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FIFTH
SECTION
CASE OF
S.S. AND OTHERS v. DENMARK
(Application
no. 54703/08)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
20 January
2011
This
judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44
§ 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial
revision.
In the case of S.S. and Others v. Denmark,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fifth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Renate
Jaeger,
President,
Peer
Lorenzen,
Karel
Jungwiert,
Rait
Maruste,
Mark
Villiger,
Isabelle
Berro-Lefèvre,
Zdravka
Kalaydjieva,
judges,
and
Claudia Westerdiek,
Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 14 December 2010,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 54705/08) against the Kingdom
of Denmark lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by the Sri Lankan nationals, S.S. and V.S. (“the
applicants”), and their two children on 14 November 2008.
The acting President of the Chamber decided to grant the applicants
anonymity (Rule 47 § 3 of the Rules of Court).
- The
applicants were represented by Mr Tyge Trier, a lawyer practising in
Copenhagen. The Danish Government (“the Government”) were
represented by their Agent, Mr Thomas Winkler, the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, and their Co-agent, Mrs Nina Holst-Christensen, the
Ministry of Justice.
- The
applicants alleged that an implementation of the deportation order to
return them to Sri Lanka would be in violation of Article 3 of the
Convention.
- On
17 November 2008, the acting President of the Chamber decided to
apply Rule 39 of the Rules of Court, indicating to the Government
that it was in the interests of the parties and the proper conduct of
the proceedings that the applicants should not be expelled to Sri
Lanka pending the Court’s decision. On 9 January 2009 the
acting President decided to give notice of the application to the
Government and granted it priority under Rule 41 of the Rules of
Court.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The applicants were born in Sri Lanka in 1969, 1979,
2000 and 2002 respectively. Currently the applicant husband lives in
Germany and the applicant wife lives with the children in an asylum
centre in Denmark.
- It
appears that the applicants married on 30 September 1998 in northern
Sri Lanka.
- It
also appears that they left Sri Lanka separately for Moscow. It is
not known exactly when. The applicant husband was in possession of a
valid passport with a study visa inserted. The applicant wife was in
possession of a valid passport. Reunited, the applicants went to
Ukraine and thereafter to Romania, where they were granted asylum in
September 2001. Two children were born to them there. In 2002 the
applicants attempted to apply for asylum in Switzerland, but
apparently, before a decision was taken, they returned voluntarily to
Romania. There, at some unknown time, they were issued with Romanian
aliens’ passports.
- On
19 July 2005 the applicants entered Denmark, where the
applicant wife’s sister and cousin lived. Since they were in
possession of Romanian aliens’ passports they could enter
Denmark without a visa. On 22 July 2005 under section 9a,
subsection 1, of the Aliens Act (udlændingeloven)
they applied for work and residence permits which they were refused
on 12 October 2005. The applicants were ordered to leave the
country before 15 November 2005.
- On
14 November 2005 the applicants requested asylum.
- In
support thereof, on 14 and 17 November 2005, the applicant wife
stated that she and her parents had moved around a lot within Sri
Lanka and had lived both in northern and central Sri Lanka and in
Colombo. The applicant wife went to school for twelve years after
which she worked as a pre-school teacher. Her family was under
surveillance by the police because her father and sister were
involved with the Tamil Tigers (LTTE). The
applicant had also been a member of and worked for the LTTE for two
years from 1995 to 1997, when she lived in the north. She told the
LTTE that she was unable to take part in their training because she
had asthma. They demanded that she work for them and she thus carried
out social work and made sure that the children could attend school
and that they were provided with food and medicine. The applicant
wife’s parents did not like this and sent her to Colombo, where
she lived at a boarding house for Tamils. In 1997, it appears, she
and all the women at the boarding house were detained by the police,
suspected of having blown up a bus. They were not provided with
anything to eat or drink during the detention. Subsequently, she was
arrested and interrogated on several occasions, including by the
Criminal Investigation Department and the military. Her father paid
for her release and arranged for her to leave Sri Lanka around
October 1999. Her case in Sri Lanka was undecided but she remained on
a list of suspects. Upon return, the police would reopen her case and
that would harm her entire family. She did not want to ruin her
children’s chances of having an education.
- In
an asylum registration report of 23 November 2005, the applicant
husband stated that he had been a member of the
LTTE for three months in 1985, when he was 16 years old. He
realised that the organisation was not for him. Thereafter he stayed
neutral and was not a member of any political or religious party or
organisation. He sold his garage in 1998 in order to leave Sri Lanka,
which he did in April 1999. Being unsatisfied with the service in
Romania and allegedly having trouble with the mafia there, the family
decided to move to Denmark.
- In
an asylum application of 1 December 2005 the applicant husband stated
that he had been a member of the LTTE from 1985 to 1986. Having
completed his training, he distributed propaganda for the
organisation. He owned a garage at which he repaired cars, minibuses
and jeeps. Both the LTTE and the military brought their vehicles and
would threaten him to work for only one party. The LTTE also asked
him to place a bomb in a military jeep. He refused and was then
accused of being an informant. He kept a low profile for a while and
sold his garage so that he could leave the country. If returned to
Sri Lanka, the LTTE would give him a death sentence.
- According
to an interview report of 3 July 2006, prepared by the Immigration
Service (Udlændingestyrelsen,
now Udlændingeservice) the applicant husband added, inter
alia, that when he was a member of the LTTE in 1985 he trained
with them three or four times a week, after school or after lunch
breaks. He ended his membership because he wanted to finish training
to be a mechanic. The LTTE told him that he could still assist them
by putting up posters. He did not always comply with their orders
because he was afraid of being caught by the authorities. The latter
asked him frequently about the LTTE and its whereabouts and he would
tell the authorities that he did not know anything. Nothing further
would happen. The applicant husband was never wanted, detained or
convicted and he had no criminal record. While working as mechanic,
he had both the military and the LTTE as customers. In 1996, he
refused a request by the LTTE to place a bomb in a military vehicle.
He begged them not to cause any problems for him and eventually they
left. In the end he felt so much under pressure and suspicion by both
parties that he decided to leave the country. His departure was not
triggered by a specific event, rather the general problems with the
LTTE and the military forces had become too much. In April or May
1998 he sold his garage. Thereafter he married and in October 1998
he travelled on his own to Colombo with a view to leaving Sri Lanka.
Six months later he left for Moscow.
- According
to an interview report of 3 July 2006, prepared by the Immigration
Service, the applicant wife added, inter alia, that she had
lived with her family at a boarding house in Colombo for about a
year. Before that she had lived at a refugee camp for Tamils who
wanted to go to Colombo. Before that, from 1996 to 1997, she had been
a forced member of the LTTE’s students’ organisation and
carried out social work for the LTTE. Her father had also carried out
social work. He had not been a member of the LTTE but was accused of
being a supporter, which caused problems for the family. Her father
was detained once in 1985 or 1986, and in 1998 he was detained many
times. The police would come to their home which was situated in an
area controlled by LTTE. It was due to their Tamil ethnicity that the
family had so many problems with the army. The applicant wife did not
know her sister’s exact position in LTTE, as she had not been
in touch with her for many years, but she assumed that her sister had
been a rank-and-file member of the LTTE for four to five years. When
the applicant wife was detained in Colombo in connection with the
bombing of the bus, she spent half a day at the police station. It
was a female suicide bomber wearing sandals who had blown up the bus,
and the police therefore checked all girls wearing sandals, including
the applicant, who was innocent. Her sister was also arrested in that
connection. If returned to Sri Lanka, the applicant wife feared
problems with the Sri Lankan army, which would know that she had been
away from her country for five years. She did not want to ruin her
children’s future and she feared that they would not be able to
go to school in Sri Lanka.
- By
letter of 31 July 2006 the Aliens Authorities requested the Danish
Embassy in Bucharest to provide information about the applicants’
basis for residence in Romania. By letter of 3 October 2006, the
Embassy stated that the applicant husband had been granted refugee
status in Romania on 4 September 2001. His residence permit
expired on 22 September 2005 and his passport expired on 27 June
2006. A prohibition on his entry into Romania had been issued against
him until 16 May 2021. The applicant wife and the oldest
child had also been granted refugee status in Romania on 4 September
2001 and been granted unlimited protection on 14 and 24 September
2004, respectively. Their residence permit for Romania expired on 15
September 2005 and the passport expired on 27 June 2006. The youngest
child had obtained refugee status in Romania on 5 July 2002. The
applicant wife and the two children had a right to stay in Romania
even though their residence permit and passport had expired.
- On
26 October 2006 the applicants’ request for asylum was refused
by the Aliens Authorities finding that the applicants’ previous
connection with LTTE was unknown to the Sri-Lankan authorities and
that none of them would face a real and concrete danger of being
subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 of the Convention upon
return to Sri Lanka. Thus, they failed to fulfil the criteria under
section 7 of the Aliens Act (Udlændingeloven) to be
granted asylum.
- The
applicants appealed against the decision to the Refugee Appeals Board
(Flygtningenævnet), before which an oral hearing was
held on 4 October 2007. The applicant wife stated, among other
things, that her father had led a humanitarian organisation which
supported the LTTE. Moreover, while being a member of the LTTE’s
students’ organisation she organised annual meetings and made
speeches and read out poetry. She was a publicly known person and
LTTE supporter. Her speeches were not political but concerned the
situation in the country and the people who had given their lives for
it. She had no connection with the high-ranking members of the LTTE
and she never carried out any military activities for the
organisation. After the marriage, her husband ran into problems with
the army and they left because he was wanted.
