 § 1 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, a treaty provision should be interpreted in good faith. It is accepted that good faith is not in itself a source of obligations where none would otherwise exist[35], but it does provide an important tool for defining the extension of existing obligations, especially in the face of State actions and omissions which have the effect of circumventing treaty obligations[36]. A State lacks good faith in the implementation of a treaty not only when it infringes, by action or omission, the obligations resulting from the treaty, but also when it frustrates the obligations which it has accepted, by obstructing the normal functioning of the treaty guarantee. The forcible impediment of the triggering mechanism of application of a treaty obligation constitutes an obstruction to the treaty itself, contrary to the principle of good faith (the obstruction test). A State also lacks good faith when it engages in conduct outside its territory which would be unacceptable inside in view of its treaty obligations (the double standard test). A double standard policy based on the place where it is executed infringes the treaty obligation, which is binding on the State in question. The application of both tests leads to the conclusion that “push-back” operations performed on high seas, without any assessment of the individual needs for international protection, are unacceptable[37].
One last obstacle to the prohibition of refoulement lies in the territory of origin of the asylum seeker. The UN Refugee Convention requires that the individual be outside his or her country of origin, which seems to be incompatible with diplomatic asylum, at least when this concept is interpreted in accordance with the International Court of Justice conservative reasoning in the Asylum case[38]. But the right to seek asylum requires the complementary right to leave one’s country to seek asylum. States cannot therefore restrict the right to leave a country and find effective protection outside it[39]. Although no State has a duty to grant diplomatic asylum, the need for international protection is even more pressing in the case of an asylum seeker who is still in the country where his or her life, physical integrity and liberty are under threat. Proximity to the sources of risk makes it even more necessary to protect those at risk in their own countries. If not international refugee law, at least international human rights law imposes on States a duty to protect in these circumstances and failure to take adequate positive measures of protection will constitute a breach of that law. States cannot turn a blind eye to an evident need for protection. For instance, if a person in danger of being tortured in his or her country asks for asylum in an embassy of a State bound by the European Convention on Human Rights, a visa to enter the territory of that State has to be granted, in order to allow the launching of a proper asylum procedure in the receiving State. This will not be a merely humanitarian response, deriving from the good will and discretion of the State. A positive duty to protect will then arise under Article 3. In other words, a country’s visa policy is subject to its obligations under international human rights law. Significant statements to this effect have been made by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe[40], the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture[41] and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees[42].
This conclusion is also borne out by European history. In fact, there were several remarkable episodes relating to protective visas in Europe during the Second World War. The efforts of the Swedish diplomat Wallenberg and others in Budapest and of the Portuguese diplomat Sousa Mendes in Bordeaux and Bayonne are well-known examples and have recently been mentioned as a valid precedent for the establishment of a formal protected entry procedure through diplomatic missions of European Union Member States[43].
It is worth recalling the latter episode: after the invasion of France by Nazi Germany and the surrender of Belgium, thousands of people fled to the south of France and particularly to Bordeaux and Bayonne. Touched by the despair of these people, the Portuguese consul of Bordeaux, Aristides de Sousa Mendes, found himself in a painful dilemma: should he comply with the clear orders of a 1939 governmental circular to refuse any visa to stateless persons, “persons with Nansen passports”, “Russians”, “Jews expelled from their countries of citizenship or residence” or all those “who were not in a condition to return freely to their countries of origin” or should he follow his conscience and international law, disobey the government’s orders and grant these visas. He chose to follow his conscience and international law and granted visas to more than 30,000 people persecuted on grounds of their nationality, religious belief or political affiliation. For that act of disobedience, the consul paid a high price: after being expelled from his diplomatic career, he died alone and in misery and his entire family had to leave Portugal[44].
Had this episode taken place today, the Portuguese diplomat would have acted in full accordance with the standard of protection of the European Convention on Human Rights. Indeed, his action would have been the only acceptable response to those in need of international protection.
The prohibition of collective expulsion
The non-refoulement obligation has two procedural consequences: the duty to advise an alien of his or her rights to obtain international protection and the duty to provide for an individual, fair and effective refugee status determination and assessment procedure. Discharging the non-refoulement obligation requires an evaluation of the personal risk of harm, which can only take place if aliens have access to a fair and effective procedure by which their cases are considered individually. The two aspects are so intertwined that one could say they are two sides of the same coin. Thus, the collective expulsion of aliens is unacceptable.
The prohibition of collective expulsion of aliens is foreseen in Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 to the European Convention on Human Rights, Article 19 (1) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, Article 12 (5) of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights, Article 22 (9) of the American Convention on Human Rights, Article 26 (2) of the Arab Charter on Human Rights, Article 25 (4) of the Commonwealth of Independent States Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and Article 22 (1) of the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrants Workers and Members of Their Families.
For the refugee status determination procedure to be individual, fair and effective, it must necessarily have at least the following features: (1) a reasonable time-limit in which to submit the asylum application, (2) a personal interview with the asylum applicant before the decision on the application is taken, (3) the opportunity to submit evidence in support of the application and dispute evidence submitted against the application, (4) a fully reasoned written decision by an independent first-instance body, based on the asylum seeker’s individual situation and not solely on a general evaluation of his or her country of origin, the asylum seeker having the right to rebut the presumption of safety of any country in his or her regard, (5) a reasonable time-limit in which to appeal against the decision and automatic suspensive effect of an appeal against the first-instance decision, (6) full and speedy judicial review of both the factual and legal grounds of the first-instance decision, and (7) free legal advice and representation and, if necessary, free linguistic assistance at both first and second instance, and unrestricted access to the UNCHR or any other organisation working on behalf of the UNHCR[45].
