Removal of asylum seekers to third countries, incompatible
with ECHR law
Refugee Legal Centre Press Release 2nd July 2007
High Court rules that the law on removals of asylum seekers to
third countries is incompatible with the European Convention on
Human Rights
The Refugee Legal Centre welcomes today's High Court decision
[Javad Nasseri v SSHD] that a provision of our immigration law
is incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights .
The ruling was made as a result of a challenge brought by the Refugee
Legal Centre to stop the removal to Greece of a 17 year-old Afghan
boy who had claimed asylum in the UK. At the time of the decision
to remove him, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
had warned that such applicants could be subject to immediate removal
from Greece without consideration there of whether they need protection.
However, a provision of UK immigration law demanded that both government
officials considering the applicant's case and the courts ignore
that risk to him.
In 2006, the government refused to consider the applications of
1690 asylum seekers on the basis that they could be sent to a 3rd
country . The overwhelming majority of those people will have been
removed from the UK without the benefit of the government investigating
whether, in their individual cases, the country to which they were
being sent would investigate their claims to be in need of international
protection.
Mr Deri Hughes-Roberts, acting Deputy Chief Executive of the Refugee
Legal Centre, said:
"The Refugee Legal Centre calls on the government to amend
our immigration law to bring it into line with the European Convention
on Human Rights. Our immigration law should allow officials and
the courts to consider the risk to individuals of removal to supposedly
safe 3rd countries and permit applicants to appeal against the
merits of any decision to remove them. This would ensure that our
country lives up to its human rights obligations towards those
that have been forced to flee their homes to seek sanctuary abroad."
Download Judgement - Javad Nasseri - and - SSHD - JavadNasserivSSHD.pdf

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