Professor Steve Peers,
Law School, University of Essex*
This week the EU Commission published its new package of proposals on asylum and (non-EU) migration – consisting of proposals for legislation, some ‘soft law’, attempts to relaunch talks on stalled proposals and plans for future measures. The following is an explanation of the new proposals (not attempting to cover every detail) with some first thoughts. Overall, while it is possible that the new package will lead to agreement on revised asylum laws, this will come at the cost of risking reduced human rights standards.
Background
Since 1999, the EU has aimed to
create a ‘Common European Asylum System’. A first phase of legislation was
passed between 2003 and 2005, followed by a second phase between 2010 and 2013.
Currently the legislation consists of: a) the Qualification
Directive, which defines when people are entitled to refugee status (based
on the UN Refugee Convention)
or subsidiary protection status, and what rights they have; b) the Dublin
III Regulation, which allocates responsibility for an asylum seeker between
Member States; c) the Eurodac
Regulation, which facilitates the Dublin system by setting up a database of
fingerprints of asylum seekers and people who cross the external border without
authorisation; d) the Asylum
Procedures Directive, which sets out the procedural rules governing asylum
applications, such as personal interviews and appeals; e) the Reception
Conditions Directive, which sets out standards on the living conditions of
asylum-seekers, such as rules on housing and welfare; and f) the Asylum
Agency Regulation, which set up an EU agency (EASO) to support Member
States’ processing of asylum applications.
The EU also has legislation on
other aspects of migration: (short-term) visas, border controls, irregular
migration, and legal migration – much of which has connections with the asylum
legislation, and all of which is covered by this week’s package. For visas, the
main legislation is the visa
list Regulation (setting out which non-EU countries’ citizens are subject
to a short-term visa requirement, or exempt from it) and the visa code
(defining the criteria to obtain a short-term Schengen visa, allowing travel
between all Schengen states). The visa
code was amended last year, as discussed here.
For border controls, the main
legislation is the Schengen
Borders Code, setting out the rules on crossing external borders and the
circumstances in which Schengen states can reinstate controls on internal
borders, along with the Frontex
Regulation, setting up an EU border agency to assist Member States. On the
most recent version of the Frontex Regulation, see discussion here
and here.
For irregular migration, the main
legislation is the Return
Directive. The Commission proposed to amend
it in 2018 – on which, see analysis here
and here.
For legal migration, the main
legislation on admission of non-EU workers is the single
permit Directive (setting out a common process and rights for workers, but
not regulating admission); the Blue
Card Directive (on highly paid migrants, discussed here);
the seasonal workers’ Directive (discussed here);
and the Directive
on intra-corporate transferees (discussed here).
The EU also has legislation on: non-EU students, researchers and
trainees (overview here);
non-EU family reunion (see summary of the legislation and case law here)
and on long-term
resident non-EU citizens (overview – in the context of UK citizens after
Brexit – here).
In 2016, the Commission proposed to revise the Blue Card Directive (see
discussion here).
The UK, Ireland and Denmark have
opted out of most of these laws, except some asylum law applies to the UK and
Ireland, and Denmark is covered by the Schengen and Dublin rules. So are the
non-EU countries associated with Schengen and Dublin (Norway, Iceland,
Switzerland and Liechtenstein). There are also a number of further databases of
non-EU citizens as well as Eurodac: the EU has never met a non-EU migrant who
personal data it didn’t want to store and process.
The Refugee ‘Crisis’
The EU’s response to the
perceived refugee ‘crisis’ was both short-term and long-term. In the short term,
in 2015 the EU adopted temporary laws (discussed here)
relocating some asylum seekers in principle from Italy and Greece to other
Member States. A legal challenge to one of these laws failed (as discussed here),
but in practice Member States accepted few relocations anyway. Earlier this
year, the CJEU ruled that several Member States had breached their obligations
under the laws (discussed here),
but by then it was a moot point.