These procedural guarantees apply to all asylum seekers
regardless of their legal and factual status, as has been recognised in
international refugee law[46],
universal human rights law[47]
and regional human rights law[48].
This conclusion is not prejudiced by the fact that the Court has decided that Article 6 of the European Convention is not applicable to expulsion or asylum procedures[49]. Neither is it prejudiced by the fact that some procedural guarantees in respect of expelled aliens can be found in Article 1 of Protocol No. 7. Article 4 of Protocol 4 and Article 1 of Protocol No. 7 are of the same nature: both are due procedure provisions, but they have substantially different personal scope. The due procedure provision of Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 is of much broader personal scope than the one provided for in Article 1 of Protocol No. 7, since the former includes all aliens regardless of their legal and factual status and the latter includes only aliens lawfully resident in the expelling State[50].
Having accepted the application of the non-refoulement principle to any State action conducted beyond State borders, one must logically go on to conclude that the procedural guarantee of individual evaluation of asylum claims and the ensuing prohibition of collective expulsion are not limited to the land and maritime territory of a State but also apply on the high seas[51].
In fact, neither the letter nor the spirit of Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 indicates that the provision is not applicable extra-territorially. The letter of the provision has no territorial limitation. In addition the provision refers very broadly to aliens, and not to residents, nor even to migrants. The purpose of the provision is to guarantee the right to lodge a claim for asylum which will be individually evaluated, regardless of how the asylum seeker reached the country concerned, be it by land, sea or air, be it legally or illegally. Thus, the spirit of the provision requires a similarly broad interpretation of the notion of collective expulsion which includes any collective operation of extradition, removal, informal transfer, “rendition”, rejection, refusal of admission and any other collective measure which would have the effect of compelling an asylum seeker to remain in the country of origin, wherever that operation takes place. The purpose of the provision would be easily frustrated if a State could place a warship on the high seas or at the limit of national territorial waters and proceed to apply a collective and blanket refusal of any refugee claim or even omit any assessment of refugee status. The interpretation of the provision should therefore be consistent with the aim of protecting aliens from being collectively expelled.
In conclusion, the extra-territoriality of the procedural guarantee of Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 of the European Convention on Human Rights is in full accordance with the extra-territorial extension of the same guarantee in international refugee law and universal human rights law.
State liability for human rights breaches during immigration and border control
Immigration and border control is a primary State function and all forms of this control result in the exercise of the State’s jurisdiction. Thus, all forms of immigration and border control of a State party to the European Convention on Human Rights are subject to the human rights standard established in it and the scrutiny of the Court[52], regardless of which personnel are used to perform the operations and the place where they take place.
Immigration and border control is usually performed by State officials placed along the border of a country, especially in places of transit of people and goods, such as ports and airports. But it can also be performed by other professionals in other places. In fact, the formal capacity of the State official performing the border control or the fact that he or she carries arms are irrelevant. All representatives, officials, delegates, public employees, police officers, law-enforcement agents, servicemen/women or temporarily contracted civil staff or any member of a private undertaking acting pursuant to statutory authority who perform the function of border control on behalf of a Contracting Party are bound by the Convention standard[53].
It is also immaterial whether the immigration or border control takes place on the land or maritime territory of a State, its diplomatic missions, warships, ships registered in the State or under its effective control, a navy of another State or a facility placed on the territory of another State or a territory leased from another State, as long as the border control is performed on behalf of the Contracting Party[54]. A State cannot evade its treaty obligations in respect of refugees by using the device of changing the place of determination of their status. A fortiori, “excision” of a part of the territory of a State from the migration zone in order to avoid the application of general legal guarantees to people arriving at that part of “excised” territory represents a blatant circumvention of a State’s obligations under international law[55].
Thus the full range of conceivable immigration and border policies, including denial of entry to territorial waters, denial of visa, denial of pre-clearance embarkation or provision of funds, equipment or staff to immigration control operations performed by other States or international organisations on behalf of the Contracting Party, remain subject to the Convention standard. They all constitute forms of exercise of the State function of border control and a manifestation of State jurisdiction, wherever they take place and whoever carries them out[56].
State jurisdiction over immigration and border control naturally implies State liability for any human rights violations occurring during the performance of this control. The applicable rules on international liability for human rights violations are those established in the Articles on State Responsibility for internationally Wrongful Acts, annexed and endorsed by the UNGA Resolution 56/83, 2001[57]. The Contracting Party remains bound by the Convention standard and its responsibility is not diminished by the fact that a non-Contracting Party is also responsible for the same act. For instance, the presence of an agent from a non-Contracting Party on board a warship of a Contracting Party or a navy under the effective control of a Contracting Party does not release the latter from its Convention obligations (Article 8 of the Articles on State Responsibility). On the other hand, the presence of an agent from a Contracting Party on board a warship of a non-contracting party or a navy under the effective control of a non-Contracting Party makes the cooperating Contracting Party responsible for any breaches of the Convention standard (Article 16 of the Articles on State Responsibility).
The violation of the Convention standard by the Italian State
According to the aforementioned principles, the Italian border control operation of “push-back” on the high seas, coupled with the absence of an individual, fair and effective procedure to screen asylum seekers, constitutes a serious breach of the prohibition of collective expulsion of aliens and consequently of the principle of non-refoulement[58].
The contested “push-back” action involved the removal of the applicants on board a military vessel of the Italian navy. Traditionally, ships on the high seas are viewed as an extension of the territory of the flag state[59]. This is an irrefutable assertion of international law, which has been enshrined in Article 92 (1) of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). This assertion is even more valid in the case of a warship, which is considered, to quote Malcolm Shaw, “a direct arm of the sovereign of the flag State”[60]. Article 4 of the Italian Navigation Code contains that very principle when it states that “Italian vessels on the high seas in places or areas which are not covered by the sovereignty of a State are deemed to be Italian territory”. In conclusion, when the applicants boarded the Italian vessels on the high seas, they entered Italian territory, figuratively speaking, ipso facto benefiting from all the applicable obligations incumbent on a Contracting Party to the European Convention on Human Rights and the United Nations Refugee Convention.
