1. Introduction
1. The motion for a resolution
on family reunification in the Council of Europe member States (
Doc. 14249) by Ms Sahiba Gafarova and several of her colleagues
points to weaknesses in existing legal standards and in their implementation
with regard to family tracing and family reunification, as revealed
by the recent refugee and migration crisis.
2. Family reunification has moved to the centre of public and
political debates on immigration in Europe. In many member States,
governments have put in place selective policies in order to limit
the number of foreigners entering as family migrants. Because of
the increasing numbers of incoming refugees and migrants, several
member States have restricted their family reunification policies.
This is a cause for concern, both for the families divided by the
fact that a person was compelled to leave his or her home country
and family, but also for the host country under various socio-political
aspects.
3. The present report provides an overview of some of the most
pertinent legal aspects of family reunification of persons under
international protection as well as regular migrants and provides
guidance on how provisions on family reunification should be interpreted
in a manner that fully complies with international law and fundamental
rights. It emphasises the importance of ensuring the right to family
reunion of migrants and refugees and of protecting individuals against
any arbitrary decision by public authorities.
4. The Council of Europe strives to achieve greater unity among
its members based on common values, in particular those enshrined
in the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5, “the Convention”), including
the right to the protection of family life under its Article 8.
This fundamental right applies to refugees and regular migrants
alike.
5. It is important for the Council of Europe to address this
subject through its various organs in a synergetic and co-ordinated
manner. Therefore, I wish to thank the Council of Europe Commissioner
for Human Rights for having invited me to the Round Table on family
reunification for refugees with the European Network of Human Rights
Institutions in Brussels on 18 October 2017. The present report
should be read in conjunction with the Issue Paper published by
the Commissioner on “Realising the right to family reunification
of refugees in Europe”, which examines family reunification for
refugees as a pressing human rights issue.
6. Finally, I wish to thank my parliamentary assistant at the
Danish Parliament Ms Eva Saez Casado for her support throughout
the preparation of this report.
2. Relevant international standards and
action
7. Respect for, and protection
of, family life are recognised as fundamental human rights in many international
texts such as Article 16 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
Articles 9 and 10 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights
of the Child and Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
In addition, the revised European Social Charter (ETS No. 163) stipulates
rights of migrant workers including family rights. However, these
international texts do not seek to regulate the status of refugees
or persons under subsidiary protection. Therefore, they are silent
as to whether and under which circumstances the rights of a child,
a spouse or another family member require their entry into a particular
country which has granted international protection to one family
member.
8. In this context, the European Agreement on the Abolition of
Visas for Refugees (ETS No. 31) should be given more attention.
Under its Article 1, refugees lawfully resident in the territory
of a Contracting Party shall be exempt from the obligation to obtain
visas for entering or leaving the territory of another Party by
any frontier, if their visit is of not more than three months' duration.
If a person has received the status of refugee in one country, he
or she would be able to visit family members in another country
without a visa. This could facilitate refugees maintaining family
relations across borders, in particular with regard to extended
family members who would not qualify for family reunification, but
also for minor refugees who are 16 years or older and out of school and
could thus work at a distance from their parents or siblings.
9. The 1951 United Nations Convention relating to the Status
of Refugees does not address the right to family reunification,
as it presupposes that all members of a family are equally recognised
as refugees by their country of residence. However, the Office of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has developed
expert guidelines on family reunification of refugees.
Furthermore, the UNHCR’s Executive Committee
has adopted a series of conclusions that reiterate the fundamental
importance of family unity and reunification and call for facilitated
entry on the basis of liberal criteria of family members of persons
recognised to be in need of international protection.
10. Ms Sophie Magennis, UNHCR Regional Representative for EU Affairs
ad interim, presented to the Committee on Migration, Refugees and
Displaced Persons in Strasbourg on 27 June 2018 the legal and practical
challenges faced by refugees wishing to reunite with family members
in Europe and outlined the UNHCR’s advocacy with the European Union
and its member States.
11. As EU law determines relevant standards for EU member States,
I highly appreciated the information provided to me during my fact-finding
visit to Brussels on 18 and 19 October 2017
by Ms Christine
Roger, Director-General for Justice and Home Affairs, Council of
the European Union, Ms Laura Corrado, Deputy Head of Unit, Directorate
B “Migration, Mobility and Innovation”, and Mr Stephen Ryan
, Deputy Head of Unit, Directorate
C “Migration and Protection”, DG Migration and Home Affairs, European
Commission as well as Mr Thomas Huddleston, Programme Director of
the non-governmental organisation Migration Policy Group, Brussels.
