1. Introduction
1. In their efforts to control
borders and manage migration flows, Council of Europe member States concentrate
much effort on guarding their borders. In this context, refusals
of entry and expulsions without any individual assessment of protection
needs have become a documented phenomenon at Europe’s borders as well
as on the territory of member States further inland. As these practices
are widespread and, in some countries, even take on a systematic
character, those “pushbacks” can be considered as part of national policies
rather than incidental measures. The highest risk attached to pushbacks
is the violation of the right to asylum and the risk of refoulement, meaning that a person
is sent back to a place where he or she might face persecution in
the sense of the 1951 United Nations Convention relating to the
Status of Refugees, or inhuman or degrading treatment in the sense
of the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5, “the Convention”).
This is why the European Court of Human Rights (“the Court”) requires
an individual assessment of protection needs and the safety of a
return in order to prevent violations of Article 3 of the Convention. Pushbacks
take place in particular at European Union borders, which is at
least in part a consequence of the shortcomings of the current Dublin
Regulation and of the failure of attempts to introduce fair responsibility-sharing
in Europe.
2. The persistent and increasing practice and policies of pushbacks
is in clear violation of the fundamental right to asylum and the
principle of non-refoulement, which form the core
of international refugee law. In the face of the gravity of human
rights violations and the tendency towards denial, I believe it
is important for the Parliamentary Assembly to look more closely
into these practices, with a view to proposing guidance to member
States on how they can protect their borders while offering adequate
protection to refugees. It is also important to recall that pushback
action and policies are especially present in European Union frontline
States, which is at least in part the result of the failure of the
Dublin system and of attempts to introduce fair responsibility-sharing
in Europe. Besides these practices, we also see an increasing tendency
of pushbacks at the internal borders of the European Union.
3. There are also reports and evidence of inhuman and degrading
treatment by member States and their agencies in the framework of
these pushbacks, through intimidation, taking or destroying migrants’
belongings, and even through the use of violence and depriving migrants
of food and basic services. In their denial of pushback action,
these types of (sometimes systematic) inhuman and degrading treatment
are denied as well, and as a consequence not adequately examined.
4. As a result of my research throughout Europe, I have become
concerned about the persistent and increasing practices and policy
of pushbacks, which are in clear violation of the rights of asylum
seekers and refugees, including the right to protection against refoulement, which is at the core
of international refugee and human rights law. I recall that member
States are obliged to provide adequate protection to asylum seekers, refugees
and migrants arriving at their borders, and thus to refrain from
any pushback, to allow for independent monitoring and to fully investigate
allegations of pushbacks.
5. Reported pushbacks concern actions towards migrants who have
clearly crossed the border and find themselves inland, and towards
migrants who are present near or at the border while attempting
to cross it. A significant number of them have attempted or envisaged
submitting an asylum claim. The most important negative consequence
of pushbacks is the vulnerable position of the victims. The denial
of access to a proper asylum procedure implies that they run the
risk of being returned to or stranded in another country where they do
not have access to a proper asylum procedure either, which puts
them at risk of being sent back to yet another country (so-called
“chain refoulement”). Pushbacks
can however also lead to direct persecution or inhuman or degrading
treatment in the country which they are returned to, or from which
they cannot escape. The core obligations of asylum and international
law are intended to prevent this from happening. As a consequence
of member States’ refusal to address reported cases of pushbacks,
those practices will continue, victims will be deprived of the right
to an effective remedy and to hold authorities accountable for human
rights violations.
6. Instead of undertaking action to abandon all types of pushbacks
by responding actively and adequately to every signal or actual
evidence, an increasing number of countries are tending to refuse
an independent examination of serious allegations, to simply deny
them or even to accuse, stigmatise and even criminalise non-governmental
organisations (NGOs), human rights defenders and civil society actors
who work to assist migrants to gain access to asylum procedures
and protection. In reporting and attempting to investigate pushbacks
and related human rights violations, NGOs are frequently blamed
and negatively framed for “interference”, despite their role as
key actors in facilitating migrants’ access to rights and to justice.
Such behaviour is in contradiction with adopted texts such as Committee
of Ministers Recommendation CM/Rec(2007)14 on the legal status of
non-governmental organisations in Europe.
7. Civil society organisations working for the promotion of vulnerable
groups and minority rights may be more likely to face threats. While
in some Council of Europe member States there may not be an immediate danger
to their personal safety, the environment in which they operate
can still be hostile. Defenders dealing with the rights of refugees,
asylum seekers and migrants, women, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender
and intersex (LGBTI) people, Roma and other national minority groups
are in a particularly vulnerable position given the “unpopularity”
of such issues in many countries. It was noted how distorted and
harmful rhetoric has led parts of the population to openly manifest
hatred towards those groups and towards civil society actors that promote
and protect their rights.
8. I was appointed rapporteur in January 2019. During the preparation
of the report a hearing was organised on 26 March 2019 in Paris
with the Council of Europe Secretary General’s Special Representative on
Migration and Refugees, Mr Tomáš Boček, and an exchange of views
with Ms Jelena Sesar, Researcher on the Balkans at the Europe Regional
Office of Amnesty International, and Mr Kris Pollet, Head of legal
and policy research with the Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE).
Their input was very useful, and I am especially grateful to Ms Sesar
who was able to speak at the hearing at short notice to present
Amnesty International’s timely and relevant report on pushbacks
from Croatia published a few days earlier.
9. After this meeting I travelled to Croatia (Zagreb and Cetingrad)
and the border region of Bosnia and Herzegovina (from Velika Kladuša
to Bihać) to gain first-hand knowledge of the situation regarding
pushback action in this area. I would like to thank to the Croatian
authorities for their co-operation and organisation of the meetings
and visits, and to all the actors with whom I was able to exchange.
Special thanks go to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR), and to the International Organization for Migration
(IOM) partners on the ground, and to Médecins du Monde Belgique,
as well as the NGOs I was able to meet, including NoNameKitchen,
Are You Syrious (in Zagreb) and the Danish Refugee Council, Vasa
Prava in Velika Kladuša. My meeting with the Mayor of Bihać was
particulary enlightening. More details of the visit are described
below.
10. No report has yet dealt exclusively with the problem of pushbacks,
but they have been referred to in the framework of various other
work, for instance
Resolution
2174 (2017) on human rights implications of the European response
to transit migration across the Mediterranean,
Resolution 2073 and
Recommendation 2078
(2015) “Countries of transit: meeting new migration and asylum
challenges” and
Resolution
2228 and
Recommendation
2136 (2018) “Human rights impact of the ‘external dimension’ of
European Union asylum and migration policy: out of sight, out of
rights?”. I was rapporteur for all of these reports.
2. Definition of “pushbacks”
11. Article 4 of Protocol No. 4
to the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 46) specifically prohibits
the collective expulsion of aliens. Since cases of expulsion are
usually accompanied by the use of force, Article 3 of the Convention,
prohibiting torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment,
will also apply. Collective expulsion has been defined by the European
Court of Human Rights as “any measure compelling aliens, as a group,
to leave a country, except where such a measure is taken on the
basis of a reasonable and objective examination of the particular
case of each individual alien of the group” (see, for instance, Čonka v. Belgium, Application No.
51564/99).