The respondent Government argued that the push-back actions on the high seas were justified by the law of the seas. Four grounds of justification could be considered: the first one, based on Article 110(1)(d) of the UNCLOS, in conjunction with Article 91, which permits the boarding of vessels without a flag state, like those which commonly transport illegal migrants across the Mediterranean ocean; the second one based on Article 110 (1) (b) of the UNCLOS, which allows ships to board vessels on the high seas if there is a reasonable ground for suspecting that the ship is engaged in the slave trade, this ground being extendable to victims of trafficking, in view of the analogy between these forms of trade[61]; the third one, based on Article 8 (2) and (7) of the Protocol against Smuggling of Migrants by land, sea and air, Supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, which allows States to intercept and take appropriate measures against vessels reasonably suspected of migrant smuggling; and the fourth one founded on the duty to render assistance to persons in danger or in distress on the high seas foreseen in Article 98 of the UNCLOS. In all these circumstances States are simultaneously subject to the prohibition of refoulement. None of these provisions can reasonably be invoked in order to justify an exception to the non-refoulement obligation and, consequently, to the prohibition of collective expulsion. Only a misconstruction of these norms, which aim to secure the protection of especially vulnerable persons (victims of trafficking, illegal migrants, persons in danger or in distress on the high seas) could justify the exposure of these persons to an additional risk of ill-treatment by delivering them to those countries from where they have fled. As the French representative, Mr Juvigny, said at the Ad Hoc Committee while discussing the draft of the Refugee Convention, “There was no worse catastrophe for an individual who had succeeded after many vicissitudes in leaving a country where he was being persecuted than to be returned to that country, quite apart from the reprisals awaiting him there”[62].
If there were ever a case where concrete measures for execution should be set by the Court, this is one. The Court considers that the Italian Government must take steps to obtain assurances from the Libyan Government that the applicants will not be subjected to treatment incompatible with the Convention, including indirect refoulement. This is not enough. The Italian Government also have a positive obligation to provide the applicants with practical and effective access to an asylum procedure in Italy.
The words of Justice Blackmun are so inspiring that they should not be forgotten. Refugees attempting to escape Africa do not claim a right of admission to Europe. They demand only that Europe, the cradle of human rights idealism and the birthplace of the rule of law, cease closing its doors to people in despair who have fled from arbitrariness and brutality. That is a very modest plea, vindicated by the European Convention on Human Rights. “We should not close our ears to it.”
[1]. Hannah Arendt described, like no one else, the mass movement of refugees in the twentieth century, made up of ordinary men and women who fled persecution for religious reasons. “A refugee used to be a person driven to seek refuge because of some act committed or some political opinion held. Well, it is true we have had to seek refuge; but we committed no acts and most of us never dreamt of having radical opinions. With us the meaning of the term “refugee” has changed. Now “refugees” are those of us who have been so unfortunate as to arrive in a new country without means and have to be helped by Refugee Committees.” (Hannah Arendt, We Refugees, in The Menorah Journal, 1943, republished in Marc Robinson (ed.), Altogether Elsewhere, Writers on exile, Boston, Faber and Faber, 1994).
[2]. The extension of the prohibition to indirect or “chain” refoulement has been acknowledged in European human rights law (see T.I. v. the United Kingdom (dec.), no. 43844/98, ECHR 2000-III; Müslim v. Turkey, no. 53566/99, §§ 72-76, 26 April 2005; and M.S.S. v. Belgium and Greece, no. 30696/09, § 286, 21 January 2011), in universal human rights law (see UN Human Rights Committee General Comment No. 31, The Nature of the General Legal Obligation Imposed on States Parties to the Covenant, 26 May 2004, CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add. 13, para. 12, and Committee Against Torture General Comment No. 1: Implementation of Article 3 of the Convention in the Context of Article 22, 21 November 1997, A/53/44, Annex IX, para. 2, and Korban v. Sweden, Communication No. 88/1997, 16 November 1998, UN doc. CAT/C/21/D/88/1997) and in international refugee law (UN doc. E/1618, E/AC.32/5: the Ad Hoc committee reported that the draft article referred “not only to the country of origin but also to other countries where the life or freedom of the refugee would be threatened”, and UN doc. A/CONF.2/SR.16 (summary report of the 16th meeting of the conference of plenipotentiaries, 11 July 1951): refoulement includes subsequent forcible return from the receiving country to another country where there would be a danger to life and liberty of the refugee, according to a Swedish proposal, which was later withdrawn by the Swedish representative, “stressing, however, that, as the President had also observed, the text of the article should be interpreted as covering at least some of the situations envisaged in that part of the amendment”), and UNHCR, Note on Non-Refoulement (EC/SCP/2), 1977, para. 4.
[3]. Soering v. the United Kingdom, 7 July 1989, § 88, Series A no. 161, and Vilvarajah and Others v. the United Kingdom, 30 October 1991, §. 103, Series A no. 215. This ill-treatment may even include appalling living conditions in the receiving State (M.S.S. v. Belgium and Greece, cited above, §§ 366-67).
[4]. Soering, cited above, § 113, Einhorn v. France, no. 71555/01, § 32, ECHR 2001-XI, and Al-Saadoon and Mufdhi v. the United Kingdom, no. 61498/08, § 149, ECHR 2010.
