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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> QD (Iraq) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWCA Civ 620 (24 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/620.html Cite as: [2010] Imm AR 132, [2009] INLR 514, [2009] Imm AR 132, [2011] 1 WLR 689, [2009] EWCA Civ 620, [2011] WLR 689 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
No1. AA/09525/2007
No.2 AA/03993/2007
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
____________________
No.1 QD (IRAQ) |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT No.2 AH (IRAQ) and – SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR REFUGEES |
Respondent Appellant Respondent Intervener |
____________________
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Mr Simon Cox and Ms Samantha Knights (instructed by Refugee & Migrant Justice) for Appellant No.2
Mr Pushpinder Saini QC and Mr Deok-Joo Rhee (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Mr Michael Fordham QC and Mr Tom Hickman (instructed by Baker & McKenzie LLP) for the Intervener in both cases
Hearing dates: Tuesday 9 and Wednesday 10 June 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
This is the judgment of the court.
The 2004 Qualification Directive
"minimum standards for the qualification and status of third country nationals or stateless persons as refugees or as persons who otherwise need international protection and the content of the protection granted."
For the purposes of this Directive:
………..
(e) 'person eligible for subsidiary protection' means a third country national …. who does not qualify as a refugee but in respect of whom substantial grounds have been shown for believing that the person concerned, if returned to his or her country of origin, … would face a real risk of suffering serious harm as defined in article 15, … and is unable, or, owing to such risk, unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country."
Serious harm
Serious harm consists of
(a) death penalty or execution; or
(b) torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment of an applicant in the country of origin; or
(c) serious and individual threat to a civilian's life or person by reason of indiscriminate violence in situations of international or internal armed conflict.
(24) Minimum standards for the definition and content of subsidiary protection status should also be laid down. Subsidiary protection should be complementary and additional to the refugee protection enshrined in the Geneva Convention.
(25) It is necessary to introduce criteria on the basis of which applicants for international protection are to be recognised as eligible for subsidiary protection. Those criteria should be drawn from international obligations under human rights instruments and practices existing in Member States.
(26) Risks to which a population of a country or a section of the population is generally exposed do normally not create in themselves an individual threat which would qualify as serious harm.
International humanitarian law
"several of the terms used in article 15(c) are terms of art within international humanitarian (and international criminal) law: e.g. 'civilian', 'life and [or] person', 'indiscriminate' and, of course, 'international or non-international [internal] armed conflict'. The only body of law in which all of these terms feature is IHL (together with international criminal law)."
Articles 2(e) and 15(c)
(1) the ostensibly cumulative but logically intractable test of "a real risk" of a "threat";
(2) the contradictory postulation of an "individual threat" to life or safety from "indiscriminate violence";
(3) the requirement of "armed conflict" when there may well be only one source of indiscriminate violence.
The first of these has to be coped with pragmatically. The second has now been resolved in principle by the European Court of Justice. The third, albeit troubling, is the subject of agreement before us.
115. From the foregoing survey of its case-law, it follows that the Court has never excluded 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.
Elgafaji v Staatssecretaris van Justitie
1. Is Article 15(c) of [the Directive] to be interpreted as offering protection only in a situation in which Article 3 of the [ECHR], as interpreted in the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights, also has a bearing, or does Article 15(c), in comparison with Article 3 of the [ECHR], offer supplementary or other protection?
2. If Article 15(c) of the Directive, in comparison with Article 3 of the [ECHR], offers supplementary or other protection, what are the criteria in that case for determining whether a person who claims to be eligible for subsidiary protection status runs a real risk of serious and individual threat by reason of indiscriminate violence within the terms of Article 15(c) of the Directive, read in conjunction with Article 2(e) thereof?
"By contrast, article 15(c) of the Directive is a provision, the content of which is different from that of article 3 of the ECHR, and the interpretation of which must, therefore, be carried out independently, although with due regard for fundamental rights, as they are guaranteed under the ECHR."
31 In order to reply to those questions, it is appropriate to compare the three types of 'serious harm' defined in Article 15 of the Directive, which constitute the qualification for subsidiary protection, where, in accordance with Article 2(e) of the Directive, substantial grounds have been shown for believing that the applicant faces 'a real risk of [such] harm' if returned to the relevant country.
32 In that regard, it must be noted that the terms 'death penalty', 'execution' and 'torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment of an applicant in the country of origin', used in Article 15(a) and (b) of the Directive, cover situations in which the applicant for subsidiary protection is specifically exposed to the risk of a particular type of harm.
33 By contrast, the harm defined in Article 15(c) of the Directive as consisting of a 'serious and individual threat to [the applicant's] life or person' covers a more general risk of harm.
