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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Lomidze v. Minister for Justice [1998] IEHC 64 (5th May, 1998) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1998/64.html Cite as: [1998] IEHC 64 |
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1. This
is an application for Judicial Review pursuant to leave granted by Ms. Justice
Laffoy on the 24th December, 1995. The delay in the case coming to hearing
arose because it was decided to await the judgment of the Supreme Court in
Anisimova
-v- The Minister for Justice
.
Mr. Justice Murphy delivered the judgment of the Supreme Court in that case on
28th November, 1997. The first and second named Applicants are Georgian
nationals and the third named Applicant is an Azerbaijani national. They are
seeking asylum in Ireland but the Minister has refused to entertain their
applications both because they arrived from a safe third country (France) and
already had an application for asylum turned down by the Netherlands, a
signatory to the relevant convention and a member of the European Union.
Essentially, the Applicants' case is that notwithstanding these particular
grounds of refusal (which are not disputed) they have a right to have their
preliminary application considered in circumstances that the principles set out
in the so called von Arnim letter of the 13th December, 1985 would be applied.
This is the well known letter sent by the Department of Justice to Mr. R. von
Arnim, Representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,
setting out the agreed principles by which applications for refugee status and
asylum would be dealt with. It has always been accepted, as is clear from the
judgment of Mr. Justice Murphy in the
Anisimova
case
cited
above, that the acceptance by the Minister of the obligations contained in the
von Arnim letter are subject to the qualification that there is an
international understanding that a person seeking asylum is under an obligation
to seek it in the "first safe country" where he has an opportunity to do so and
that the von Arnim procedures must be qualified by the existence of such an
understanding and its operation in appropriate cases.
2. This
application is grounded on an affidavit by Ms. Nadette Foley, Director of the
Irish Refugee Council, sworn on the 12th January, 1996. She said in her
affidavit that at approximately 7 p.m. on the 22nd December, 1995 she learnt
that the Applicants had attempted to enter the State at Rosslare Port, Co.
Wexford and had initially indicated that they were tourists but had
subsequently indicated to an Immigration Officer that they were seeking asylum
in Ireland. The deponent further swore that the Immigration Officer on duty at
Rosslare Harbour, Mr. John O'Carroll, informed her that the Applicants together
with the first and second named Applicants' two children had been refused leave
to land in the State and that the first and third named Applicants were to be
detained in Mountjoy Prison. Further details of what then happened are set out
in the affidavit and it is not necessary to elaborate on them here. Mr.
O'Carroll informed the Applicant that he had spoken with a Mr. John Lohan, the
Duty Officer for the Department of Justice, and that it had been decided that
the Applicants' application for asylum in Ireland would not be considered and
that they would be deported from the State on Wednesday, 27th December, 1995.
The deponent spoke with Mr. Lohan who made it clear to her that the decision of
the Department was to remove the Applicants from the State on a sailing to Le
Harve in France on the 27th December, 1995. He made it clear that the Minister
was not going to consider the Applicants' application for asylum and that he
had checked this matter with the relevant Principal Officer, Mr. Brian
Ingoldsby. Ms. Foley spoke with the Applicants through a Russian Interpreter
and she was told that they had connections with senior officials in Georgia and
that because of political changes in that country including civil war, they had
been severely harassed and the first named Applicant had been detained for
periods of up to fifteen days at a time. The first and second named Applicants
claimed that if they were returned to Georgia they could easily be arrested and
imprisoned without charge. The third named Applicant claimed that he was a
soldier who had deserted from the Azerbaijani Army and who faced the imposition
of a sanction ranging from imprisonment to the death penalty if he returned.
He further alleged that he was from a well known trouble spot and disputed area
as between Azerbaijan and Armenia, namely Nagorno Karabach. He also claimed
that he could face a penalty ranging from prison to death.
3. Mr.
John Lohan of the Department of Justice swore a replying affidavit. He
confirmed that he had received the call from the Rosslare Immigration Office.
He said that the Applicants were in possession of some form of documents which
purported to be passports issued by an organisation based in Washington D.C.,
USA which is a non governmental organisation without authority to issue
passports but which is in the practice of doing so. He agrees that a decision
was made that the Applicants should be refused leave to land in the State in
accordance with the provisions of the Aliens Orders on the grounds of not
having valid travel documents and no valid Irish visa. Mr. Lohan defends the
position taken by the Department on the grounds that the von Arnim letter does
not oblige the Minister to consider applications for refugee status in the case
of safe third country removals or manifestly ill-founded applications.
4. Having
read the decision of the Supreme Court in
Anisimova
-v- The Minister for Justice
,
I find myself in agreement with Mr. Durcan, Counsel for the Applicants, that
that case is authority for the proposition that the principles in the von Arnim
letter must be applied to applications on the preliminary issue of whether a
substantive application should be entertained or not but only of course insofar
as they could be relevant in that context. I am satisfied that they were not
so applied in this case. There were breaches of the principles numbered 4, 6,
9 and 10. These particular principles are formulated as follows:-
5. In
the circumstances, I think that the Applicants are entitled to Judicial Review
and I will discuss with Counsel the precise form of relief which will enable
their application at least to be processed so that the question of whether
their substantive application can possibly be considered or not will at least
be properly dealt with.