[5]. Othman (Abu Qatada) v. the United Kingdom, no. 8139/09, § 233, 7 January 2012, not yet final.
[6]. Bensaid v. the United Kingdom, no. 44599/98, § 46, ECHR 2001-I; Boultif v. Switzerland, no. 54273/00, § 39, ECHR 2001-IX; and Mawaka v. the Netherlands, no. 29031/04, § 58, 1 June 2010.
[7]. See the correct interpretation of the Court’s jurisprudence made by the House of Lords in Regina v. Special Adjudicator (Respondent) ex parte Ullah (FC) (Appellant) Do (FC) (Appellant) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department (Respondent), paras. 24 and 69, and, among legal scholars, Jane McAdam, Complementary protection in international refugee law, Oxford, 2007, pp. 171-72, and Goodwin-Gill and McAdam, The refugee in international law, third edition, Oxford, 2007, p. 315.
[8]. As applied by the UN Committee Against Torture in Balabou Mutombo v. Switzerland, Communication No. 13/1993, 27 April 1994, and Tahir Hussain Khan v. Canada, Communication No. 15/1994, 18 November 1994, and Conclusions and Recommendations: Canada, CAT/C/CR/34/CAN, 7 July 2005, para. 4.a), that criticised “the failure of the Supreme Court of Canada, in Suresh v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to recognize at the level of domestic law the absolute nature of the protection of Article 3 of the Convention, which is not subject to any exception whatsoever”.
[9]. As interpreted by the UN Committee on the Rights of Children in its General Comment No. 6 (2005) on the treatment of unaccompanied and separated children outside their country of origin, UN doc. CRC/GC/2005/6, 1 September 2005, para. 27: “States shall not return a child to a country where there are substantial grounds for believing that there is a real risk of irreparable harm to the child, such as, but by no means limited to, those contemplated under Articles 6 and 37 of the Convention, either in the country to which removal is to be effected or in any country to which the child may subsequently be removed…”
[10]. As applied by the UN Human Rights Committee in ARJ v Australia, Communication No. 692/1996, 11 August 1997, para. 6.9 (“If a state party deports a person within its territory and subject to its jurisdiction in such circumstances that as a result, there is a real risk that his or her rights under the Covenant will be violated in another jurisdiction, that state party itself may be in violation of the Covenant”), confirmed by Judge v. Canada, Communication No. 829/1998, 5 August 2003, paras. 10.4-10.6, regarding the risk of being submitted to the death penalty in the receiving State. On another occasion, the same body concluded that “in certain circumstances an alien may enjoy the protection of the Covenant even in relation to entry or residence, for example, when considerations of non-discrimination, prohibition of inhuman treatment and respect for family life arise” (UN Human Rights Committee General Comment No. 15 (1986), para. 5, reiterated in General Comment No. 19, 1990, para. 5, with regard to family life, and in General Comment No. 20, 1992, para. 9, with regard to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
[11]. Principles on the effective prevention and investigation of extra-legal, arbitrary and summary executions, ESC resolution 1989/65, 24 May 1989, endorsed by the UNGA resolution 44/162, 15 December 1989, para. 5.
[12]. Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, UNGA resolution 47/133, 18 December 1992, Article 8 (1).
[13]. See, for instance, Article VIII (2) of the OAU Convention, conclusions III (3) and (8) of the 1984 Cartagena Declaration on Refugees, OAS/Ser.L/V/II.66, doc.10, rev.1, pp. 190-93, and para. 5 of the Recommendation (2001) 18 of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe. The different approach of the Directive 2004/83/EC is highly problematic for the reasons stated in the above text.
[14]. See Recommendation Rec No. R (84) 1 of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe on the protection of persons satisfying the criteria in the Geneva Convention who are not formally recognized as refugees, and UNHCR, Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status, 1979, re-edited 1992, para. 28.
[15]. M.S.S. v. Belgium and Greece, cited above, § 366.
[16]. Chahal v. the United Kingdom, 15 November 1996, §§ 79-80, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-V, and in proceedings for the expulsion of a refugee, Ahmed v. Austria, 17 December 1996, §§ 40-41, Reports 1996-VI.
[17]. UN Committee Against Torture, Tapia Paez v. Sweden, Communication No. 39/1996, 28 April 1997, CAT/C/18/D/39/1996, para. 14.5, and MBB v. Sweden, Communication No. 104/1998, 5 May 1999, CAT/C/22/D/104/1998, para. 6.4, and UN Human Rights Committee General Comment No. 20: Replaces General Comment 7 concerning prohibition of torture and cruel treatment or punishment (Article 7), 10 March 1992, paras. 3 and 9, and General Comment No. 29 on States of Emergency (Article 4), UN doc. CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.11, 31 August 2001, para. 11, Considerations of reports: Concluding Observations on Canada, UN doc. CCPR/C/79/Add.105, 7 April 1999, para. 13, and Concluding Observations on Canada, UN doc. CCPR/C/CAN/CO/5, 20 April 2006, para. 15.