12. The obligation of States not to expel or return (refouler) a person to territories
where his/her life or freedom would be threatened is a protection
principle set out in Article 33 of the United Nations Convention
on the Status of Refugees, Article 3 of the European Convention
on Human Rights and Article 3 of the United Nations Convention Against
Torture and Other, Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
(CAT). This article prohibits States from expelling or returning
(refouler) a refugee in any
manner whatsoever to a territory where s/he would be at risk of
persecution. The prohibition of refoulement applies
to all refugees, including those who have not been formally recognised
as such, and to asylum seekers whose status has not yet been determined.
13. Although “pushback” action and policies may be less clear
in its legal scope than that of refoulement or of
collective expulsion, I have decided to use the term in this report
for two main reasons. Firstly, it is in line with the violent and
physical nature of the practices involved, which I wish to denounce
and which the recommendations aim to tackle, and secondly, the notion
of “pushback” may be applied broadly to cases of non-respect of
human rights obligations related to refusal of entry into a country
of persons seeking protection, the refoulement of
those already within a territory, collective expulsion, obligations
to carry out screenings, and other hostile action aimed to deny
entry into European countries at land and sea borders.
14. Looking at the facts during my research, it became clear,
moreover, that for some countries pushing migrants back from borders
had become a systematic “policy” rather than a repetition of isolated
incidents. The title of the report was therefore modified to reflect
this worrying fact.
15. Pushback action is closely linked to another phenomenon described
as “pullback”. This consists in agreement between countries that
migrants will be retained on one side, usually in exchange for financial
or other economic incentives given to the retaining country. Pullbacks
are implemented by means of joint patrols, agreements to prevent
migrants from approaching the border, in some cases funding for
reception centres or camps. As observed in my report “Human rights
impact of the ‘external Dimension’ of European Union Asylum and
Migration policy: out of sight, out of rights?”, this poses a serious
problem of responsibility for violations of the human rights of
migrants denied freedom of movement or access to an asylum procedure
and potentially victims of the worst forms of inhuman treatment.
The present report does not deal with this issue although some reference
will be made to it in the examples given.
3. The
work of international organisations to detect, sanction and prevent
pushbacks
3.1. Council
of Europe
3.1.1. European
Court of Human Rights
16. On the basis of Article 3 of
the European Convention on Human Rights, the Court has reiterated
the importance of individualised procedural safeguards which prohibit
collective expulsions. In
Conka v. Belgium, the
Court found a violation of Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 as the expulsion
procedure had not afforded sufficient guarantees demonstrating that
the personal circumstances of each of those concerned had been genuinely and
individually taken into account.
In
Sharifi and others v Italy and Greece, it
found a violation of Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 due to the lack
of access to individualised procedural safeguards on the port of
Ancona, where the applicants had been detained.
17. The Court held that the Dublin system, the mechanism for deciding
which European Union State is in charge of handling an asylum claim
lodged by a third country national, “must be applied in a manner
compatible with the Convention: no form of collective and indiscriminate
returns could be justified by reference to that system, and it was
for the State carrying out the return to ensure that the destination
country offered sufficient guarantees in the application of its
asylum policy to prevent the person concerned being removed to his
country of origin without an assessment of the risks faced”.
18. In the landmark
Hirsi Jamaa case,
the Court convicted Italy for its pushback operations in international waters
in co-operation with Libya. Automatic returns (pushback operations)
without any individual assessment and the possibility of legal redress
constitute a violation of Articles 3 and 13 of the European Convention
on Human Rights and of Article 4 of its Protocol No. 4.
The Court held that: “where
a State had, exceptionally, exercised its jurisdiction outside its
national territory, it could accept that the exercise of extraterritorial jurisdiction
by that State had taken the form of collective expulsion”. This
case is particularly relevant for incidents involving expulsions
at sea (pushbacks from Italy to Libya, for instance). Once again,
the failure to take the victims’ individual circumstances into account
informed the Court’s finding of a violation of Protocol No. 4.
19. The Court made clear that member States exercising effective
control over migrants exercise jurisdiction and are therefore bound
by the obligations of the Convention, even if this control takes
place outside their territory. Since then, member States tend to
circumvent their responsibility with creative interpretations of
their jurisdiction and territory.
20. Sufi and Elmi v. the United Kingdom developed
the prohibition of States from extraditing or expelling individuals
to another territory where there are substantial grounds for believing
that they face a real risk of torture. The Court held that the situation
of generalised violence in Somalia was intense enough to bar the forced
return of individuals there. In coming to this decision, it assessed
whether fighting was localised or widespread, whether parties used
means and methods of warfare that increased the risks to civilians
and whether the use of such tactics was widespread amongst the parties
to the conflict. This case is relevant for migrants facing refoulement to Syria.
21. In the cases of
N.D. and N.T. v.
Spain (Applications Nos. 8675/15 and 8697/15, judgment
of 3 October 2017) a request for referral to the Grand Chamber was
accepted on 29 January 2018. In that judgment on the automatic return
of sub-Saharan migrants by the Spanish Government to Morocco, the
Court recalled its jurisdiction as established in the
Hirsi judgement and made clear that
member States cannot escape their responsibility while construing
their jurisdiction in a certain way. Member States are hence not
allowed to move their borders inwards to prevent asylum seekers
from making an asylum claim.
22. In relation to the refusal of access to territory and to asylum
application procedures, at the time of reporting the Court had imposed
interim measures (emergency measures demanded of a member State
when there is a risk of irreparable harm to applicants) on Hungary
for the eighth time, ordering a family of Afghan asylum seekers
to be given adequate food supplies while in the Röszke border transit
zone. Recently, the Hungarian authorities forced two asylum-seeking
Afghan families to leave the country under duress, which was condemned
by the UNHCR as deeply shocking and a flagrant violation of international
and European Union law.
3.1.2. Council
of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights
23. The Commissioner has reacted
on several occasions to issues concerning pushbacks, including for instance
concerning the refusal of the Croatian authorities to assist the
Ombudswoman in her investigation of pushback cases. In October 2018,
the Commissioner stated that she was “worried” by reports from “expert refugee
and migrant organisations that provide consistent and substantiated
information about a large number of collective expulsions from Croatia
to Serbia and to Bosnia and Herzegovina of irregular migrants, including potential
asylum seekers”.
24. Similarly, in her report on a visit to Greece
published on 6 November 2018, the
Commissioner noted that several interlocutors had drawn her attention
to consistent allegations of summary returns (pushbacks) to Turkey,
often accompanied by the use of violence, preventing migrants from
accessing the asylum procedure. The Commissioner noted with concern
that such pushback operations were documented in several recent reports
by civil society organisations along with numerous testimonies.
She also noted that, in June 2017, similar documented allegations
led her predecessor to express his concerns
and the Greek Ombudsman to launch
an
ex officio investigation
into this alleged practice.
25. The Commissioner for Human Rights has also expressed concern
after numerous meetings and exchanges with human rights defenders
throughout Europe that the work of these bodies and other civil
society actors was increasingly challenged, in particular with respect
to the protection of refugees, asylum seekers and migrants. She
has made a number of recommendations regarding the importance of
the work of NGOs and civil society in migration and the need for
them to be allowed to carry out their work in an “enabling environment conducive
to their work.”
