Friday, March 07, 2008
Friday, March 07, 2008
Kathy Tzilivakis
After
The Germans are expected to announce their decision - whether to temporarily stop implementing the European Union's Dublin II Regulation (EC 343/2003) that says the first member state a migrant enters is the one responsible for examining his/her asylum application - next week.
"So far, Germany has only suspended the return of minors, but we are now waiting for the [German] ministry of interior to decide whether to extend it to all asylum-seekers based on a presentation we made based on new evidence we got concerning cases [of asylum-seekers] sent back to Athens," Karl Kopp, spokesman for Pro Asyl, a German human rights organisation, told the Athens News.
"It is all about the problems faced by those who are transferred back to
While the German ambassador, Wolfgang Schultheiss, told the Athens News that he has no information on the matter, he did confirm that there has not been any recent return of unaccompanied minors from
"We have looked into the last 85
Another blow
The news that
As reported by the Athens News on February 15, the Norwegian government decided to ignore the Dublin II Regulation and examine the applications of all asylum-seekers who had passed through
"Such a decision will be taken on the grounds of information from Greek authorities and other parties," he said. "We are not in a position to comment on details in this process or when a decision will be taken. Information will, in due time, be given in a press release and through the Norwegian embassy in
Meanwhile, considerable juris-prudence has developed in EU members
'There is no political will'
Efthalia Pappa, director of the local Ecumenical Refugee Programme - an office set up by the Holy Synod to help asylum-seekers and refugees - is one of the country's harshest critics. Echoing concerns repeatedly voiced by the Greek ombudsman and local and international human rights organisations, Pappa told the Athens News there is no political will to improve the asylum situation.
The asylum-seeker approval rate in
According to
"They [authorities investigating asylum claims] don't seem to care if someone has been tortured or why they are seeking international protection," she told the Athens News. "Asylum-seekers are forced to sign papers stating that they have come for economic reasons. They don't know what they are signing."
Local human rights groups, including the Greek ombudsman, are growing increasingly concerned. Last month, Deputy Ombudsman Andreas Takis sent a five-page letter to the director of the Greek police's aliens bureau in downtown
"During these past several months, we have discovered that the 'pink' card [a temporary residence and work permit valid for six months issued to asylum-seekers] is issued on the same day as their asylum rejection letter," said Takis in his letter. "In the majority of cases, the asylum applications have been reviewed under the accelerated procedure."
By putting them on the fast track, the rejected asylum-seekers have only 10 days by which to appeal.
"However, the issuing of the [pink card] on the same day as the rejection letter creates the erroneous impression that [the asylum-seeker] has the legal right to stay in the country until it expires," stressed Takis in the letter.
He said that this confusion is also due to the fact there is no interpreter present in order to explain the situation to them. To ensure the integrity of the asylum system, the deputy ombudsman recommended authorities abandon the accelerated procedure because it severely restricts asylum-seekers' access to appeal.
On behalf of the Ecumenical Refugee Programme, Pappa has also sent a similar letter informing Kordatos of the difficulties rejected asylum-seekers in
"Before issuing the first-instance rejection decision, the foreigner is informed about his right to appeal in the presence of an interpreter and in a language he understands," said Kordatos in a letter dated January 23. He also stressed that no one is denied an appeal, even if the (10-day) deadline has expired.
A broken system
The Greek asylum system has reportedly failed one 15-year-old unaccompanied minor from
"Despite all the evidence presented by the boy, authorities concluded that his claim was unfounded," said Pappa. "The same thing happened to a woman from
Another recent case involves a 37-year-old man from the Darfur region of
"After this event, I feel lost and lonely and I couldn't stay any more in
Last week, the United Nations refugee agency said the already difficult humanitarian situation in
Human rights wrongs
The German human rights organisation, Pro Asyl, released a shocking report in November accusing the Greek coastguard of "systematically abusing newly-arrived refugees". The report, titled "The truth may be bitter, but it must be told", is based on a series of fact-finding missions conducted by lawyers and human rights advocates on the islands of Samos, Hios and
The group has alleged that members of the Greek coastguard tortured asylum-seekers, prompting the government to order an investigation.
"In one reported case on the
"
People seeking asylum in the EU often enter the bloc through
The head of UNHCR in
Source: Spero News,March 07, 2008