12. For those member States of the Council of Europe which are
also members of the European Union, the EU Directive on the right
to family reunification (2003/86/EC) is applicable. Regrettably,
it leaves EU countries a wide margin of appreciation, for example
with regard to requiring a certain residence duration or a certain level
of financial resources. From the perspective of Article 8 of the
European Convention on Human Rights, such requirements must not
be a deterrent or an absolute obstacle to family reunification.
13. Regarding family reunification, there is a major difference
between refugees and persons under subsidiary protection. While
refugees have the right to family reunification under international
law, the situation of persons with the status of subsidiary protection
is determined by national law, because there is no specific international
obligation regarding family reunification for these persons. The
EU Directive on family reunification for refugees leaves it also
to national legislation to determine whether persons under subsidiary protection
have the right to family reunification.
14. In view of the absence of legal clarity regarding a right
to family reunification under international law, the United Nations
and the Council of Europe have drafted complimentary texts which
help in interpreting international law in a way which ensures the
protection of family unity. While it is worth taking account of
the following soft-law standards, it is obviously necessary to develop
international law further, in order to have legal clarity and security
for the benefit of refugees and persons under subsidiary or temporary
protection.
15. The Parliamentary Assembly underlined in its
Recommendation 1686 (2004) on human mobility and the right to family reunion that
“the concept of ‘family’ underlying that of family reunion has not
been defined at European level and varies in particular according
to the value and importance attached to the principle of dependence”,
and also urged member States to “interpret the concept of asylum
seekers’ families as including
de facto family
members (natural family), for example … partner or natural children
as well as elderly, infirm or otherwise dependent relations”. The
Committee on Migration, Refugees and Displaced Persons strongly supported
the right to respect and protection of family life in its “Position
paper on family reunification” (AS/Mig (2012) 01, 2 February 2012).
16. Regarding the special needs and rights of unaccompanied minors,
Resolution 1996 (2014) “Migrant children: what rights at 18?” and
Resolution 2020 (2014) on the alternatives to immigration detention of children are
also of relevance for issues concerning family reunification.
17. In its Recommendation No. R (99) 23 on family reunion for
refugees and other persons in need of international protection (15
December 1999),
the Committee of Ministers defined
minimal standards to be respected by all member States. This recommendation
and the relevant Assembly resolutions have been cited by the European
Court of Human Rights when interpreting Article 8 of the European
Convention on Human Rights.
18. Ms Kristiina Lilleorg, Thematic Specialist of the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) presented the action of the IOM
in this field to the committee in Paris on 20 September 2017. The
IOM’s family reunification action at national level has been supported
by programmes with Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Finland, Iceland,
Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland
and the United Kingdom. The largest programme exists with Germany,
which has funded family reunification work by IOM for more than
55 000 beneficiaries since 2016, with a focus on vulnerable persons and
unaccompanied children. The programme with Italy served 1 700 beneficiaries,
the one with Belgium 164 and the one with Hungary 50. The IOM focuses
on visa support, pre-departure orientation and assistance as well
as travel assistance for family members.
3. National
law and practice
19. The European Council on Refugees
and Exiles (ECRE) in Brussels publishes its European Database of Asylum
Law,
which is a useful point of reference
for legislative debates on family reunification of refugees and
migrants. I am therefore grateful for the overview of the existing
law and practice concerning family reunification, which was provided
to the committee in Paris on 8 December 2017 by Ms Amanda Taylor,
Co-ordinator of the European Database of Asylum Law of ECRE.
20. Although the European Union has set some common standards
in relation to asylum applications and applications for subsidiary
protection status, EU member States have very different legislation
in this field, because the issuance of visas remains a national
competence. All EU member States are signatory to the 1951 United
Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and recognise
in addition a subsidiary form of protection, which is of a temporary
character and limited to the beneficiary him/herself. It is very
regrettable that family reunification is often applicable to those
with refugee status only, while beneficiaries of subsidiary protection
generally do not have a right to reunite with their family in the
country which has granted subsidiary protection.
