Recommendation
1547 (2002)[1]
Expulsion
procedures in conformity with human rights and enforced with respect for
safety and dignity
1.
The Assembly is greatly concerned at the number of deaths resulting from
the methods used to enforce expulsion orders in Council of Europe member
states. Ten people died between September 1998 and May 2001 while being
deported from Austria, Belgium, Germany, France, Italy and Switzerland.
2.
These deaths are sad examples of the worst that can happen during
expulsion procedures. Amnesty International has, for at least the past
seven years, been receiving regular complaints about the ill-treatment of
potential deportees. All organisations dealing with complaints report that
the numbers received have risen sharply in the last two years, reflecting
an increase in the number of expulsions and at the same time in the number
of forced and violent expulsions.
3.
The Assembly believes that the increase in the number of incidents during
expulsions from Council of Europe member states shows that these are not
isolated events. All too often, persons awaiting expulsion are subjected,
in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights, to discrimination,
racist verbal abuse, dangerous methods of restraint and even violence and
inhuman or degrading treatment. All too often, the officials responsible
for enforcing expulsion orders resort to an unjustified, improper or even
dangerous use of force. The European Committee for the Prevention of
Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) believes
that there are clear risks of inhuman treatment in the deportation of
foreigners; during the preparatory phase, during expulsion (on flights or
on boats) and on arrival.
4.
The Assembly is concerned at the predominant, or indeed exclusive, role of
the police and security forces, which are often poorly trained, in
enforcing expulsion orders. It can only deplore the fact that the
involvement, at all stages of the procedure, of professionals in both
psycho-social support and humanitarian aid on the one hand, and of
lawyers, judges and doctors on the other, remains limited. The Assembly is
also concerned at the inordinate responsibilities which states place
directly or indirectly on carriers.
5.
In this context, it is not surprising that it is difficult to gather
reliable information on expulsion procedures. It is often only by chance
that ill-treatment suffered during deportation comes to light. Lack of
resources and support account for the fact that very few people, on
returning to their countries of origin, bring proceedings against those
responsible for expelling them.
6.
The Assembly regrets that in all the member states of the Council of
Europe expulsion procedures lack transparency. It is interested to note
that some Council of Europe member states are looking into this area or
have implemented reforms, however it is concerned that the legal
frameworks for the enforcement of expulsion orders are often not adhered
to in practice.
7.
The Assembly believes that forced expulsion should only be used as a last
resort, that it should be reserved for persons who put up clear and
continued resistance and that it can be avoided if genuine efforts are
made to provide deportees with personal and supervised assistance in
preparing for their departure.
8.
The Assembly insists that the Council of Europe?s fundamental values
will be threatened if nothing is done to combat the present climate of
hostility towards refugees, asylum seekers and immigrants, and to
encourage respect for their safety and dignity in all circumstances.
9.
It thanks the European Commissioner for Human Rights for having recently
brought together the non-governmental organisations for a seminar on human
rights standards applying to the holding of foreigners wishing to enter a
Council of Europe member state and to the enforcement of expulsion orders,
which gave him the opportunity to obtain valuable information on expulsion
procedures.
10.
The Assembly recalls and reaffirms its recent recommendations aimed at
improving the protection and treatment of asylum seekers, namely
Recommendation 1475
(2000) on the arrival of asylum seekers at European airports,
Recommendation 1467
(2000) on clandestine immigration and the fight against traffickers,
Recommendation 1440
(2000) on restrictions on asylum in the member states of the Council of
Europe and the European Union, and Recommendation
No. R (99) 12 of the Committee of Ministers to member
states on the return of rejected asylum seekers.
11.
The Assembly recommends that the Committee of Ministers conduct an
in-depth study, and follow it up with periodical reports, on the
procedures and practices used in the Council of Europe?s members states,
including those of central and eastern Europe, during the enforcement of
legally decided expulsion orders, by gathering precise and detailed
information on:
i. the relevant legal and regulatory
frameworks in national laws and the direction and extent of existing and
planned reforms;
ii.
the practice put in place by the authorities responsible for enforcing
expulsion orders and the directives which are the basis of this
practice;
iii.
the number of complaints, the results of enquiries and, where
applicable, the legal and disciplinary convictions.
12.
The Assembly also recommends that the Committee of Ministers set up a
joint working party at European level (including, for example,
representatives of governments, parliaments and relevant organisations,
members of bodies responsible for carrying out expulsion orders, persons
working in the health and psycho-social fields, pilots, judges and legal
advisers) to draw up, in a pragmatic and human spirit, a code of good
conduct which includes the following:
i. an exhaustive list of human rights standards
applicable to foreigners being expelled and their safeguards;
ii.
a list of minimum principles regarding the monitoring, supervision and
support of potential deportees, with regard to their dignity and safety;
iii.
guidelines on restraint techniques;
iv.
a status for members of escorts and liaison agents guaranteeing that the
responsibility for expulsion procedures lies fully with the public
authorities.
13.