- At
the same oral hearing before the Refugee Appeals Board, the applicant
husband changed his explanation and stated that he had sold his
garage already in 1996 and lived in hiding for three years until he
left Sri Lanka. He had to leave because the army knew about his
work for the LTTE. At some unknown time, several men from the army
had pointed at him and said “tiger” and beaten him. The
applicant husband submitted a declaration in English from a lawyer in
Sri Lanka of 28 September 2005 to “whom it may concern”
stating that the applicant husband was one of several suspected of
helping LTTE and that he was “wanted by the Sri Lankan
police and that there was a case pending against him”. The
applicant husband explained that the police had come to his home and
delivered the letter to his mother. Subsequently, his mother had
contacted the said lawyer who had contact with all Singhalese
authorities. The lawyer had said that the applicant husband was
wanted for a criminal offence related to the abduction of a man who
had worked at his garage. The applicant husband was therefore a
wanted person in Sri Lanka and would be killed by the authorities
upon return.
- On
4 October 2007, the Refugee Appeals Board upheld the refusal to grant
the applicants asylum. It found that the authorities were not aware
of the activities carried out by the applicant wife which ended about
two years before her departure. Likewise, it found that the applicant
husband’s activities had a low profile character. Moreover,
having regard to the time that had passed since the activities took
place, there was no basis for assuming that the applicants were at
risk of persecution upon return. Finally, it found that the
applicants’ new changed explanations before it lacked
credibility and it did not attach any value as evidence to the
declaration submitted.
- On
25 September 2008 the applicants’ request for a residence
permit on humanitarian grounds was refused by the Ministry of
Refugee, Immigration and Integration Affairs (Ministeriet for
flygtninge, indvandrere og integration).
Subsequent events before the Court and domestic proceedings
- On
14 November 2008 the Danish Refugee Council (Dansk
Flygtningehjælp), an NGO, requested the Refugee Appeals
Board to reopen the case. It referred to the applicants’
previous explanations and the general deterioration of the security
situation in Sri Lanka. In addition it alleged that the applicant
husband was of interest to the authorities, most recently in
connection with a bombing in 2007, and that the same applied to the
applicant wife, who was of interest to the authorities due to her
extensive activities for the LTTE; her many arrests; her sister’s
high-profile membership of the LTTE and subsequent television
exposure; and her father’s and cousin’s affiliation with
the LTTE.
- On
14 November 2008, on the applicants’ behalf, the Danish Refugee
Council also submitted a letter to the Court of Human Rights
requesting that it stay the applicants’ deportation.
- On
17 November 2008, the Court of Human Rights decided to apply Rule 39
of the Rules of Court, indicating to the Government that it was in
the interests of the parties and the proper conduct of the
proceedings that the applicants should not be expelled to Sri Lanka
pending the Court’s decision.
- Consequently,
on 18 November 2008 the Refugee Appeals Board extended the time-limit
for the applicants’ departure until further notice.
- On
30 March 2009 the Refugee Appeals Board decided to reopen the
applicants’ asylum case.
- By
letter of 11 June 2009 the applicants’ representative forwarded
a CD-ROM to the Refugee Appeals Board with a copy of a television
broadcast which allegedly showed that the applicant wife’s
sister was active with the LTTE as a high-profile “training
master”. The representative maintained that in April 2009 the
applicant wife had talked to her father in Sri Lanka.
- On
16 June 2009 the Refugee Appeals Board decided to suspend the
examination of all asylum cases concerning ethnic Tamils from
northern Sri Lanka, including the applicants’ case.
- On
16 December 2009, on the basis of the most recent background
information concerning Sri Lanka including, inter alia, a
Memorandum of 26 October 2009 prepared by the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, the Refugee Appeals Board decided to review the suspended
cases, including the applicants’ case.
- The
Refugee Appeals Board obtained the files on the applicants from the
Romanian and the Swiss authorities.
- During
a hearing before the Refugee Appeals Board on 19 April 2010 the
applicant wife submitted a photograph of a stage performance and
explained that she had played before an audience of more than five
hundred people at such theatrical events. The play in question
concerned the life story of an LTTE member, who was a martyr. The
applicant wife believed that there were people present among
the audience who informed the Government about the plays.
Furthermore, her father had been deeply involved with the LTTE. The
applicant wife added that just before her departure in 1999 she was
arrested by the criminal police in Colombo, who said that she was to
be interviewed again at a different location. Her father bribed the
police and four days after, she left the country. The
last time the applicant wife had contact with her family was when she
spoke to her cousin in 2009. She last spoke to her mother and sister
in 2005.
The
applicant did not know where her family was. The applicant wife
showed a video clip from YouTube to the Refugee Appeals Board,
allegedly showing her sister with other LTTE members in
November 2007. The applicant had last seen her sister in 1997
when they lived at the boarding house in Colombo. The applicant did
not know where her sister was. Finally, the applicant wife submitted
that in Denmark, she has participated in demonstrations against the
hostilities in Sri Lanka.
- At
the outset of the hearing before the Refugee Appeals Board on
19 April 2010 the applicant husband stated that he was mentally
well and capable of being interviewed. He stated that he and his
father were attacked by Singhalese in 1983. His father was killed and
the applicant sustained an injury to his hand. Moreover, he had
inherited the garage from his parents in 1996. The same year the LTTE
had asked the applicant husband to place a bomb in a military
vehicle. He had refused but hid the bomb in his garage, where it
remained even after he sold the garage for about 300,000 rupees in
May 1998. He was afraid that the bomb had been discovered and that he
was therefore wanted by the authorities. He left Sri Lanka using a
false passport with his own picture. The applicant husband had no
contact with his family. He last spoke with them in 2007. However, in
2005 and 2007 he received two letters from his mother who stated that
the buyer of the garage had informed the authorities about the bomb
in the garage and that the secret police sought her out in order to
find him. It appears that he submitted the two said letters from his
mother, dated 2005 and 2007, alleging that the authorities were
looking for the applicant husband. It also appears that the applicant
husband submitted yet another declaration from the same lawyer, who
had made the declaration in 2005. It was dated 5 December 2007 to
“whom it may concern” and stated, inter alia, that
the search for the applicant husband “had been intensified by
the police, intelligence unit of the Sri-Lankan Army and the
parliamentary groups” and that “there were several cases
against him for allegedly supporting the LTTE”.
32. On
19 April 2010, the Refugee Appeals Board refused to reopen the
applicants’ case. It found that the most recent general
background information would not lead to a revised assessment of the
case. More specifically in its letter to the applicant’s
representative it stated as follows:
The Refugee Appeals Board finds that the applicants have
provided new and/or extended information during the reopened
proceedings, and that this gives rise to critical doubt about the
credibility of the applicants’ information, as there appears to
be no reasonable explanation for the late appearance of the
information, even in view of the information regarding the applicant
husband’s mental difficulties, see counsel’s pleading of
19 April 2010 with exhibits. The applicant wife has thus stated that
the reason why she did not inform the Refugee Appeals Board of her
LTTE theatre performances in the previous asylum proceedings was that
at the time she was not in possession of the photograph now submitted
... The Refugee Appeals Board finds that this is not a reasonable
explanation why she did not, at the beginning of her asylum case,
inform the Refugee Appeals Board of the high profile that she now
invokes. The applicant wife further stated that, in connection with
the arrest where her father paid a bribe for her release, she was the
only one arrested and that she was to be questioned again at a
different location, and that this arrest was the reason for her
departure four or five days later. The Refugee Appeals Board finds
that this statement contradicts her statement at the interview of 3
July 2006 as reported by the Danish Immigration Service according to
which she was arrested with the sister who now lives in Denmark and
that her father paid for the release without any conditions. It
appears from her asylum application form that the arrest for which
her father paid a bribe took place in 1998. Her departure was in
March 1999. The Refugee Appeals Board finds that the applicant
wife’s statement appears to have been extended on essential
points and it only considers it a fact that her father did social or
humanitarian work in the local community in his home town ... without
being a member of the LTTE, that as a member of the LTTE between 1995
and 1997, the applicant wife also did social work for the LTTE,
including distribution of food and medicine, that she lived in
various places after 1997, at which time she was exposed to general,
brief periods of detention, and that one year prior to her departure
she lived in Colombo, from where she departed using her genuine
national passport. Moreover, the Refugee Appeals Board noted that the
information provided by the applicant wife, that the last time she
had contact with her father was in 2005, does not correspond with the
information provided by the Danish Refugee Council in its letter of
11 June 2009. The Board further notes that the applicant wife’s
brief arrests were in the nature of general detention in which
several other Tamils were detained by the authorities in connection
with situations where the LTTE was considered responsible for
specific actions. The applicant wife was released unconditionally
every time. She stayed in Colombo for about one year with part of her
family before her departure. They were registered with the
authorities in Colombo. She departed using her own, genuine
nationality passport. At the above interview, the applicant wife
stated about her sister in the LTTE that she had been a member of the
LTTE for four to five years and that she assumed that her sister was
a rank-and-file member, but that she had no contact with her. This
statement contradicts the information about the sister provided by
the Danish Refugee Council in its letter of 11 June 2009.