[18]. See the fundamental Declaration of States Parties to the 1951 Convention and/or its 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, UN doc. HCR/MMSP/2001/9, 16 January 2002, para. 4, which noted that “the continuing relevance and resilience of this international regime of rights and principles, including at its core the principle of non-refoulement, whose applicability is embedded in customary international law”, and UNHCR, “The Principle of Non-Refoulement as a Norm of Customary International Law”, Response to the Questions posed to UNHCR by the Federal Constitutional Court of the Federal Republic of Germany in cases 2 BvR 1938/93, 2 BvR 1953/93, 2 BvR 1954/93, and even more categorical, the 5th conclusion of the 1984 Cartagena Declaration on Refugees, OAS/Ser.L/V/II.66, doc.10, rev.1, pp. 190-93, which affirms that “This principle is imperative in regard to refugees and in the present state of international law should be acknowledged and observed as a rule of jus cogens”, reiterated by the 2004 Mexico Declaration and Plan of Action to Strengthen the International Protection of Refugees in Latin America, and, among legal scholars, Lauterpacht and Bethlehem, “The scope and content of the principle of non-refoulement: Opinion”, in Refugee Protection in International Law, UNHCR’s Global Consultation on International Protection, Cambridge, 2003, pp. 87 and 149, Goodwin-Gill and McAdam, cited above, p. 248, Caroline Lantero, Le droit des refugiés entre droits de l’Homme et gestion de l’ immigration, Bruxelles, 2010, p. 78, and Kälin/Caroni/Heim, Article 33, para. 1, marginal notes 26-34, in Andreas Zimmermann (ed.), The 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its Protocol, A Commentary, Oxford, 2011, pp. 1343-46.
[19]. Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe Recommendation Rec (2005) 6 on exclusion from refugee status in the context of article 1 F of the Convention relating to the Status of Refugees of 28 July 1951. For instance, conclusive (or non-rebuttable) presumptions of dangerousness of a person drawn from the nature of the crimes committed or the gravity of the penalty imposed are arbitrary.
[20]. Haitian Centre for Human Rights et al. US, case 10.675, report No. 51/96, OEA/Ser.L./V/II.95, doc. 7 rev., 13 March 1997, para. 157, stating that there are “no geographical limitations” to non-refoulement obligations resulting from Article 33 of the UN Refugee Convention. In para. 163, the Inter-American Commission also concluded that the push-back actions of the US breached Article XXVII of the American Declaration of Human Rights.
[21]. Advisory Opinion on the Extraterritorial Application of Non-Refoulement Obligations under the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol, 26 January 2007, para. 24, and “Background note on the protection of asylum-seekers and refugees at sea”, 18 March 2002, para. 18, UN High Commissioner for Refugees responds to US Supreme Court Decision in Sale v. Haitian Centers Council, in International Legal Materials, 32, 1993, p. 1215, and “Brief Amicus Curiae: The Haitian Interdiction case 1993”, in International Journal of Refugee Law, 6, 1994, pp. 85-102.
[22]. Declaration on Territorial Asylum, adopted on 14 December 1967, UNGA resolution 2312 (XXII), A/RES/2312(XXII), according to which “No person referred to in article 1, paragraph 1, shall be subjected to measures such as rejection at the frontier or, if he has already entered the territory in which he seeks asylum, expulsion or compulsory return to any state where he may be subjected to persecution.”
[23]. Regina v. Immigration Officer at Prague Airport and another (Respondents) ex parte European Roma Rights Centre and others (Appellants), 9 December 2004, para. 26: “There would appear to be general acceptance of the principle that a person who leaves the state of his nationality and applies to the authorities of another state for asylum, whether at the frontier of the second state or from within it, should not be rejected or returned to the first state without appropriate enquiry into the persecution of which he claims to have a well-founded fear.” In para. 21, Lord Bingham of Cornhill clearly indicated that he followed the Inter-American Commission’s ruling in the Haiti case (“The appellants' position differs by an order of magnitude from that of the Haitians, whose plight was considered in Sale, above, and whose treatment by the United States authorities was understandably held by the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights (Report No. 51/96, 13 March 1997, para 171) to breach their right to life, liberty and security of their persons as well as the right to asylum protected by article XXVII of the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, of which the Commission found the United States to be in breach in para 163.”, with my underlining).
[24]. Conclusions and Recommendations of the CAT concerning the second report of the USA, CAT/C/USA/CO/2, 2006, paras. 15 and 20, affirming that the state must ensure that the non-refoulement obligation is “fully enjoyed by all persons under (its effective control)…wherever located in the world”, and in J.H.A. v. Spain, CAT/C/41/D/323/2007 (2008), which found Spain’s responsibility engaged with regard to non-refoulement obligations where it interdicted sea migrants and conducted extra-territorial refugee status determination.
[25]. General Comment No. 31: The Nature of the General Legal Obligation Imposed on States Parties to the Covenant, CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.13, 2004, para. 12, underlining that a State must respect the principle of non-refoulement “for all persons in their territory and all persons under their control”, Concluding Observations of the Human Rights Comm.: USA, CCPR/79/Add.50, 1995, para. 284, and Kindler v. Canada, Commentary No. 470/1991, 30 July 1993, para. 6.2, and ARJ v. Australia, Commentary No. 692/1996, 11 August 1997, para. 6.8.
[26]. See, among others, Guy Goodwin-Gill, “The right to seek asylum: interception at sea and the principle of non-refoulement”, Inaugural Lecture at the Palais des Académies, Brussels, 16 February 2011, p. 2, and The Refugee in International law, Cambridge, 2007, p. 248, Bank, Introduction to Article 11, marginal notes 57-82, in Andreas Zimmermann (ed.), The 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its Protocol, A Commentary, Oxford, 2011, pp. 832-41, and in the same book, Kälin/Caroni/Heim on Article 33, marginal notes 86-91, pp. 1361-63, Frelick, “Abundantly clear”: Refoulement, in Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, 19, 2005, pp. 252 and 253, Hathaway, The Rights of Refugees under International Law, Cambridge, 2005, p. 339, Lauterpacht and Bethlehem, cited above, p. 113, Pallis, “Obligations of the states towards asylum seekers at sea: interactions and conflicts between legal regimes”, in International Journal of Refugee Law, 14, 2002, pp. 346-47, Meron, “Extraterritoriality of Human Rights Treaties”, in American Journal of International Law, 89, 1995, p. 82, Koht, “The ‘Haiti Paradigm’ in United States Human Rights Policy”, in The Yale Law Journal, vol. 103, 1994, p. 2415, and Helton, “The United States Government Program of Interception and Forcibly Returning Haitian Boat People to Haiti: Policy Implications and Prospects”, in New York School Journal of Human Rights, vol. 10, 1993, p. 339.
