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Dutch government urged to halt plan to deport Somalis
Albany Tribune
February 22, 2012 Markacadeey
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The Dutch government should not deport Somalis to
any part of south-central Somalia, including Mogadishu,
until security improves substantially, and the UN refugee
agency has issued new guidelines. In mid-February 2013,
Dutch authorities said they planned to deport two rejected
Somali asylum seekers, originally from Mogadishu, back to
Somalia on February 20 and 23.
The returns would end a
22-month suspension of returns to the city which has been
engulfed by deplorable levels of violence. On February 19, a
Dutch court ordered the authorities to suspend the first
deportation pending an appeal. United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugee (UNHCR) guidelines advise countries
against returns to south-central Somalia because people
returned there “face a real risk of serious harm.” The
refugee agency is preparing new guidance.
“The Dutch
government should not decide to resume deportations to
south-central Somalia until the UN has issued an up-to-date
objective assessment of security conditions there,” said
Gerry Simpson, senior refugee researcher and advocate at
Human Rights Watch. “While security has improved in parts of
Mogadishu, the city is by no means safe, and the rest of
south-central Somalia is still plagued by conflict, attacks
on civilians, and serious rights abuses.”
In April
2011, the Netherlands suspended all returns of people
originally from Mogadishu, Somalia’s capital, and in June
the European Court of Human Rights ruled that indiscriminate
violence in Mogadishu put anyone returned there at risk of
serious harm. The court stressed that insecurity in
Mogadishu meant that Somalis from other parts of
south-central Somalia could not safely transit through the
city to reach their homes. As a result, the Netherlands also
suspended all returns of Somalis originating from
south-central areas outside Mogadishu.
The
Netherlands granted “subsidiary protection” to rejected
asylum seekers from Mogadishu simply because they were from
Mogadishu. Although it refrained from deporting Somalis from
areas in south-central Somalia outside Mogadishu, the
Netherlands did not give them a protected status.
On
December 14, 2012, the Dutch Justice Ministryinformed
Parliament by letter that the ministry considered that the
security situation in Mogadishu had improved. Citing EU
legal language, the Ministry said there was no longer a
situation there that “serious[ly] and individual[ly]
threatened a civilian’s life” because of “indiscriminate
violence” in the context of an “armed conflict.” The letter
said that while Mogadishu could not be considered safe for
everyone, some people were not at risk there.
As a
result, the letter announced that “asylum seekers from
Mogadishu no longer qualify [for subsidiary protection
status] merely because of the state of their city” and that
all cases of people from Mogadishu would be reviewed on an
individual basis. The letter said that Somalis who already
hold subsidiary status in the Netherlands will continue to
benefit from that status for the time being.
The
letter concluded by saying that “forced return to all parts
of Somalia” were now possible for failed asylum seekers
because “return[ed] asylum seekers no longer have to travel
through territory [i.e. Mogadishu] where there is”
indiscriminate violence.
A February 11 Decision
published in the Law Gazette announced a change to part of
the “Aliens Circular” relating to “Asylum Policy regarding
Somalia,” thereby giving legal effect to the government’s
policy changes as announced in the December 14 letter to
Parliament.
Human Rights Watch said the new policy
meant the people most likely to be deported first under the
new policy are Somalis from areas outside Mogadishu in
south-central Somalia, who have neither refugee nor
subsidiary protection status in Holland.
In the
December 14 letter, the Justice Ministry said its new policy
was based on a November 30, 2012 report by the Dutch
Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the security situation in
south- central Somalia. But Human Rights Watch said that
despite improvements in security in Mogadishu over the past
year, the ongoing conflict and limited access to many parts
of south-central Somalia mean that conducting a thorough
assessment of conditions remains difficult.
The
Netherlands and all other countries should refrain from
deporting Somalis until UNHCR has issued its planned new
guidelines on returns to Somalia, Human Rights Watch said.
In particular, Human Rights Watch called on the
Netherlands to take into account the December 2011 European
Union “Qualification Directive” which requires States to
“obtain … precise and up-to-date information from … the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and the
European Asylum Office” before making a decision to return
anyone to a situation where they might face serious harm.
Article 8(2)(b) of the EU’s 2005 Procedures Directive
relating to asylum claims also requires states to “obtain …
precise and up-to-date information from … sources such as
UNHCR.”
The current UNHCR guidance dates from May
2010. At that time UNHCR concluded that the situation in
south-central Somalia, including Mogadishu, involved
“reported high frequency of significant casualties among the
civilian population” and represented “a situation of
indiscriminate violence in a situation of internal armed
conflict in the meaning of Article 15(c) of the EU
Qualification Directive.”
UNHCR’s guidance also said
that there are “no reliable safety zones exist in southern
and central Somalia given the unpredictable evolution of the
conflict, characterized by constant struggle for territorial
control by parties to the conflict and outbreaks of violence
in previously unaffected areas” and that therefore “any
individual present on the territory would be at risk of
serious harm.”
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