Longer term, the Commission
proposed overhauls of the law in 2016: a) a Qualification
Regulation further harmonising the law on refugee and subsidiary
protection status; b) a revised Dublin
Regulation, which would have set up a system of relocation of asylum
seekers for future crises; c) a revised Eurodac
Regulation, to take much more data from asylum seekers and other
migrants; d) an Asylum
Procedures Regulation, further harmonising the procedural law on asylum
applications; e) a revised Reception
Conditions Directive; f) a revised Asylum
Agency Regulation, giving the agency more powers; and g) a new Resettlement
Regulation, setting out a framework of admitting refugees directly from
non-EU countries. (See my comments
on some of these proposals, from back in 2016)
However, these proposals proved
unsuccessful – which is the main reason for this week’s attempt to relaunch the
process. In particular, an EU
Council note from February 2019 summarises the diverse problems that befell
each proposal. While the EU Council Presidency and the European Parliament
reached agreement on the proposals on qualification, reception conditions and resettlement
in June 2018, (Update, 1 October 2020: for the texts of the deals reached on qualification and reception conditions, see the Statewatch website). Member States refused to support the Presidency’s deal and the
European Parliament refused to renegotiate (see, for instance, the Council
documents on the proposals on qualification
and resettlement;
see also my
comments on an earlier stage of the talks, when the Council had agreed its negotiation
position on the qualification regulation).
On the asylum agency, the EP and
Council agreed
on the revised law in 2017, but the Commission proposed an amendment
in 2018 to give the agency more powers; the Council could not agree on this. On
Eurodac, the EP and Council only partly
agreed on a text. On the procedures Regulation, the Council largely
agreed its position, except on border procedures; on Dublin there was never
much prospect of agreement because of the controversy over relocating asylum
seekers. (For either proposal, a difficult negotiation with the European
Parliament lay ahead).
In other areas too, the
legislative process was difficult: the Council and EP gave up negotiating
amendments to the Blue Card Directive (see the last attempt at a compromise here,
and the Council negotiation mandate here),
and the EP has not yet agreed a position on the Returns Directive (the Council
has a negotiating
position, but again it leaves out the difficult issue of border procedures;
there is a draft
EP position from February). Having said that, the EU has been able to agree
legislation giving more powers to Frontex, as well as new laws on EU migration
databases, in the last few years.
The attempted relaunch
The Commission’s new Pact
on asylum and immigration (see also the roadmap
on its implementation, the Q
and As, and the staff
working paper) does not restart the whole process from scratch. On
qualification, reception conditions, resettlement, the asylum agency, the
returns Directive and the Blue Card Directive, it invites the Council and
Parliament to resume negotiations. But it tries to unblock the talks as a whole
by tabling two amended legislative proposals and three new legislative
proposals, focussing on the issues of border procedures and relocation of
asylum seekers.
Screening at the border
This revised proposals start with
a new proposal
for screening asylum seekers at the border, which would apply to all non-EU
citizens who cross an external border without authorisation, who apply for
asylum while being checked at the border (without meeting the conditions for
legal entry), or who are disembarked after a search and rescue operation. During
the screening, these non-EU citizens are not allowed to enter the territory of
a Member State, unless it becomes clear that they meet the criteria for entry. The
screening at the border should take no longer than 5 days, with an extra 5 days
in the event of a huge influx. (It would also be possible to apply the proposed
law to those on the territory who evaded border checks; for them the deadline
to complete the screening is 3 days).
Screening has six elements, as
further detailed in the proposal: a health check, an identity check,
registration in a database, a security check, filling out a debriefing form,
and deciding on what happens next. At
the end of the screening, the migrant is channelled either into the expulsion
process (if no asylum claim has been made, and if the migrant does not meet the
conditions for entry) or, if an asylum claim is made, into the asylum process –
with an indication of whether the claim should be fast-tracked or not. It’s
also possible that an asylum seeker would be relocated to another Member State.
The screening is carried out by national officials, possibly with support from
EU agencies.