34 Reference is made, more generally, to a 'threat … to a civilian's life or person' rather than to specific acts of violence. Furthermore, that threat is inherent in a general situation of 'international or internal armed conflict'. Lastly, the violence in question which gives rise to that threat is described as 'indiscriminate', a term which implies that it may extend to people irrespective of their personal circumstances.
35 In that context, the word 'individual' must be understood as covering harm to civilians irrespective of their identity, where the degree of indiscriminate violence characterising the armed conflict taking place - assessed by the competent national authorities before which an application for subsidiary protection is made, or by the courts of a Member State to which a decision refusing such an application is referred - reaches such a high level that substantial grounds are shown for believing that a civilian, returned to the relevant country or, as the case may be, to the relevant region, would, solely on account of his presence on the territory of that country or region, face a real risk of being subject to the serious threat referred in Article 15(c) of the Directive.
36 That interpretation, which is likely to ensure that Article 15(c) of the Directive has its own field of application, is not invalidated by the wording of recital 26 in the preamble to the Directive, according to which '[r]isks to which a population of a country or a section of the population is generally exposed do normally not create in themselves an individual threat which would qualify as serious harm'.
37 While that recital implies that the objective finding alone of a risk linked to the general situation in a country is not, as a rule, sufficient to establish that the conditions set out in Article 15(c) of the Directive have been met in respect of a specific person, its wording nevertheless allows - by the use of the word 'normally' - for the possibility of an exceptional situation which would be characterised by such a high degree of risk that substantial grounds would be shown for believing that that person would be subject individually to the risk in question.
38 The exceptional nature of that situation is also confirmed by the fact that the relevant protection is subsidiary, and by the broad logic of Article 15 of the Directive, as the harm defined in paragraphs (a) and (b) of that article requires a clear degree of individualisation. While it is admittedly true that collective factors play a significant role in the application of Article 15(c) of the Directive, in that the person concerned belongs, like other people, to a circle of potential victims of indiscriminate violence in situations of international or internal armed conflict, it is nevertheless the case that that provision must be subject to a coherent interpretation in relation to the other two situations referred to in Article 15 of the Directive and must, therefore, be interpreted by close reference to that individualisation.
39 In that regard, the more the applicant is able to show that he is specifically affected by reason of factors particular to his personal circumstances, the lower the level of indiscriminate violence required for him to be eligible for subsidiary protection.
40 Moreover, it should be added that, in the individual assessment of an application for subsidiary protection, under Article 4(3) of the Directive, the following may be taken into account:
- the geographical scope of the situation of indiscriminate violence and the actual destination of the applicant in the event that he is returned to the relevant country, as is clear from Article 8(1) of the Directive, and
- the existence, if any, of a serious indication of real risk, such as that referred to in Article 4(4) of the Directive, an indication in the light of which the level of indiscriminate violence required for eligibility for subsidiary protection may be lower.
…….
43 Having regard to all of the foregoing considerations, the answer to the questions referred is that Article 15(c) of the Directive, in conjunction with Article 2(e) of the Directive, must be interpreted as meaning that:
- the existence of a serious and individual threat to the life or person of an applicant for subsidiary protection is not subject to the condition that that applicant adduce evidence that he is specifically targeted by reason of factors particular to his personal circumstances;
- the existence of such a threat can exceptionally be considered to be established where the degree of indiscriminate violence characterising the armed conflict taking place -- assessed by the competent national authorities before which an application for subsidiary protection is made, or by the courts of a Member State to which a decision refusing such an application is referred -- reaches such a high level that substantial grounds are shown for believing that a civilian, returned to the relevant country or, as the case may be, to the relevant region, would, solely on account of his presence on the territory of that country or region, face a real risk of being subject to that threat.
44 It should also, lastly, be added that the interpretation of Article 15(c) of the Directive, in conjunction with Article 2(e) thereof, arising from the foregoing paragraphs is fully compatible with the ECHR, including the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights relating to Article 3 of the ECHR (see, inter alia, NA. v. The United Kingdom, § 115 to 117 and the case-law cited).
"individual threat" and "indiscriminate violence"
"a risk" of "a … threat"
"were happening on a wide scale and in such a way as to be of sufficient severity to pose a real risk of serious harm … to civilians generally."
"armed conflict"
Disposal
Is there in Iraq or a material part of it such a high level of indiscriminate violence that substantial grounds exist for believing that an applicant such as QD or AH would, solely by being present there, face a real risk which threatens his life or person?