The applicant husband stated to the Refugee Appeals
Board that, contrary to what he stated in 2007, he did in fact own
the garage until 1998. He further stated that LTTE left a bomb in his
garage, that he hid the bomb there and that that was the reason why
he chose to sell the garage ... in May 1998 for 300,000 Sri Lankan
rupees. Thereafter, he stayed in various locations until October 1998
when he took up residence in or near Colombo. He did not use his own
name and was not registered with the authorities, and in April 1999
he left using a false passport with his picture inserted. The Refugee
Appeals Board finds that this statement contradicts the applicant
husband’s previous statements, including the interview report
of 3 July 2006 according to which he stated that he refused to help
the LTTE plant the bomb, that the LTTE had eventually left, and that
the LTTE as well as people from the Sri Lankan army continued to
force him to work for them, that he needed the money but that they
did not pay very often, and that he eventually could not stand it and
therefore sold his garage in April or May 1998, that he stayed
for six months in Colombo before his departure, and that he departed
lawfully using his genuine passport in which a study visa had been
inserted. In its decision of 4 October 2007, the Refugee Appeals
Board rejected the idea that the applicant husband was the subject of
a specific search at his mother’s house, and on the basis of an
assessment of the applicant’s statement at the current Refugee
Appeals Board hearing, the Refugee Appeals Board does not find that
the current statement and the letter from the mother, which dates
from 2007, ... [can] lead to a revised assessment. Therefore,
concerning the applicant husband, the Refugee Appeals Board only
considers it a fact that he sustained an injury to his hand in 1983
in connection with the assault where his father was killed, that he
trained with the LTTE for three months in 1985 and subsequently left
without problems to continue his education, that he probably
inherited the garage from his mother’s family in 1996, that he
ran the garage, that he sold the garage in 1998 because both the LTTE
and the Sri Lankan authorities were pressuring him to work for them,
and that thereafter he stayed in various locations, most recently for
six months in Colombo before departing from the airport in Colombo in
April 1999 using his own name and his own genuine passport.
... As the applicants’ statements are assessed,
the Refugee Appeals Board thus deems it a conclusive fact that
neither applicant stood out at all in March and April 1999.
Neither of them was wanted by the Sri Lankan authorities nor did they
have any specific conflicts with the authorities. Both departed
lawfully. In the assessment of whether, if they were to return to Sri
Lanka, including via Colombo, the applicants, who are ethnic Tamils
from northern Sri Lanka, would risk persecution or assault as covered
by section 7 of the Aliens Act, including treatment as covered by
Article 3 of the ECHR, particularly because a video clip exists on
YouTube of the applicant wife’s younger sister who allegedly
was a high-ranking so-called training master in LTTE according to the
information received, the Refugee Appeals Board notes that in the
sequence shown the person pointed out in the video clip - in part
together with others and in part alone - is seen wearing a uniform
and carrying weapons and ammunition and agitating for the LTTE’s
fight. The person in question speaks directly to the camera. The
Board notes that there is no other information available about the
applicant’s younger sister apart from that provided for the
case by the applicant wife herself. In this connection, it gives rise
to some uncertainty with the Refugee Appeals Board that the applicant
wife stated at the hearing that the last times she had contact with
her parents was in 2005, but that a cousin told her in a brief
telephone conversation in 2009 that the family was staying in M.
According to the information from the Danish Refugee Council ...on
11 June 2009, the applicant wife stated that in April 2009
she was contacted by her father who informed her that he was with her
sister, but that they would move to M as soon as possible. Even if it
is considered a fact that the sister in question is the person
pointed out in the video clip on YouTube, the Refugee Appeals Board
finds that, in view of the applicants’ insignificant profile as
described above, their return would not put them at risk of
persecution or assault as covered by section 7 of the Aliens Act.
This assessment takes into consideration that the applicants departed
lawfully from Sri Lanka in 1999 and are now thirty-one and forty
years old, respectively. Although the applicants are ethnic Tamils
from northern Sri Lanka, neither of them has had specific conflicts
with the Sri Lankan authorities and cannot be considered to be wanted
or having been wanted previously. In this respect, the Refugee
Appeals Board finds that the circumstance that as ethnic Tamils from
northern Sri Lanka the applicants may risk being questioned by
authorities when entering the country does not lead to a revised
assessment of the case in terms of asylum law. In this assessment,
consideration has been had to the background information available to
the Refugee Appeals Board, from which it appears that the individuals
at particular risk of being detained and investigated upon entry in
Colombo are young Tamils, men in particular, from northern and
eastern Sri Lanka: those without ID; those not resident or employed
in Colombo; and those recently returned from the West, see United
Kingdom: Home Office, Report of Information Gathering Visit to
Colombo, Sri Lanka 23 -29 August 2009. It further
appears from the background material available to the Board that, in
general, individuals who have previously supported LTTE on a lower
level are not of interest to the authorities, see Home Office,
Operational Guidance Note, Sri Lanka, August 2009, and Home Office,
Report of Information Gathering Visit to Colombo, Sri Lanka 23 - 29
August 2009. Therefore, the Refugee Appeals Board finds that,
following an overall assessment of the specific circumstances of the
present case, including the specific assessment that must be made
according to the Court’s decision of 6 August 2008, NA. v.
The United Kingdom, the applicants cannot be considered to be in
such a position upon return that it justifies asylum. The injury to
the applicant husband’s little finger on his right hand is
found not to lead to another assessment. The circumstance that the
applicant wife has participated in demonstrations in Copenhagen as
one of several Tamil demonstrators is also found not to lead to
another assessment. Accordingly, the applicants are still not
entitled to a residence permit under section 7 of the Aliens Act as
they, if they return, are not considered to be at risk of persecution
that could motivate asylum or of inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment as covered by section 7, subsection 2 of the Aliens Act
... No time limit for departure is fixed as ...the Court has
requested the Danish Government not to return the applicants by force
for the time being with reference to Rule 39 of the Rules of Court.
If the applicants’ basis for lawful residence in Denmark
lapses, they must leave Denmark immediately ... If the applicants do
not leave voluntarily, they may forcibly be returned to Sri Lanka...
- At
some unknown time thereafter the applicant husband moved to Germany
and obtained a residence permit.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
A. Asylum
proceedings in Denmark
34. By
virtue of section 7 of the Aliens Act (Udlændingeloven),
asylum is granted to aliens who satisfy the conditions of the Geneva
Convention. Applications for asylum are determined in the first
instance by the former Aliens Authorities (now called the Immigration
Service) and in the second instance by the Refugee Appeals Board.
- Pursuant
to section 56, subsection 8, of the Aliens Act, decisions by the
Refugee Board are final, which means that there is no avenue for
appeal against the Board’s decisions. Aliens may, however, by
virtue of Article 63 of the Danish Constitution (Grundloven)
bring an appeal before the ordinary courts, which have authority to
adjudge on any matter concerning the limits to the competence of a
public authority.
- By
virtue of section 54, subsection 1, second sentence, of the Aliens
Act the Refugee Appeals Board itself sees that all facts of a case
are brought out and decides on examination of the alien and witnesses
and procuring of other evidence. Consequently, the Board is
responsible not only for bringing out information on all the specific
circumstances of the case, but also for providing the requisite
background information, including information on the situation in the
asylum-seeker’s country of origin or first country of asylum.
For this purpose, the Refugee Appeals Board has a comprehensive
collection of general background material on the situation in the
countries from which Denmark receives asylum seekers. The
material is up-dated and supplemented on a continuous basis. The
background material of the Refugee Appeals Board is obtained from
various authorities, in particular the Danish Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and the Danish Immigration Service. In addition, background
material is procured from various organisations, including the Danish
Refugee Council, Amnesty International and other international human
rights organisations and the UNHCR. Also included are the annual
reports of the US State Department (Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices) on the human rights situation in a large number of
countries, reports from the British Home Office, reports from the
documentation centre of the Canadian Refugee Appeals Board, reports
from the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs, reports from EURASIL
(European Union Network for Asylum Practitioners), reports from the
authorities of other countries and to some extent articles from
identifiable (international) journals. Moreover, the Board may
request the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs to issue an opinion on
whether it can confirm information from a background memorandum
drafted in general terms. The Refugee Appeals Board also retrieves
some of its background material from the Internet. Internet access
also enables the Board to obtain more specific information in
relation to special problems in individual cases.
- Usually,
the Refugee Appeals Board assigns counsel to the applicant. Board
hearings are oral and the applicant is allowed to make a statement
and answer questions. The Board decision will normally be served on
the applicant immediately after the Board hearing, and at the same
time the Chairman will briefly explain the reason for the decision
made.
III. RELEVANT INFORMATION ABOUT SRI LANKA
Events
occurring after the cessation of hostilities in May 2009
- Extensive
information about Sri Lanka can be found in NA. v. the United
Kingdom, no. 25904/07, §§ 53-83. The information set
out below concerns events occurring after the delivery of the said
judgment on 17 July 2008 and, in particular, after the cessation
of hostilities in May 2009.
- Fighting
between the Sri Lankan army and the LTTE intensified in early 2009,
with the army taking a number of rebel strongholds in the north and
east of the country. On 19 May 2009, in an address to the country’s
parliament, the President of Sri Lanka announced the end of
hostilities and the death of the leader of the LTTE, Velupillai
Prabhakaran. It was also reported that most, if not all, of the
LTTE’s leadership had been killed.
- The
previous day, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs had estimated that around 220,000 people had
already reached internally displaced persons’ camps, including
20,000 in the last two or three days. In addition, it was believed
that another 40,000-60,000 people were on their way to the camps
through the crossing point at Omanthai, in the northern district of
Vavuniya.
- In
July 2009, the South Asia Terrorism Portal reported that the number
of killings in Sri Lanka in the previous three years (including
deaths of civilians, security forces and members of the LTTE) was:
4,126 in 2006; 4,377 in 2007; 11,144 in 2008 and 15,549 between 1
January 2009 and 15 June 2009. An estimated 75-80,000 people
were reported to have been killed in total over the course of the 26
year conflict.
42. In
July 2009, in a “Note
on the Applicability of the 2009 Sri Lanka Guidelines”,
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) observed
that:
“Notwithstanding the cessation of the hostilities,
the current protection and humanitarian environment in Sri Lanka
remains extremely challenging. In the North, nearly the entire
population from the territory formerly held by the LTTE in the North
(285,000 Tamils) has been confined to heavily militarized camps in
the Northern region. Although the government has gradually reduced
the military presence in the camps and has pledged to start the
progressive return to their villages of origin of the majority of
those in the camps, it is clear that this may take a considerable
amount of time. The lack of freedom of movement remains the
overriding concern for this population restricting its ability to
reunite with family members outside the camps, access employment,
attend regular schools, and ultimately choose their place of
residence.”