To ensure human rights
protection, there must be independent monitoring to address allegations of
non-compliance with human rights. These allegations might concern breaches of
EU or international law, national law on detention, access to the asylum
procedure, or non-refoulement (the
ban on sending people to an unsafe country). Migrants must be informed about
the process and relevant EU immigration and data protection law. There is no
provision for judicial review of the outcome of the screening process, although
there would be review as part of the next step (asylum or return).
Asylum procedures
The revised proposal
for an asylum procedures Regulation would leave in place most of the
Commission’s 2016 proposal to amend the law, adding some specific further
proposed amendments, which either link back to the screening proposal or aim to
fast-track decisions and expulsions more generally.
On the first point, the usual
rules on informing asylum applicants and registering their application would
not apply until after the end of the screening. A border procedure may apply following the screening
process, but Member States must apply
the border procedure in cases where an asylum seeker used false documents, is a
perceived national security threat, or falls within the new ground for
fast-tracking cases (on which, see below). The latter obligation is subject to exceptions
where a Member State has reported that a non-EU country is not cooperating on
readmission; the process for dealing with that issue set out under the 2019
amendments to the visa code will then apply. Also, the border process cannot
apply to unaccompanied minors or children under 12, unless they are a supposed
national security risk. Further exceptions apply where the asylum seeker is
vulnerable or has medical needs, the application is not inadmissible or cannot
be fast-tracked, or detention conditions cannot be guaranteed. A Member State
might apply the Dublin process to determine which Member State is responsible
for the asylum claim during the border process. The whole border process
(including any appeal) must last no more than 12 weeks, and can only be used to
declare applications inadmissible or apply the new ground for fast-tracking
them.
There would also be a new border
expulsion procedure, where an asylum application covered by the border
procedure was rejected. This is subject to its own 12-week deadline, starting
from the point when the migrant is no longer allowed to remain. Much of the
Return Directive would apply – but not the provisions on the time period for
voluntary departure, remedies and the grounds for detention. Instead, the
border expulsion procedure would have its own stricter rules on these issues.
As regards general fast-tracking,
in order to speed up the expulsion process for unsuccessful applications, a
rejection of an asylum application would have to either incorporate an
expulsion decision or entail a simultaneous separate expulsion decision.
Appeals against expulsion decisions would then be subject to the same rules as
appeals against asylum decisions. If the asylum seeker comes from a country
with a refugee recognition rate below 20%, his or her application must be
fast-tracked (this would even apply to unaccompanied minors) – unless
circumstances in that country have changed, or the asylum seeker comes from a
group for whom the low recognition rate is not representative (for instance,
the recognition rate might be higher for LGBT asylum-seekers from that country).
Many more appeals would be subject to a one-week time limit for the rejected
asylum seeker to appeal, and there could be only one level of appeal against
decisions taken within a border procedure.
Eurodac
The revised proposal
for Eurodac would build upon the 2016 proposal, which was already far-reaching:
extending Eurodac to include not only fingerprints, but also photos and other
personal data; reducing the age of those covered by Eurodac from 14 to 6; removing
the time limits and the limits on use of the fingerprints taken from persons
who had crossed the border irregularly; and creating a new obligation to
collect data of all irregular migrants over age 6 (currently fingerprint data
for this group cannot be stored, but can simply be checked, as an option,
against the data on asylum seekers and irregular border crossers). The 2020
proposal additionally provides for interoperability with other EU migration
databases, taking of personal data during the screening process, including more
data on the migration status of each person, and expressly applying the law to
those disembarked after a search and rescue operation.
Dublin rules on asylum responsibility
A new proposal
for asylum management would replace the Dublin regulation (meaning that the
Commission has withdrawn its 2016 proposal to replace that Regulation). The
2016 proposal would have created a ‘bottleneck’ in the Member State of entry,
requiring that State to examine first whether many of the grounds for removing
an asylum-seeker to a non-EU country apply before considering whether another
Member State might be responsible for the application (because the asylum seeker’s
family live there, for instance). It would also have imposed obligations
directly on asylum-seekers to cooperate with the process, rather than only
regulate relations between Member States. These obligations would have been
enforced by punishing asylum seekers who disobeyed: removing their reception
conditions (apart from emergency health care); fast-tracking their substantive
asylum applications; refusing to consider new evidence from them; and
continuing the asylum application process in their absence.