Finally, the Assembly recommends that the Committee of Ministers urge
member states:
i. to establish independent monitoring systems
for expulsion procedures, for example by appointing observers, mediators
or ombudsmen, and to conduct impartial and in-depth enquiries at all
levels into allegations of ill-treatment;
ii. to ensure that all foreigners awaiting
expulsion receive, under the aegis of a referee, supervision which is:
a.
individual, through the assessment of the individual situation of
each foreigner concerned, covering not only his or her administrative
and legal status, but also his or her anxieties concerning the
expulsion and his or her state of health;
b.
comprehensive, through the involvement of a multidisciplinary group
including, with respect for their ethical principles, doctors,
psychologists, social workers, legal advisors, organisations offering
legal or humanitarian assistance, particularly non-governmental
organisations;
c.
monitored at all stages of the expulsion procedure, that is, during
preparation for departure, in particular in detention areas and
centres, during the journey and on repatriation;
iii. to ensure that every accompanied minor
concerned by an expulsion procedure is not taken away by the competent
officers unless in the presence of his parents and accompanied by them;
iv. to develop systematic policies for
voluntary or forced repatriation in partnership with the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) or any other relevant body, in
particular through the allocation of financial aid;
v. to adapt without delay their legislation and
practices regarding holding prior to expulsion, in order to:
a.
limit the length of detention in waiting or transit zones to a
maximum of fifteen days;
b.
limit the length of detention in police stations to the amount of time
strictly necessary for any arrest and to separate foreigners awaiting
expulsion from people being questioned for common law crimes;
c.
limit prison detention to those who represent a recognised danger to
public order or safety and to separate foreigners awaiting expulsion
from those detained for common law crimes;
d.
avoid detaining foreigners awaiting expulsion in a prison
environment, and in particular to:
?
put an end to detention in cells;
?
allow access to fresh air and to private areas and to areas where
foreigners can communicate with the outside world;
?
not hinder contacts with the family and non-governmental
organisations;
?
guarantee access to means of communication with the outside world,
such as telephones and postal services;
?
ensure that during detention foreigners can work, in dignity and with
proper remuneration, and take part in sporting and cultural
activities;
?
guarantee free access to consultation and independent legal
representation;
e.
guarantee, under regular supervision by the judge, the strict
necessity and the proportionality of the use and continuation of
detention for the enforcement of the deportation order, and to set the
length of detention at a maximum of one month;
f.
favour alternatives to detention which place less restrictions on
freedom, such as compulsory residence orders or other forms of
supervision and monitoring, such as the obligation to register; and to
set up open reception centres;
g.
ensure that detention centres are supervised by persons who are
specially selected and trained in psycho-social support and to ensure
the permanent, or at least regular, presence of ?inter-cultural
mediators?, interpreters, doctors and psychologists as well as legal
protection by legal counsellors;
h.
take into account, in any decision to limit personal freedom, the
needs of vulnerable groups, and in particular:
?
the principle of the unity of the family must be respected in all
circumstances;
?
unaccompanied minors must be treated in accordance with their age, and
must immediately be taken charge of by a judge for minors and have
access to independent legal consultation and representation;
?
single women must be able to use separate facilities,
?
the elderly must have access to the medical care necessary for their
age;
vi.
ensure that expulsion orders are enforced by specially trained,
plain-clothed state representatives and not by private agents, and avoid
any traumatising treatment, especially towards vulnerable persons;
vii.
inform the destination state of the measures taken, to ensure the
expelled persons are not considered criminals;
viii.
set up a monitoring system in the destination country, managed by
embassy personnel, with a view to ensuring that the expelled person is
not subjected to human rights violations, considered as a criminal or
threatened with blackmail or arbitrary detention;
ix.
adapt immediately their legislation and practices concerning the
transportation of expelled foreigners in order to:
a.
inform the deportee at least thirty-six hours in advance of the
details of the journey: times, destination, means of transport and, if
applicable, whether they will be escorted;
b.
limit the use of escorts to cases of known resistance, to take careful
account of all refusals to be escorted and to organise a prior meeting
with members of the escort, if absolutely necessary;
c.
ensure that members of escorts are adequately trained, particularly in
mediation and stress management, and have linguistic and cultural
knowledge;
d.
favour in all cases scheduled air transport and to ensure that the
carrier and captain have been fully informed and, if they do not allow
the presence on board of independent observers or video recordings, to
at least give their formal agreement;
e.
allow also the presence of independent observers or to make video
recordings of the moments leading up to departure, due to the
possibility of threats or attacks intended to persuade the person to
leave; the independent observers must be present on departure and
arrival;
f.
systematically draw up certificates on the physical and mental health
of the deportee, on departure and arrival;
g.
introduce into national law specific regulations which strictly forbid
the following practices:
?
partial or total obstruction of the respiratory tract;
?
gagging with adhesive tape;
?
the use of poison gas or stun gas;
?
the administration of tranquillisers against the wishes of the person
concerned or of medicines without medical direction;
?
any form of restraint other than handcuffs on the wrists;
?
immobilisation by handcuffs during the journey;
?
the wearing of masks or hoods by members of the escort;
?
the arbitrary or disproportionate use of force;
h.
ensure proportionality and respect for safety and human dignity in any
other measures taken during the expulsion procedure, by taking account
of the particular needs of vulnerable persons such as children,
unaccompanied minors, single women and the elderly;
i.
ensure that deportees receive food and drink during the journey and
that they can carry and reclaim their personal belongings;
x.
introduce into law the legal guarantees necessary for persons whose
rights are violated during an expulsion procedure to be able to
effectively exercise their right to appeal, namely:
a.
the possibility for the victim, or any other person appointed by
him or her to this effect, to appeal to the legal authorities,
including, if appropriate, the diplomatic representations of the state
from which he has been expelled;
b.
the provision of complete information to all persons awaiting
expulsion regarding the possibility of making an appeal and ways of
doing so, information on the possible consequences of a refusal to
co-operate and the means of restraint stipulated in national law;
c.
the presence of the victim in the state which decided to expel him
or her throughout the duration of the proceedings brought about by the
appeal, if necessary by means of:
?
the suspension of an expulsion procedure against a person still
present in the state from which he or she is to be expelled; or
?
the return of an expelled person to the state which expelled him or
her.
_____
[1].
Assembly debate on 22 January 2002 (3rd Sitting) (see
Doc. 9196,
report of the Committee on Migration, Refugees and Demography, rapporteur:
Mrs Vermot Mangold).
Text
adopted by the Assembly on 22 January 2002 (3rd Sitting).
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