[27]. Sale v. Haitian Centers Council, 509/US 155, 1993, with a powerful dissenting opinion of Justice Blackmun.
[28]. Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Haji Ibrahim, [2000] HCA 55, 26 October 2000, S157/1999, para. 136, and Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Khawar, [2002] HCA 14, 11 April 2002, S128/2001, para. 42.
[29]. See, for the same argument, Robinson, Convention relating to the Status of Refugees: its history, contents and interpretation - A Commentary, New York, 1953, p. 163, and Grahl-Madsen, Commentary on the Refugee Convention 1951 Articles 2-11, 13-37, Geneva, p. 135.
[30]. PCIJ, Interpretation of Article 3 § 2 of the Treaty of Lausanne (Frontier between Turkey and Iraq), Advisory opinion No. 12, 21 November 1925, p. 22, and the Lotus case, 7 September 1927, p. 16, and the ICJ, Competence of the General Assembly for the Admission of a State to the United Nations, Advisory Opinion, 3 March 1950 - General List No. 9, p. 8.
[31]. UN Doc. E/AC.32/SR.21, paras. 13-26.
[32]. UN Doc.E/AC.32/SR.20, paras. 54-56.
[33]. UN doc. A/CONF.2/SR.35.
[34]. Alland and Teitgen-Colly, Traité du droit d'asile, Paris, 2002, p. 229: “L’expression française de ‘refoulement’ vise à la fois l’éloignement du territoire et la non-admission à l’entrée”.
[35]. ICJ, In re Border and Transborder Armed Actions (Nicaragua v. Honduras), judgment of 22 December 1988, para. 94.
[36]. See, for example, the reasoning of the Human Rights Committee, in Judge v. Canada, Comm. No. 829/1998, 5 August 2003, para.10.4.
[37]. This conclusion is, in fact, in accordance with American policy prior to the 1992 presidential order, since the USA considered the prohibition of refoulement applicable to actions undertaken on the high seas (Legomsky, “The USA and the Caribbean Interdiction Programme, in International Journal of Refugee Law, 18, 2006, p. 679). This conclusion also corresponds to actual American policy, since the USA have not only abandoned the said policy of summarily returning sea migrants to Haiti without any individual evaluation of the situation of the asylum seekers, but have themselves criticised that same policy in the “Trafficking in Persons 2010 Report” of the State Department when referring negatively to the Italian push-back practices in the Mediterranean (“Further, the Italian government implemented an accord with the Government of Libya during the reporting period that allowed for Italian authorities to interdict, forcibly return and re-route boat migrants to Libya. According to Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch the government failed to conduct even a cursory screening among these migrants for indications of trafficking”).
[38]. The Asylum case (Colombia v Perú), judgment of 20 November 1950 (General List No. 7, 1949-1950): “Such a derogation from territorial sovereignty cannot be recognized unless its legal basis is established in each particular case”.
[39]. See Article 17 of the 1889 Treaty on International Penal Law (Treaty of Montevideu), Article 2 of the 1928 Convention fixing the rules to be observed for the granting of asylum (Havana Convention) and Articles 5 and 12 of the 1954 Caracas Convention on Diplomatic Asylum, and, for a comprehensive study, Question of Diplomatic Asylum: Report of the Secretary-General, 22 September 1975, UN doc. A/10139 (Part II), and Denza, Diplomatic Asylum, in Andreas Zimmermann (ed.), The 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its Protocol, A Commentary, Oxford, 2011, pp. 1425-40.
[40]. Parliamentary Assembly Recommendation 1236 (1994) on the right of asylum, which does “insist that asylum procedures and visa policies, in particular ones recently changed through national laws or on the basis of European Union treaties, continue to be based on the 1951 Geneva Convention and the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms - remembering that the latter also implies obligations vis-à-vis persons who are not necessarily refugees in the sense of the 1951 Geneva Convention - and allow no infringements to be made, especially not of the generally accepted principle of non-refoulement, and the prohibition of rejection of asylum seekers at the border”.
[41]. Report to the Italian Government on the visit to Italy carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 27 to 31 July 2009, para. 29: “The prohibition of refoulement extends to all persons who may be within a State’s territory or otherwise subject to its jurisdiction. The European Court of Human Rights has recognised a number of specific situations which may give rise to an extraterritorial application of ECHR obligations and engage a State’s responsibility in this respect. A State’s extraterritorial jurisdiction may be based, in particular, on (a) the activities of the State’s diplomatic or consular agents abroad…”
[42]. The UNHCR accepted the applicability of the non-refoulement obligation on the territory of another State in its Advisory Opinion on the Extraterritorial Application of Non-Refoulement Obligations under the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol, 26 January 2007, para. 24 (“UNHCR is of the view that the purpose, intent and meaning of Article 33(1) of the 1951 Convention are unambiguous and establish an obligation not to return a refugee or asylum-seeker to a country where he or she would be [at] risk of persecution or other serious harm, which applies wherever a State exercises jurisdiction, including at the frontier, on the high seas or on the territory of another State”).
