[ ]

Paposhvili v. Belgium, [2016] ECHR 1113 (13 December 2016)

Date of judgement: 13 December 2016

Court: European Court of Human Rights

Citation(s):  Paposhvili v. Belgium – 41738/10 (Judgment (Merits and Just Satisfaction) : Court (Grand Chamber)) [2016] ECHR 1113 (13 December 2016)

Short summary 

The Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) memorably reshaped its Art. 3 case law on the expulsion of seriously ill migrants in leaving behind the restrictive application of the high Art. 3 threshold set in N v. the United Kingdom Appl. No. 26565/05, Council of Europe: European Court of Human Rights, 27 May 2008, and pushed for a more rigorous assessment of the risk of ill-treatment. 

Summary by: Claudia Broadhead

Link to original judgement 

Click here to open the case in PDF format

Categorisations

Private v State, International Law, Refugee Law, Civil Rights Law, Migration and Health, Right to Family, Issues in Litigation, Evidence Admissibility


Weight of decision 

The decision handed down by the ECtHR bears significant weight upon the interpretation of Art. 2 and 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). 

Key facts

The applicant, a Georgian national facing removal from Belgium due to criminal activity, suffered from leukaemia and recurrent tuberculosis which had caused lung disease. The applicant claimed that, if removed to Georgia, he would be unable to access adequate medical treatment and was therefore at risk of ill-treatment in violation of his rights under Art. 3 ECHR (prohibition of torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment), and accelerated death in breach of his right to life under Art. 2 ECHR. The applicant also argued that his removal to Georgia in conjunction with a ten-year ban on re-entering Belgium would result in separation with his family, who had leave to remain in Belgium. 

Previous instances 

The Fifth Section Chamber judgment of April 2014 held that the applicant’s removal would not encroach upon his Art. 3 or Art. 8 (right to private and family life) rights under the ECHR. The case was later referred to the Grand Chamber, and the applicant died pending these proceedings. The applicant’s family continued proceedings before the Grand Chamber of the ECtHR. 

The ECtHR found that there would have been a violation of Art. 3 and 8 ECHR if the Applicant had been removed to Georgia without the Belgian authorities having assessed the risk that he faced from removal in light of the information concerning the state of his health and the existence (or lack thereof) of appropriate treatment in Georgia.

Summary of holding

The ECtHR held that the severity of ill-treatment under Art. 3 must attain a minimum level and that the suffering flowing from a natural occurring illness may be (or risks being) exacerbated by treatment, whether flowing from conditions of detention, expulsion, or other measures for which the authorities could be held responsible. 

The ECtHR highlighted that since its decision in N v. the United Kingdom, an extremely high threshold (exceptional circumstances) had been set when applying Art. 3 to seriously ill persons. Indeed, only those close to death appear to be covered by the provision. In this case, the ECtHR determined that Art. 3 is triggered where “the absence of appropriate treatment in the receiving country or the lack of access to such treatment, exposes the individual to a serious, rapid and irreversible decline in his or her state of health resulting in intense suffering or to a significant reduction in life expectancy” (para. 183). The ECtHR recognised here that the application of Art. 3 only to persons close to death had deprived those whose condition was less critical, but who were still seriously ill, from “the benefit of that provision” (para. 181).

In ensuring that Art. 3 is respected, the ECtHR went on to highlight that appropriate procedures need to be put in place to allow the individual to adduce evidence of the potential risk upon return to the country of origin, and for the State to examine the foreseeable consequences of return with regard to both the general situation and the individual’s circumstances. Thus, the applicant is not obliged to present clear proof that they would be exposed to proscribed treatment. 

The authorities should assess whether the care generally available in the receiving State is sufficient and appropriate in practice for the treatment of the applicant’s illness. So, states must assess the impact of removal upon the individual by comparing their health prior to removal and how it would evolve after transfer. 

Factors to be considered in this assessment include whether the care is generally available in the receiving State, whether it is sufficient and appropriate in practice for the applicant’s treatment, and whether the individual will actually have access to this care and these facilities in the receiving State. This includes considerations relating to costs, existence of social networks and distances to access the relevant treatment.