By "material part" we mean the applicant's home area or, if otherwise appropriate, any potential place of internal relocation.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL C5/2008/1706
ON APPEAL FROM THE IAT
- UNHCR mandate and position in relation to international protection;
- the object and purpose of Subsidiary Protection Status ("SPS") under the Qualification Directive, 2004/83/EC, 29 April 2004;
- the context and object of Article 15(c);
- the meaning of "individual threat";
- the meaning of "internal armed conflict";
- the meaning of "indiscriminate violence";
- the meaning of a real risk of a threat to life or person;
- country condition update: Iraq.
UNHCR mandate and position in relation to international protection
10.1. affirmed that complementary protection should be resorted to only after full use has been made of the 1951 Convention;
10.2. underlined the importance of developing the international protection system in a way which avoids protection gaps, and enables all those in need of international protection to find and enjoy it.
Subsidiary Protection Status
"4. The aim is an open and secure European Union, fully committed to the obligations of the Geneva Refugee Convention and other relevant human rights instruments, and able to respond to humanitarian needs on the basis of solidarity. A common approach must also be developed to ensure the integration into our societies of those third country nationals who are lawfully resident in the Union."
16.1. State practice: At the time of the Tampere Conclusions there was consistent State practice in European States recognising that persons may be in need of international protection even if none of the 1951 Convention grounds is the cause of the feared harm. However, the precise scope of the protection offered varied across European States.[12] (see the ECRE Report, April 1999,[13] summarised at Annexure 1 to these submissions.) The Qualification Directive provided an opportunity to harmonise State practice in this respect.
16.2. International human rights law: most importantly,
(1) the obligation not to return a person to a country where they face a risk of suffering the death penalty or execution (Article 15(a)) reflecting Member State's obligations under Protocol 6 of the ECHR and the principle in Soering v UK (1989) 11 EHRR 439 (death row phenomenon);
(2) the obligation not to return a person to a country where they are substantial grounds to believe that he/she will face a real risk of inhuman or degrading treatment or torture, reflecting the non-refoulement obligation arising under Article 3 of the ECHR (Article 15(b)). This was extended to Article 2 in Gonzalez v Spain, App. No. 43544/98, 29 June 1999;
(3) the non-refoulement obligation under Article 3 of the Convention Against Torture. This non-refoulement obligation has attained the status of jus cogens.
(4) the non-refoulement obligation arising under Articles 6 and 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. See Human Rights Committee in its General Comments No. 31 on the Nature of the General Legal Obligation on States Parties to the Covenant.[14]
20.1. the Qualification Directive itself states that the criteria for SPS "should be drawn from international obligations under human rights instruments and practices in Member States" – it does not mention IHL (Recital 25);
20.2. the ECJ in Elgafaji stated that the Qualification Directive, and Article 15(c) in particular, must be interpreted with "due regard for fundamental rights, as they are guaranteed under the ECHR" (at [28]), but did not refer to IHL.
20.3. IHL and SPS are two separate legal regimes. IHL imposes responsibilities on the protagonists to an armed conflict or on States within whose territory armed conflict is occurring or who are occupying powers.[15] IHL is interpreted in the light of its object and purpose, which is not necessarily the same as the object and purpose of SPS. It would not therefore be surprising if the same or similar term were to be given a different meaning in IHL and under Article 15(c). By way of example, in Prosecutor v Tadic[16] the Appeal Chamber of the International Criminal Court ("ICC") explained that the reference to "armed conflict" under the Geneva Conventions must be given a very broad temporal scope, extending States obligations up until a general conclusion of peace (in international conflict) or a peaceful settlement (in internal conflict) (at [70]). This interpretation of "armed conflict" is obviously necessary to ensure that IHL continues to apply until such a formal cessation of a conflict and to lend clarity to the temporal application of IHL;[17] but different considerations will be relevant when interpreting Article 15(c).
21.1. The criteria for recognising SPS must be interpreted broadly, in order to achieve the objective of securing protection to persons in need of international protection who do not meet the criteria of the 1951 Convention.
21.2. Regional and international and regional human rights instruments inform –but do not limit—the scope and meaning of SPS;
21.3. IHL and international criminal law inform—but do not limit—the scope and meaning of Article 15 (c), and some caution is warranted when drawing on IHL in the context of complementary protection against non-refoulement.
The object and context of Article 15(c)
Background to Article 15(c)
24.1. The Organization of African Unity agreed the Convention Governing the Specific Aspects of the Refugee Problems in Africa, 1969 [Tab 13], also included Article 1.2 in the following terms:
"The term "refugee" shall also apply to every person who, owing to external aggression, occupation, foreign domination or events seriously disturbing public order in either part or the whole of his country of origin or nationality, is compelled to leave his place of habitual residence in order to seek refuge in another place outside his country of origin or nationality."