- A
Human Rights Watch [HRW] press release,
dated 28 July 2009, reported that:
“The government has effectively sealed off the
detention camps from outside scrutiny. Human rights organizations,
journalists, and other independent observers are not allowed inside,
and humanitarian organizations with access have been forced to sign a
statement that they will not disclose information about the
conditions in the camps without government permission. On several
occasions, the government expelled foreign journalists and aid
workers who had collected and publicized information about camp
conditions, or did not renew their visas.”
- A
further Human Rights Watch press release dated 26 August 2009 set
out concerns that more than 260,000 Tamil civilians remained in
detention camps without the freedom to leave.
- In
August 2009, the first post-war local elections were held in Northern
Sri Lanka. The British Broadcasting Corporation reported that voter
turn-out was low due to the number of people who were still
displaced. The governing party, the United People’s Freedom
Alliance, took the majority of seats in the biggest city in the
region, Jaffna. However, the Tamil National Alliance, a party
sympathetic to the defeated LTTE, took the majority of seats in
Vavuniya, the other town where polling took place.
- On
7 September 2009, James Elder, the official spokesman
for the United Nations Children’s Fund in Sri Lanka was ordered
to leave Sri Lanka because of adverse remarks that he had made
to the media about the plight of Tamils in the government-run camps.
- On
10 September 2009 the Sri Lankan Official Government News Portal
announced that the motion to extend the State of Emergency (under
which the authorities have extensive anti-terrorism powers and
heightened levels of security including checkpoints and road blocks)
by a further month had been passed by Parliament with a
majority of 87 votes.
48. In
a report dated 22 October 2009, the United States of America State
Department published a report entitled “Report to
Congress on Incidents During the Recent Conflict in Sri Lanka”,
which compiled incidents from January 2009, when the fighting
intensified, until the end of May 2009. Without reaching any
conclusions as to whether they had occurred or would constitute
violations of international law, it set out extensive reports of
enforced child soldiers, the killing of captives or combatants trying
to surrender, enforced disappearances and severe humanitarian
conditions during the hostilities.
49. On
21 November 2009, the Sri Lankan
Government announced its decision that all internally displaced
persons would be given freedom of movement and allowed to leave the
detention camps from 1 December 2009.
- In
its Global Appeal 2010-2011, the UNHCR reported that:
“The Government-led military operations in
northern Sri Lanka which ended in May 2009 displaced some
280,000 people, most of whom fled their homes in the last few months
of the fighting. The majority of these internally displaced persons
(IDPs) now live in closed camps in Vavuniya district, as well as in
camps in Mannar, Jaffna and Trincomalee. An additional 300,000 IDPs,
some of whom have been displaced since 1990, are also in need of
durable solutions.
The IDPs originate mainly from the Mannar, Vavuniya,
Kilinochchi, Mullaitivu and Jaffna districts in northern Sri Lanka,
as well as from some areas in the east of the country. Though the end
of hostilities has paved the way for the voluntary return of
displaced people, some key obstacles to return remain. For instance,
many of the areas of return are riddled with mines and unexploded
ordnance. Not all are considered to be of high risk, particularly
those away from former frontlines, but mine-risk surveys and the
demarcation of no-go areas are urgently needed.
Other key obstacles to return include the need to
re-establish administrative structures in areas formerly held by the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam; the destruction or damaged
condition of public infrastructure and private homes; and the
breakdown of the economy - including agriculture and fisheries.
The Government of Sri Lanka is planning the return
framework, and it has called on UNHCR for support with return
transport, non-food items, return shelter, livelihoods support and
assistance in building the capacity of local authorities.
With some progress having been recently achieved, it is
hoped that a substantial number of IDPs will be able to return to
their places of origin in the latter half of 2009, but a large
portion of new IDPs are also likely to remain in the camps and with
host families until well into 2010.”
51. In
a Human Rights Report 2009, dated 11 March 2010, the United States
of America State Department stated that the Sri-Lankan
Government accepted assistance from NGOs and international actors for
the IDP camps but management of the camps and control of assistance
were under the military rather than civilian authorities. Food,
water, and medical care were all insufficient in the first few weeks
after the end of the war, but by July the situation had stabilised
and observers reported that basic needs were being met. In June the
military withdrew from inside the camps but continued to provide
security around the barbed wire-enclosed perimeter. The
IDPs in the largest camp, Manik Farm, were not given freedom of
movement until December, when a system of temporary exit passes was
implemented for those who had not yet been returned to their
districts of origin. Some observers said that this exit system still
did not qualify as freedom of movement.
- Human
Rights Watch, in their report, World Report 2010, estimated that six
months after the main fighting ended, the Government continued to
hold more than 129,000 people (more than half of them women and
girls) in the camps. Over 80,000 of these were children. The camps
were severely overcrowded, many of them holding twice the number
recommended by the UN. As a result, access to basic requirements such
as food, water, shelter, toilets and bathing, had been inadequate.
These conditions imposed particular hardships on the elderly,
children and pregnant women. The camps were under military
administration, and effective monitoring by humanitarian agencies was
lacking. The authorities failed to provide camp residents with
sufficient information about the reason for their continued
detention, the whereabouts of relatives, or the criteria and
procedure for their return home.
- The
United Kingdom Border Agency Country of Origin Information Report on
Sri Lanka of 11 November 2010 (“the November 2010 COI Report”)
stated as follows:
4.23 The International Crisis Group (ICG) report Sri
Lanka: A Bitter Peace, 11 January 2010, also referred to
“extra-legal detention centres” maintained by the
military and observed: “These detained have had no access to
lawyers, their families, ICRC or any other protection agency, and it
is unclear what is happening inside the centres. In addition, ‘the
grounds on which the ex-combatants have been identified and the legal
basis on which they are detained are totally unclear and arbitrary’.
Given the well-established practice of torture, enforced
disappearance and extra-judicial killing of LTTE suspects under the
current and previous Sri Lankan governments, there are grounds for
grave concerns about the fate of the detained. The government has
announced that of those alleged ex-combatants currently detained,
only 200 will be put on the trial; most will detained for a further
period of ‘rehabilitation’ and then released.”
...
4.25 Referring to the “at least 11,000 people”
detained “in so-called ‘rehabilitation centers”
because of their alleged association with the LTTE, the HRW [document
Legal Limbo, The Uncertain Fate of Detained LTTE Suspects in Sri
Lanka, released on 29 January 2010, observed: “The
government has routinely violated the detainees’ fundamental
human rights, including the right to be informed of specific reasons
for arrest, the right to challenge the lawfulness of the detention
before an independent judicial authority, and the right of access to
legal counsel and family members. The authorities’ consistent
failure to inform families of the basis for the detainees’
arrest and their whereabouts raises serious concerns that some
detainees may have been victims of torture and ill-treatment, which
are more likely to take place where due process of law is lacking and
which have long been serious problems in Sri Lanka. Given the lack of
information about some detainees, there is also a risk that some may
have been ‘disappeared’.”
4.31 The UNHCR ‘Eligibility Guidelines for
Assessing the International Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from
Sri Lanka’, 5 July 2010 reported that “In the wake of
the conflict, almost 11,000 persons suspected of LTTE links were
arrested and detained in high-security camps” adding that
“According to a Government survey, as of 1 March 2010, 10,781
LTTE cadres were being held at 17 centres. Among the detainees were
8,791 males and 1,990 females.” and noted that “Some of
the adult detainees have...been released after completing
rehabilitation programmes or because they were no longer deemed to
present a risk, including some persons with physical disabilities.”
- The
November 2010 COI Report also set out:
4.09 The EIU [The Economist Intelligence Unit], Country
Report, Sri Lanka, July 2010 reported: “The EU has warned
that Sri Lanka faces losing trade advantages under the Generalised
System of Preferences-Plus (GSP-Plus) scheme from August 15th,
unless the Government commits itself in writing to improving its
human rights record. The EU has put forward 15 conditions that it
says the Government needs to promise to meet within the next six
months. These include: ensuring that the 17th amendment to the
constitution, which requires that appointments to public positions be
impartial and reflect the country’s ethnic and religious mix,
is enforced; repealing parts of the Prevention of Terrorism Act that
are incompatible with Sri Lanka’s covenants on political
and human rights; reforming the criminal code to allow suspects
immediate access to a lawyer on arrest; and allowing journalists to
carry out their professional duties without harassment. However, the
Government has rebuffed the EU, stressing that the issues that it has
raised are internal political matters that should not be linked to
trade. “The EU is not the only international body currently
putting pressure on the government. Sri Lanka has also rejected the
UN’s appointment of a three-member panel to examine possible
human rights violations during the island’s civil war. The Sri
Lankan authorities have warned that they will not provide visas for
panel members to enter the country.”
...
4.11 The EIU, Country Report, Sri Lanka, August 2010
noted that: “The decision by the UN secretary-general, Ban
Ki-moon [on 22 June 2010], to appoint a panel to examine
accountability issues stemming from the final stages of the island’s
civil war, which ended in May 2009, has prompted a strong reaction in
Sri Lanka ...
4.12 On 17 September 2010 the UN News Service reported
that “Secretary-General Ban Ki moon has held his first
meeting with the panel of experts set up to advise him on
accountability issues relating to alleged violations of international
humanitarian and human rights law during the final stages last year
of the conflict in Sri Lanka.” The source also noted that the
role of the experts was to examine “the modalities, applicable
international standards and comparative experience with regard to
accountability processes, taking into account the nature and scope of
any alleged violations in Sri Lanka.”