[43]. See the Study on the feasibility of processing asylum claims outside the EU against the background of the common European asylum system and the goal of a common asylum procedure, of the Danish Centre for Human Rights on behalf of the European Commission, 2002, p. 24, Communication from the Commission to the Council and the European Parliament on the managed entry in the EU of persons in need of international protection and the enhancement of the protection capacity of the regions of origin “improving access to durable solutions”, Com(2004) 410 final; Comments of the European Council on Refugees and Exiles on the Communication from the Commission to the Council and the European Parliament on the managed entry in the EU of persons in need of international protection and the enhancement of the protection capacity of the regions of origin ‘Improving Access to Durable Solutions’, CO2/09/2004/ext/PC, and UNHCR Observations on the European Commission Communication "On the Managed Entry in the EU of Persons in Need of International Protection and Enhancement of the Protection Capacity of the Regions of Origin: Improving Access to Durable Solutions", 30 August 2004.
[44]. See, among others, Entry on Aristides de Sousa Mendes, in Encyclopaedia of the Holocaust, Macmillan, New York, 1990, Wheeler, And who is my neighbour? A world war II hero or conscience for Portugal, in Luzo-brasilian Review, vol. 26, 1989, pp. 119-39, Fralon, Aristides de Sousa Mendes - Le Juste de Bordeaux, éd. Mollat, Bordeaux, 1998, and Afonso, “Le “Wallenberg portugais”: Aristides de Sousa Mendes, in the Revue d’histoire de la Shoah, Le monde juif, No. 165, 1999, pp. 6-28.
[45]. See, for the standard of international human rights and refugee law, Andric v. Sweden, decision of 23 February 1999, no. 45917/99; Čonka v. Belgium, no. 51564/99, §§ 81-83, ECHR 2002-I; Gebremedhin [Gaberamadhien] v. France, no. 25389/05, §§ 66-67, ECHR 2007-II; M.S.S. v. Belgium and Greece, cited above,§§ 301-302 and 388-389; and I.M. v. France, no. 9152/09, § 154, 2 February 2012; Report to the Italian Government on the visit to Italy carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 27 to 31 July 2009, para. 27; Recommendation Rec (2003)5 of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe on measures of detention of asylum seekers, Recommendation No. R (98) 13 of the Committee of Ministers on the right of rejected asylum seekers to an effective remedy against decisions on expulsion in the context of Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights, Recommendation Rec (81)16 on the harmonisation of national procedures relating to asylum; Recommendation 1327 (1997) of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe on the “Protection and reinforcement of the human rights of refugees and asylum seekers in Europe”; Guidelines on human rights protection in the context of accelerated asylum procedures adopted by the Committee of Ministers on 1 July 2009, and Improving Asylum Procedures: Comparative analysis and Recommendations for Law and Practice, Key Findings and Recommendations, A UNHCR research project on the application of key provisions of the Asylum Procedures Directive in selected Member States, March 2010, and UNHCR Provisional Comments on the Proposal for a Council Directive for Minimum Standards on Procedures in Member States for Granting and Withdrawing Refugee Status (Council Document 14203/04, 9 November 2004), 10 February 2005; European Council on Refugees and Exiles, Information note on the Council Directive 2005/85/EC of 1 December 2005 on minimum standards on procedures in member states for granting and withdrawing refugee status, IN1/10/2006/EXT/JJ; International Law Commission, sixty-second session, Geneva, 3 May-4 June and 5 July-6 August 2010, Sixth report on expulsion of aliens submitted by Maurice Kamto, Special Rapporteur, Addendum A/CN.4/625/Add.1, and Report of the International Law Commission, sixty-second session, 3 May-4 June and 5 July-6 August 2010, General Assembly, Official Documents, sixty-fifth session, Supplement No. 10 (A/65/10)A/65/10), paras. 135-83; and House of Lords European Union Committee, Handling EU Asylum Claims: New Approaches examined, HL Paper 74, 11th Report of Session 2003-04, and Minimum Standards in Asylum Procedures, HL Paper 59, 11th Report of Session 2000-01.
[46]. Executive Committee of UNHCR Conclusion No. 82 (1997), para. d(iii) and Executive Committee Conclusion No. 85 (1998), para. q); UNHCR, Handbook on Procedures and Criteria of Determining Refugee Status, HCR/IP/4/Eng/Rev.1, 1992, paras. 189-223, and International Law Association, Resolution 6/2002 on Refugee Procedures (Declaration on International Minimum Standards for Refugee Protection), 2002, paras. 1, 5 and 8.
[47]. See the judgment of the International Court of Justice of 30 November 2010 in the Ahmadou Sadio Diallo case, A/CN.4/625, para. 82, in the light of Article 13 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and Article 12 (4) of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights; UN Committee Against Torture, SH v. Norway, Communication No. 121/1998, 19 April 2000, CAT/C/23/D/121/1998 (2000), para. 7.4, and Falcon Rios v. Canada, Communication No. 133/1999, 17 December 2004, CAT/C/33/D/133/1999, para 7.3, Conclusions and Recommendations: France, CAT/C/FRA/CO/3, 3 April 2006, para. 6, Conclusions and Recommendations: Canada, CAT/C/CR/34/CAN, 7 July 2005, para. 4 (c) and (d), Consideration of Reports Submitted by states Parties under article 19 of the Convention, China, CAT/C/CHN/CO/4, 21 November 2008, para. 18 (D); UN Human Rights Committee, General Comment No. 15: The position of Aliens under the Covenant, 1986, para. 10; UN Committee on the elimination of racial discrimination, General rec. 30, Discrimination against Non-Citizens, CERD/C/64/Misc.11/rev.3, 2004, para. 26; UN Special Rapporteur on the prevention of discrimination, final report of Mr. David Weissbrodt, E/CN4/Sub2/, 2003, 23, para. 11; and UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants Mr Jorge Bustamante, Annual report, Doc. A/HRC/7/12, 25 February 2008, para. 64.