24.2. The Cartagena Declaration on Refugees[19], adopted by Latin American Countries in November 1984 [Tab 14], included the following conclusion at III.3:
"…in view of the experience gained from the massive flows of refugees in the Central American area, it is necessary to consider enlarging the concept of a refugee, bearing in mind, as far as appropriate and in the light of the situation prevailing in the region, the precedent of the OAU Convention (article 1, paragraph 2) and the doctrine employed in the reports of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Hence the definition or concept of a refugee to be recommended for use in the region is one which, in addition to containing the elements of the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol, includes among refugees persons who have fled their country because their lives, safety or freedom have been threatened by generalized violence, foreign aggression, internal conflicts, massive violation of human rights or other circumstances which have seriously disturbed public order."
"unable to return in safe and durable conditions because of the situation prevailing in that country, who may fall within the scope of Article 1A of the Geneva Convention or other international or national instruments giving international protection, in particular:
(i) persons who have fled areas of armed conflict or endemic violence;
(ii) persons at serious risk of, or who have been the victims of, systemic or generalised violations of their human rights;…"
The context of Article 15(c)
Individual threat
Internal Armed Conflict
37.1. Article 15(c) has to be read in light of the object and purpose of SPS, namely, to protect from a risk of serious harm if returned to their country of origin in circumstances that fall outside the 1951 Convention. Persons who face a real risk of serious harm due to indiscriminate violence are in need of international protection regardless of whether the context is classified in international law as one of "armed conflict".[28]
37.2. International protection needs arising from indiscriminate violence are not limited to situations of declared war or internationally recognized conflicts. It is therefore of importance that the requirements for an "internal armed conflict" are not set too high.
37.3. The Temporary Protection Directive applies to persons who have fled "armed conflict or endemic violence" and persons at serious risk of "systemic and generalised violations" of their human rights.
37.4. State practice in 1999 showed that a majority of EU states offered complementary protection from a risk of suffering serious human rights abuses beyond cases of IHL "armed conflict": see Annexure 1.
37.5. A UNHCR study in 2007 reported that of the three States covered by the Study on which data was then available, there was already a divergence as to the meaning given to "armed conflict".[29] In one, Sweden, SPS is granted where there is a "severe conflict".[30] The German Administrative Court has subsequently held that only internal disturbances and tensions, such as riots and sporadic acts of violence and other acts of a similar nature are clearly not armed conflicts.[31]
37.6. The European Court of Human Rights recognises that, exceptionally, a "general situation of violence" is capable of giving rise to a breach of Article 3: NA v United Kingdom, App. No. 25904/07, 17 July 2008.
37.7. IHL is of limited (although some) assistance interpreting the meaning of Article 15(c), not least because,
37.7.1. the absence of a settled definition in IHL: see Annexure 2 to these submissions.
37.7.2. the different object and purpose of IHL: see paragraph 20.3 above, and Annexure 2.
37.8. In Elgafaji the ECJ referred to an armed conflict under Article 15(c) being "characterised" by the presence of indiscriminate violence. It stated that there would be a sufficient individual threat where the indiscriminate violence "reaches such a high level that substantial grounds are shown for believing that a civilian, returned to the relevant country, or as the case may be, to the relevant region" would face a real risk of being subject to a serious threat (at [35]).
Indiscriminate violence
45.1. The IAT adopts a special meaning of "indiscriminate" which is unnecessary and contrary to the object and purpose of the Qualification Directive.
45.2. From the perspective of refugee / human rights law, the distinction between violence employed against military targets and civilians is a false one. The correct distinction is between violence giving rise to a well-founded fear of persecution and violence that does not but which nonetheless gives rise to the need for international protection outside the regime of the 1951 Convention. It is in the latter sense that violence is "indiscriminate" within the meaning of Article 15(c).
45.3. Moreover, the approach taken by the IAT—as it acknowledged (at [97])—gives rise to a protection gap. For instance, it means that where armed conflict leads to a break down in law and order leading to endemic criminal violence, those fleeing would be unable to claim SP because the violence would not be committed against civilians in breach of the Geneva Conventions.
45.4. This protection gap is not only contrary to the object and purpose of the Qualification Directive in general, but is contrary to Article 6, which makes clear that actors of serious harm include "non-State actors".
45.5. Indeed, there is nothing in Article 15(c) that refers to or limits the source of the violence to which a person is entitled to claim protection from, as long as it arises in the context of an armed conflict. From the perspective of the individual, and following the object and purpose of SPS, it does not matter whether the risk of serious harm arises from acts of the state, insurgents or others.