The treatment of returned failed asylum seekers at Colombo airport
United Kingdom Government Reports
- The
United Kingdom Border Agency Country of Origin Information Report on
Sri Lanka of 18 February 2009 (“the February 2009 COI Report”)
sets out a series of letters from the British High Commission –
hereafter “BHC”, Colombo, on arrival procedures at
Colombo airport. In its letter of 28 August 2008, the BHC observed:
“[T]he correct procedure for [Department of
Immigration and Emigration [DIE]] officers is to record the arrival
of these persons manually in a logbook held in the adjacent Chief
Immigration Officer’s office. The name, date and time of
arrival and arriving flight details are written into the log. It
records why the person has come to their attention and how the case
was disposed of. I have had the opportunity to look at the log, and
it appears that the only two ways of disposal are to be passed to the
Criminal Investigations Department [CID], or allowed to proceed.
The office of the State Intelligence Service [SIS] is in
the immigration arrivals hall and an officer from SIS usually patrols
the arrivals area during each incoming flight. Invariably, if they
notice a person being apprehended they approach IED [Immigration and
Emigration Department] and take details in order to ascertain in
[sic] the person may be of interest to them. Their office contains
three computer terminals, one belonging to the airport containing
flight information and two stand-alone terminals. If an apprehended
person is considered suitable to be passed to CID, they are
physically walked across the terminal building to the CID offices. A
CID officer should then manually record the arrival of the person in
a logbook held in their office...often persons shown in the DIE
logbook to have been handed to CID are never actually recorded as
being received in the CID logbook. It is believed that CID has
allowed these persons to proceed and no action has been taken against
them.”
- The
same letter also noted that CID offices at the airport contained two
computers, which were not linked to any national database. Any checks
on persons detained or apprehended were conducted over the phone with
colleagues in central Colombo. There were no fingerprint records at
the airport. One computer contained records of suspects who had been
arrested and charged with offences, and court reference numbers. It
continued as follows:
“Were a Sri Lankan national to arrive at Colombo
Airport having been removed or deported from the United Kingdom, they
would be in possession of either a valid national Sri Lankan
passport, or an emergency travel document/temporary passport, issued
by the Sri Lankan High Commission in London. The holder of a valid
passport would have the document endorsed by the immigration officer
on arrival and handed back to him/her. A national passport contains
the national ID card number on the laminated details page. I have
made enquiries with the DIE at Colombo Airport, and with the
International Organisation for Migration who meet certain returnees
at the airport, and both have confirmed that a person travelling on
an emergency travel document is dealt with similarly. They too have
the document endorsed by the immigration officer on arrival and
returned to them. Before issuing an emergency travel document, the
Sri Lankan High Commission in London will have details of an
applicant confirmed against records held in Colombo and will thus
satisfactorily confirm the holder’s nationality and identity.
If a returnee subsequently wishes to obtain a national identity card,
they have to follow the normal procedures.”
- In
a letter dated 22 January 2009, the BHC reported that an official had
spent several hours observing the return of failed asylum seekers
from the United Kingdom, including those who were in possession of
emergency travel documents, issued by the Sri Lankan High Commission
in London. In the official’s opinion, the fact that certain
returnees had been issued with emergency travel documents by the Sri
Lankan High Commission in London did not seem to make any difference
to their treatment upon arrival.
- The
Report of Information Gathering Visit to Colombo on 23 to 29 August
2009, conducted jointly by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office
Migration Directorate and United Kingdom Border Agency Country of
Origin Information Service (“the Report of Information
Gathering Visit, August 2009”), concluded that all enforced
returns (of whatever ethnicity) were referred to the CID at the
airport for nationality and criminal record checks, which could take
more than 24 hours. All enforced returns were wet-fingerprinted.
Depending on the case, the individual could also be referred to the
SIS and/or the Terrorist Investigation Department for questioning.
Anyone who was wanted for an offence would be arrested.
- The
report set out that those with a criminal record or LTTE connections
would face additional questioning and might be detained. In general,
non-government and international sources agreed that Tamils from the
north and east of the country were likely to receive greater scrutiny
than others, and that the presence of the factors below would
increase the risk that an individual could encounter difficulties
with the authorities, including possible detention:
- Outstanding
arrest warrant
- Criminal
record
- Connection
with the LTTE
- Bail
jumping/escape from custody
- Illegal
departure from Sri Lanka
- Scarring
- Involvement
with media or NGOs
- Lack
of an ID card or other documentation
- The
United Kingdom Border Agency Country of Origin Information Report on
Sri Lanka of 11 November 2010 set out the following:
33.20 The BHC letter of 30 August 2010 went on to
observe that: “At the beginning of 2010, partly due to the
large numbers of Sri Lankans being returned from around the world and
causing logistical problems, CID procedures were relaxed in that they
no longer had to detain returnees until written confirmation was
received from the local police. All returnees are still interviewed,
photographed and wet fingerprinted. The main objective of these
interviews is to establish if the returnee has a criminal record, or
if they are wanted or suspected of committing any criminal offences
by the police. The photographs are stored on a standalone computer in
the CID office at the airport. The fingerprints remain amongst paper
records also in the CID office at the airport. Checks are initiated
with local police, but returnees are released to a friend or
relative, whom CID refers to as a surety. This surety must provide
evidence of who they are, and must sign for the returnee. They are
not required to lodge any money with CID. “The main CID offices
at Colombo Airport, which are housed on the ground floor adjacent to
the DIE embarkation control, are currently undergoing a complete
refurbishment funded by the Australian government. The one completed
office suite has three purpose built interview rooms, and facilities
where returnees can relax and eat meals.”
...
33.22 A British High Commission letter of 14 September
2010 reported: “There is strong anecdotal evidence that
scarring has been used in the past to identify suspects. Previous
conversations with the police and in the media, the authorities have
openly referred to physical examinations being used to identify
whether suspects have undergone military style training. More recent
claims from contacts in government ministries suggest that this
practice has either ceased or is used less frequently. At the very
least it appears that the security forces only conduct these when
there is another reason to suspect an individual, and are not looking
for particular scars as such, but anything that may indicate the
suspect has been involved in fighting and/or military training. There
is no recent evidence to suggest that these examinations are
routinely carried out on immigration returnees.”
Other Sources
61. On
19 October 2009, Tamilnet reported that twenty-nine Tamil youths were
taken into custody by the State Intelligence Unit of the Sri Lanka
Police at the International Airport in two separate incidents whilst
trying to leave Sri Lanka. It was also reported that since July 2009,
special teams of the State Intelligence Unit and police had been
deployed in the airport to monitor the movement of Tamils who try to
go abroad.
The treatment of Tamils in Colombo
United Kingdom Government Reports
- The
Report of Information Gathering Visit, August 2009, stated that the
frequency of cordon and search operations had not reduced
significantly in recent months, though there were fewer large-scale
operations than in previous years. In general, young male Tamils
originating from the north and east of the country were most at risk
of being detained following cordon and search operations, with the
presence of the risk factors set out above increasing that risk.
Those without employment or legitimate purpose for being in Colombo
were also likely to be seen as suspect. The same report also noted
that most sources agreed that there had been few, if any, abductions
or disappearances since June 2009. There was not a great deal of
available information about the profile of Tamils targeted for
abduction, although it appeared that people linked to the media might
be more vulnerable. Police did not generally carry out effective
investigations. It went on to note that most sources agreed that
there had not been any significant reduction in the number of
checkpoints in Colombo, whose stated purpose remained to detect and
prevent terrorist activity. In general those most likely to be
questioned were young Tamils from the north and east; those without
ID; those not resident or employed in Colombo; and those recently
returned from the West. However, most sources said that arrests at
checkpoints were rare and none had been reported since June 2009.
It was reportedly fairly likely that someone would be stopped at a
checkpoint en route from the airport to Colombo city. Finally,
it clarified that people who wished to live in Colombo but did not
originate from there must register with the local police station with
a national ID card or full passport, and details of planned length
and purpose of stay. In theory, whilst anyone was entitled to
register to stay in Colombo, some sources suggested that young Tamil
men originally from the north or east of the country could encounter
difficulties and face closer scrutiny. The presence of any of the
risk factors set out above would also attract greater attention from
the police.
The treatment of Tamils in general
United Nations Reports
63. The
UNHCR Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International
Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from Sri Lanka, April 2009 (“UNHCR
2009 Sri Lanka Guidelines”) observed that:
“The significant majority of reported cases of
human rights violations in Sri Lanka involve persons of Tamil
ethnicity who originate from the North and East...In
Government-controlled areas, Tamils who originate from the North and
the East, which are, or have been under LTTE control, are frequently
suspected as being associated with the LTTE. For this reason, Tamils
from the North and the East are at heightened risk of human rights
violations related to the implementation of anti-terrorism and
anti-insurgency measures. While this risk exists in all parts of
Sri Lanka, it is greatest in areas in which the LTTE remains
active, and where security measures are heaviest, in particular the
North and parts of the East, and in and around Colombo.”
64. The
Guidelines also noted that the Government had been heavily criticised
for the high number of Tamils who have been subjected to arrest and
security detention, particularly on the basis of information gathered
in registration exercises and questioning at cordons and road
checkpoints in and around the capital.
65. The
UNHCR ‘Note on the Applicability of the 2009 Sri Lanka
Guidelines’, dated July 2009, observed:
“The country of origin information that UNHCR has
considered indicates that Tamils from the North of Sri Lanka continue
to face a significant risk of suffering serious human rights
violations in the region (and elsewhere in the country) because of
their race (ethnicity) or (imputed) political opinion. Tamils in the
North are still heavily targeted in the security and anti-terrorism
measures described in the Guidelines. Wide scale detention and
confinement of Tamils from the North remains a serious concern.
Pro-Government paramilitary elements also continue to operate with
impunity against Tamils in the North.”
