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The Nordic Countries and Fortress Europe

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Title: The Nordic Countries and Fortress Europe


1
The Nordic Countries and Fortress Europe
  • Professor Martin Scheinin
  • 4th ETMU Days 2007

2
Bits of historical background
  • The Nordic countries as Lutheran (Christian)
    states nationality, public service, identity
  • Finland after 1809 the creation of nationhood
    and resistace to Russification based on the
    Swedish Constitution of 1772 and 1789
  • The Cold War and the Iron Curtain
  • The pull of human rights (the right to leave)
  • The push of Realpolitik and a 1000 km land border
    with the Soviet Union
  • Ratification of the Refugee Convention Denmark
    1952, Norway 1953, Sweden 1954, Iceland 1955,
    Finland 1968

3
Normative background
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948
  • Art 14.1 Everyone has the right to seek and to
    enjoy in other countries asylum from
    persecution.
  • Refugee Convention 1951
  • Art 1 definition of refugee
  • Art 33 prohibition against non-refoulement
  • International Covenant on Civil and Political
    Rights 1966
  • Art 12.4 Everyone shall be free to leave any
    country, including his own.
  • Art 13 An alien lawfully in the territory of a
    State Party to the present Covenant may be
    expelled therefrom only in pursuance of a
    decision reached in accordance with law and
    shall, , be allowed to submit the reasons
    against his expulsion and to have his case
    reviewed
  • CSCE (later OSCE) Helsinki Final Act 1975

4
Fortress Europe
  • Free movement of labour as one of the four
    fundamental freedoms of a single market (EEC -gt
    EU)
  • Personal extension from workers to EU citizens
    and lawful residents
  • Geographical extension to EEA countries
  • Sharp distincton between eradication of internal
    boarders and collective responsibility over
    external borders

5
Facts about the burden2006 Global Trends
(UNHCR 2007)
6
More facts
7
UNHR statistics on Nordic Countries, end-2006
8
Lethal consequences of Fortress Europe
  • Since 1993 the NGO UNITED has monitored the
    deadly results of the building of a 'Fortress
    Europe'.
  • More than 6700 deaths of refugees and migrants
    have been documented up to now. Great majority of
    the deaths occur at sea.
  • These deaths can be put down to border
    militarisation, asylum laws, detention policies,
    deportations and carrier sanctions.
  • They are linked to the carrying out of decisions
    taken on highest political level the Schengen
    Treaty, the Dublin Convention and EU border
    control programs.

9
What can the Nordic Countries be blamed for?
  • Restrictive domestic policies
  • Involvement in restrictive European-level
    policies
  • Outsourcing of border controls through carrier
    sanctions
  • Fast-track procedures allowing removal before
    final decision
  • Bypassing judicial review of deportation
  • Breaching the rule of non-refoulement
  • Unlawful, unnecessary or disproportionate use of
    force

10
Restrictive domestic policies Finland
  • Tradition from the times of the Cold War
  • Often only a handful of asylum applications are
    successful per year
  • 2006 38 2005 12 2004 29 2003 8 2002 14
  • Compensated through the adoption of quota
    refugees throuh the UNHRC and fairly generous
    humanitarian status
  • the quota is not always filled
  • EU harmonization is now forcing Finland towards
    stricter rules on humanitarian (subsidiary) status

11
Carrier sanctions
  • EU Directive 2001/51/EC imposes an obligation to
    return persons arriving without proper travel
    documents and to impose on airlines and other
    carriers sanctions
  • Territorial outsourcing of border controls
  • Privatization of border controls
  • Chilling effect on international protection
  • Complicity in the denial of the human right to
    leave
  • Disagreement as to sanctions apply even when a
    person is an asylum-seeker
  • E.g. Denmark applies the sanctions nevertheless
  • Finland and Sweden allow discretionary exemptions
  • France, Greece, Lithuania, Luxembourg,
    Netherlands and Spain are more liberal

12
Fast-track procedures
  • UN Human Rights Committees Concluding
    Observations on Finland 2004
  • 12. The Committee notes the lack of clarity as to
    the implications and consequences of the
    amendment to the Aliens Act of July 2000
    providing for accelerated procedures in the case
    of asylum-seekers with manifestly ill-founded
    claims and applications by aliens from a "safe"
    country, as regards both the suspensive effect of
    an appeal and the legal protection available to
    asylum-seekers.
  • The State party should ensure that legislation
    and practice in this area are compatible with
    articles 2, 6, 7 and 13 of the Covenant and, in
    particular, that appeals have a suspensive effect.

13
Breaching the rule of non-refoulement
  • Agiza v. Sweden (Communication 233/2003)
  • Sweden violated the Convention Against Torture
  • Alzery v. Sweden (Communication 1416/2005)
  • Sweden violated article 7 of the Covenant on
    Civil and Political Rights (prohibition against
    torture and related practices)
  • Dar v. Norway (Communication 249/2004)
  • Norway breached article 22 of CAT by deporting a
    complainant to Pakistan but remedied the breach
    by taking him back and granting residence

14
Excessive use of force
  • European Committee for the Prevention of Torture,
    report on visit to Finland 2003
  • 57. .. the delegation heard claims from various
    sources (and, in some cases, found evidence) of
    highly questionable practices, such as the
    involuntary administration of medication (cf.
    paragraph 36), the carrying out of deportations
    without prior notice to the persons concerned or
    the exercising of psychological pressure
    (including by threats of forcible administration
    of tranquillisers) on persons after a failed
    deportation attempt.
  • 37. ..The administration of medication to persons
    subject to a deportation order must always be
    carried out on the basis of a medical decision
    taken in respect of each particular case the
    taking of such a decision necessarily involves
    that the person concerned has been physically
    seen and examined by a medical doctor. ...
  • Excessive use of force (by CIA operatives) at
    Bromma airport was one of the violations by
    Sweden of ICCPR article 7 in Alzery v. Sweden
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