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Frances asylum procedures condemned by the European
Court of Human Rights
By Ajay Pakrash and Senthooran Ravee
11 June 2007
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The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) on April 26 condemned
France for the absence of an effective right to appeal for undocumented
asylum-seekers. Nevertheless, French President Nicolas Sarkozys
newly formed administration has confirmed that the government
intends to take tough measures on immigration and carry out the
mass deportation of undocument immigrants.
Sarkozy intends soon to present the first legislation of his
five-year administration. Immigration will be a top priority at
a mid-July session of the new National Assembly resulting from
the second round of the legislative elections June 17. Sarkozys
prime minister, François Fillon, announced that a new law
on immigration will be brought forward at the first parliamentary
session after the elections. This is clearly an attempt to win
further support away from the far-right National Front.
The measures outlined by Fillon will make it far more difficult
for immigrants with family members already living in France to
gain residence status. The person residing legally in France will
have to have a house deemed adequate to accommodate the family
member(s) and have income from work, specifically not from welfare
payments, sufficient to provide for that person or persons. The
candidates must prove their ablility to speak French before
being allowed to settle in France.
Sarkozy has chosen his close friend Brice Hortefeux to head
the new Ministry of Immigration and National Identity. Hortfeux
declared on Europe 1 radio, We have rejected mass legalisation.
It doesnt work and it penalises, even immigrants.
He added that the policy would be carried out with firmness
and humanism and lots of pragmatism.
Hortefeux claimed there were 200,000-400,000 undocumented immigrants
(sans papiers) in France and pledged to strictly adhere
to the policy of deporting them. He expects 25,000 sans papiers
to be deported this year.
The European Court of Human Rights ruled April 26, 2007, in
the case of Gebremedhin v. France, that there had been a violation
by the French authorities of Articles 13 and 3 of the European
Convention of Human Rights. The court awarded the applicant 8,300.60
for costs and expenses. (See full
text)
Asebeha Gebremedhin, 28, an Eritrean press photographer arrived
without papers at Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris on June 29,
2005, and applied for asylum. He was placed in the waiting
area of deportation. His request for refugee status to the
French Office for the Protection of Refugees and Stateless Persons
(OFPRA) was rejected due to inconsistencies in his claims.
The Ministry of the Interior dismissed his application and gave
directions for his removal to Eritrea, or if need be to
any country where he may be legally admissible. An appeal
against the decision was dismissed.
Consequently, with the support of the National Association
for Assisting Foreign Nationals (ANAFEAssociation nationale
dassistance aux frontières pour les étrangers),
he appealed to the European Court of Human Rights. Through its
intervention, the French authorities issued him a temporary residence
permit, on July 20, 2005.
The European Human Rights judge stressed in the ruling, Given
the importance which the Court attached to Article 3 of the European
Convention of Human Rights and the irreversible nature of the
harm that might occur if the risk of torture or ill-treatment
materialised, it was a requirement of Article 13 that the persons
concerned should have access to a remedy with automatic suspensive
effect. As the applicant, while in the waiting area,
had not had access to this, he had been deprived of an effective
remedy in respect of his complaint under Article 3.
The government of former President Jacques Chirac modified
the OFPRA procedure for granting asylum to reduce the time for
treating such cases. This average time decreased from 258 days
in 2003 to 108 days in 2005.
Amnesty International France complained that the procedure
time was too short and that it does not give enough time to asylum-seekers
to produce proof of the authenticity of their claim. The authorities
examine the files within 15 days instead of nearly three months.
Asylum-seekers would not have the right to have any access to
a financial allowance and healthcare if the case were rejected.
Such draconian procedures help the right-wing Union for a Popular
Movement (UMP) government expedite the rapid expulsion of illegal
immigrants and meet their target of 25,000 deportations. Many
are sent back to their countries even though their lives are in
serious danger. Many asylums-seekers have been imprisoned on their
return to their countries, and several have lost their lives.
One of these was Elanchelvan Rajendram. He came to France in
2002, to escape persecution in Sri Lanka. The OFPRA rejected his
demand for refugee status in early 2003. He lived in France as
an undocumented immigrant until the police arrested him in 2005
and sent him back to Sri Lanka. He was murdered by the Sri Lankan
army at his home on February 28, 2007.
The procedure for the granting of asylum status comes under
the responsibility of the Ministry of the Interior, which makes
the final decision on whether or not to admit an individual. At
the time of Rajendrums deportation, Sarkozy was interior
minister. He thus bears a share of the responsibility for the
formers fate.
Amnesty Internationals 2007 Annual Report noted: Abusive
practices in the fight against irregular immigration continued
to be another major area of concern affecting many EU member states.
The response has been disappointing, showing yet again a pattern
of denial.
The report added: The lack of long-term sustainable solutions
and the language of fear that dominates political agendas have
led to disturbing manifestations of racism and discrimination
in Europe. The current climate encourages the stigmatisation of
foreigners and suspicion of Muslims and members of other religious
communities.
At their summit meeting held in Seville in June 2002, the leaders
of 15 European Union nations decided on drastic measures to further
limit the flow of immigration into Europe. (See EU
summit steps up attack on refugees and foreigners)
Sarkozys UMP is set to win the coming elections to the
National Assembly, as a result of the collapse of the official
left and his own populist demagogy, promising everything to everybody.
Sarkozy has attempted to whip up anti-immigrant prejudice to divert
attention from the social crisis and the governments record,
as well as from its proposed free-market, anti-welfare state and
repressive policies. The Socialist Party has no fundamental differences
with Sarkozy on these questions, although it has disagreements
as to how these measures should be implemented. The mass of the
French population has consistently opposed the attacks on its
rights and social gains, but it has been disenfranchised politically.
The brutal measures directed today against refugees, asylum-seekers
and immigrant communities are an indication that further attacks
on all democratic and social rights are on the agenda, and that
Sarkozy, Fillon and the UMP intend to implement them as rapidly
as possible.
See Also:
French parliamentary elections: The collapse
of the "left"
[8 June 2007]
France: Guy Môquet, Sarkozy and
the Stalinist school of falsification
[2 June 2007]
France: Sarkozy prepares shock
therapy
[28 May 2007]
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