- The
UNHCR Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International
Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from Sri Lanka of 5 July 2010,
which superseded the April 2009 Guidelines contained information on
the particular profiles for which international protection needs may
arise in the current context. It was stated that:
“given the
cessation of hostilities, Sri Lankans originating from the north of
the country are no longer in need of international protection under
broader refugee criteria or complementary forms of protection solely
on the basis of risk of indiscriminate harm. In light of the improved
human rights and security situation in Sri Lanka, there is no longer
a need for group-based protection mechanisms or for a presumption of
eligibility for Sri Lankans of Tamil ethnicity originating from the
north of the country. It is important to bear in mind that the
situation is still evolving, which has made the drafting of these
Guidelines particularly complex.”
- In
summary, the following were UNHCR’s recommendations: All claims
by asylum seekers from Sri Lanka should be considered on the basis of
their individual merits according to fair and efficient refugee
status determination procedures and up-to-date and relevant country
of origin information. UNHCR considered that, depending on the
particular circumstances of the case, some individuals with profiles
similar to those outlined in the Guidelines require a particularly
careful examination of possible risk. These risk profiles, while not
necessarily exhaustive, are set out below:
(i) persons
suspected of having links with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE);
(ii) journalists
and other media professionals;
(iii) civil
society and human rights activists;
(iv) women and
children with certain profiles; and
(v) lesbian,
gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) individuals.
It
was also stated that in the light of Sri Lanka’s 26 year
internal armed conflict, and a record of serious human rights
violations and transgressions of international humanitarian law,
exclusion considerations under Article 1F of the 1951 Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees may arise in relation to
individual asylum seeker claims by Sri Lankan asylum seekers.
Other Sources
68. The
BBC reported in March 2010 that the Colombo Police force had opened
four special units in Colombo suburbs able to take statements in
Tamil, with plans for more. Previously, Tamil-speaking Sri Lankans
had to rely on a friend to translate their complaints into Sinhala.
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained that an implementation of the deportation order
to return them to Sri Lanka would be in violation of Article 3 of the
Convention, which in so far as relevant read as follows:
Article 3
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
- The
Government contested that argument. Moreover, they maintained that
the applicant husband could no longer claim to be a victim within the
meaning of Article 34 because he had left Denmark and obtained a
residence permit in Germany.
A. Admissibility
- As to the question of whether the applicant husband
may claim to be the victim for the purposes of Article 34 of the
Convention in view of the fact that subsequently he was granted a
residence permit in Germany, the Court considers that this issue is
closely linked to the substance of his complaint under Article 3. It
therefore joins
the preliminary objection raised by the Government in this respect to
the merits
of the case.
- The
Court further notes that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded
within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 (a) of the Convention. It
further notes that it is not inadmissible on any other grounds. It
must therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
1. The applicants
- The
applicants maintained that, in general, returning ethnic Tamils from
the north and east of Sri Lanka would be contrary to Article 3 of the
Convention.
- Moreover,
the applicants would be particularly exposed to being subjected to
treatment contrary to Article 3 of the Convention by the
Sri Lankan authorities upon return due notably to the following
risk factors: a) the applicant wife was significantly involved with
and a member of the LTTE from 1995 to 1998 and that she is certain
that the authorities are informed about at least her theatre
performances about martyred LTTE members; b) the applicant wife was
arrested and detained on many occasions suspected of LTTE activities;
c) there was suspicion that a criminal record and an arrest warrant
existed against her; d) the applicant husband was a member of the
LTTE for three months in 1985; e) he hid an LTTE bomb in his garage,
where it was found by the buyer of the garage, who informed the
authorities about it; f) that therefore he is wanted by the police on
suspicion of supporting the LTTE; g) both applicants have relatives
who were members of the LTTE, including the applicant wife’s
sister who was a high-ranking training master, which is demonstrated
by her appearance in 2007 in footage on YouTube; h) the
applicants have made an asylum claim abroad; i) the applicant husband
has a visible hand injury sustained in 1983; and j) the applicant
wife has participated in demonstrations in Copenhagen against the
hostilities in Sri Lanka.
- In
addition, on arrival at Colombo airport the applicants would be at
risk of persecution and of being subjected to outrages by the
Sri Lankan authorities, which have the technological means and
procedures in place to identify failed asylum seekers and those
wanted by the authorities.
2. The Government
- The
Government maintained that no violation of Article 3 would occur
if the applicants were to be returned to Sri Lanka and that they had
failed to demonstrate that they would be of sufficient interest to
the authorities as to warrant their detention or interrogation upon
return.
- Referring
to the decisions by the Refugee Appeal Board, including its most
recent of 19 April 2010 which specifically considered the case in the
light of NA. v. the United Kingdom (cited above), the
Government maintained that the applicants have not been subjected to
actions on the part of the authorities reflecting that they were of
interest to them prior to their lawful departure in 1999. Having
regard to the facts found established by the Refugee Appeal Board
neither applicant stood out to the authorities when they departed
lawfully using passports issued by the Sri-Lankan authorities in 1999
and neither of them were subsequently wanted by the Sri Lankan
authorities.
- The
Government also found, in line with the Refugee Appeals Board’s
findings in the reopened proceedings, that the most recent
information submitted by the applicants should be disregarded, namely
that the applicant wife had a particular profile via her theatrical
LTTE performances and that a few days before departing from Sri Lanka
she had been arrested and was to be interrogated again at another
location, when her father paid a bribe for her release. Likewise, the
Government refused to accept as a fact that the applicant husband was
wanted by the Sri Lankan authorities and that the latter had sought
out his mother in order to find him. There was no reasonable
explanation for the late presentation of that information, which
contradicted the applicants’ previous statements.
- The
Government were therefore of the opinion that the present case is
clearly distinguishable from NA. v. the United Kingdom (cited
above) and that all the possible risk factors identified by the
applicants taken cumulatively, also in the light of the current
situation in Sri Lanka, do not constitute a sufficient basis for
concluding that, upon return to Colombo airport or at a later date,
the applicants would be of sufficient interest to the authorities in
their efforts to combat the LTTE to warrant their detention and
interrogation.
3. The Court
(a) General
principles
- The Contracting States have the right as a matter of
international law and subject to their treaty obligations, including
the Convention, to control the entry, residence and expulsion of
aliens (Üner v. the Netherlands [GC], no. 46410/99,
§ 54, ECHR 2006 ....; Abdulaziz, Cabales and Balkandali
v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 28 May 1985, Series A no. 94,
p. 34, § 67, Boujlifa v. France, judgment of 21
October 1997, Reports 1997 VI, p. 2264, § 42).
- However,
expulsion by a Contracting State may give rise to an issue under
Article 3, and hence engage the responsibility of that State under
the Convention, where substantial grounds have been shown for
believing that the person concerned, if deported, faces a real risk
of being subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3. In such a
case, Article 3 implies an obligation not to deport the person in
question to that country (Saadi v. Italy [GC], no. 37201/06,
§ 125, 28 February 2008).
- The
assessment of whether there are substantial grounds for believing
that the applicant faces such a real risk inevitably requires that
the Court assess the conditions in the receiving country against the
standards of Article 3 of the Convention (Mamatkulov and Askarov
v. Turkey [GC], nos. 46827/99 and 46951/99, § 67, ECHR
2005 I). These standards imply that the ill treatment the
applicant alleges he will face if returned must attain a minimum
level of severity if it is to fall within the scope of Article 3. The
assessment of this is relative, depending on all the circumstances of
the case (Hilal v. the United Kingdom, no. 45276/99, §
60, ECHR 2001 II). Owing to the absolute character of the right
guaranteed, Article 3 of the Convention may also apply where the
danger emanates from persons or groups of persons who are not public
officials. However, it must be shown that the risk is real and that
the authorities of the receiving State are not able to obviate the
risk by providing appropriate protection (H.L.R. v. France,
judgment of 29 April 1997, Reports 1997 III, § 40).
- The
assessment of the existence of a real risk must necessarily be a
rigorous one (see Chahal v. the United Kingdom, judgment of
15 November 1996, Reports 1996-V, § 96;
and Saadi v. Italy, cited above, § 128). It is in
principle for the applicant to adduce evidence capable of proving
that there are substantial grounds for believing that, if the measure
complained of were to be implemented, he would be exposed to a real
risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 (see N.
v. Finland, no. 38885/02, § 167, 26 July 2005).
Where such evidence is adduced, it is for the Government to dispel
any doubts about it.
- If
the applicant has not yet been extradited or deported when the Court
examines the case, the relevant time will be that of the proceedings
before the Court (see Saadi v. Italy, cited above, §
133). A full and ex nunc assessment is called for as the
situation in a country of destination may change in the course of
time. Even though the historical position is of interest in so far as
it may shed light on the current situation and its likely evolution,
it is the present conditions which are decisive and it is therefore
necessary to take into account information that has come to light
since the final decision taken by the domestic authorities (see Salah
Sheekh v. the Netherlands, no. 1948/04, § 136, ECHR 2007 I
(extracts)).
- The
foregoing principles, and in particular the need to examine all the
facts of the case, require that this assessment must focus on the
foreseeable consequences of the removal of the applicant to the
country of destination. This in turn must be considered in the light
of the general situation there as well as the applicant’s
personal circumstances (Vilvarajah and Others v. the United
Kingdom, judgment of 30 October 1991, Series A no. 215,
§ 108). In this connection, and where it is relevant to do so,
the Court will have regard to whether there is a general situation of
violence existing in the country of destination.
- The
Court has never ruled out the possibility that a general situation of
violence in a country of destination will be of a sufficient level of
intensity as to entail that any removal to it would necessarily
breach Article 3 of the Convention. Nevertheless, the Court
would adopt such an approach only in the most extreme cases of
general violence, where there was a real risk of ill-treatment simply
by virtue of an individual being exposed to such violence on return.