21. France is one of the few EU countries with high numbers of
asylum applicants which does not distinguish between refugees and
persons under subsidiary protection and gives family members of
both categories the possibility to apply for family reunification,
generally through the French consular services abroad.
However, decisions on family reunification
often take considerable time and require documentary evidence to
be submitted by applicants to the competent French Consulate. In
2017, 20 479 visas were issued for family members of refugees and
stateless persons and 10 779 visas for beneficiaries of subsidiary
protection.
22. In Germany, family reunification is possible for refugees
and persons under subsidiary protection,
but the latter category was excluded
in 2016 due to the extremely high number of asylum seekers, which
has dropped since but still remains very high.
In cases of hardship, beneficiaries
of subsidiary protection can also apply for family reunification,
but only 160 visas have so far been issued for their family members.
In total, 322 000 visas have been issued by Germany for family reunification
since January 2015.
Since July 2018, the German Government
again provides for the possibility of beneficiaries of subsidiary
protection to bring their family. In view of the numbers of applications
for international protection in Germany, this possibility is limited to
1 000 persons per month, in order to ensure a proper functioning
of the respective administrative procedures which take on average
10 to 11 months.
23. Other EU countries which receive a high number of migrants
are even less open to family reunification. In Austria, beneficiaries
of subsidiary protection can only apply for family reunification
three years after having received subsidiary protection. Bosnia
and Herzegovina only allows family reunification for refugees; beneficiaries
of subsidiary protection cannot apply for family reunification.
In Cyprus, beneficiaries of subsidiary protection have no right
to family reunification either, save for exceptional circumstances.
Greece does not allow for family reunification of persons under
subsidiary or temporary protection, but reserves family reunification
to persons with refugee status only. Hungary allows for family reunification
for both, refugees and persons under subsidiary protection, but
the latter have to fulfil material requirements, such as subsistence, accommodation
and health insurance. Italy requires that persons requesting family
reunification must have a permit of stay for at least one year.
Malta permits family reunification for refugees only, while beneficiaries
of subsidiary protection are excluded from this provision.
24. Family reunification for aliens legally residing in Spain
is regulated under the Aliens Law (Articles 16 to 19) and Articles
52 to 61 of its Implementing Regulation, which set out conditions
such as housing and financial requirements. Article 40 of the Spanish
Asylum Law establishes a more favourable family reunification framework
for both refugees and beneficiaries of subsidiary protection, called
“family extension of the right to asylum or subsidiary protection”.
This law does not include the same requirements as the Aliens Law,
and does not distinguish between refugees and beneficiaries of subsidiary
protection. Since the legislative change of 2015, Sweden allows
family reunification for refugees, while persons under subsidiary
protection can reunite with their family in Sweden in exceptional
circumstances only, for example if they do not have the possibility
of being reunified in a country outside the European Union.
25. In accordance with Turkish law, persons under temporary protection
do not have a right to family reunification, but they can apply
to the discretion of the competent Turkish authorities, which have
currently suspended family reunification, unless the applicant has
been accepted for resettlement in another country and the family
will join him or her before departure.
26. My own country, Denmark, provides family reunification for
refugees, who have to apply within three months, but persons under
subsidiary or temporary protection must normally have their temporary
residence permit extended beyond the initial three-year period before
they can apply. In exceptional cases, persons under subsidiary or
temporary protection can apply for family reunification before the
end of this three-year waiting period, if waiting three years could
cause hardship, for example if the applicant was the carer for a
handicapped spouse in the home country, or if the applicant has
a seriously ill minor child still living in the home country.
In practice, these rare exceptions
leave out many persons under subsidiary protection and indeed cause suffering
and hardship. A recent landmark decision is the judgment of the
European Court of Human Rights in the case of
Biao
v. Denmark.
Denmark was thence criticised by
the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) and
the Secretary General of the Council of Europe.
27. The huge differences between national law and practice regarding
family reunification for refugees and, in particular, beneficiaries
of subsidiary or temporary protection are a huge problem. It is
incomprehensible how the protection of family life under Article
8 of the European Convention on Human Rights can be interpreted
so differently among the signatory Parties to this Convention. The
Council of Europe should do more to achieve a more harmonised approach
which ensures more effectively the protection of family life through
family reunification.