[48]. Inter-American Commission, Haitian Centre for Human Rights et al. v. US, case 10.675, para. 163, in view of Article XXVII of the American Declaration of Human Rights, and the judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Union of 28 July 2011, in the Brahim Samba Diouf case (C-69-10), in the light of Article 39 of the Directive 2005/85/CE.
[49]. With regard to the expulsion procedure, see Maaouia v. France ([GC], no. 39652/98, ECHR 2000-X), and to the asylum procedure see Katani v. Germany ((dec), no. 67679/01, 31 May 2001). Like Judges Loucaides and Traja, I also have serious doubts about the proposition that, on account of the alleged discretionary and public-order element of the decisions taken in these procedures, they are not to be seen as determining the civil rights of the person concerned. I have two major reasons: first, these decisions will necessarily have major repercussions on the alien’s private and professional and social life. Second, these decisions are not discretionary at all and do have to comply with international obligations, such as those resulting from the prohibition of refoulement. Anyway, the guarantees of the asylum procedure can also be derived from Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 and even from the Convention itself. In fact, the Court has already based its assessment of the fairness of an asylum procedure on Article 3 of the Convention (Jabari v. Turkey, no. 40035/98, §§ 39-40, ECHR 2000-VIII,). In addition, the Court has used Article 13 of the Convention to censure the lack of an effective remedy against the rejection of an asylum application (Chahal, cited above, § 153, and Gebremedhin [Gabermadhien], cited above, § 66). In other words, the content of the procedural guarantees of the prohibition of refoulement derives, ultimately, from those Convention Articles which protect human rights from which no derogation is permitted (such as, for example, Article 3), in conjunction with Article 13, as well as from Article 4 of Protocol No. 4.
[50]. Čonka, cited above, where the applicants had at the time of the expulsion already lost their permission to remain and were under an order to leave the country. See also, for the applicability of other regional conventions to aliens not lawfully on the territory, Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Provisional Measures requested by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in the matter of the Dominican Republic, case of Haitian and Haitian-Origin Dominican Persons in the Dominican Republic, order of the court of 18 August 2000, and African Commission on Human and People’s Rights, Rencontre Africaine pour la Défense des Droits de l’Homme v. Zambia, communication No. 71/92, October 1996, para. 23, and Union Inter-Africaine des Droits de l’Homme et al. v. Angola, communication No. 159/96, 11 November 1997, para. 20.
[51]. To this effect, see also the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe Resolution 1821 (2011) 1 on the interception and rescue at sea of asylum seekers, refugees and irregular migrants, paras. 9.3-9.6.
[52]. See the leading judgment of Abdulaziz, Cabales and Balkandali v. the United Kingdom, 28 May 1985, § 59, Series A no. 94.
[53]. Lauterpacht and Bethlehem, cited above, § 61, and Goodwin and McAdam, cited above, p. 384.
[54]. Lauterpacht and Bethlehem, cited above, para. 67, and Goodwin-Gill, “The right to seek asylum: interception at sea and the principle of non-refoulement”, Inaugural Lecture at the Palais des Académies, Brussels, 16 February 2011, p. 5, and Goodwin and McAdam, cited above, p. 246.
[55]. See Bernard Ryan, “Extraterritorial immigration control, what role for legal guarantees?”, in Bernard Ryan and Valsamis Mitsilegas (eds), Extraterritorial immigration control, legal challenges, Leiden, 2010, pp. 28-30.
[56]. In para 45 of the case of Regina v Immigration Officer at Prague Airport and another (Respondents) ex parte European Roma Rights Centre and others (Appellants), the House of Lords recognised that pre-clearance operations actually “purport to exercise governmental authority” over those targeted. Nonetheless, the Lords were not ready to consider the denial of boarding a plane at a foreign airport as an act of refoulement in the context of the UN Refugee Convention.
[57]. Nowadays these rules constitute customary international law (ICJ, Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro, judgment of 26 February 2007, para. 420, and, among legal scholars, McCorquodale and Simons, “Responsibility Beyond Borders: State responsibility for extraterritorial violations by corporations of international human rights law”, Modern Law Review, 70, 2007, p. 601, Lauterpacht and Bethlehem, cited above, p. 108, and Crawford and Olleson, “The continuing debate on a UN Convention on State Responsibility”, International and Comparative Law Quarterly, 54, 2005, p. 959) and are applicable to human rights violations (Crawford, The International Law Commission’s articles on state responsibility: Introduction, text and commentaries, Cambridge, 2002, p. 25 and Gammeltoft-Hansen, “The externalisation of European migration control and the reach of international refugee law”, in European Journal of Migration and Law, 2010, p. 8).
[58]. The same conclusion was reached by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), in its Report to the Italian Government on the visit to Italy from 27 to 31 July 2009, para. 48.
[59]. See the Permanent Court of International Justice Lotus judgment (France v. Turkey), judgment of 27 September 1927, para. 65, were the Court clearly stated: “A corollary of the principle of the freedom of the seas is that a ship on the high seas is assimilated to the territory of the State the flag of which it flies, for, just as in its own territory, that State exercises its authority, upon it, and no other State may do so…It follows that what occurs on board a vessel on the high seas must be regarded as if it occurred on the territory of the State whose flag the ship flies.”.
[60]. Shaw, International Law, Fifth Edition, Cambridge, p. 495.
[61]. Report of the working group on contemporary forms of slavery, UN Doc E/CN.4/Sub.2/1998/14, 6 July 1998, rec. 97, and Report of the working group on contemporary forms of slavery, UN Doc E/CN.4/Sub.2/2004/36, 20 July 2004, rec. 19-31.
[62]. UN doc. E/AC.32/SR.40