Future common European asylum system

The aim of this Green Paper is to identify the various options that may be considered in the second phase of the creation of the European asylum system.

ACT

Green Paper of 6 June 2007 on the future common European asylum system [COM (2007) 301 final - Not published in the Official Journal].

SUMMARY

This Green Paper is intended to launch a broad process of consultation leading to the publication of an action programme. This document, which is expected to be ready in the first quarter of 2008, will bring together all the measures necessary for the setting up of a common European asylum system.

Applications for asylum

The Commission proposes:

Reception conditions for asylum seekers

The Commission would like to limit the power of evaluation authorised by the current provisions of Council Directive 2003/9/EC on minimum standards for reception conditions for asylum seekers in the Member States. The areas in which this power could be reduced include access to the labour market and the form and standard of the material reception conditions afforded to asylum seekers.

Protection for asylum seekers

The Commission is considering possible models for a "uniform system".

Among the various options proposed, the Commission suggests:

Appropriate response in situations of vulnerability

The Commission notes important deficits in national definitions and procedures for identifying the most vulnerable asylum seekers. It thinks that more in-depth action on the part of the European Community is necessary at all stages of the asylum application evaluation process. It recommends concentrating on certain specific subjects, e.g. improving the definition of the notion of aid and adequate psychological and medical advice.

Further, the Commission suggests introducing, on the European level:

Integration

The Commission is initiating a general debate on how to improve the integration of those entitled to international protection. It suggests:

Implementation and supporting measures

The Commission proposes expanding the scope of practical cooperation among Member States. It envisages for example:

The Commission also wants to guarantee enhanced support for related activities as well as a concrete and systematic follow-up mechanism for evaluating their results. It is envisaging launching a feasibility study before the end of the year to examine possible options in this regard, including transforming the structures implicated in practical cooperation into a European support bureau.

Sharing responsibilities and financial solidarity

The Commission proposes looking more deeply into the principles and objectives of the Dublin regime (that is, the Dublin Regulation plus EURODAC), with a view to ensuring that application of this regime leads to a fairer distribution of asylum seekers and/or refugees among the Member States.

The Commission also wants to find a better way of using the resources of the European Refugee Fund (ERF) to reduce disparities and increase the level of the existing rules. In order to improve the impact of the ERF, it suggests setting up consultation and/or information-sharing mechanisms on the national and the EU level.

Asylum: the external dimension

The EU regional protection programmes conceived by the Commission are intended to afford greater protection for refugees and to offer them lasting solutions in their region of origin and transit. To date two pilot projects have been set up: one in the newly independent Western states and the other in Tanzania. These projects are still at a very early stage, but in the light of the evaluation of their results the Commission will consider how the EU can help third countries respond to the challenges raised by problems of asylum. It is also considering how to improve the EU's global strategies regarding third countries and how they can be made more coherent.

Alongside the implementation of regional protection programmes, the Commission is also considering how to provide global financial assistance for integration actions undertaken by the Member States.

With regard to mixed flows at the border (waves of arrivals comprising both illegal immigrants and people in need of protection), the Commission suggests considering:

Background

The Hague Programme action plan calls for the adoption of measures leading to the creation of an asylum system by the end of 2010. The Commission feels that the process has to begin now, and has drafted this Green Paper so that these questions can be debated and new measures suggested in time for them to be adopted by that date.

Last updated: 30.07.2007