3.1.3. Special
Representative of the Secretary General on Migration and Refugees
26. After his visit to the region,
the Council of Europe Secretary General’s Special Representative
on Migration and Refugees published a report identifying problems
with access to the territory and asylum procedures in Serbia and
Hungary, expressing his concern that reported practices were contrary
to Article 4 of Protocol No. 4 to the Convention.
In an exchange of views with the
committee on 26 March in Paris, the Special Representative presented
his forthcoming report, which adds to and provides points of comparison
with the findings from my own mission to the region.
27. Regarding Spain, in September 2018 the Special Representative
published a report on his March 2018 fact-finding visit to the country,
in which he criticised the substandard
living conditions in the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla.
With regard to prevention of entry into the territory, he warned
about the “questions raised with regard to the right to seek asylum
and the respect for the principle of
non-refoulement” in
the context of “practices involving information sharing by the border
police with the relevant authorities of a neighbouring country regarding
suspected unauthorised border crossings and the subsequent action
of the authorities in the neighbouring country to intercept migrants
and refugees before they cross the border”.
3.2. United
Nations
28. Whereas Article 3 of the European
Convention on Human Rights implies an absolute prohibition of refoulement, Article 33 of the United
Nations Refugee Convention prohibits the expulsion of a refugee
“in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where
his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his race,
religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or
political opinion”. Article 33.2 leaves some room for exceptions
for persons who are a serious risk for the public security.
29. According to the UNHCR, asylum procedures should “be examined
within the framework of specially established procedures by qualified
personnel having the necessary knowledge and experience, and an understanding
of an applicant’s particular difficulties and needs”. The
practical application of this is explained in detail in “A guide
to international refugee protection and building State asylum systems”.
30. Under article 3 of the United Nations Convention Against Torture
and Other, Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment:
“No State Party shall expel, return (“refouler”)
or extradite a person to another State where there are substantial
grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being subjected to
torture.”
31. Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights prohibits the infliction of torture or cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment or punishment. According to the United Nations
Human Rights Committee, “States parties must not expose individuals
to the danger of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment upon return to another country by way of their extradition,
expulsion or refoulement”.
32. The UNHCR, often in partnership with the IOM, is present in
the field in all countries where pushbacks have been confirmed or
alleged. The assistance of the organisation, both with respect to
information provided on particular cases and guidance during my
fact-finding mission, was essential to the preparation of this report. Although
the UNHCR is not involved in border management, it deals extensively
and on a daily basis with the results of the retention of huge numbers
of migrants in transit zones and reception centres, and is thus
well-placed to bear witness to incidents as they arise.
3.3. European
Union
33. Article 18 of the Charter of
Fundamental Rights of the European Union guarantees the right to
asylum for migrants and its Article 19 prohibits collective explosions.
This article also states that: “No one may be removed, expelled
or extradited to a State where there is a serious risk that he or
she would be subjected to the death penalty, torture or other inhuman
or degrading treatment or punishment.” These articles can also apply
extra-territorially, for instance if EU Agencies operate outside
EU territory.
34. The Qualifications Directive codifies the prohibition of refoulement as defined in the United
Nations Refugee Convention and Article 3 of the convention into
EU secondary law, prohibiting member States from expelling an individual
to a country where they face a real risk of persecution. Article
78 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU)
stipulates that the European Union must provide a policy for asylum,
subsidiary protection and temporary protection, “ensuring compliance
with the principle of non-refoulement.
This policy must be in accordance with [the 1951 Geneva Convention
and its Protocol] and other relevant treaties.”
35. The role of the European Border and Coast Guard Agency (Frontex)
is to “help EU countries and Schengen associated countries manage
their external borders. It also to helps to harmonise border controls across
the EU. The agency facilitates co-operation between border authorities
in each EU country, providing technical support and expertise”.
Frontex has a mandate to co-operation with third countries, which
will be further developed in its new mandate.
The agency has recently been accused
of complicity in the expulsions of migrants from the shores of Italy
to Libya
and of directly participating in
violent pushback operations at the Evros land border between Turkey
and Greece, whereby individuals were beaten and robbed of their possessions.
36. In a 2013 report, the NGO Pro Asyl accused Frontex of complicity
in “maritime pushbacks” between Greece and Turkey, as most of the
pushbacks occurred within its operational area.
More
specifically, the report accuses Frontex of implementing illegal
operations designed to detect, dissuade and intercept migrants wishing
to claim asylum in Greece.
That
the problem of complicity is currently still relevant, is illustrated
by the questions raised about the role of Frontex in pushbacks from
Hungary to Serbia.
37. In December 2018, agents from Frontex were deployed at the
border between Croatia and Bosnia.
Recently released footage appears
to show a Frontex plane observing a van smuggling migrants into
Croatia. The smugglers were subsequently arrested and the migrants
deported to Turkey, raising questions about Frontex complicity in
Croatian pushback operations. During my visit to Croatia and Bosnia
and Herzegovina, the Croatian police explained the extent of co-operation
with Frontex and with the European Union. Frontex involvement in
border management helps reduce cases of police violence in general
and police training funded by
the European Union is an important factor in border control. Nevertheless,
it appears that more should be done by the agency to ensure the
safety and humanitarian treatment of people attempting to cross the
borders in this region (see focus on Croatia below).
4. Cases
of pushback action
4.1. Pushbacks
from European Union member States to countries outside of Europe
4.1.1. The
border between Morocco and Spain at Ceuta and Melilla
38. In 2015, Spain made an amendment
to the Aliens Act, which now provides that “those foreigners who are
detected at Ceuta’s and Melilla’s border lines when trying to pass
the border’s contentious elements to irregularly cross the border
can be rejected to avoid their illegal entry in Spain”.
Although accompanied by provisions
aimed to guarantee international human rights obligations, the amendment
has in practice allowed the Spanish Government to justify collective
expulsions.
39. In the same year, the United Nations Human Rights Committee
expressed concern about the practice of summary return on the borders
of Ceuta and Melilla. The committee was also concerned by changes
to the Aliens Act, noting that expulsions were carried out without
sufficient guarantees of respect for the principle of non-refoulement and that non-Syrian
asylum seekers, as well as those from other Arab countries, were
being denied the right to access asylum offices there. The committee
expressed alarm at reports of ill-treatment, by both Spanish and
Moroccan authorities during expulsions from the enclaves.
40. In July 2018, Spain sent back 116 Sub-Saharan African migrants
who managed to cross the border fence at Ceuta and Melilla,
and a total number of 6 000 migrants
entered the enclaves. Migrants who enter Ceuta and Melilla irregularly
are housed in the Temporary Stay Centre for Immigrants (Centro de
Estancia Temporal de Inmigrantes, CETI), under the authority of
the Employment and Social Security Ministry. The centres are open
but asylum seekers may not be transferred to the mainland, meaning
many remain on the 8.5 or 12 km2 enclaves
throughout the duration of their asylum process. According to Human
Rights Watch: “Migrants faced substandard conditions in arrival
facilities and obstacles to applying for asylum. Summary returns
from the enclaves continued [in 2018].”
Human Rights Watch also reported
overcrowding and a failure to prevent abuse from other migrants
towards LGBTQ asylum seekers.