28. Irrespective of the status granted, the protection needs and
flight experiences of refugees and beneficiaries of subsidiary protection
are very similar. As with refugees, beneficiaries of subsidiary
protection are temporarily unable to return to their countries of
origin due to the risk of serious harm. There is therefore no reason
to distinguish between the two statuses as regards their right to
family life.
4. Key
aspects of family reunification
29. It is important to ensure the
right to family reunion and to protect individuals against any arbitrary decisions
by public authorities for several reasons: the societal problems
caused by isolating refugees from family members; the importance
of family reunification in the creation of socio-cultural stability;
and to facilitate the integration of third-country nationals, thus
promoting economic and social cohesion.
30. Family reunification is a fundamental aspect of bringing normality
back to the lives of people who have fled persecution or serious
harm and have lost family members during forced displacement and
fleeing. It is particularly important to ensure that the unity of
the migrant’s family is maintained in cases where the head of the
family has fulfilled the necessary conditions for admission to a
particular country.
4.1. Legislative
barriers to family reunification
31. It is regrettable that there
is limited harmonisation of national legislation concerning minimum
standards on family reunification as well as relevant conditions,
procedures and rights. This situation causes negative competition
among States, with a few States receiving the majority of asylum
and family reunification applications while others use their more
restrictive laws as a dissuasive instrument against refugees and
their family members. Within Europe, such discrepancies will create
major problems, both for people seeking asylum and their families
as well as for cohesion and co-operation among States in Europe.
32. In this regard, the European Court of Human Rights found in
its judgment
Hode and Abdi v. the United Kingdom that
“there was no obligation on a State under Article 8 of the [European
Convention on Human Rights] to respect the choice by married couples
of the country of their matrimonial residence and to accept the non-national
spouses for settlement in that country”.
33. The right to family reunification is in itself an indispensable
instrument for integration. The European Commission
recognises the right to family reunification
for third-country nationals holding a residence permit of one year
or more who have reasonable prospects of obtaining permanent residence.
Member States will be entitled to require, for the exercise of this
right that third-country nationals comply with integration measures
in accordance with national law. For EU citizens, the EU Family
Reunification Directive
provides for a certain level of harmonisation
in the rules guiding family reunification. However, it allows EU
member States to impose higher requirements for family reunification,
in particular regarding the financial situation of applicants. The Directive
applies to all EU Member States, except Denmark, Ireland and the
United Kingdom. Nevertheless, national practices differ within the
European Union
and thus create problems of co-operation
among EU member States as well as, and this is even more important,
inhumane obstacles for family reunification of regular migrants
within the European Union.
34. The protection offered by asylum legislation covers both international
protection – i.e. refugee status – and subsidiary protection in
accordance with European Union requirements. Subsidiary protection
is generally granted to persons under threat of the death penalty,
torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, or indiscriminate
violence in situations of international or internal armed conflict.
Such subsidiary protection is sometimes called temporary protection
or protection on humanitarian grounds.
35. Unlike persons entitled to asylum on the grounds of individual
persecution under the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of
Refugees, individuals in need of subsidiary protection are typically
granted the right of residency for one year. Apart from this, within
the framework of the Common European Asylum System, subsidiary protection
was widely adjusted to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status
of Refugees in material aspects. In view of the recent increase
in cases of subsidiary protection and the fact that persons under subsidiary
protection are granted fewer rights, including as regards family
reunification, it can be questioned whether a distinction is actually
desirable between refugees and persons under subsidiary protection,
or whether one single refugee status should be applied – with full
right to family reunification.
36. This diversity of legal standards within Europe is a matter
for concern, and efforts should be made to set common standards
on family reunification.
4.2. Definition
of family
37. When speaking of family reunification
of refugees, it is necessary to define what “family” means for this purpose.
Such a definition is to be distinguished from general notions about
a family, which may be determined differently depending on cultural,
religious, philosophical or legal traditions. Traditionally, family
means the refugee’s married spouse and minor children.
38. However, this traditional definition of family does not necessarily
correspond to the multitude of ways people live together as a family
today. In Europe, the term patch-work family has been used in order
to describe families where both spouses have children with other
partners, typically from earlier marriages. Those children have
their residence with one parent and visiting rights with the other
parent or they have a shared residence with both parents. In addition,
unmarried couples may have children who have legally recognised
residence and visiting rights with one or both parents. Likewise,
children may have legally protected family relations with persons
who have adopted them, or with their grandparents, when the latter
undertake the upbringing of those children.
