, 1. Februar 2012 |
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Tagungsnummer: |
412F01 |
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12:30-14:30
Law Societies‘ Joint Brussels Office
5th floor, avenue des Nerviens 85
1040 Brussels
Under
the Dublin Regulation (343/2003/EC), asylum applicants must, in
principle, be dealt with by the country by which they first entered the
EU, leading to increased migratory pressure on Member States with an
external Schengen land border.
In January 2010, the European Court of Human Rights held in MSS v. Belgium & Greece that
asylum seekers’ rights under the Convention would be violated should
those persons be transferred to Greece under the Dublin system, given
the substandard quality of the asylum facilities there.
In its judgment on NS v. SSHD,
released on 21 December 2011, the European Court of Justice has
revisited this issue. Considering both the Dublin Regulation and the
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU (CFR), it confirmed the
existence of a rebuttable rather than a conclusive presumption of
compliance of the receiving Member State with fundamental rights. Thus,
transfers cannot be permitted where they would amount to a breach of
Art. 4 CFR.