41. Spain’s approach towards migrants entering irregularly has
led to individuals taking drastic measures, with over 700 migrants
violently attempting to storm the Ceuta fence in July 2018
. But despite widespread criticism
of its policy, the Spanish Interior Ministry recently stated that
there were no immediate plans to halt summary deportations.
4.1.2. Pushbacks
from Poland to Belarus
42. The European Court of Human
Rights issued interim measures to Poland in several cases concerning pushbacks
to Belarus in 2017.
In the same year, 34 complaints
against the Border Guard were registered by the Voivodeship Administrative
Court, while the Supreme Administrative Court recently ruled in
12 cases that the official notes issued and signed only by the Border
Guard to substantiate refusal of entry decisions, referring solely
to economic activity as the reason for foreigners’ entry into the
country, were not credible. Applicants before the European Court
of Human Rights alleged they had been pushed back several times
to Belarus (in one case 28 times!), including after the issue of
the interim measures under Rule 39 to allow them to apply for asylum
in Poland. Despite this, all the applicants were still in Belarus
at the time of the communication. At the time of the report none
of these cases had been judged.
4.1.3. Pushbacks
and pullbacks between Italy and Libya
43. Under a 2008 agreement between
Italy and Libya aimed at preventing irregular migration from Libya
to Italy, Italy carried out several naval operations whereby it
intercepted irregular migrants and returned them to Libya. These
were condemned by the European Court of Human Rights in the
Hirsi Jamaa case. This agreement
was suspended in 2011, but in February 2017 a new memorandum of
understanding provided for support from Italy to the Libyan Coast
Guard to intercept migrant boats trying to cross from Libya to Italy.
In this context, an application was filed with the Court arguing
that Italy was responsible for a fatal rescue incident in November
2017 in which the Libyan coastguard allegedly interfered in attempts
by an NGO vessel to rescue 130 migrants from a sinking dinghy, as
a result of which at least 20 migrants died and survivors suffered
severe human rights violations in Libya. The application was filed
by the Global Legal Action Network (GLAN) and the Association for
Juridical Studies on Immigration (ASGI). The case is currently under
examination.
44. In Assembly
Resolution
2228 (2018) “Human rights impact of the ‘external dimension’ of
European Union asylum and migration policy: out of sight, out of
rights?”, paragraph 11.3 asks the Government of Italy to “investigate
fully the allegations of experts and international NGOs, such as
Amnesty International, of returns to Libya of migrants picked up
at sea in the Italian search and rescue zone, and of collusion between
the Libyan coastguard and the human smugglers in the Mediterranean”.
The situation has, if anything, worsened since the publication of
that report, as political tensions in Libya have risen and NGOs
are no longer authorised to carry out search and rescue operations
in the Mediterranean.
4.2. Pushbacks
from the European Union to Council of Europe member States (Schengen
and non-Schengen borders)
4.2.1. Pushbacks
between Greece and Turkey
45. In April 2017, some 3 600 asylum
seekers attempted to cross the Evros river from Turkey into Greece.
By the end of July 2017, 9 480 had
attempted to make the crossing and the UNHCR recorded a total of 18 014 registrations
at the land border as at 31 December 2018.
Since mid-2017 there have been frequent reports
of pushbacks into Turkey at the Evros border.
Human Rights Watch has accused
the Greek authorities of summarily expelling migrants at this border,
where migrants were allegedly beaten, robbed of their possessions
and subjected to ill-treatment by “forces wearing uniforms and masks
without recognisable insignia”.
These reports have been corroborated
by other media outlets.
46. The Council of Europe Human Rights Commissioner has called
on Turkey several times to ensure that human rights are upheld,
in particular in the context of the implementation of the 2016 EU–Turkey
deal.
47. In February 2018, the Greek Council for Refugees (GCR) reported
that “large families, pregnant women, victims of torture but also
minors,” were victims of pushbacks at the Evros border. According
to the GCR: “A common element in their testimonies is their arbitrary
detention in police stations, under extremely poor hygiene conditions,
the use of violence and their subsequent transfer, crammed in vans,
on one side of the river, wherefrom, on overcrowded boats, they
are transferred to the other side, with their lives exposed in danger
and in violation of fundamental human rights.”
A follow-up report referring to
continued allegations of such practices was released by the GCR
in collaboration with the Greek NGOs ARSIS and Human Rights 360 in
December 2018.
48. In April 2018, the Council of Europe’s Committee on the Prevention
of Torture and Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment (CPT) reported the
following after a visit to Greece regarding police and border guard stations
in the Evros region: “Several foreign nationals interviewed in private
at three places of detention made credible allegations about the
occurrence of push-back operations from Greece to Turkey by boat
across the Evros River border, after they had been apprehended by
Greek police and border guards. A number of them alleged that they
had been physically ill-treated (including baton blows to the head)
by police and border guard officers or (para-)military commandos
during such push-back operations. … the CPT considers that, at least until
early March 2018, these persons were not effectively protected against
the risk of
refoulement. The Committee
recommends that the Greek authorities act to prevent any form of
push-backs taking place, and effectively protect foreign nationals
against the risk of
refoulement.”
4.2.2. Pushbacks
from Hungary
49. Legal amendments that entered
into force on 5 July 2016 allowed the Hungarian police to automatically pushback
asylum seekers who were apprehended within 8 km of the Serbian–Hungarian
or Croatian– Hungarian border, depriving them of the opportunity
to lodge an asylum claim.
As a result, between 5 July and 31 December
2016, 19 057 migrants were denied access (i.e. prevented from entering
or escorted back to the border) at the Hungarian–Serbian border.
Irregular entry into Hungary through the border fence is punishable
by up to 10 years’ imprisonment – and/or the imposition of an expulsion
order. Lodging an asylum claim does not suspend the criminal procedure,
placing Hungary in breach of Article 31 of the 1951 Geneva Convention.
50. Further legal reforms in March 2017 and in 2018 allowed successively
for irregularly staying migrants found anywhere in Hungary to be
escorted to the external side of the border fence with Serbia and
for the criminalisation of individuals and organisations considered
to be assisting irregular crossing.
In 2017, 9 136 migrants were pushed
back from the territory of Hungary to the external side of the border
fence with Serbia. The only legal means for those travelling along
the Balkans to enter Hungary is to lodge an asylum claim at one
of the “transit zones”, erected along the border between Serbia
and Croatia. In practice, however, the number of migrants granted
permission to enter Hungary is very small: Hungary applies the policy
of non-entry to the territory in the transit zones. By January 2018,
only one asylum seeker per day per transit zone, five days a week
(a total of 10 persons per week) was allowed to enter Hungary via
each of the two transit zones.
51. Médecins sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) has recorded
hundreds of injuries inflicted by Hungarian border guards, including
dog bites, irritations caused by pepper spray and bruises caused
by assaults,
noting further that 76% of children
treated by its clinicians cite the State authorities as the main perpetrators
of violence against them.
Human Rights Watch notes
that “[a]sylum seekers are detained indefinitely in substandard
border camps without a possibility to challenge their detention.
They face violence during operations to force them back to the border,
and limitations on meaningful access to asylum”
and that “[b]y August, authorities
had limited daily entry of asylum seekers to one or two asylum seekers
per day, leaving thousands stranded in poor conditions in Serbia”
. During a visit to Hungary, the
CPT stated that injuries found on the bodies of interviewees confirmed
reports of beatings during pushback operations.