39. Restrictive approaches to the eligibility of family members
for family reunification constitute a major obstacle to reuniting
families. For instance, in the European Union, only seven member
States regularly allow family reunification of siblings, and even
then, this is usually because one sibling is dependent on the other,
a notion that is often applied narrowly. As a result, young adults
who were the heads of their households in their country of origin
are often prevented from reuniting with brothers or sisters who
are dependent on them. Failing to provide for reunification with
adult siblings may also create situations where parents are forced
to decide whether to reunite with their minor child in Europe or
stay with their adult children in the country of origin.
40. The circumstances of the forced displacement of persons might
also have impacted their family situation, for example if a spouse
or parent has died and another person has taken this position without
having had the factual opportunity to have this position legally
recognised through marriage or adoption. In the latter cases, the
actual duration of such a position might require a protection similar
to that of traditional core families, in particular where a marriage
or adoption is being legalised once a refugee has reached a safe
country.
41. While the European Court of Human Rights has repeatedly limited
the right to family reunification to the core family comprising
parents and minor children, for example in its judgment
Slivenko
v. Latvia,
it must be noted that a wider approach
was taken in the judgment
Maslov
v. Austria,
where the European Court found that
family life existed between parents and young adult children who
were financially dependent on their parents. However, the Court
found in its judgment
Berisha
v. Switzerland that financial dependence between adult
children and parents did not exclude financial support at a distance
and thus without family unity.
42. In the latter cases, Article 10.2 of the Convention on the
Rights of the Child must be respected: “A child whose parents reside
in different States shall have the right to maintain on a regular
basis, save in exceptional circumstances, personal relations and
direct contacts with both parents.”
43. Looking at this issue from a political point of view, the
public debate is often paralysed through a diffuse fear of abusive
practices by refugees as well as quantitative fears regarding the
number of persons to be sustained as refugees. While there have
been cases of marriages concluded for immigration visa purposes only,
it must be noted that such cases are extremely rare in refugee situations.
In addition, the right to protection as a refugee under the 1951
Convention relating to the Status of Refugees is not limited quantitatively
per se. A refugee cannot be refused protection because of the fact
that he or she has a spouse or a certain number of children.
44. Therefore, this issue has to be addressed in more abstract
terms: the right to family reunification obviously exists for married
spouses and minor children, especially young children who do not
have the legal capacity to go to a boarding school or to work at
a place distant from their parents, for example. In addition, elderly
parents with a disability, who are dependent on a person with refugee
status, should have the right to family reunification.
4.3. Family
tracing
45. Families who flee persecution
or violence often get separated against their will. This is particularly
tragic for unaccompanied minors. In such circumstances, family reunification
requires that family members are found and identified.
46. Expressing my gratitude to Ms Frédérique Desgrais, Head of
the Restoring Family Links and Missing Persons Unit of the ICRC
in Geneva for her presentation to the committee in Paris on 20 September
2017, I wish to pay tribute to the long-standing work of the ICRC.
Together with national Red Cross and Red Crescent societies, the
ICRC is doing excellent work on re-establishing contacts between
refugees or migrants and their families. The Restoring Family Links
programme of the ICRC
has been a very laudable success
story for decades. Through the use of new technologies, people can
publish their photo and details on the internet. Thus, the Trace
the Face
project has helped many refugees
to find family members. This action should be supported by all member
States.
47. Under the ICRC´s Restoring Family Links Strategy 2008-2018,
support is given to family members separated by armed conflict,
natural disasters or migration. In the context of migration, restoring
family links is different from family reunification, because it
includes clarifying the fate of missing family members and alleviating
the suffering of people who have no news of their families. This
work of the ICRC is distinct from asylum procedures and family reunification
claims, as personal data about family members collected by the ICRC
is not used for family reunification applications and procedures.
48. The European Union has included under its European Return
Fund projects for family tracing and reunifying children with their
parents.
In addition, progress in the registration
of refugees and the EU-wide sharing of information are to be achieved
through the European Union’s Schengen Visa Information System, which
connects EU member States’ consulates as well as external border
crossing points and performs biometric matching, primarily of fingerprints,
for identification and verification purposes.
Moreover, the data thus gained could
be used to facilitate family tracing and reunification.
