Greece deems Turkey “safe”, but refugees are not: The substantive examination of asylum applications is the only safe solution for refugees
Athens, 14 June 2021: With a new Joint Ministerial Decision (JMD) issued on 7 June,[1] the Greek State designates Turkey as a “safe third country” for families, men, women and children of five nationalities[2] seeking international protection in Greece. It is noted that the JMD applies even to those from countries with high recognition rates for international protection, such as Syria, Afghanistan and Somalia.[3] This decision reinforces the policy established by the March 2016 EU-Turkey Statement that shifts the responsibility to protect refugees, including unaccompanied children,[4] arriving in Europe to third countries.
For years, the
effect of this externalisation policy has been to turn the Greek islands into a
place of confinement for thousands of displaced and persecuted people, as
authorities prioritised “containing” them on the islands to facilitate their
return to third countries. This created places like Moria that became shameful symbols of
Europe’s failure to protect refugees. But the solution is not to send displaced
individuals to Turkey. In Turkey, people seeking asylum from non-European
countries are not granted international protection per the 1951 Refugee Convention,
while
in March 2021 Turkey announced it would withdraw from the Istanbul Convention,
and will thus not be protecting victims of gender-based violence, who are at an
increased risk in case of return from Greece, based on the new JMD. People should not be returned to a country where their
lives would be in danger, but multiple reports over recent years warn of the refoulement
of refugees from Turkey, even to war zones in Syria.[5]
Furthermore, the concept of a “safe third country” presupposes the existence of
an essential connection between the asylum seeker and that country, as well as the
consent of the third country to receive the returnee. These conditions are not
met in the case of Turkey.
The decision to
designate Turkey as a “safe third country”, should be revoked for the aforementioned reasons. Furthermore, the
unworkability of this new law is highlighted, since as far back as March 2020, Turkey is not
accepting the return of refugees and asylum seekers from Greece. This has been
pointed out by Greece’s Ministry of Migration and Asylum as well as the
European Commission.[6] Refugees
whose applications have been rejected as inadmissible according to the “safe third
country” principle, are already enduring a situation of protracted legal
uncertainty, social exclusion, destitution, homelessness, and even prolonged
detention in Greece, which is at risk of turning into a prison.[7] This JMD will serve only to increase the number of people in such a
situation.
In fact, as has
been pointed out in relevant interventions by the Greek Ombudsperson, and more
recently in a reply by the Commissioner for Migration and Home Affairs of the
European Commission,[8] in
these cases applicants must be able to re-apply for asylum, and have their
applications examined on their merits, in accordance with EU and national law.[9]
In line with a
recent announcement by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),[10] our organisations stress that “externalization simply
shifts asylum responsibilities elsewhere and evades international obligations”. We once again
call on the Greek and European authorities to honour their responsibility to protect
refugees and to avoid further undermining the European
asylum acquis and the fundamental principles and values for protecting human rights.
To this end, we call on Greece to revoke the JMD issued on 7 June.
Signatories
Action for education
ΑRSIS – Association for
the Social Support of Youth
Better
Days
Centre
Diotima
Danish
Refugee Council (DRC)
ECHO100PLUS
ELIX
Equal
Rights Beyond Borders
Europe
Must Act
European
Lawyers in Lesvos (ELIL)
Fenix - Humanitarian Legal Aid
Greek Council for
Refugees (GCR)
Greek Forum of Migrants
Greek Forum of Refugees (GFR)
Greek Helsinki Monitor
Hellenic League for
Human Rights (HLHR)
HumanRights360
Human Rights Legal Project
Initiative
for the Detainees’ Rights
International
Rescue Committee (IRC)
INTERSOS Hellas
Irida
Women's Center
Legal
Centre Lesvos
Lesvos
Solidarity
Lighthouse
Relief
Médecins
du Monde - Greece
METAdrasi-
Action for Migration and Development
Mobile Info Team (MIT)
Network for Children’s
Rights
Network
for the Social Support of Refugees and Migrants
Odyssea
Refugees International
Refugee
Law Clinic Berlin
Refugee Legal Support (RLS)
Refugee Rights Europe (RRE)
Refugee Support Aegean (RSA)
Samos Volunteers
SolidarityNow
Still I
Rise
Terre des hommes Hellas
[1] Joint Ministerial Decision
(JMD) 42799/2021, Gov. Gazette 2425/Β/7-6-2021, available in Greek at: https://bit.ly/3gjEYcI.
[2]
The JMD applies to nationals of Afghanistan, Syria, Somalia, Bangladesh and
Pakistan
[3] Indicatively, in 2020, the rate
of positive decisions issued by the Greek Asylum Service (GAS) for asylum
applicants from Somalia was 94.1%, from Syria 91.6% and from Afghanistan 66.2%.
RSA, “Asylum statistics for 2020 A need for regular and transparent official
information”, 11 February 2021, available at: https://bit.ly/3vcbC5K.
[4] According to the latest available
statistics issued by the National Center for Social Solidarity (EKKA), 68% of
unaccompanied children that have been identified in Greece are from Syria,
Afghanistan and Pakistan. Accordingly, and in any case, the implementation
of the JMD is not in line with the principle of the best interests of the child
and the protective provisions of the International Convention on the Rights of
the Child. On the latest available statistics
see EKKA, Situation Update: Unaccompanied Children (UAC) in Greece,
15 May 2021, available at: https://bit.ly/3wcByPw.
[5]
Amongst others: EASO, Syria Situation of returnees from abroad: Country of Origin
Information, June
2021, available at: https://bit.ly/3weoZUn,
pp. 12-13; AIDA, Country Report Turkey (May 2021 update), 31 May 2021, available at: https://bit.ly/3gfnyzr; DW,
“Amnesty: Turkey forced Syrian refugees back into war zone”, 25 October 2019, available at: https://bit.ly/3pAOpc3;
ECRE, “Human Rights Watch report:
push backs of Syrian refugees by Turkey”, 30 March 2018, available at: https://bit.ly/2T43XsK;
Human Rights Watch, “Turkey:
Syrians Pushed Back at the Border”,
23 November 2015,
available at: https://bit.ly/3x2tPUA.
[6] Amongst
others: Ministry of Migration and Asylum, “Request by Greece towards the EU for
the immediate return 1,450 third country nationals under the Joint EU-Turkey
Statement”, 14 January 2021, available in Greek at: https://bit.ly/3izPzmA; European
Commission, Commission Staff Working Document: Turkey 2020 Report, 6 October
2020, available at: https://bit.ly/3xgt4aK,
p. 48.
[7] It
is noted that the majority (65.8%) of international protection applications that
were submitted in Greece in 2020 regarded asylum seekers from the 5 countries
that are stated in the JMD. Ministry of Migration and Asylum, Annual briefing 2020, 19 January 2021, available in Greek at: https://bit.ly/3wfCgfi, p.13.
[8] EN P-000604/2021, Answer given by Ms
Johansson on behalf of the European Commission (1.6.2021), διαθέσιμο στα αγγλικά στο: https://bit.ly/3cuwEGb.
[9]
Article 38, para. 4 Directive 2013/32/EU on common procedures for granting and withdrawing international protection
(recast) and article 86, para. 5 L. 4636/2019 (also known as “IPA”).
[10] UNHCR, “UNHCR warns against “exporting” asylum, calls
for responsibility sharing for refugees, not burden shifting”, 19 May
2021, available at: https://bit.ly/3v7EgEN.
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