52. A related recent dissuasive measure taken by Hungary has been
food deprivation of third-country nationals detained in the transit
zones, evidenced as from August 2018. After several interim measures
issued by the European Court of Human Rights following complaints
by the Hungarian Helsinki Committee (HHC), the Hungarian Immigration
and Asylum Office undertook to provide food to all asylum seekers
in the transit zone. But on 8 February 2019, the parents of an Iraqi
family of five detained in the transit zone were refused food by the
Immigration and Asylum Office for five days, until a new interim
measure was issued by the Court ordering the practice to be stopped.
Between February 2019 and 23 April 2019, the HHC had to request
interim measures on a case-by-case basis in a total of eight cases,
pertaining to 13 starved people in the transit zones, bringing the
total number of starvation cases since August 2018 to 13, and that
of affected individuals to 21.
53. As mentioned above, Afghan families have recently been returned
to Serbia. According to the HCC, 11 Afghan nationals residing in
the Hungarian transit zone were faced with a choice of either returning
to Kabul or crossing the border into Serbia. The UNHCR called the
action “a flagrant violation of international and EU law”, urging
Frontex to refrain from co-operation in these joint return operations.
54. The proliferation of unofficial “border hunters”, who have
subsequently become part of the Hungarian border patrol force, has
also been a problem in Hungary. According to Doctors Without Borders,
such groups promote “xenophobic discourse and violence against refugees,
asylum seekers and other migrants in the country”.
There
are similar reports of violent militias on the borders of Bulgaria
and Slovenia.
4.2.3. Pushbacks
from Croatia (Schengen candidate) to Bosnia and Herzegovina
55. In 2017, Human Rights Watch
reported that the Croatian police were violently expelling migrants
back to the Serbian border without giving them the chance to lodge
an asylum claim. Migrants claimed that they were assaulted and robbed
of their personal belongings.
It made similar reports that the
Croatian authorities were violently expelling migrants to Bosnia
and Herzegovina,
publishing interviews with several
migrants who claimed that “Croatian police deported them to Bosnia
and Herzegovina without due process after detaining them deep inside
Croatian territory. Sixteen, including women and children, said
police beat them with batons, kicked and punched them, stole their
money, and either stole or destroyed their mobile phones”.
56. The Belgrade Center for Human Rights and the International
Aid Network published a report “Documenting Abuse and Collective
Expulsions of Refugees and Migrants” which includes data on pushbacks and
violence against refugees and migrants by Croatian border police.
Data from the report were collected in line with the Istanbul Protocol,
including forensic medical opinions issued in individual cases.
57. These claims have been corroborated by several other international
organisations and civil society groups. According to the Asylum
Information Database (AIDA) “people from Afghanistan, but also from
Iraq, Pakistan, Syria and other countries, were not given access
to the asylum procedure, although some explicitly and repeatedly
approached the Croatian police, expressing their wish to apply for
international protection”.
The methods used by Croatian police
were described in detail in a joint report by the NGO No Name Kitchen and
other civil society groups, which reported that migrants were deprived
of the right to lodge an asylum claim.
58. In December 2018, No Name Kitchen documented three cases of
individuals being apprehended in Slovenia and subsequently pushed
back to Croatia and then to Bosnia,
and
cases of pushbacks from Slovenia have also been reported by the
UNHCR.
Between
January and August 2018, 140 people reported being pushed back from
Romania. In Bulgaria, migrants and asylum seekers have been expelled
to Turkey without due process. Again, migrants report being beaten,
assaulted with dogs and robbed of their money, mobile phones, food,
drinks and other items. Border crossings into Bulgaria increased
in 2018, and between August and October 2018, a total of 2 416 people
were detained by the Bulgarian authorities. In November 2018, Bulgaria
and Greece collectively pushed back 11 000 migrants, with many being
stripped, beaten and robbed of their food and possessions before
being expelled to Turkey.
4.2.4. A
closer examination: findings from my mission to Croatia and Bosnia
and Herzegovina, 26-29 March 2019
59. Croatia has the longest external
land border of the European Union, spanning 1 300 km in all, of
which 1 100 km separate the country from Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The authorities we met with during our visit emphasised that the
closing of the humanitarian corridors through the Balkans and the
hard borders set up by neighbouring Hungary and Slovenia, as well
as the responsibility accompanying Croatia’s candidacy to become
part of the Schengen area, had made tight border control a priority
nationally as well as for the European Union. According to the authorities,
Croatia was nearing readiness to enter the area, as the Serbian border
was now secure and most problems concerned the Bosnian border, despite
these border closures. My attention was also drawn to the fact that
the effects of the displacement of 750 000 people during the war
in ex-Yugoslavia were still felt.
60. Croatia had supported the 2018 United Nations Global Compact
for Regular, Safe and Orderly Migration and the multilateral approach
it represented, as well as the compact’s insistence on the fact
that countries of transit and of destination needed to be heard.
Croatia itself had received 150 Syrians relocated from Turkey in 2018,
and a further 100 so far in 2019, under the management of the Interior
Ministry.
61. According to the Croatian Government, as very few of the asylum
seekers arriving at the border wish to stay in Croatia, a great
majority tries to enter irregularly to avoid finger-printing (and
consequently the responsibility for Croatia based on the Dublin
Regulation). In 2017, 70% of the people who registered as asylum
seekers left Croatia before the end of the asylum procedure. During
my visits to the camps in the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Velika Kladuša and Bihać, I was informed that a great variety of nationalities
are present in the camps: among them are North African, Syrian,
Afghan, Somalian, Eritrean and Iraqi nationals. Despite the fact
that an individual examination of protection needs is always required,
this variety shows even more that part of them would be entitled
to protection.
62. There was consensus among the authorities with whom I met
during my visit that reforming the Dublin Regulation with regard
to the principle of first EU country of entry for asylum application
was critical. If the system had been applied strictly, there would
have been 600 000 applications for asylum in Croatia (in the period
during which Dublin Regulation was not applied in Greece and Italy),
whereas in fact there had been only 150 applications during this
period. In its judgments AS (C-490/16)
and Jafari (C-646/16), the
European Court of Human Rights interpreted the irregular entry criteria
in the Dublin Regulation in light of the practice of the Slovenian
authorities during the time of the mass border crossings in 2016
to facilitate transfers to Austria and other countries. The Court
considered such crossings still irregular and that there was therefore
no reason not to apply Article 13 of the Dublin Regulation. Although
in 2018 other member States requested a Dublin transfer to Croatia
in 1 263 cases, the number of actual transfers to Croatia in that
year was 126.
63. Frustration was high in the Croatian Government on aspects
of the Dublin reform negotiations, for instance on the possibility
of carrying out border and asylum procedures at control centres
in coastal States. Croatia did not have problems in coastal regions
and rejected the idea of opening a sea passage for migrants.
64. The European Union was providing financial support for technical
operational needs to the country, including 7 million euros for
border policing and a further 6.8 million for training, although
this support was considered insufficient in view of the challenges.
An operational agreement with Frontex enabled aircraft surveillance
to be carried out at the border, and 20 case workers were assigned
to asylum procedures. Croatia had improved its border management
to a point that it was now able to provide expertise to Serbia and
North Macedonia.