45.6. The fact that IHL does not address violence arising from criminal gangs and non-combatants is a product of the fact that the purpose of IHL is to protect human rights by imposing obligations on the parties to armed conflict. By contrast, refugee / non-refoulement obligations impose obligations on host States and therefore do not address precisely the same type of harm.
45.7. There is also a practical objection to the approach taken by the IAT. It is frequently difficult to distinguish between threats of violence emanating from combatants and those deriving from mere criminals. In Iraq, for instance, the distinction between insurgent groups and criminal gangs has never been clear and has fluctuated over time. As the UNHCR has stated in a recent report,
"Due to the complex situation of a high number of actors involved in providing security and actors involved in violence, where the lines are often blurred, an asylum-seeker's failure to identify the perpetrator of violence should not be considered as detrimental to his/her credibility."[34]
Likewise, the complexity of a situation should not prejudice the substance of a person's asylum claim. It is submitted that it would be contrary to the object and purpose of SPS for a person's status to turn on the classification and motivation of actors committing violence at any particular time.
Real risk of a threat of harm to life or person
"What is at stake is both the protection of the physical liberty of individuals as well as their personal security in a context which, in the absence of safeguards, could result in a subversion of the rule of law and place detainees beyond the reach of the most rudimentary forms of legal protection" (Kurt v Turkey (1998) 27 EHRR 373, at [123].
"Imagine a case of intended expulsion to a country in which the rule of law is flagrantly flouted, habeas corpus is unavailable and there is a real risk that the individual may face arbitrary detention for many years. I could, of course, make this example more realistic by citing the actualities of the world of today. It is not necessary to do so. The point is clear enough. Assuming that there is no evidence of the risk of torture or inhuman or degrading treatment, is the applicant for relief to be told that the ECHR offers in principle no possibility of protection in such extreme cases?" (at [43])
Country condition update: Iraq
MICHAEL FORDHAM QC
TOM HICKMAN
Blackstone Chambers
(acting pro bono)
ELIZABETH WILLIAMS
ALEXIS MARTINEZ
SAM PARR
Baker & McKenzie LLP
(acting pro bono)
UNHCR London
31 May 2009
UNHCR, London 27 May 2009
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL C5/2008/1706
ON APPEAL FROM THE IAT
1. This table summarises some of the findings of the ECRE Report, Complimentary/Subsidiary protection in the EU states, April 1999 [Tab 17].
2. Other grounds of complimentary/subsidiary protection offered by the countries listed are set out in the report. This table includes those most relevant to the present case.
PAGES | COUNTRY | COMPLIMENTARY/SUBSIDIARY PROTECTION AFFORDED |
5-6 | AUSTRIA |
Persons at risk of serious human rights violations[43] |
7-9 | BELGIUM | 1. Persons at risk of serious human rights violations 2. Persons who have fled civil war or generalised violence |
10-15 | DENMARK | Persons who ought not to be returned (but: persons who flee situations of civil war or generalised violence not generally protected) |
16-17 | FINLAND | 1.Persons at risk of serious human rights violations 2. Persons who have fled civil war or generalised violence |
18-19 | FRANCE | Persons at risk of treatment contrary to Article 3 ECHR |
20-23 | GERMANY | 1. Persons who have fled situations of war and civil war 2. Tolerated: persons at risk of inhuman or degrading treatment, torture, death or physical harm |
24-25 | GREECE | 1. Persons who have fled war and civil war 2. Cases of civil conflict accompanied by mass violations of human rights |
26-27 | IRELAND | Persons who have fled war or civil war |
28-30 | ITALY | Persons who due to humanitarian reasons or international/constitutional obligations cannot be returned |
31 | LUXEMBOURG | Persons at risk of serious human rights violations |
34-38 | THE NETHERLANDS | Persons who have fled situations of civil war and generalised violence |
39-40 | PORTUGAL | Persons who have fled situations of civil war or generalised violence |
41-45 | SPAIN | Persons who have fled situations of civil war or generalised violence |
46 | SWEDEN | 1. Persons who need protection from internal or external armed conflict 2. Persons who have a well-founded fear of being subjected to torture or inhuman and degrading treatment. |
48 | UNITED KINGDOM | 1. Persons at risk of serious human rights violations 2. Persons who have fled situations of civil war or generalised violence |
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL C5/2008/1706
ON APPEAL FROM THE IAT
Common Article 3
Additional Protocol II
"shall apply to all armed conflicts which are not covered by the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts (Protocol I) and which take place in the territory of the High Contracting Party between its armed forces and dissident armed forces or other organised armed groups which, under responsible command, exercise such control over a part of its territory as to enable them to carry out sustained and concerted military operations and to implement this protocol."