Exceptionally, however, in cases where an applicant alleges that he
or she is a member of a group systematically exposed to a practice of
ill-treatment, the Court has considered that the protection of
Article 3 of the Convention enters into play when the applicant
establishes that there are serious reasons to believe in the
existence of the practice in question and his or her membership of
the group concerned. In those circumstances, the Court will not then
insist that the applicant show the existence of further special
distinguishing features if to do so would render illusory the
protection offered by Article 3. This will be determined in the light
of the applicant’s account and the information on the situation
in the country of destination in respect of the group in
question. In determining whether it should or should not
insist on further special distinguishing features, it follows that
the Court may take account of the general situation of violence in a
country. It considers that it is appropriate for it to do so if that
general situation makes it more likely that the authorities (or any
persons or group of persons where the danger emanates from them) will
systematically ill treat the group in question (NA. v. the
United Kingdom, no. 25904/07, §§ 115- 117, 17 July
2008).
(b) Assessing
the risk to Tamils returning to Sri Lanka
- In
NA. v. the United Kingdom (cited above), the Court made a
number of general findings relating to the assessment of the risk of
Tamils returning to Sri Lanka.
- It
noted, among other things, that the United Kingdom Asylum and
Immigration Tribunal had recognised a number of factors (§§ 30
42) which might increase the risk of serious harm to Tamils
from the Sri Lankan authorities in Colombo. The factors were set
out in a headnote as follows:
“(1) Tamils are not per se at risk of serious
harm from the Sri Lankan authorities in Colombo. A number of factors
may increase the risk, including but not limited to: a previous
record as a suspected or actual LTTE member; a previous criminal
record and/or outstanding arrest warrant; bail jumping and/or
escaping from custody; having signed a confession or similar
document; having been asked by the security forces to become an
informer; the presence of scarring; return from London or other
centre of LTTE fundraising; illegal departure from Sri Lanka; lack of
an ID card or other documentation; having made an asylum claim
abroad; having relatives in the LTTE. In every case, those factors
and the weight to be ascribed to them, individually and cumulatively,
must be considered in the light of the facts of each case but they
are not intended to be a check list.
(2) If a person is actively wanted by the
police and/or named on a Watched or Wanted list held at Colombo
airport, they may be at risk of detention at the airport.
(3) Otherwise, the majority of returning
failed asylum seekers are processed relatively quickly and with no
difficulty beyond some possible harassment.
(4) Tamils in Colombo are at increased risk
of being stopped at checkpoints, in a cordon and search operation, or
of being the subject of a raid on a Lodge where they are staying. In
general, the risk again is no more than harassment and should not
cause any lasting difficulty, but Tamils who have recently returned
to Sri Lanka and have not yet renewed their Sri Lankan identity
documents will be subject to more investigation and the factors
listed above may then come into play.
...”
- The
Court stated (§§128-130) that while account had to be taken
of the general situation of violence in Sri Lanka at the present
time, it was satisfied that it would not render illusory the
protection offered by Article 3 to require Tamils challenging their
removal to Sri Lanka to demonstrate the existence of further special
distinguishing features which would place them at real risk of
ill-treatment contrary to that Article. Therefore, the Court
considered that it was in principle legitimate, when assessing the
individual risk to returnees, to carry out that assessment on the
basis of the list of “risk factors”, which the domestic
authorities, with the benefit of direct access to objective
information and expert evidence, had drawn up. It noted that the
United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal had been careful to
avoid the impression that the risk factors were a “check list”
or exhaustive, and did not consider it necessary to identify any
additional risk factors, which had not been duly considered by the
domestic authorities. The Court emphasised, however, that the
assessment of whether there was a real risk must be made on the basis
of all relevant factors which may increase the risk of ill-treatment.
Due regard should also be given to the possibility that a number of
individual factors may not, when considered separately, constitute a
real risk; but when taken cumulatively and when considered in a
situation of general violence and heightened security, the same
factors may give rise to a real risk. Both the need to consider all
relevant factors cumulatively and the need to give appropriate weight
to the general situation in the country of destination derive from
the obligation to consider all the relevant circumstances of the
case.
- Moreover, on the basis of the evidence before it, the
Court found (§133) that, in the context of Tamils being returned
to Sri Lanka, the protection of Article 3 of the Convention enters
into play when an applicant can establish that there are serious
reasons to believe that he or she would be of sufficient interest to
the authorities in their efforts to combat the LTTE as to warrant his
or her detention and interrogation.
- In
respect of returns to Sri Lanka through Colombo, the Court found
(§§134-136) that there was a greater risk of detention and
interrogation at the airport than in Colombo city since the
authorities would have greater control over the passage of persons
through an airport than they would over the population at large. In
addition, the majority of the risk factors identified by the United
Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal would be more likely to bring
a returnee to the attention of the authorities at the airport than in
Colombo city. It was also at the airport that the cumulative risk to
an applicant, arising from two or more factors, would crystallise.
Hence the Court’s assessment of whether a returnee is at real
risk of ill-treatment may turn on whether that person would be likely
to be detained and interrogated at Colombo airport as someone of
interest to the authorities. While this assessment is an individual
one, it too must be carried out with appropriate regard to all
relevant factors taken cumulatively including any heightened security
measures that may be in place as a result of an increase in the
general situation of violence in Sri Lanka. Furthermore,
although noting that the objective evidence before it contained
different accounts of the precise nature of the procedures followed
at Colombo airport and the nature of the information technology
there, the Court considered at the very least that the Sri Lankan
authorities have the technological means and procedures in place to
identify at the airport failed asylum seekers and those who are
wanted by the authorities. The Court further found that it was a
logical inference from those findings that the rigour of the checks
at the airport is capable of varying from time to time, depending on
the security concerns of the authorities. These considerations must
inform the Court’s assessment of the risk to the applicant.
- Finally
(§137) it could not be said that there was a generalised risk to
Tamils from the LTTE in a Government controlled area such as Colombo.
The Court accepted the findings of the domestic authorities that
individual Tamils might be able to demonstrate a real and personal
risk to them from the LTTE in Colombo. However, it also accepted
their assessment that this would only be to Tamils with a high
profile as opposition activists, or those seen by the LTTE as
renegades or traitors. The Court therefore considered that it also
had to examine any complaint as to the risk from the LTTE in the
context of the individual circumstances of an applicant’s case.
- On
the basis of the objective information set out above (see paragraphs
38 – 68) concerning Sri
Lanka after the passing on 17 July 2008 of the judgment in
NA. v. the United Kingdom (cited above), the Court
finds that since the end of hostilities in Sri Lanka and the
death of the leader of the LTTE in May 2009, there has been progress,
inter alia, on the reintegration of internally displaced
persons and on the treatment of Tamils in Colombo. However, there is
no evidence of an improvement in the human rights situation of Tamils
suspected of having or recently having had links with the LTTE.
- The
Court therefore maintains its conclusion in NA v. the United
Kingdom (cited above) that there is not a general risk of
treatment contrary to Article 3 to Tamils returning to Sri Lanka. The
protection of Article 3 of the Convention will enter into play only
when an applicant can establish that there are serious reasons to
believe that he or she would be of sufficient interest to the
authorities to warrant his or her detention and interrogation upon
return (NA. v. the United Kingdom, ibid, § 133).
- The
assessment of whether there is a real risk must therefore continue to
be made on a case by case basis considering all relevant factors, (as
set out in the United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal Country
Guidance case of LP
and endorsed in NA. v. the United Kingdom, ibid, §
129-130) which may increase the risk of ill treatment, including
but not limited to: a previous record as a suspected or actual LTTE
member; a previous criminal record and/or outstanding arrest warrant;
bail jumping and/or escaping from custody; having signed a confession
or similar document; having been asked by the security forces to
become an informer; the presence of scarring; return from London or
other centre of LTTE fundraising; illegal departure from Sri Lanka;
lack of an ID card or other documentation; having made an asylum
claim abroad; and having relatives in the LTTE. The Court would also
reiterate that due regard must continue to be given to the
possibility that a number of individual factors may not, when
considered separately, constitute a real risk, but may do so when
taken cumulatively (NA. v. the United Kingdom, ibid, § 130)
bearing in mind any heightened security measures that may be in place
as a result of any deterioration in the general situation in Sri
Lanka.
(c) The
applicants’ case
- On
the basis of the foregoing observations, the Court will examine the
applicants’ particular circumstances in order to determine
whether there would be a violation of Article 3 if they were to be
expelled to Sri Lanka.
- At
the outset it notes that the applicants have no legal basis for
staying in Denmark and that by virtue of the Refugee Appeals Board’s
decision of 10 April 2010 they may forcibly be returned to Sri Lanka
if they do not leave voluntarily. Apparently, the applicant husband
did leave Denmark voluntarily and obtained a residence permit in
Germany. However, the Court has not received any indication that the
deportation order of 10 April 2010 can no longer be enforced as to
the applicant husband, should he enter Denmark anew, for example to
maintain contact with his wife and children there. Thus, although the
imminent danger of his being forcibly returned to Sri Lanka by
the Danish authorities has clearly diminished it cannot be said to be
eliminated. In any event the Court does not consider it necessary to
rule on the Government’s preliminary objections, which it
joined to the merits of this complaint, as it considers that the
order to deport the applicants to Sri Lanka would not give rise to a
violation of Article 3 of the Convention for the reasons which
follow.
- In
assessing the risk to the applicants from the Sri Lankan authorities,
the Court will examine the strength of their claim to be at real risk
as a result of an accumulation of the risk factors identified.
- The
applicants are of Tamil ethnicity and have Tamil features. They have
both lived in the North of Sri Lanka.
- The
applicant husband is forty-one years old and the applicant wife is
thirty-one years old.
- The
applicants left Sri Lanka in 1999, that is eleven years ago.
- On
19 July 2005 with Romanian aliens’ passports, the
applicants entered Denmark, where the applicant wife’s sister
and cousin lived.
