Monday, 2 June 2025

European Return Orders and the European Human Rights Convention: The Commission’s Proposal for a Return Regulation

 


 

Professor Elspeth Guild, University of Liverpool

 

Photo credit: Marcelx42, via Wikimedia Commons

 

In March 2025 the European Commission published a proposal for a re-cast return regulation. It has been met with mixed responses, a certain jubilation in some parts of Europe’s extreme right, a certain concern not least from a human rights perspective in other quarters. For an excellent analysis of this proposal see Majcher’s blog on this site. One of the innovations in the proposal is a European Return Order which any Member State may enforce without issuing its own expulsion decision (Articles 7-9). (‘Return’ is the EU term for ‘expulsion’ which is the term used in the European Convention on Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. I will use the term ‘expulsion’, consistent with European and international human rights law).

 

In this blog I will examine the human rights problems which Member States are likely to encounter where they seek to expel someone on the basis of a European Return Order issued by another Member State. I will focus in particular on the case law of the European Court of Human Rights regarding the human rights assessments which states must carry out before expelling a person. These requirements were recently reviewed, expanded and confirmed by the ECtHR in its 4 February 2025 judgment in A.B. and Y.W. v Malta in the context of Article 3 ECHR (the prohibition on torture, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment). I will also examine the duty on states to carry out a human rights assessment in the context of Article 8 (the duty to respect private and family life). Although this is a qualified right, states must justify on grounds of necessity and proportionality any interference with it. The facts of each situation need to be considered and weighed against the interest of the person.

 

The European Return Order

 

According to the Commission’s explanatory memorandum, the European Return Order (ERO) will not replace each Member State’s own return decisions. Instead, the ERO will extend the scope of application of Member States' return decisions in order to make them actionable across the Union by Member States other than the one which made the order. The ERO will be in a common form which includes the key elements of the national expulsion decision. It will be made available through the Schengen Information System (the EU information sharing system for security and border management). In so far as technical changes may be required for this purpose, they will be addressed in amendments to SIS rules.

 

An implementing act will make it mandatory for all Member States to recognise and enforce an expulsion (return) decision issued by another Member State in the form of the ERO (with limited derogations). Among those derogations is a provision (Article 9(4)) which allows Member States not to recognise or enforce the expulsion decision of another Member State on ground that it is manifestly contrary to public policy. In EU law public policy does not expressly include fundamental or human rights grounds, although the similarly worded public policy derogation in the Brussels Regulation on the mutual recognition of civil judgments does include manifest human rights breaches, according to the case law of the CJEU (see the judgment in Real Madrid, for example).

 

More relevant may be Article 5 of the proposed regulation, which requires that Member States implement the regulation in compliance with the principle of non-refoulement, and with fundamental rights including the Charter, with relevant international law. However, there is no indication of how a Member State is to reconcile the duty to recognise and enforce expulsion orders made by other Member States with the Article 5 duties.

 

Again, according to the Commission, the Member State that issues an expulsion decision remains responsible for its enforcement. It must use all appropriate means to ensure effective expulsion of the person named therein. The new proposal is intended to be a mechanism for recognition of expulsion decisions issued by another Member State, underpinned and facilitated by the ERO. The explanatory memorandum states that the proposal clarifies the process and relevant procedural safeguards and remedies based on the lessons learnt from the implementation of the 2023 Commission Recommendation on mutual recognition of return decisions

 

The objective of mutual recognition of expulsion decisions among the Member States has long been on the EU agenda. In 2001, a directive (2001/40) was adopted to achieve this end. As noted by Peers, that directive does not apply to the process or substance of the decision and permits expulsion by another Member State as an option not an obligation. Under that directive, enforcement takes place under national law which must include the Returns Directive 2008/115 (which will be repealed if the proposed regulation is adopted in the current form). Thus, the main purpose of the 2001 directive appears to be to avoid a state having to send an irregularly present migrant back to the Member State which issued the expulsion decision. A system for financial compensation was adopted in 2004. The criticisms which Peers makes of the directive include: its application to persons with rights under international agreements agreed by the EU, inappropriate extension of Schengen (and the SIS II rules) to persons already present on the territory, inadequate application of human rights standards, opacity as regards as regards costs and inconsistency with the Returns Directive.