"Two criteria are usually used in this regard:10
· First, the hostilities must reach a minimum level of intensity. This may be the case, for example, when the hostilities are of a collective character or when the government is obliged to use military force against the insurgents, instead of mere police forces.
· Second, non-governmental groups involved in the conflict must be considered as "parties to the conflict", meaning that they possess organized armed forces. This means for example that these forces have to be under a certain command structure and have the capacity to sustain military operations."[47]
Statute of the ICC
"Paragraph 2(e) applies to armed conflicts not of an international character and thus does not apply to situations of internal disturbances and tensions, such as riots, isolated and sporadic acts of violence or other acts of a similar nature. It applies to armed conflicts that take place in the territory of a State when there is protracted armed conflict between governmental authorities and organized armed groups or between such groups."
"an armed conflict exists whenever there is a resort to armed force between States or protracted armed violence between governmental authorities and organized armed groups or between such groups within a State." [48]
"Case law has brought important elements for a definition of an armed conflict, in particular regarding the non-international armed conflicts in the meaning of common Article 3 which are not expressly defined in the Conventions concerned.
Judgments and decisions of the ICTY throw also some light on the definition of NIAC. … the ICTY [in Tadic] went on to determine the existence of a NIAC "whenever there is […] protracted armed violence between governmental authorities and organised armed groups or between such groups within a State". The ICTY thus confirmed that the definition of NIAC in the sense of common Article 3 encompasses situations where "several factions [confront] each other without involvement of the government's armed forces". Since that first ruling, each judgment of the ICTY has taken this definition as a starting point.." (references omitted)
Relevance to the Qualification Directive
Note 1 SeeUNHCR Statement on Subsidiary Protection Under the EC Qualification Directive for People Threatened by Indiscriminate Violence, January 2008 [Tab 11]. [Back] Note 2 Statute of the Office of the UNHCR, GA Res. 428(V), Annex, UN Doc A/1775, at [1] (1950) [Tab 1]. [Back] Note 3 Ibid., at [8(a)]. [Back] Note 4 UNTS No. 2545, Vol. 189, p.137 and UNTS No. 8791, Vol. 606, p.267. [Back] Note 5 SeeUNHCR Note on International Protection, submitted to the 45th session of the Executive Committee of the High Commissioner’s Programme, UN Doc. A/AC.96/830, 7. Sept. 1994 [Tab 3]. [Back] Note 6 In such cases, the institutional competence of UNHCR is based on paragraph 9 of its Statute: “The High Commissioner shall engage in such additional activities, including repatriation and resettlement, as the General Assembly may determine, within the limits of the resources placed at his disposal.” [Back] Note 7 UNHCR, Providing International Protection Including Through Complementary Forms of Protection, Executive Committee of the High Commissioner’s Programme, Standing Committee, UN Doc. EC/55/SC/CRP.16, 2 June 2005, at [26] [Tab 8]. [Back] Note 8 (1) UNHCR, Complementary Forms of Protection: Their Nature and Relationship to the International Protection Regime, UN Doc. EC/50/SC/CRP.18, 9 June 2000 [Tab 4]; (2) UNHCR, Providing International Protection Including through Complementary Forms of Protection (supra) [Tab 8]; (3) UNHCR, Complementary Forms of Protection, Global Consultations on International Protection, EC/GC/01/18, 4 September 2001 [Tab 5]. [Back] Note 9 UNHCR’s Executive Committee of the High Commissioner’s Programme, Conclusions on the Provision of International Protection Including through Complementary Forms of Protection, No. 103 (LVI) 2005, 7 October 2005 [Tab 9]. [Back] Note 10 Temporary Protection Directive 2001/55/EC, 20 July 2001; Reception Directive 2003/9/EC, 27 January 2003; Qualification Directive 2004/83/EC, 29 April 2004; Asylum Procedures Directive 2005/85, 1 December 2005; Council Regulation (EC) No. 343/2003 establishing the criteria and mechanisms for examining asylum applications. [Back] Note 11 For State practice following the adoption of the Qualification Directive, see UNHCR, Asylum in the European Union, A Study of the Implementation of the Qualification Directive, November 2007 [Tab10]. [Back] Note 12 See UNHCR, Some Additional Observations and Recommendations on the European Commission Proposal, Geneva, July 2002, p.6 [Tab 6]. [Back] Note 13 European Council on Refugees and Exiles, Complementary / Subsidiary Forms of Protection in the EU States – An Overview, ELENA National Coordinators, April 1999 [Tab 17]. [Back] Note 14 U.N. Doc. CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.13, 21 April 2004, at [12]; also General Comment No. 6 (2005) on the Treatment of unaccompanied and separate children outside their country of origin. [Back] Note 15 There is no obligation under the Geneva Conventions