It would no longer be possible
for asylum seekers to provide additional evidence of family links, with a view
to being in the same country as a family member. Overturning a CJEU
judgment (see further discussion here),
unaccompanied minors would no longer have been able to make applications in
multiple Member States (in the absence of a family member in any of them). However,
the definition of family members would have been widened, to include siblings
and families formed in a transit country. Responsibility for an asylum seeker based on
the first Member State of irregular entry (a commonly applied criterion) would
have applied indefinitely, rather than expire one year after entry as it does
under the current rules. The ‘Sangatte clause’ (responsibility after five
months of living in a second Member State, if the ‘irregular entry’ criterion
no longer applies) would be dropped. The ‘sovereignty clause’, which played a
key part in the 2015-16 refugee ‘crisis’ (it lets a Member State take
responsibility for any application even if the Dublin rules do not require it,
cf Germany accepting responsibility for Syrian asylum seekers) would have been
sharply curtailed. Time limits for detention during the transfer process would
be reduced. Remedies for asylum seekers
would have been curtailed: they would only have seven days to appeal against a
transfer; courts would have fifteen days to decide (although they could have
stayed on the territory throughout); and the grounds of review would have been
curtailed.
Finally, the 2016 proposal would
have tackled the vexed issue of disproportionate allocation of responsibility
for asylum seekers by setting up an automated system determining how many
asylum seekers each Member State ‘should’ have based on their size and GDP. If
a Member State were responsible for excessive numbers of applicants, Member
States which were receiving fewer numbers would have to take more to help out.
If they refused, they would have to pay €250,000 per applicant.
The 2020 proposal drops some of the
controversial proposals from 2016, including the ‘bottleneck’ in the Member
State of entry (the current rule, giving Member States an option to decide if a non-EU country is responsible for the
application on narrower grounds than in the 2016 proposal, would still apply).
Also, the sovereignty clause would now remain unchanged.
However, the 2020 proposal also
retains parts of the 2016 proposal: the redefinition of ‘family member’ (which
could be more significant now that the bottleneck is removed, unless Member
States choose to apply the relevant rules on non-EU countries’ responsibility
during the border procedure already); obligations for asylum seekers (redrafted
slightly); some of the punishments
for non-compliant asylum-seekers (the cut-off for considering evidence would
stay, as would the loss of benefits except for those necessary to ensure a
basic standard of living: see the CJEU case law in CIMADE
and Haqbin);
dropping the provision on evidence of family links; changing the rules on
responsibility for unaccompanied minors; retaining part of the changes to the
irregular entry criterion (it would now cease to apply after three years; the
Sangatte clause would still be dropped; it would apply after search and rescue
but not apply in the event of relocation); curtailing judicial review (the
grounds would still be limited; the time limit to appeal would be 14 days;
courts would not have a strict deadline to decide; suspensive effect would not
apply in all cases); and the reduced time limits for detention.
The wholly new features of the
2020 proposal are: some vague provisions about crisis management;
responsibility for an asylum application for the Member State which issued a
visa or residence document which expired in the last three years (the current
rule is responsibility if the visa expired less than six months ago, and the
residence permit expired less than a year ago); responsibility for an asylum
application for a Member State in which a non-EU citizen obtained a diploma;
and the possibility for refugees or persons with subsidiary protection status
to obtain EU long-term resident status after three years, rather than five.
However, the most significant
feature of the new proposal is likely to be its attempt to solve the underlying
issue of disproportionate allocation of asylum seekers. Rather than a
mechanical approach to reallocating responsibility, the 2020 proposal now
provides for a menu of ‘solidarity contributions’: relocation of asylum
seekers; relocation of refugees; ‘return
sponsorship’; or support for ‘capacity building’ in the Member State (or a
non-EU country) facing migratory pressure. There are separate rules for search
and rescue disembarkations, on the one hand, and more general migratory
pressures on the other. Once the Commission determines that the latter
situation exists, other Member States have to choose from the menu to offer
some assistance. Ultimately the Commission will adopt a decision deciding what
the contributions will be. Note that ‘return sponsorship’ comes with a ticking
clock: if the persons concerned are not expelled within eight months, the
sponsoring Member State must accept them on its territory.