 

As for the Commission’s recommendation on mutual recognition of expulsion decisions, the Commission claimed that this would facilitate and accelerate the return processes for the Member State responsible for return and enhance cooperation and mutual trust between Member States by further increasing convergence between Member States on managing migration. This is a rather large claim as will be explained below. In particular, the Commission claimed that obstacles to cooperation and communication among national authorities responsible for the asylum and the return procedures represent a key structural challenge for a more efficient expulsion processes. This logic underpins the current proposal for an ERO.

 

The Human Rights Obstacles to EROs

 

The key problem, however, with mutual recognition of expulsion decisions among Member States is the duty in international and European human rights law that a state seeking to expel an individual must carry out an assessment which consists of two parts which are not necessarily part of the same proceedings depending on the national law of the state. First there must be an ex nunc rigorous assessment of any risk which the person might face if returned to the proposed country, for the purposes of ensuring that the prohibition on refoulement is fully complied with (para 72 A.B. and Y.W. v Malta). This is required by Article 3 ECHR and the subject of substantial caselaw. Secondly, there must be a full assessment of the proportionality of the expulsion decision in light of the right to respect for his or her private and family life (Article 8 ECHR). It is for the state to show that the decision is proportionate and the threat sufficient to outweigh the individual’s right to respect for his or her private or family life.

 

Assessing the risk of refoulement

 

On the first ground, the prohibition on refoulement, it is for the person to make the claim. But thereafter, the risk assessment must focus on the foreseeable consequences of the applicant’s removal to the country of destination, in the light of the general situation there and of his or her personal circumstances. It must be considered whether, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, substantial grounds have been shown for believing that the person concerned, if returned, would face a real risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 ECHR. If the existence of such a risk is established, the applicant’s removal would necessarily breach Article 3, regardless of whether the risk emanates from a general situation of violence, a personal characteristic of the applicant, or a combination of the two (para 61 A.B. and Y.W. v Malta).

 

As regards the distribution of the burden of proof, the ECtHR has clarified that there is a shared duty between the applicant and the immigration authorities to ascertain and evaluate all relevant facts in asylum proceedings. This includes a procedural obligation (part of the Article 3 duty) to assess the risk before expelling the individual. There are two main consequences of the Article 3 ECHR requirements. First, the authorities of a Member State executing an expulsion order (or an ERO) must be satisfied that the expulsion will not constitute refoulement. This will have to be on the basis of its own assessment not that of another Member State as the difference in assessment of risk in countries of origin by different Member States vary widely (as regards the same country of origin and where the risk is the same: generalised violence or civil war). Thus, an assessment of a country of origin by one Member State may result in granting protection while the assessment of the same country by another Member State may result in no protection and the issue of an expulsion order. Secondly, the assessment must be ex nunc and carried out in close temporal proximity to the proposed date of expulsion. Where there is an extended delay between adopting an expulsion order and its proposed execution, the state must carry out a new assessment to ensure that the risk remains below the threshold required by Article 3. All assessments must be rigorous.

 

Assessing the right to respect for private and family life

 

The second human rights ground which may defeat an expulsion decision is the right to respect for the person’s private and family life (Article 8 ECHR). Expulsion will always be an interference with private and family life (there is no need for expulsion where the person wishes and chooses to leave the country thus exercising his or her own choice regarding private and family life). The grounds on which a state can interfere with the right are set out in Article 8(2) and in all cases must be in accordance with the law and necessary in a democratic society. The grounds are limited to the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others. The ECtHR has elaborated an extensive list of elements which must be considered when assessing the proportionality of the state’s claim to interfere with the right which include: in all cases, the length of the applicant’s stay in the country from which he or she is to be expelled and the solidity of his, her or their social, cultural and family ties with the host country and with the country of destination.

