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Inclusion before Exclusion or Vice Versa?

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Title: Inclusion before Exclusion or Vice Versa?


1
Inclusion before Exclusion or Vice Versa?
29 May, 2008 Best Practices for Refugee Status
Determination Prato
  • David Kosar
  • Supreme Administrative Court of the Czech
    Republic
  • Masaryk University, Brno
  • david.kosar_at_nssoud.cz

2
Framework of the Presentation
  • Inclusion before Exclusion under GC1951
  • Wording of GC1951
  • State practice Jurisprudence
  • Doctrinal views
  • Position of the UNHCR
  • Policy arguments
  • Inclusion before Exclusion under EC Law
  • Qualification Directive
  • Procedures Directive
  • Concluding remarks

3
Terminology
  • Inclusion before Exclusion
  • the view that according to the CSR51 the
    application of the inclusion clause must precede
    the application of the exclusion clause
  • Exclusion before Inclusion
  • the view that according to the CSR51 the
    application of the exclusion clause may precede
    the application of the inclusion clause

4
  • Inclusion before Exclusion
  • under GC1951

5
GC 1951 Wording I.
  • Art. 1F (Exclusion) The provisions of this
    Convention shall not apply to any person with
    respect to whom there are serious reasons for
    considering that
  • (a) He has committed a crime against peace, a
    war crime, or a crime against humanity, as
    defined in the international instruments drawn up
    to make provision in respect of such crimes
  • (b) He has committed a serious non-political
    crime outside the country of refuge prior to his
    admission to that country as a refugee
  • (c) He has been guilty of acts contrary to the
    purposes and principles of the United Nations.
  • Art. 32 1 (Expulsion) The Contracting States
    shall not expel a refugee lawfully in their
    territory save on grounds of national security or
    public order.

6
GC 1951 Wording II.
  • Art. 33 (Non-refoulement)
  • 1. No Contracting State shall expel or return
    ("refouler") a refugee in any manner whatsoever
    to the frontiers of territories where his life or
    freedom would be threatened on account of his
    race, religion, nationality, membership of a
    particular social group or political opinion.
  • 2. The benefit of the present provision may not,
    however, be claimed by a refugee whom there are
    reasonable grounds for regarding as a danger to
    the security of the country in which he is, or
    who, having been convicted by a final judgement
    of a particularly serious crime, constitutes a
    danger to the community of that country.

7
Other Instruments
  • Art. 14 UDHR48
  • (1) Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy
    in other countries asylum from persecution.(2)
    This right may not be invoked in the case of
    prosecutions genuinely arising from non-political
    crimes or from acts contrary to the purposes and
    principles of the United Nations.
  • Art. 31 VCLT69 Basic rule of treaty
    interpretation
  • 1. A treaty shall be interpreted in good faith
    in accordance with the ordinary meaning to be
    given to the terms of the treaty in their context
    and in the light of its object and purpose.

8
GC 1951 State Practice
  • Exclusion before inclusion
  • AUS (MIMA v Singh), AUT (VwGH, 29.10.1993, No.
    93/01/0985), CAN (Gonzales), UK (Gurung), NL
    Council of State, 8 April 1991 (RV 1991, 5), NZ
    (NZRSAA, No. 74796)
  • Inclusion before exclusion, but only for
    Art.1F(b)
  • earlier NZ approach (Re S.K., No. 29/91)
  • Inclusion before exclusion
  • DEN, FRA
  • Unsettled case law
  • Czech Rep., Belgium

9
GC 1951 Doctrinal Views
  • Exclusion before inclusion
  • Goodwin-Gill McAdam (2007 ed.)
  • Art. 1 F speaks about persons (not refugees)
  • Hathaway Harvey
  • Art. 14 2 UDHR48 is absolute bar
  • Inclusion before exclusion, but only for
    Art.1F(b)
  • Geoff Gilbert Art 1F(b) speaks clearly of
    refugees
  • Inclusion before exclusion
  • Jean-Yves Carlier you must be first in before
    you are out
  • Michael Bliss exclusion first is inconsistent
    with general principles of procedural fairness
  • LCHR ECRE Art. 1 F ? admissibility test

10
GC 1951 UNHCRs view I.
  • UNHCR Handbook
  • 141. Normally it will be during the process of
    determining a person's refugee status that the
    facts leading to exclusion under these clauses
    will emerge.
  • 176. An application for refugee status by a
    person having () used force, or to have
    committed acts of violence of whatever nature and
    within whatever context, must in the first
    place--like any other application--be examined
    from the standpoint of the inclusion clauses .
  • 177. Where it has been determined that an
    applicant fulfils the inclusion criteria, the
    question may arise as to whether he may not be
    covered by the terms of one or more of the
    exclusion clauses.

11
GC 1951 UNHCRs view II.
  • UNHCR GUIDELINES ON INTERNATIONAL PROTECTION
    Application of the Exclusion Clauses
  • 31. The exceptional nature of Article 1F
    suggests that inclusion should generally be
    considered before exclusion, but there is no
    rigid formula. Exclusion may exceptionally be
    considered without particular reference to
    inclusion issues
  • (i) where there is an indictment by an
    international criminal tribunal
  • (ii) in cases where there is apparent and
    readily available evidence pointing strongly
    towards the applicants involvement in
    particularly serious crimes, notably in prominent
    Article 1F(c) cases, and
  • (iii) at the appeal stage in cases where
    exclusion is the question at issue.