- On
14 November 2005 the applicants requested asylum.
- In
support thereof, on 14 and 17 November 2005, the applicant wife
stated, inter alia, that she had been a member of and worked
for the LTTE for two years from 1995 to 1997. Her work consisted of
carrying out social work and making sure that the children could go
to school and that they were provided with food and medicine. The
applicant wife’s parents did not like this and sent her to
Colombo. In 1997, it appears, she and several other Tamil women were
detained by the police suspected of having blown up a bus. Her father
paid for her release. Subsequently she was arrested and interrogated
on several occasions. Her father arranged for her to leave Sri Lanka
around October 1999. Her case in Sri Lanka was undecided but she
remained on a list of suspects. Her family was under surveillance by
the police because her father and sister were involved with the LTTE.
- On
3 July 2006 the applicant wife added, inter alia, that she had
been a forced member of the LTTE’s students’ organisation
from 1996 to 1997 and carried out social work for them. Her father
had also carried out social work. He had not been a member of the
LTTE but was accused of being a supporter, which caused problems for
the family. He was detained many times in 1998. The police would come
to their home which was situated in an area controlled by LTTE. It
was due to their Tamil ethnicity that the family had so many problems
with the army. The applicant wife did not know her sister’s
exact position in the LTTE, as she had not had contact with her for
many years, but she assumed that her sister had been a rank-and-file
member of the LTTE for four to five years.
- In
the applicant husband’s asylum request of 23 November and
1 December 2005 he stated that he had been a member of the
LTTE for three months in 1985, when he was 16 years old. He
realised that the organisation was nothing to him. Thereafter he
stayed neutral and was not a member of any political or religious
party or organisation. He owned a garage where he repaired cars,
minibuses and jeeps. Both the LTTE and the military brought their
vehicles and would threaten him to serve only one party. The LTTE
also asked him to place a bomb in a military jeep. He refused and was
then accused of being an informant. He kept a low profile for a while
and sold his garage in 1998 in order to leave Sri Lanka, which he did
in April 1999.
- On
3 July 2006 the applicant husband added, inter alia, that he
was never wanted by the authorities, detained or convicted and he had
no criminal record. In 1996, he refused a request by the LTTE to
place a bomb in a military vehicle. He begged them not to cause any
problems for him and eventually they left. His departure was not
triggered by a specific event, rather the general problems with the
LTTE and the military forces had become too much.
- On
4 October 2007, in the appeal proceedings before the Refugee
Appeals Board, after the Aliens Authorities’ refusal of
26 October 2006 to grant the applicants asylum, the
applicant wife added that she was a publicly known person and LTTE
supporter because she had organised annual meetings where she read
out poetry. The applicant husband changed his explanation, saying
that he had sold his garage already in 1996 and lived in hiding for
three years until leaving Sri Lanka. He had to leave because the army
knew about his work for the LTTE. He submitted a declaration on
28 September 2005 and stated that he was wanted by the Sri
Lankan police for a criminal offence related to the abduction of a
man, who had worked at his garage. The same day, the Refugee Appeals
Board upheld the refusal to grant the applicants asylum.
- Subsequently,
in their request of 14 November 2008 to the Refugee Appeals Board for
a reopening of the proceedings, the applicants alleged that they were
both wanted by the authorities and that the applicant wife’s
sister was a high-profile LTTE member. In support of the latter, on
11 June 2009 her representative submitted a copy of a
television broadcast.
- Finally,
on 19 April 2010, at a hearing before the Refugee Appeals
Board the applicant wife submitted a photograph of one her alleged
stage performances before an audience of more than five hundred
people. She added, inter alia, that her father had been deeply
involved with the LTTE and that just before her departure in 1999 she
had been arrested by the criminal police in Colombo, who said that
she was to be interviewed again at a different location. Her father
bribed the police and four days after, she left the country. The
applicant husband changed his account and stated that in 1996 he had
refused to place the LTTE bomb in a military vehicle, but he had
hidden the bomb in his garage. It remained there even after he sold
the garage in May 1998. His mother had told him that the buyer
of the garage had informed the authorities about the bomb and
consequently he was wanted by the secret police. He also left Sri
Lanka using a false passport.
111. The
Court notes in this respect the Refugee
Appeals Board’s finding on 10 April 2010 that the applicants
had not reasonably explained why they had not furnished the new
information during the original asylum proceedings, which gave rise
to critical doubt about its credibility. Accordingly, the
Refugee Appeals Board could only consider
it a fact that the applicant wife’s father did social or
humanitarian work in the local community without being a member of
the LTTE, that as a member of the LTTE between 1995 and 1997, the
applicant wife also did social work for the LTTE, that she lived in
various places after 1997, at which time she was exposed to general,
brief detentions, and that one year prior to her departure she lived
in Colombo, until she left using her own genuine passport.
As regards the applicant husband
it could only consider it a fact that he was a member of
the LTTE for three months in 1985 and subsequently left without
problems to continue his education, that he ran a garage and sold it
in 1998 because both the LTTE and the Sri Lankan authorities were
pressuring him to work for them, and that thereafter he stayed in
various locations before departing from the airport in Colombo in
April 1999 using his own genuine passport.
The Court
finds no grounds for concluding that such finding was wrong.
Accordingly,
it does not find it established that the applicants
had
supported LTTE on more than a lower level, or that they were of
interest to the authorities in 1999, when they departed
lawfully, or that they were
subsequently wanted by the Sri Lankan authorities, or
that upon return they would
be of interest to the authorities due to their previous involvement
with LTTE, which took place more than twelve years ago.
112. In
the Court’s view the fact that the applicant wife’s
sister was a member of the LTTE carries little weight in the present
case (see NA. v. the United, cited
above, § 146), even if she was a
high-profile member and appears on footage
on YouTube. It also observes in this connection that the
applicant wife on 3 July 2006 explained that she had not been in
touch with her sister for many years.
113. The
applicants maintained that they were at great risk of being detained
and interrogated on their arrival at Colombo airport and the
applicant husband pointed out that he has an injury to his hand from
1983. The Court observes, however, that he
did not have any problems in leaving the country in 1999 (see
also NA. v. the United, cited
above, §
144).
- Furthermore,
as regards the risk of being arrested at Colombo airport, the Court
reiterates the arrival procedures there (see paragraphs 55
-61) and repeats that there is no indication that the
applicants and notably the applicant wife have ever been recorded by
the Sri Lankan authorities in connection with arrest or detention.
Nor is there any indication that photographs, fingerprints or other
means of identification have been stored by the Sri Lankan
authorities in order to enable them to identify the applicants upon
return.
- In
the Court’s view the present case is thus clearly
distinguishable from NA.
v. the United Kingdom (cited
above), in which NA. left Sri Lanka clandestinely after having been
arrested and detained by the army on six occasions between 1990 and
1997 on suspicion of involvement with the LTTE. During one or
possibly more of these periods of detention he was ill treated
and his legs were scarred from beatings with batons. Moreover, during
his most recent detention, NA. had been photographed and his
fingerprints had been taken. His father had also signed certain
papers in order to secure NA.’s release.
- The
Court also observes that there are no grounds for believing that the
Sri Lankan authorities are informed that the applicants have
made an asylum claim abroad, or have participated in demonstrations
in Denmark, and they will not be deported from a location which is
considered a centre of LTTE fundraising.
- In conclusion, having regard to the current general
situation in Sri Lanka taken cumulatively with the risk factors
identified above, the Court finds that there are no substantial
grounds for finding that the applicants, including their children,
would be of interest to the Sri Lankan authorities if they were
returned. In those circumstances, the Court finds that an
implementation of the order to deport the applicants to Sri Lanka
would not give rise to a violation of Article 3 of the
Convention.
II. OTHER ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF THE CONVENTION
- In
their observations of 31 May 2010 the applicants also complained that
it would be in violation of Articles 3 and 8 of the Convention to
return them to Sri Lanka because the applicant husband was mentally
and physically ill and because the applicants would be separated from
their family in Denmark. They submitted various documents from 2008
and 2009 to this effect. Article 8 of the Convention reads as
follows:
“1. Everyone has the right to respect
for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public
authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in
accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in
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
Court notes that the applicant failed to raise, either in form or
substance, before the domestic courts the complaint made to it under
Article 8. Moreover, in the light of all the material in its
possession, and in so far as the criteria set out in Article 35 §
1 have been complied with and the matters complained of are within
its competence, the Court finds that they do not disclose any
appearance of a violation of Articles 3 or 8 of the Convention. It
follows that these complaints must be rejected in accordance with
Article 35 § 4 of the Convention.
III. RULE 39
OF THE RULES OF COURT
- The
Court points out that, in accordance with Article 44 § 2 of the
Convention, the present judgment will not become final until (a) the
parties declare that they will not request that the case be referred
to the Grand Chamber; or (b) three months after the date of the
judgment, if reference of the case to the Grand Chamber has not been
requested; or (c) the Panel of the Grand Chamber rejects any request
to refer under Article 43 of the Convention.
- It considers that the indication made to the
Government under Rule 39
of the Rules of Court (see above § 4) must continue in force
until the present judgment becomes final or until the Panel of the
Grand Chamber of the Court accepts any request by one or both of the
parties to refer the case to the Grand Chamber under Article 43 of
the Convention.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
1. Decides to join the Government’s
objection as to the applicant’s victim status to the merits,
and that it is not necessary to rule it;
- Declares the complaint concerning Article 3
of the Convention admissible and the remainder of the application
inadmissible;
- Holds that an implementation of the order to
deport the applicants to Sri Lanka would not give rise to a violation
of Article 3 of the Convention;
- Decides to continue to indicate to the
Government under Rule 39 of the Rules of
Court that it is desirable in the interests of the proper conduct of
the proceedings not to deport the applicants until such time as the
present judgment becomes final or further order.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 20 January 2011, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Claudia Westerdiek Renate Jaeger
Registrar President