65. Another key issue was the conclusion of readmission agreements
between Croatia and countries of origin, but talks with Afghanistan,
Pakistan and Iran had so far not yielded results through a lack
of incentives for these countries. A working agreement on readmission
with Bosnia and Herzegovina was under way, although the Bosnian
authorities were reluctant to take migrants back without very precise
proof of presence. An agreement with Serbia was currently suspended.
According to the Croatian Government, visa liberalisation policies
in other countries caused problems for those further towards the
centre of Europe.
– Border control and policing
66. I was able to exchange on border
control directly with the Croatian Border Police force at the Cetingrad station,
where the chief of the station and the regional head explained that
80% to 90% of equipment and infrastructure was paid for by the European
Union. Night vision with thermal detectors allowed surveillance during
darkness and the Frontex aircraft based in Zadar controlled the
frontier and shared relevant information. In all, 6 500 officers
were deployed along the border; on the Bosnian side there were only
two to four officers between sectors. Some 620 smugglers had been
caught in 2018, and the police denounced huge numbers of what was
termed “fake refugees”.
67. The work of the police was complicated by the need for local
regular crossing, controlled by biometric passport inspection at
certain crossing points, which were periodically the target of attempts
to cross by large groups of illegal immigrants. One such incident
had led to the closure of the border at Maljević for one week in 2018
and resulted in migrants being transferred by coach to Velika Kladuša
(Bosnia) without crossing the Croatian border.
68. A mixed patrol system with the Bosnian police was organised
along the “green border” of 25 km around Cetingrad. The Croatian
police force received training on reception of persons asking for
international protection, in which case an officer for migration
came to fill in registration forms and people were taken to the Pörin
reception centre. The police’s official remit was to prevent illegal
immigration and cross-border trafficking. If registered at the police
station, migrants were obliged to give fingerprints, which, according
to the Bosnian police, most wished to avoid (once again in the context
of the Dublin “first country of entry” rule). It should be noted
that those joint patrol operations may have a deterring effect for
asylum seekers to approach official border crossing points and ask
for protection. According to the Ombudsman, the objective and effect
of these joint patrols is that migrants are discouraged from approaching
the Croatian–Bosnian border. In this light, it is crucial that clear
information on the right to seek asylum is communicated proactively.
69. During my meeting with her, the State Secretary for European
and International Affairs explained that accusations of police violence
were now the subject of inquiry at ministry level instead of within
the police’s own ranks, which ensured an objective assessment of
the facts and could lead to sanctions (although according to other
sources none had yet been pronounced). But she was persistent in
her denial of the alleged violence used by the border police and
of the pushbacks. According to the State Secretary, asylum seekers
try to avoid contact with the Croatian authorities in order to travel
further north to western European countries.
– Meetings with the Ombudsperson’s
office
70. I was struck by the large discrepancies
between the statements of the authorities and non-State actors like
the Ombudsman and NGOs. The authorities expressed mistrust of NGOs,
seen as questioning unnecessarily the country’s border management,
accusing the Croatian police of mistreatment where cases were extremely
rare, and in some cases encouraging border crossing by illegal migrants.
On the other hand, the findings of the Ombudsman and NGOs were so
consistent and substantiated that I as rapporteur had to take them
seriously and investigate.
71. In this context, the Deputy Ombudswoman of Croatia told me
about the high number of complaints (over 200) she had lodged with
the Ministry of the Interior about alleged pushbacks and collective
expulsions from Croatia to Bosnia and Herzegovina but also from
Croatia to Serbia. Only 1% of them had been declared admissible,
which caused the Ombudswoman concerns about the level of independence
with which the complaints are being dealt. Although the ministry
has informed us about a new, more centralised procedure applied
for complaints, it was not yet clear to the Ombudswoman how the
impartiality will be safeguarded in the future procedure.
72. Many of the complaints dealt with the experiences of undocumented
migrants on the Croatian territory who were confronted with the
authorities. According to their testimonies, they were apprehended
and brought to the police station. They claimed that they were not
provided with information about the possibility to request asylum,
but were instead brought back to the border or into Bosnian territory.
As official return procedures to Bosnia and Serbia were not always
easy, the detention period could be long. Those who managed to lodge
an asylum claim had to wait for long periods, often in detention.
The number of people managing to lodge asylum claims had dropped
by 40% in 2018 as compared to 2017. Length of detention in police
stations was also a concern, as was the lack of adequate health
care in several detention centres. According to the testimonies and
the Ombudswoman’s own experience, the conditions of detention were
worrying, as no health care was available on a daily basis, but
was limited to emergency health care, and psychological support
and interpretation facilities were lacking.
73. Cases of suspected refoulement included,
for instance, decisions concerning a large group of people turned
away in 1.5 hours with exactly the same wording for each person
“Economic migrants, do not wish to stay.” Usually in these cases,
decisions ordered return with voluntary departure within a seven-day
deadline. The apparent absence of legal border crossings seemed
to indicate that pushbacks were happening. The European Union’s
request for “expediency” at borders, even accompanied by the need
for due process, encouraged Schengen countries to process and return
cases without sufficient individual guarantees of access to information
and assistance, and the Schengen implementation rules allowed for
border authorities to “discourage” potentially illegal entrants,
which allowed a margin of interpretation leaning towards refoulement.
74. Additional problems outlined by independent bodies, international
organisations and NGOs concerned the non-registration of cases,
the apprehension of migrants anywhere within the territory and transportation
to border areas where decisions were taken without allowing sufficient
time for appeal, absence of interpretation and misinformation about
rights to protection.
75. My meeting with the Deputy Ombudsperson of Croatia corroborated,
notably, the conclusions of the Council of Europe Human Rights Commissioner
concerning increasing (administrative and other) obstacles facing
human rights defenders and NGOs dealing with migrants in many parts
of Europe. For instance, the National Preventive Mechanisms in place
since June 2018 required advance written requests from the Ombudsperson’s
office to consult specific police records rather than holding database
information available without restrictions. Lawyers and NGOs were
seeing their access to persons in need of assistance reduced and
their presence resented, if not hampered, by the authorities. These
restrictions illustrate that it has become more difficult to reach
out to migrants in need of help or to monitor border practices,
and that the democratic space is progressively shrinking.
– Reception Centre for Asylum
Seekers
76. In Zagreb I visited the Reception
Centre for Asylum Seekers with the Director of the centre and Ms Juliette
Delescluse, Field co-ordinator for Croatia and General Co-ordinator
for the Balkans with Médecins du Monde Belgium, who was providing
on-site medical care. The centre accommodates adults as well as adolescents
over 16 (on the advice of guardians), either asylum applicants,
who stayed on average up to one year, or people in return or other
procedures whose stays were often just a few days. Children living
in families in the centre attended local schools. Efforts were made
to reduce asylum waiting times to six months. Asylum seekers were
authorised to work nine months after their application.
77. Médecins du Monde had been present since 2016, providing health
care, first aid and treatment, referring to local specialist doctors
where necessary. A general practitioner was present every day as
well as two psychologists, an interpreter for Arabic and one for
Farsi. A general medical examination and a psychological consultation
were carried out on arrival.