 

In the case of expulsion on grounds of criminal conviction, the nature and seriousness of the offence committed by the person in the expelling state and the time elapsed since the offence was committed and the person’s conduct during that period must be assessed. Where family life is at issue, the assessment must include consideration of the nationalities of the person and any family members concerned, the family situation, such as the length of marriage, and other factors expressing the effectiveness of a couple´s family life, whether or not the spouse knew about the offence at the time when he or she entered into a family relationship, whether or not there are children of the marriage and, if so, their age(s), the seriousness of the difficulties that the spouse is likely to encounter in the country to which the applicant is to be expelled, the best interests and well-being of any children involved, in particular any difficulties they would encounter if they had to follow the person to the country to which he or she is to be expelled.

 

The assessment of the person’s entitlement to respect for privacy and family life in the context of the state’s claim to the necessity and proportionality of an interference with it must take place when the actual expulsion of the individual is planned to take place. It must be up to date. Where the state knew (or ought to have known) of the existence of the person’s relevant private and/or family life in accordance with Article 8, it is under a duty to undertake a thorough assessment, subject to procedural safeguards including a right of appeal.

 

In the context of an ERO, it is difficult to see how an expelling state which is other than that where the person’s private and family life is situated will be in a position to make such an assessment. Reliance on an assessment made in another state may be insufficient depending on the temporal relationship of the assessment and the proposed expulsion.

 

Similarly, while the objective is to ensure that persons named in an expulsion order by any Member State are expelled as quickly as possible to a third country or another Member State, it is not clear that this will be rapid. Nor is it self-evident that a person will not have developed family life in the expelling Member State. Such family life could have commenced in the issuing Member State then continued in that Member State which is responsible for the expulsion. There are myriad circumstances which occur in practice which blur the lines of where family and private life have developed and been exercised. It is worth remembering that in EU law as regards the expulsion of a third country national from one Member State who is in possession of a residence permit in another Member State, the CJEU has held that the person must be permitted to return the Member State which issued the residence permit and only expelled to a third country where the person refuses to do so. This relieves the Member State where the person is present from the obligation to carry out a human rights compliant private or family life assessment.


Conclusion

 

The Commission’s proposal for an ERO to facilitate the expulsion of third country nationals from the EU by requiring a Member State other than that which has taken the decision to expel the person raises substantial issues as regards human rights. International and European human rights require states to make an up to date risk assessment before expulsion where a person has claimed a fear of persecution, of the application of the death penalty or is otherwise at risk of deprivation of life, torture, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment or arbitrary disappearance. This duty will apply to the expelling Member States in spite of the fact that the issuing state may have carried out such an assessment. This is particularly so where the original assessment is out of date or where there are substantial differences in protection rates for persons from the same country and in generally similar circumstances in the issuing state and the state which is to carry out the expulsion. The expelling state may also be required to carry out an assessment of the necessity, legality and proportionality of the expulsion decision in light of the person’s right to respect for their private and family life (Article 8 ECHR). In many cases, the elements of private and/or family life will be in the issuing state. The expelling state is likely to have difficulties as regards accessing of such elements and in the event that its assessment is that the interference is not proportionate, the fate of the person will be ambiguous. The required assessments may also be hampered by lack of access to and translation of documents. While Article 9(4) of the proposal permits a Member State to decide not to recognise another Member State’s expulsion order, this must be on the ground that to do so is manifestly contrary to public policy, and the proposal does not explicitly confirm that fundamental and human rights could be part of a public policy assessment.  

 

In sum, this proposal does not appear likely to speed up human rights’ compliant expulsions. Rather it is likely to result in lengthy procedures fraught with cross border problems for both states. A better approach to the issue of persons subject to expulsion decisions who move from one Member State to another is to facilitate their return to the first Member State. However, if the person claims a fear that the first Member State will expel them contrary to the prohibition on non-refoulement, the expelling state cannot simply disregard the claim without breaching its own human rights obligations.

 

No comments:

Post a Comment