12
GC 1951 UNHCRs view III.
  • The Background Note to 2003 UNHCR Guidelines
  • The holistic approach allows for flexibility,
    taking into account the nature of the particular
    case as it for instance prevents unnecessary
    consideration of Article 1F in cases where
    non-inclusion arises.
  • Inclusion before exclusion also enables a fuller
    understanding of the circumstances and
    international protection concerns about family
    members to be addressed. ( 100)

13
GC 1951 Policy Arguments
  • Argument of Judicial Economy
  • Where there is a choice between a construction
    of the Convention that would further speedy,
    economical and efficient decision-making and
    one that would frustrate those objectives, the
    former construction should be preferred. (Kirby
    J in Singh)
  • VS
  • 4 categories of arguments for inclusion first
  • Slippery slope arguments
  • Criminal paradigm arguments
  • Procedural arguments
  • Pragmatic arguments

14
GC 1951 Conclusions
  • general purpose of Art. 1(F) is not the
    protection of the society of refuge from
    dangerous refugees, whether because of acts
    committed before or after the presentation of a
    refugee claim that purpose is served by Art. 33
    ... Rather, it is to exclude ab initio those who
    are not bona fide refugees at the time of their
    claim for refugee status. (Pushpanathan)
  • Art. 1F is expressed as an exception. If it is
    satisfied, the provisions of the Convention are
    said not to apply to the person in question. If
    the provisions of the Convention do not apply to
    the person, the person cannot be entitled to
    protection under the Convention. The preferable
    solution is to read the reference to "admission
    ... as a refugee" as a reference to putative
    admission as a refugee. (Singh)

15
  • Inclusion before Exclusion
  • under EC Law

16
EC Law Qualification Directive I.
  • Art. 12(2)
  • A third country national or a stateless person
    is excluded from being a refugee where there are
    serious reasons for considering that
  • (a) he or she has committed a crime against
    peace, a war crime, or a crime against humanity,
    as defined in the international instruments drawn
    up to make provision in respect of such crimes
  • (b) he or she has committed a serious
    non-political crime outside the country of refuge
    prior to his or her admission as a refugee which
    means the time of issuing a residence permit
    based on the granting of refugee status
  • (c) he or she has been guilty of acts contrary to
    the purposes and principles of the United Nations
    as set out in the Preamble and Articles 1 and 2
    of the Charter of the United Nations.

17
EC Law Qualification Directive II.
  • Art. 2 (c) refugee TCN who, owing to a
    well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons
    of , is outside the country of nationality and
    is unable to avail himself or herself of the
    protection of that country, , and to whom
    Article 12 does not apply
  • Art. 12(2) QD Article 1F of the GC1951
  • Art. 13 Member States shall grant refugee
    status to a third country national , who
    qualifies as a refugee
  • gt QD refugee formula merger of inclusion
    exclusion clauses

18
EC Law Qualification Directive III.
  • Art. 4 1. In cooperation with the applicant
    it is the duty of the Member State to assess the
    relevant elements of the application.
  • 2. The elements referred to in of 1 consist of
    the applicant's statements and all documentation
    at the applicants disposal regarding the
    applicant's background and the reasons for
    applying for international protection.
  • 3. The assessment of an application for
    international protection is to be carried out on
    an individual basis and includes taking into
    account
  • (a) all relevant facts as they relate to the
    country of origin at the time of taking a
    decision on the application
  • (b) the relevant statements and documentation
    presented by the applicant
  • (c) the individual position and personal
    circumstances of the applicant,

19
EC Law Qualification Directive IV.
  • Art. 4(1) Art. 4(2) gt MS must ALWAYS assess
    the reasons for applying for international
    protection.
  • What does must assess mean?
  • Inclusion before exclusion
  • Arts. 2(c) and 12(2) QD counsel strongly against
    it
  • QD distinguishes the hearings stage and the
    determination stage gt inclusion must be
    addressed in the hearings stage
  • where Gurung and the NZRSAA provides guidance,
    the QD imposes an obligation

20
EC Law Procedures Directive
  • Preambular 10, 13, 22
  • Art. 3(1) PD applies to all applications for
    asylum
  • Art. 8(2) decisions by the determining
    authority on applications for asylum are taken
    after an appropriate examination.
  • No accelerated procedure (x First Proposal PD)
  • Not manifestly unfounded (x Amended Proposal
    PD)
  • gt PD is silent
  • but drafting history eliminates inclusion before
    exclusion

21
  • Concluding remarks

22
Concluding remarks
  • GC1951
  • gt Exclusion before inclusion
  • no support for distinction between the hearings
    determination stage
  • European Asylum Acquis
  • gt Exclusion before inclusion
  • inclusion must be addressed in the hearings
    stage!!!
  • Holistic approach (Art.1F alongside Art.1A)?
  • no support in the text of the GC1951
  • argument of judicial economy
  • belt-and-brace approach is dangerous

23

Thank you very much for your attention!
David Kosar Supreme Administrative Court of the
Czech Republic Masaryk University,
Brno 4775_at_mail.muni.cz, david.kosar_at_nssoud.cz
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