78. Médecins du Monde also made a weekly visit to the Putina detention
centre among others, but the authorities were reluctant to provide
or allow more regular health care for migrants considered to be
“only in transit”. The absence of daily care meant frequent recourse
to emergency services, which was expensive. However, the situation
was improving, and the objective was to assist in putting in place
a functioning public health system. 20% of patients were under 18,
30% were women, 50% of the patients referred to specialists were
women. As regards allegations of police violence, some people bore
traces of police violence, and were directed to the Ombudsperson
to lodge complaints. Local doctors were reluctant to report injuries
as the result of police violence, and there had been so far no response
by the authorities to the cases filed.
– Non-governmental organisations
79. While in Zagreb I was able to meet with the NGOs Centre for
Peace Studies and Are You Syrious, who provided legal assistance
and other services to migrants.
Lawyers funded by the UNHCR visited
camps for two hours per week. Between April and October 2017, NGOs
had escorted 300 people to the Croatian border who had asked for
their support, announcing their arrival to the police, but this
had been stopped as it gave asylum seekers false hopes of receiving
protection. The will of migrants to travel on from Croatia was stronger than
the Dublin Rules, so escorting them to official posts amounted to
forcing them to register where they did not wish to make their claim.
Croatian authorities appeared not to be prepared to contact or receive
them. In addition, the authorities resented any action they considered
as “interference” by the NGOs. Also these organisations have received
many testimonies about pushbacks, a significant part accompanied
by violence. They recalled a notorious case of a six-year-old girl
who died in such action, as she was forced with her family to walk
on train tracks, where she was ran over by a train. When her parents
tried to return to Croatia, they were pushed back again.
80. All non-State actors we interviewed informed me about many
other cases in which detected migrants reported not being sent to
a police station, but immediately brought to the border or far inland
within Bosnian territory, implying that no access to an asylum procedure
was offered and official return procedures were circumvented. In
some cases, this happened even with migrants who were found in the
north of Croatia, sometimes after a formal readmission procedure
applied by the Slovenian authorities. An element that appeared to
be structural, especially in those informal procedures, was the
brutal way pushbacks were carried out. Goods, in particular mobile
phones, were destroyed, people were intimidated, and many people
reported that violence was used against them.
81. Respondents also explained how systematic and well-documented
these practices were. They referred to several documentaries in
which the Croatian authorities were shown mistreating groups of
migrants, among them women and minors, while directing them to the
Bosnian territory. This was also confirmed by the Mayor of the Bosnian
city of Bihać, Mr Šuhret Fazlić, who claimed he had been confronted
with special units of the Croatian authorities in the forests within
Bosnian territory, forcing migrants to walk. On other occasions,
the Mayor had met groups of migrants who had been stripped of their
shoes or even all of their clothing, allegedly by the Croatian authorities.
– Situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina
82. I was able to visit two camps
in the Bosnian canton of Una Sana, in Velika Kladuša and the Bira
camp in Bihać, accompanied by Mr Seid Husagic, Senior Field Coordinator
with the UNHCR. I met with the IOM Co-ordinator in Una-Sana Canton,
representatives of the Vaša Prava Legal Aid Network and representatives
of the Danish Refugee Council. I also visited the Sedra (converted
hotel) family reception centre operated by the IOM/UNHCR.
83. Conditions in the Velika Kladuša camp were bad, although I
was informed that until November 2018 there had only been an improvised
camp of tents, whereas now a disused warehouse and containers provided dry
shelter. However, despite the efforts of the IOM and UNHCR there
was overcrowding, a lack of any form of occupation, and visible
mental and physical health problems. Conditions in the Bira camp
in Bihać were horrifying, again accommodation was in warehouses
but with interior water leaks, promiscuity of accommodation and
lack of sanitary installations. There were currently 1 600 migrants
in the camp (with recent spikes of numbers of up to almost 3 000).
According to the UNHCR, health care outside the camps was an even
bigger problem than inside them. Migrants were principally from
northern Africa, followed principally by Afghanistan, Syria, Eritrea
and Somalia.
84. During my visit of the Velika Kladuša camp, I met with a family,
consisting of grandparents, parents and young children, who had
just been returned by the Croatian authorities after being detected
on Croatian territory. They explained that they had tried to ask
for asylum but that they did not get the chance. They appeared to
be exhausted, as they had had to walk a long distance after being
dropped by the Croatian police. Several respondents we spoke to
on the Bosnian territory, from where migrants make multiple attempts
to cross the Croatian border, emphasised that most migrants aimed
to request asylum in Croatia. They explicitly challenged the statement
of the Croatian authorities that migrants preferred to be returned
to Bosnia in order to make another attempt to cross into Croatia
irregularly, rather than applying for asylum in Croatia.
85. In Bihać I met with Mayor Mr Šuhret Fazlić. He stated that
the Croatian police were returning migrants across the border in
contradiction to extradition procedures and agreements. There was
an 8-km zone into Bosnian territory where Croatian police were authorised
to “discourage” people from trying to enter Croatia, but this distance
was not respected. The attempts to close the European Union’s eastern
border had made the situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina untenable,
with thousands of migrants “disappearing” into the region on both
sides of the border but especially the Bosnian side where police
patrols were few. As mentioned before, the Mayor had witnessed on
many occasions that Croatian authorities carrying weapons (he presumed
they belonged to a special unit within the border police) operated
deep into the Bosnian territory while returning migrants. The mayor
uttered his criticism of the inhuman character of the actions, but
also of the unlawfulness, as they deprived asylum seekers of the
right to asylum and they violated the sovereignty of the Republic
of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
86. The representative of the UNHCR explained that it was almost
impossible for migrants to have access to asylum in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
There were only a few officials (RSDs) in the whole country tasked
with the examination of asylum requests, where according to the
UNHCR, 25 000 have expressed their intention to seek asylum. As
many of the migrants are stuck in the country, it is important to
have them registered and to offer them protection and support to
build a future. He mentioned several procedural obstacles: an expression of
the intention to ask asylum expired after two weeks, but it was
very difficult to lodge an asylum claim in time, due to the lack
of capacity. The only office to lodge a claim was located in Sarajevo,
but migrants who travelled to Sarajevo from North Bosnia were not
allowed to return to the camps in the north due to the limitation
of numbers of migrants in each “zone” of Bosnia. Thousands of migrants
resided outside the camps, lacking any access to health care, information,
legal assistance or safety.
4.2.5. Pushbacks
from Bulgaria (non-Schengen) to Turkey
87. Pushbacks and other violent
action appear to remain widespread along the border of Bulgaria
with Turkey. Turkish agencies and organisations report that at least
10 000 individuals are being pushed back collectively from Bulgaria
and Greece into Turkey on a monthly basis. Low numbers of new arrivals
into Bulgaria in the first half of 2018 and a sharp increase in
the second half indicate unofficial cross-border co-operation between
the Bulgarian and Turkish governments to prevent access through
this external EU border, at least for the duration of the Bulgarian
Presidency of the EU Council. According to the Asylum in Europe organisation
(AIDA), alongside pushbacks this co-operation made access to the
territory and international protection of those in need of it all
the more difficult.
4.3. Pushbacks
between Council of Europe member States not members of the European
Union
4.3.1. Pushbacks
from Serbia to North Macedonia
88. Access to the territory and
to asylum procedure remains also problematic in Serbia as noted
by the Council of Europe’s Special Representative on Migration and
Refugees in 2017
, which includes pushbacks in
border areas with Bulgaria and North Macedonia, as well as at the
Belgrade International Airport. While the practice of having joint
military and police forces at the borders was abolished in April
2018, pushback practices have continued.
