Steve Peers
Here are the questions and background information in a new Dutch reference to the CJEU, the first case concerning the latest version of the EU's asylum responsibility rules (known as the 'Dublin III Regulation'). It's a rough, unofficial translation from the original. Thanks to Flip Schuller, lawyer at Prakken D'Oliveira, for this.
Preliminary questions from the court The Hague
(Den Bosch)
Case number: AWB 14/12282
Brief summary of the
case
The applicant applies
for asylum on 04-03-2014. Based on research in the EU-VIS-system it turns out
that the applicant received a visa from the French representation in Iran on
the date 17-12-2013. This visa was valid from 17-12-2013 until 11-02-2014.
On 07-03-2014 the State
Secretary for Security and Justice requested France to take charge of the
application of the applicant. The French authorities accepted this request on 5-5-2014.
The applicant declared
that he made use of the visa on 18-12-2013, that he slept one night in Paris
and then returned to Iran. Then he travelled on 20-02-2014 illegally from Iran,
through Turkey and finally arrived in the Netherlands somewhere around
01-03-2014. The applicant declared that his passport with stamps is taken by
the Sepah-e Pasdaran-e Enqelab-e and that he doesn’t have evidence to submit
about his travel. The applicant emphasizes that he did not have troubles in
Iran before and that the problems firstly arose on 15-02-2014.
To underline the
applicant resided in Iran after being in France, he submitted the following
documents:
-
A
statement from his employer;
-
A
statement from a physician;
-
A signed
agreement on the sale of property. With regard to that the applicant states
that it is dated on 10-01-2014 and that he had to sign this agreement in
person.
The preliminary
questions are:
1. What is the extent
of article 27 of Regulation 604/2013 [the right to an appeal], whether or not
in conjunction with consideration 19 of the Preamble of Regulation 604/2013?
Does an applicant, in
a situation like this, where the applicant firstly after a claim-acceptance is
confronted with the Dublin claim and the applicant thus evidence submits after
the claim-acceptance which could lead to the conclusion that not the requested
EU MS but the requesting EU MS is responsible for the application for
international protection, and that then the requesting EU MS does not examine the
submitted evidence nor submit it to the requested EU MS, based on this article
(thus art. 27) has a right to an
(effective) remedy against the application of the criteria for determining the
EU MS responsible (mentioned in chapter III of Regulation 604/2013?
3. In case the answer
on question 2 is that also apart from family-situations other circumstances
could lead to the conclusion that an applicant can appeal on the basis of an
incorrect application of the criteria for determining the EU MS responsible,
could that be the facts and circumstances mentioned in consideration 12 of this
judgment? [These are
the documents mentioned in the summary of the case.]
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