that is directly analogous to the non-refoulement obligation imposed on non-parties to an armed conflict under the 1951 Convention and international human rights law, but obligations under IHL do impose rules in relation to displacement and displaced persons. See Jean-Marie Henckaerts and Louise Doswald-Beck, ICRC, Customary International Humanitarian Law, Cambridge University Press 2005, Chapter 38, pp.457-474 [Tab 19]. [Back] Note 16 International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Appeals Chamber, Prosecutor v Dusko Tadic, Case No. IT-94-1-A, Decision on the Defence Motion for Interlocutory Appeal on Jurisdiction, 2 October 1995 [Tab 22]. [Back] Note 17 Likewise, the Appeal Chamber stated that the notion of armed conflict in IHL had to be given a very broad geographical scope because the obligations arising from an armed conflict, such as those relating to treatment of POWs and civilians, are clearly intended to apply outside the area of hostilities (at [68]-[69]). [Back] Note 18 The Qualification Directive follows the 1951 Convention by requiring a well founded fear of persecution before a person will qualify for Refugee Status under the Directive (Article 2(c)). [Back] Note 19 Adopted at a Colloquium on the International Protection of Refugees in Central America, Mexico and Panama, held at Cartagena, Colombia, 22 November 1984 [Tab 14]. The work of the Colloquium was attended by representatives from the UNHCR and United Nations Development Program ("UNDP"); human rights experts from throughout Latin America; and representatives from the governments of Belize, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, and Venezuela. [Back] Note 20 Communication from the Commission to the Council and the European Parliament on the right to asylum of 11 October 1991, SEC (91) 1857 fin [Tab 15]. [Back] Note 21 European Council in Edinburgh, 11-12 December 1992, Conclusions of the Presidency; Declaration on the Former Yugoslavia, 12 December 1992 [Tab 16]. [Back] Note 22 Presidency Conclusions, Tampere European Council, 15-16 October 1999, at [14] [Tab 18]. [Back] Note 23 The Commission’s Draft stated,
“…Member States shall grant subsidiary protection status to an applicant for international protection who is outside his or her country of origin, and cannot return there owing to a well-founded fear of being subject to the following serious and unjustified harm:
… (c) a threat to his or her life, safety or freedom as a result of indiscriminate violence arising in situations of armed conflict, or as a result of systematic or generalised violations of their human rights.” [Back] Note 24 The Committee’s Recommendation stated,
“Subsidiary protection should be granted by members to a person who, on the basis of a decision taken individually by the competent authorities, does not fulfil the criteria for refugee status under the 1951 Convention and its 1967 Protocol but is found to be in need of international protection:
…. [c]-- because that person has been forced to flee or remain outside his/her country or origin as a result of a threat to his/her life, security or liberty, for reasons of indiscriminate violence, arising from situations such as armed conflict, …” (Recommendation Rec (2001)18, 27 Nov. 2001) [Back] Note 25 The ICRC continues to qualify Iraq as an armed conflict situation. See the documents referred to in UNHCREligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of Iraqi Asylum-Seekers, Geneva, April 2009, fn. 23 [Tab 12]. UNHCR considers that the degree of violence in the central Governorates continues to qualify asylum seekers in the EU for protection under Article 15(c): ibid. fn. 13 and paragraph 59 below. [Back] Note 26 The French CRR stated, “the situation prevailing in Iraq is characterised in particular by the perpetration of attacks, extortion and threats targeting certain groups, which conduct continuous and concerted military operations in certain parts of the territory. Therefore, this situation should be considered as a situation of generalized violence resulting from a situation of internal armed conflict”: cited in UNHCR, Study of the Implementation of the Qualification Directive [Tab 10] supra, p.76. The study found a divergent approach in the national law of Member States. [Back] Note 27 Ibid., pp.76-7, although not the Bavarian higher administrative court. [Back] Note 28 Ibid. p.78: UNHCR therefore asked, “what added value this term brings to a legal provision on subsidiary protection?” [Back] Note 29 Ibid. p.79. Data was available on France, German and Swedish practice, but not Greece or the Slovak Republic (the five countries surveyed). A Report by ELENA, dated October 2008, also found a variation in approaches amongst Member States to the notion of “armed conflict”:The Impact of the EU Qualification Directive on International Protection, ECRE, European Legal Network on Asylum, p.28 [Tab 21]. [Back] Note 30 UNHCR, Asylum in the European Union: A Study of the Implementation of the Qualification Directive, November 2007, p.78 [Tab 10]. [Back] Note 31 BVerwG 10 C 43.07, 24 June 2008 [Tab 24]. After citing the Second Additional Protocol to