Online:
Visits:
Stories:
Profile image
By Human Wrongs Watch
Contributor profile | More stories
Story Views

Now:
Last Hour:
Last 24 Hours:
Total:

So Much for Sanctuary: How an EU Asylum Rule ‘Results in Death’

Monday, August 31, 2015 1:51
% of readers think this story is Fact. Add your two cents.

(Before It's News)

.
OXFORD, 28 August 2015 (IRIN)* – On Thursday, Austrian police opened the back of a truck abandoned on the side of a motorway to find the bodies of 71 migrants. They had suffocated after paying smugglers to transport them across the border from neighbouring Hungary. The bodies were so decomposed it took a day to determine the number of dead.
.

Photo: Jodi Hilton/IRIN | Germany is no longer sending Syrian asylum seekers back to the first EU state they entered

Some, perhaps all, were Syrian refugees, most likely trying to reach Germany. Despite having made it into the EU’s passport-free Schengen zone, they still felt the need to travel clandestinely to avoid being fingerprinted and registered for asylum in Hungary, which would have offered them few opportunities to work or integrate.

“This tragedy comes as a cruel reminder that the Dublin Regulation results in death,” commented Hungarian NGO Migszol in a blog posted shortly after the news broke.

“What we need is a safe passage through our country, and for that, we need to fight the European legislation.”

Under the EU’s Dublin Regulation, asylum seekers registered and fingerprinted in one country, for example Hungary, can be returned there if they later try to register an asylum claim elsewhere, say in Germany or the UK.

The rule was designed to determine which member state was responsible for processing an asylum claim and to deter people from registering multiple claims.

In practice, northern EU states have used it to avoid processing claims for people already registered in another country – usually frontline states such as Italy, Greece and Hungary.

Even before the EU’s current struggles to formulate a more harmonized response to the record numbers of migrants arriving at its sea and land borders, the Dublin system was under pressure.

Germany’s decision earlier this week to suspend “Dublin transfers” of Syrian asylum seekers to other member states has raised further questions about its future.

Critics point out the rule places an unfair burden on frontline states such as Greece and Italy, which are already struggling to cope with thousands of new arrivals and deters such states from fingerprinting and registering.

Italy in particular has been accused of failing to fingerprint a significant portion of the 170,000 migrants who arrived there by boat in 2014.

For their part, asylum seekers intent on joining family members in Sweden or Holland, or on finding work in the UK, are extremely reluctant for their fingerprints to be loaded into Eurodac, an EU-wide fingerprint database.

A Syrian refugee shows his ill son to a hungarian police officer and asks for medical help for the kid. | Photo: András D Hajdú | IRIN

A Syrian refugee shows his ill son to a hungarian police officer and asks for medical help for the kid. | Photo: András D Hajdú | IRIN

Greg O’Ceallaigh, a London-based barrister who deals with Dublin removals of asylum seekers from the UK back to countries such as Italy, said that many asylum seekers were taking clandestine routes through Europe to evade detection until they reached a country where they had a family member or at least spoke the language.

“We see people who have burned the skin off their fingertips in an effort to avoid being fingerprinted.”

Many of the criticisms of the Dublin system are not new. As well as placing additional pressure on frontline states, it forces refugees to stay in a country where they may have no family connections, cannot speak the language, and struggle to support themselves.

According to a 2013 report by the European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE), the regulation has also often resulted in asylum seekers being detained for long periods, separated from their families and denied the opportunity to appeal transfer decisions.

Such concerns have resulted in numerous court cases challenging Dublin transfers, including a 2011 European Court of Human Rights ruling that asylum seekers cannot be transferred to Greece, which is still respected by most member states, and three revisions of the original regulation which was drafted in 1990.

The most recent version – Dublin III – came into force in January 2014, and, on paper at least, it offers more protections to asylum seekers, said O’Ceallaigh.

For example, when determining where a claim should be registered, presence of close family members in a country is given more weight and should in theory trump the first-country-of-arrival rule.

In reality, it rarely does, said Maria Hennessey, a legal officer with the Irish Refugee Council.

“I really think there needs to be a fundamental change,” she added.

The European Commission appears to agree. It welcomed Germany’s move as “an act of European solidarity” and has encouraged member states to accept 40,000 asylum seekers who would be relocated from Greece and Italy over two years.

The coach departs for Szeged. The authorities say they try to keep families together | Photo: András D Hajdú | IRIN

The coach departs for Szeged. The authorities say they try to keep families together | Photo: András D Hajdú | IRIN

So far, member states have reluctantly agreed to take in a total of 32,000. More than 100,000 migrants have arrived in Italy and Greece in July alone.

“I think it’s really admirable what Germany’s doing but everyone else needs to step up,” said O’Ceallaigh.

“There does need to be a more politically brave response to all of this; a proper pan-European asylum strategy.”

*Source: IRIN, a humanitarian news and analysis, a service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Go to Original.

**Photo: Jodi Hilton/IRIN | Germany is no longer sending Syrian asylum seekers back to the first EU state they entered

Read also:

More than 300,000 Make Perilous Mediterranean Crossing in 2015

UN Strongly Urges Europe to ‘Put Human Life, Rights and Dignity First’ in Response to Mediterranean Crisis

What about All Those Migrants Who Die Before Ever Setting Foot on a Boat?

Migrant Boat Tragedy: ‘EU countries can find money for warfare but not to rescue people’

The Massive Deaths of Migrants Were ‘Sadly Predictable’ — UN Human Rights Chief

Dying for Europe

The Death Sea

Some 300 Feared Dead in Fresh Mediterranean Tragedy

‘Turning Blind Eye Not a Solution’ to Mediterranean Migrant Crisis – UN Rights Expert

 
 
 
 
 
 
 



Source: http://human-wrongs-watch.net/2015/08/31/so-much-for-sanctuary-how-an-eu-asylum-rule-results-in-death/

Report abuse

Comments

Your Comments
Question   Razz  Sad   Evil  Exclaim  Smile  Redface  Biggrin  Surprised  Eek   Confused   Cool  LOL   Mad   Twisted  Rolleyes   Wink  Idea  Arrow  Neutral  Cry   Mr. Green

Total 1 comment
  • DK

    Migszol has an agenda that is both Liberal and self serving, these people who died firstly did not ask for asylum at any embassy before entering Europe therefore entered the union without any legal pretext to do so, becoming criminals by choice. One criminal act leads to another, and all criminals always want the best for themselves and their families, desperation notwithstanding. They would not find legal employment in any nation in the European Union therefore would find illegal employment preying on the society which harbors them, swamping the legal system with anti deportation cases until they get what they demand – open borders, benefits and an immunity akin to antisemitism.

    The deaths are regrettable, but their own behavior led to their deaths and those people were adults with children for whom they and not the state were legal guardians. If they would have waited they would have been processed as refugees and sent to a safe country outside of Europe while at the same time their host nation would have provided the food, shelter and some form of primary and secondary education until that event.

Top Stories
Recent Stories

Register

Newsletter

Email this story
Email this story

If you really want to ban this commenter, please write down the reason:

If you really want to disable all recommended stories, click on OK button. After that, you will be redirect to your options page.