Crisis management
The issue of managing asylum
issues in a crisis has been carved out of the Dublin proposal into a separate
proposal, which would repeal an EU
law from 2001 that set up a framework for offering ‘temporary protection’
in a crisis. Note that Member States have never used the 2001 law in practice.
Compared to the 2001 law, the new
proposal is integrated into the EU asylum legislation that has been adopted or
proposed in the meantime. It similarly applies in the event of a ‘mass influx’
that prevents the effective functioning of the asylum system. It would apply
the ‘solidarity’ process set out in the proposal to replace the Dublin rules
(ie relocation of asylum seekers and other measures), with certain exceptions
and shorter time limits to apply that process.
The proposal focusses on providing
for possible exceptions to the usual asylum rules. In particular, during a
crisis, the Commission could authorise a Member State to apply temporary
derogations from the rules on border asylum procedures (extending the time
limit, using the procedure to fast-track more cases), border return procedures
(again extending the time limit, more easily justifying detention), or the time
limit to register asylum applicants. Member States could also determine that
due to force majeure, it was not
possible to observe the normal time limits for registering asylum applications,
applying the Dublin process for responsibility for asylum applications, or
offering ‘solidarity’ to other Member States.
Finally, the new proposal, like
the 2001 law, would create a potential for a form of separate ‘temporary
protection’ status for the persons concerned. A Member State could suspend the
consideration of asylum applications from people coming from the country facing
a crisis for up to a year, in the meantime giving them status equivalent to ‘subsidiary
protection’ status in the EU qualification law. After that point it would have
to resume consideration of the applications. It would need the Commission’s
approval, whereas the 2001 law left it to the Council to determine a situation
of ‘mass influx’ and provided for the possible extension of the special rules
for up to three years.
Other measures
The Commission has also adopted
four soft law measures. These comprise: a Recommendation
on asylum crisis management; a Recommendation
on resettlement and humanitarian admission; a Recommendation
on cooperation between Member States on private search and rescue operations;
and guidance
on the applicability of EU law on smuggling of migrants – notably concluding
that it cannot apply where (as in the case of law of the sea) there is an
obligation to rescue (see further analysis here).
On other issues, the Commission
plan is to use current legislation – in particular the recent amendment to the
visa code, which provides for sticks to make visas more difficult to get for
citizens of countries which don’t cooperate on readmission of people, and
carrots to make visas easier to get for citizens of countries which do cooperate on readmission. In some
areas, such as the Schengen system, there will be further strategies and plans
in the near future; it is not clear if this will lead to more proposed
legislation.
However, on legal migration, the
plan is to go further than relaunching the amendment of the Blue Card
Directive, as the Commission is also planning to propose amendments to the
single permit and long-term residence laws referred to above – leading
respectively to more harmonisation of the law on admission of non-EU workers
and enhanced possibilities for long-term resident non-EU citizens to move
between Member States (nb the latter plan is separate from this week’s proposal
to amend this law as regards refugees and people with subsidiary protection
already). Both these plans are relevant to British citizens moving to the EU
after the post-Brexit transition period – and the latter is also relevant to
British citizens covered by the withdrawal agreement.
Comments
This week’s plan is less a
complete restart of EU law in this area than an attempt to relaunch discussions
on a blocked set of amendments to that law, which moreover focusses on a
limited set of issues. Will it ‘work’? There are two different ways to answer
that question.
First, will it unlock the
institutional blockage? Here it should be kept in mind that the European
Parliament and the Council had largely agreed on several of the 2016 proposals
already; they would have been adopted in 2018 already had not the Council
treated all the proposals as a package, and not gone back on agreements which
the Council Presidency reached with the European Parliament. It is always open
to the Council to get at least some of these proposals adopted quickly by
reversing these approaches.