the Geneva Conventions, 12 August 1949 (“APII”), Arts. 1 and 2, the Court stated: “thus there are only internal disturbances and tensions, such as riots, isolated and sporadic acts of violence and other acts of a similar nature, which are [query: clearly] not armed conflicts. In internal crises falling in between [such situations and APII, Art.1(1)] it is this Court’s opinion that the presumption of an armed conflict within the meaning of Article 15 Letter c of the Directive is not automatically excluded. But in any event, to satisfy the conditions the conflict must present a certain degree of intensity and permanence….The concept of “armed conflict” under international law was chosen to show clearly that only conflicts of a certain magnitude fall within the purview of this provision….The orientation toward the criteria of international humanitarian law runs up against its limits in any case where it is contradicted under Art. 15 Letter c of the Directive by the purpose of granting protection to persons seeking refuge in third countries…” (at [22]). [Back] Note 32 See e.g. UNHCR, Annotated Comments on the EC Council Directive, January 2005 [Tab 7], p.33: “Persons fleeing indiscriminate violence and gross human rights violations more generally would, however, similarly be in need of international protection. [UNHCR therefore] hopes that States will recognize the need to grant protection broadly in transposing and applying this provision.” [Back] Note 33 See UNHCR, Study of the Implementation of the Qualification Directive, supra, [Tab 10] p.77. Likewise, it is submitted that the reference to “a civilian” in Article 15(c) should not exclude a former combatant from protection where they can show that they have renounced military activities. Such a person should not be at risk of risk of being returned because of their former combatant status, and there is nothing in ECHR jurisprudence that would permit such a removal. [Back] Note 34 Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of Iraqi Asylum-Seekers, April 2009 [Tab 12], pp.23-4, at [27]. [Back] Note 35 Article 3 provides, “No State Party shall expel, return ("refouler") or extradite a person to another State where there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being subjected to torture.” No difference arises from the use of the word “danger” rather than “risk”: see Soering v United Kingdom (1989) 11 EHRR 439, at [88]: “substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being subjected to torture…” (emphasis supplied). [Back] Note 36 Germany – CAT/C/32/D/214/2002 [2004] UNCAT 7 (17 May 2004), at [13.5]. The Office of High Commissioner on Human Rights’ General Comment No. 1 on the CAT, states that: “the risk of torture must be assessed on grounds that go beyond mere theory or suspicion. However, the risk does not have to meet the test of being highly probable” (at [6]). [Back] Note 37 UNHCR, Some Additional Observations and Recommendations, supra, July 2002 [Tab 6], p. 7. [Back] Note 38 SeeUNHCR Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status under the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees, January 1992, Geneva [Tab 2], at [63]. [Back] Note 39 UNHCR, Some Additional Observations and Recommendations, supra [Tab 6], p. 7. [Back] Note 40 UNHCR, Eligibility Guidelines, April 2009 [Tab 12]. [Back] Note 41 Ibid. p.18, at [12]-[13]. In these Governorates there remains a prevalence of instability, violence and human rights violations by various actors. Armed groups remain lethal and suicide attacks and car bombs directed against the MNF-I/ISF, Awakening Movements and civilians, in addition to targeted assassinations and kidnappings, continue to occur on a regular basis. These methods of violence are usually targeted at chosen areas where civilians of specific religious or ethnic groups gather, including places of worship, market places, bus stations, and neighbourhoods. The overall situation is that there is a likelihood of persons being subjected to serious harm: ibid. p.23, at [27]. [Back] Note 42 Ibid. p.19, fn.24. [Back] Note 43 Reference in this table to “serious human rights violations” means violations such as inhuman and degrading treatment or torture. [Back] Note 44 We set out here the various definition of armed conflict under IHL but it is not part of UNHCR’s mandate to interpret IHL. [Back] Note 45 ICRC Opinion Paper, How is the Term “Armed Conflict” Defined in International Humanitarian Law? March 2008 [Tab 20], p.3. [Back] Note 47 Ibid. p.3, footnotes omitted. [Back] Note 48 International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Appeals Chamber, Prosecutor v Dusko Tadic, Case No. IT-94-1-A, Decision on the Defence Motion for Interlocutory Appeal on Jurisdiction, 2 October 1995 at [70] [Tab 22]. Tadic was applied in Pre-Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Court, Prosecutor v Thomas Lubanga Dyilo, the Situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo, ICC-01/04-01/06-803, 26 January 2009 [Tab 23]. [Back] Note 49 ICRC Opinion Paper, How is the Term “Armed Conflict” Defined in International Humanitarian Law? March 2008, p.4 [Tab 20]. [Back]