49. Also beyond the European Union, such identification and tracing
of family members must be possible. Therefore, it is urgent for
the Council of Europe to establish a centralised register for tracing
families within Council of Europe member States.
4.4. Protecting
children
50. The protection of children
is the central aspect in protecting their family life. Articles
9 and 10 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child define a number
of fundamental rights which are important for family reunification:
- a child shall not be separated
from his or her parents against their will,
- the right of the child who is separated from one or both
parents to maintain personal relations and direct contact with both
parents on a regular basis,
- applications by a child or his or her parents to enter
or leave a State Party for the purpose of family reunification shall
be dealt with by States Parties in a positive, humane and expeditious
manner.
51. In this respect, national authorities must be guided by the
child’s best interest when they decide on family reunification matters.
52. Unaccompanied minors abroad can fall under the Hague Convention
on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction,
as abduction can also refer to trafficked
or smuggled minors or minors who were accompanying only one parent.
This convention is however rarely referred to in matters of family reunification
of refugees and migrants. Ms Maud De Boer-Buquicchio, United Nations
Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children,
and President of Missing Children Europe, reported to our committee
in Strasbourg on 28 June 2018 that a very high portion of child
refugees were trafficked. It is therefore necessary to pay greater
attention to the rights enshrined in the Hague Convention.
53. Within the European Union the protection of children in migration
has been identified as a priority.
It is essential to extend this protection
to all member States of the Council of Europe and work on Europe-wide policies
for family reunification for the benefit of child protection.
4.5. Protecting
vulnerable persons
54. Family reunification must be
a right for everybody. However, vulnerable persons will depend to
a much higher degree on reunification with their family. This applies
in particular to young children, but can also include persons with
special physical or mental needs.
55. It is obvious, for instance, that traumatised refugees will
need their family members for mental and social support in healing
the wounds they suffered. Likewise, physically handicapped people
will depend on family members for their care.
56. Such higher vulnerability may also require that more distant
family members be included in the family reunification, for example
if they have been the prime carer of a refugee.
4.6. Reducing
irregular migration
57. As the Commissioner for Human
Rights has stated, denying family reunification also closes one
of the much needed safe and legal routes to Europe and encourages
irregular secondary migration.
58. All Council of Europe member States must therefore work together
to ensure such safe and legal routes for family reunification.
5. Conclusions
59. Family life is one of the fundamental
pillars of our cultures and societies. The absence of family life largely
hinders the protection and well-being of individual human beings
as well as of our societies as a whole. In particular, children
will suffer severely from being separated from their parents.
60. Bearing in mind that migration is inevitable and one of the
main causes of family separation, that everyone has the right to
respect for family life and that the family is the natural and fundamental
unit of society entitled to protection by society and the State,
families must be protected and measures promoted which enhance such
protection.
61. The principle of family unity must be preserved and defended,
while fully respecting the fundamental human rights and the human
dignity of refugees and other persons in need of international protection,
including the best interests of a child. In addition, there must
be recognition that preserving the integrity of refugee families
both enhances the protection of their members and facilitates appropriate
long-term solutions for them.
62. The EU Family Reunification Directive
and
the EU Qualification Directive
provide for higher standards
on family reunification of refugees and persons under international
protection. It is very regrettable that the United Kingdom has not
agreed to these standards, that Denmark has opted out and that non-EU members
which are members of the Council of Europe do not adhere to such
standards. All Council of Europe member States should co-ordinate
their efforts in this respect, in order to avoid a counterproductive
diversity of legal standards within Europe.
63. As the traditional definition of family does not necessarily
correspond to the multitude of ways people live together as a family
today, the right to family reunification must be applied in a manner
which includes such forms of family life.
64. Children have the fundamental right to live with their parents
and not to be separated from them against their will. The Convention
on the Rights of the Child has to be observed in this respect.
65. The distinction between refugees and persons under subsidiary
or temporary protection should be abandoned as regards family reunification.
66. National legislation should provide for safe and legal routes
for family reunification, for instance through consular services
or, where consular services do not exist, through the relevant institution
in the host country.
67. In addition, it is recommended that Council of Europe member
States establish bilateral arrangements to represent each other
for the purposes of collecting visa applications and issuing visa.
68. A centralised register for tracing families should be established
within Council of Europe member States. In this respect, Europe-wide
co-operation should be sought with the ICRC and the Schengen Visa
Information System.