Recent legislative changes also include
provisions which allow for refusal of entry without suspensive effect
of the appeal.
89. The Human Rights Committee expressed concerns related to “collective
and violent” denial of access to territory.
These concerns
have also been shared by the Committee Against Torture (CAT)
and
Amnesty International,
while the UNHCR reported this problem
for the first time in 2012.
In 2015, CAT recommended that Serbia
establish “formalised border monitoring mechanisms, in co-operation
with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
and civil society organizations”.
90. Since 2017 the UNHCR has implemented a Border Protection Monitoring
(BPM) system in the western Balkans countries, which captures some
of the movements in south-eastern Europe, including pushbacks. In 2018,
more than 4 400 cases involving pushbacks for this region were recorded,
including (but not exclusively) between Serbia and North Macedonia
or Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia, as well as from countries neighbouring
the region, notably Croatia and Hungary. Some 140 cases of arbitrary
arrests or detention were mentioned during pushback records, and
848 cases of denial of access to asylum application mentioned by groups
of people pushed back. The BPM will be used to monitor pushbacks
along the Albanian, Montenegrin, Bosnian and Croatian routes and
contacts reinforced with the respective Ombudspersons.
4.3.2. Allegations of pushback action between
Georgia and Armenia
91. In 2018, according to official
statistics on border crossing, of the 11 994 014 individuals entering
Georgia 15 908 were denied entry (compared to previous years both
entries and denials were gradually increasing: in 2017 these represented
respectively 11 369 817 and 7 861. The said individuals were originally
from Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Eritrea, Iraq and Iran. Denials
concerned mainly Iranian nationals, followed by Syrian, Turkish,
Yemenite, Afghan, Iraqi, Eritrean and Somalian nationals.
92. In the course of 2018, the UNHCR received a number of unconfirmed
reports of potential indirect refoulement, very
few of which were followed up by enquiry and action. One case of
potential refoulement was avoided
through the UNHCR’s immediate intervention with the Deputy Head
of the Border Police in favour of an Iranian citizen, and another
case of confirmed indirect refoulment also
concerned an Iranian asylum seeker in Georgia who had been sent
back to Armenia. In light of these cases, the UNHCR had reached
an agreement with the Refuge Issues Division, at the Migration Department
of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, where cases known to the UNHCR
would be analysed and follow-up given.
4.4. Pushbacks between EU member States
4.4.1. Pushbacks between France and Italy
(and Spain)
93. Regular reports attest the
refusal of entry without protection needs being taken into account
at the Italian border with France. France plans to maintain controls
at its Schengen borders after the end of April 2019. On the basis
of instructions reportedly introducing the practice of racial profiling,
the Border Police and other police forces deployed in the region
have boarded trains arriving from Italy and controlled passengers
who appeared to be of African origin. Persons who explicitly expressed
the intention to seek asylum have been refused entry by the French
authorities on the basis that Italy is responsible for their claim,
without being placed under the formal procedure foreseen by the
Dublin Regulation.
94. Despite strong condemnation by monitoring bodies, civil society
organisations, as well as court rulings condemning Prefectures for
failing to register the asylum applications of people entering through
Italy, practice remains unchanged. In response to a report by the
General Controller of Places of Detention (CGLPL), the Ministry
of the Interior stated in June 2018 that refusals of entry were
not in contravention of the law and implied that asylum applications
were made before French officials on Italian soil.
The restrictions on access to the territory
of France have been coupled with criminalisation of humanitarian
assistance, as convictions continue to be delivered in other cases.
95. The French–Spanish land border became one of the main entry
points to France in 2018. Spanish media have reported that migrants
are pushed back from France to Spain without appropriate guarantees,
in procedures lasting less than 20 minutes. Filmed footage has shown
Border Police officials controlling groups of migrants in Hendaye,
placing them on board a van and leaving them at the border instead
of handing them over to their Spanish counterparts. Civil society
organisations and local authorities have denounced what appears
to be a practice mirroring the methods of the Border Police on the
Italian border.
5. Recommendations
96. Pushback action and policies
in Council of Europe member States are thus evidenced in many regions, mainly
concentrated at European Union/Schengen borders but not restricted
to these. Collective refoulement represents
a flagrant denial of the human rights of those prevented from entering
Europe, beginning with the right of access to protection, information,
due process and legal assistance.
97. Migrants who arrive at the border of Council of Europe member
States cannot be subjected to inhuman and degrading treatment as
a result of national policies, and operational mechanisms must enable
European countries to avoid the acute human suffering of all migrants,
whether refugees, asylum seekers or economic migrants, forced to
live in insalubrious, unhealthy and dangerous conditions at Europe’s
borders. Assisted returns in line with the right to human dignity
are possible and best practises should be used as a basis for EU investment,
at the same time encouraging development co-operation in countries
of origin, especially on the African continent, as a solution to
the root causes of mass migration.
98. The draft texts for adoption contain concrete recommendations
for putting an end to pushback policies and practise by Council
of Europe member States. They include recommendations already made
by Council of Europe bodies and by the UNHCR with reference to applicable
United Nations and European Union legislation, as well as points
which I have gathered from exchanges with NGOs such as Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch and from my experience on the ground.
99. Among these recommendations feature prominently the need for
access to the possibility of making a claim for protection at borders,
for legal aid, accessible and comprehensible information and to
assistance from NGOs at places where human rights violations take
place (transit zones along borders, in particular). NGOs must be
supported by national authorities rather than being criminalised
in their action and portrayed as obstacles or promoters of smuggling.
Their access and capacity to act and monitor in border regions should
be managed, but not limited.
100. Another problem is the lack of access or presence of medical
services at borders, which means that there is often no medical
care, but also no formal means of testifying to physical violence
which may be carried out by border officials, and therefore no proof
of the causes of the violence. Authorities often claim that injuries are
caused by migrants using violence against one another.
101. Independent border monitoring is essential in putting an end
to pushback practices and policies. Tripartite monitoring agreements
between national authorities competent for border controls, the
UNHCR and NGOs specialised in asylum and immigration law are useful
tools to mainstream sustainable border monitoring. This should not
exclude border monitoring performed by national human rights institutions
and international organisations. Any type of border monitoring should
allow for unannounced visits to all border areas and the findings
of border monitoring exercises should be published.
102. Allegations of violence and mistreatment must be adequately
addressed, and a complaints mechanism ensured. Investigation of
incidents should where possible be combined with protective measures
for alleged victims pending investigation. Prevention measures must
be introduced against informal forced return procedures, including
standardised procedures at borders and clear rules of conduct.
103. In addition, the lack of attention from the public and media
which impedes legal procedures through the difficulty in substantiating
evidence to use for litigation. Those cases which have been brought
have been made possible by research journalism and documentation.
Research should be stepped up, especially as satellite and digital
data is enabling ever-growing use in registering the time and location
of human rights violations.
104. Finally, improved relocation is key in reducing the pressure
on Europe’s bordering countries, to avoid overcrowding, unnecessary
detention and generally unacceptable reception conditions for asylum
seekers. At the same time, more priority should be given to integration
of protected persons, generalising best practices from countries
with proven success in this process.