On the blocked proposals, the
Commission has targeted the key issues of border procedures and allocation of
asylum-seekers. If the former leads to more quick removals of unsuccessful
applicants, the latter issue is no longer so pressing. But it is not clear if
the Member States will agree to anything on border procedures, or whether such
an agreement will result in more expulsions anyway – because the latter depends
on the willingness of non-EU countries, which the EU cannot legislate for (and
does not even address in this most recent package). And because it is uncertain
whether they will result in more expulsions, Member States will be wary of
agreeing to anything which either results in more obligations to accept
asylum-seekers on their territory, or leaves them with the same number as
before.
The idea of ‘return sponsorship’
– which reads like a grotesque parody of individuals sponsoring children in
developing countries via charities – may not be appealing except to those
countries like France, which have the capacity to twist arms in developing
countries to accept returns. Member States might be able to agree on a
replacement for the temporary protection Directive on the basis that they will
never use that replacement either. And Commission threats to use infringement
proceedings to enforce the law might not worry Member States who recall that
the CJEU ruled on their failure to relocate asylum-seekers after the relocation
law had already expired, and that the Court will soon rule on Hungary’s
expulsion of the Central European University after it has already left.
As to whether the proposals will
‘work’ in terms of managing asylum flows fairly and compatibly with human
rights, it is striking how much they depend upon curtailing appeal rights, even
though appeals are often successful. The proposed limitation of appeal rights
will also be maintained in the Dublin system; and while the proposed ‘bottleneck’
of deciding on removals to non-EU countries before applying the Dublin system
has been removed, a variation on this process may well apply in the border
procedures process instead. There is no new review of the assessment of the
safety of non-EU countries – which is questionable in light of the many reports
of abuse in Libya. While the EU is not proposing, as the wildest headbangers
would want, to turn people back or refuse applications without consideration,
the question is whether the fast-track consideration of applications and then
appeals will constitute merely a Potemkin village of procedural rights that
mean nothing in practice.
Increased detention is already a
feature of the amendments proposed earlier: the reception conditions proposal
would add a new ground for detention; the return Directive proposal would
inevitably increase detention due to curtailing voluntary departure (as
discussed here).
Unfortunately the Commission’s claim in its new communication that its 2018
proposal is ‘promoting’ voluntary return is therefore simply false. Trump-style
falsehoods have no place in the discussion of EU immigration or asylum law.
The latest Eurodac proposal would
not do much compared to the 2016 proposal – but then, the 2016 proposal would
already constitute an enormous increase in the amount of data collected and
shared by that system.
Some elements of the package are
more positive. The possibility for refugees and people with subsidiary
protection to get EU long-term residence status earlier would be an important
step toward making asylum ‘valid throughout the Union’, as referred to in the Treaties.
The wider definition of family members,
and the retention of the full sovereignty clause, may lead to some fairer
results under the Dublin system. Future plans to improve the long-term
residents’ Directive are long overdue. The Commission’s sound legal assessment that
no one should be prosecuted for acting on their obligations to rescue people in
distress at sea is welcome. The quasi-agreed text of the reception conditions Directive
explicitly rules out Trump-style separate detention of children.
No proposals from the EU can
solve the underlying political issue: a chunk of public opinion is hostile to
more migration, whether in frontline Member States, other Member States, or
transit countries outside the EU. The politics is bound to affect what Member
States and non-EU countries alike are willing to agree to. And for the same
reason, even if a set of amendments to the system is ultimately agreed, there
will likely be continuing issues of implementation, especially illegal pushbacks
and refusals to accept relocation.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 26
JHA4: chapter I:3, chapter I:4, chapter I:5, chapter I:6, chapter
I:7
Photo credit: DW
*I have worked as an independent consultant for the impact assessment regarding the background of some of this week’s proposals. My views are, however, independent of any EU institution or Member State.
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