Potential takeaways for future climate migration litigation

  • Threshold for breach of Art.3 ECHR. The ECtHR established in N v. United Kingdom that removing a non-national suffering from a serious illness to “a country where the facilities for the treatment of that illness are inferior to those available in the Contracting State may raise an issue under Article 3, but only in a very exceptional case” (para. 42). The case set a very high threshold to finding breaches of Art. 3 where the issue was attributable to the State’s lack of resources to deal with a naturally occurring phenomenon. 
    • By contrast, in the case at hand, the ECtHR left behind the restrictive application and pushed for a more rigorous assessment of the risk of ill-treatment. 
  • Practice access to treatment. The judgement does not simply discuss whether adequate treatment is generally available in the receiving State but, crucially, whether the treatment would be accessible to the person concerned, addressing practical as opposed to theoretical access to sufficient care.

AL v. Austria, Appl. No. 7788/11, Council of Europe: European Court of Human Rights, 10 May 2012

Date of judgement: 10 May 2012

Court: European Court of Human Rights

Citation(s): A.L. v. Austria, Appl. No. 7788/11, Council of Europe: European Court of Human Rights, 10 May 2012

Short summary 

The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) reiterated the obligation of Contracting States to protect individuals from deportation which would place them at risk of treatment contrary to Art. 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (prohibition of torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment), noting that Contracting States retained the right to control the entry and expulsion of aliens and that there was no obligation to grant political asylum. The ECtHR stressed that to have an indication as to whether an expulsion would violate Art. 3, from now on, an assessment of the situation in the country would have to be carried out, as the historical situation would offer little more than some help towards understanding the present conditions.

Summary by: Yusuf Lahham

Link to original judgement 

Click here to open the case in PDF format


Weight of decision 

The decision handed down by the ECtHR bears significant weight upon the interpretation of Art. 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). 

Key facts

A Togolese national (“the applicant”) brought a case against the Republic of Austria seeking to overturn the decisions of the Federal Asylum Office and the Asylum Court in denying him asylum claim and ordering his return to Togo. As a member of the prominent opposition political party, Union des Forces de Changement (UFC), the applicant alleged that upon his return, he would face a risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Art. 3. 

In addition to this, he claimed that he had been threatened by soldiers in Togo during protests organised in a camp for flood victims due the unequal distribution of relief. The applicant further claimed that another Togolese national (“M.A”) had been granted asylum, relying on very similar evidence to that which had been put forward in his application. He argued that on the basis of M.A’s application result, he too should be granted asylum.

Previous instances 

On 6 July 2009, the applicant’s request for asylum and subsidiary protection was denied by the Federal Asylum Office on the basis that his submission of fear and persecution was not credible and appeared to be a fabrication around what had really happened. The Office noted that parliamentary elections had taken place in 2007, with the UFC winning 27 seats, and that although Togo could not be considered a representative democracy, opposition parties were generally free to act. The Office went on to conclude that whilst the applicant had been truthful regarding his account of the flood and the tensions between soldiers within the flood victim camp, the alleged threats and the applicant’s subsequent fear was contradictory to the applicant’s statements. 

In light of the above, the Office rejected the application for asylum and subsidiary protection on the grounds that the persecution awaiting the applicant in Togo was nothing more than speculation on his part, and that there would be no risk of persecution as recognised under Art. 1(A)(2) of the 1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees

On 29th April 2010, the Asylum Court held a hearing to address the applicant’s appeal, which was based upon the following grounds: that he was unaware of the possibility of submitting more than three pieces of evidence, he had issues understanding the interpreter and as such had not given a full account of police violence towards him at the camp, that members of the UFC were still subject to persecution notwithstanding the 2007 parliamentary elections, and that M.A, another organiser of the demonstrations had been granted asylum. The Court held that the applicant’s statements were contradictory and not due to any translation errors. It was also found that the evidence put forward appeared to be fabricated and that no actual violence towards his person had occurred at the camp. The court ordered his expulsion to Togo, and dismissed his claim. 

Continued on the next page…