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Document 52013PC0415
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union concerning the Position of the Council on the adoption of a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council laying down standards for the reception of asylum seekers
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union concerning the Position of the Council on the adoption of a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council laying down standards for the reception of asylum seekers
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union concerning the Position of the Council on the adoption of a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council laying down standards for the reception of asylum seekers
/* COM/2013/0415 final - 2008/0244 (COD) */
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union concerning the Position of the Council on the adoption of a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council laying down standards for the reception of asylum seekers /* COM/2013/0415 final - 2008/0244 (COD) */
2008/0244 (COD) COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION
TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT
pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European
Union
concerning the Position of the Council on the adoption of
a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council laying down standards
for the reception of asylum seekers 1. Background Date of transmission of the proposal to the European Parliament and to the Council (document COM(2008) 815 final/2 - 2008/0244 (COD) || 9 December 2008 Date of the opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee: || 16 July 2009 Date of the position of the European Parliament, first reading: || 7 May 2009 Date of transmission of the amended proposal: || 6 June 2011 Foreseen date of adoption of the position of the Council: (document COM(2011) 320 final -2008/0244 COD) || 7 June 2013 2. Objective
of the proposal from the Commission The proposal amends the 2003
Reception Conditions Directive laying down minimum standards for the reception
of asylum seekers, and aims to ensure better and more harmonised standards of treatment.
In particular, it addresses the issue of grounds for detention and includes an
extensive list of rules and guarantees. It strengthens access to employment,
material support, health care, and legal assistance, provision of
representation for unaccompanied minors, the identification of special needs as
well as facilitating the Commission's role in monitoring implementation. 3. Comments
on the position of the Council Following the Commission's
amended proposal in June 2011, which aimed at taking stock of the progress made
in the negotiations until then, a common position was reached at political
level between co-legislators on 28 June 2012. COREPER unanimously endorsed the common
position on 11 July 2012. The LIBE committee also informally endorsed it on 19
September 2012 via an orientation vote [51 votes for, 4 against and 3
abstentions]. On 20 September, the LIBE Chairman sent a letter to the Council
PRES indicating that if the Council adopts the common position without changes,
he will recommend to the Members of the LIBE committee and subsequently to the Plenary
to adopt the common position without amendments. The main differences between
the common position and the Commission 2011 amended proposal are as set below. Definition of family members - Article 2
(c) The Commission proposal
extended the definition of family members as far as minors were concerned. In
particular it includes married minor children of the applicant, the minor
siblings of the minor applicant, and the parents or other adult responsible for
the minor. In all cases, it covers both married and unmarried minors. The common position does not
endorse this definition, but the more restrictive one as agreed in the
Qualification Directive amended proposal. However, the definition of
family members in the Reception Conditions Directive only concerns
accommodation arrangements, and in particular the right of family members to be
lodged together. Since the common position also includes safeguards in other
provisions which ensure the rights of minors, whether married or unmarried, in
relation to their accommodation rights, the objectives of the Commission
proposal are fully met. Identification of the
special reception needs of vulnerable persons, Article 22, Recital 14 The common position retains
the objectives of the Commission proposal concerning the treatment of this
category of applicants. Although the wording has been substantially amended in
negotiations, the obligation to assess the individual needs of all applicants
with a view to identifying who is a vulnerable person and thus may need special
reception guarantees is retained. The amendments introduced to
the Commission proposal mainly aim to address concerns that the identification
procedure may create disproportionate administrative costs and unnecessary
administrative procedures. They thus clarify the scope of application of the
identification process but they do not restrict it. Material reception
conditions - Article 17(5), Recital 20 The common position retains
the obligation included in the Commission proposal for Member States to apply a
national point of reference when calculating the required level of material
assistance for asylum applicants. As an example of such a point of reference, the
Commission proposal stipulated the minimum social welfare assistance provided
to nationals. This example was not retained in the common position due to
concerns that this may, automatically, lead to equal treatment between asylum
seekers and nationals in this respect. Since this reference was only included
as an example in the concerned provision, its deletion has no effect to the
obligation set therein. Health care – Article 19 The common position retains
the objective of the COM proposal in this respect, since it ensures better
standards on healthcare for all applicants, including vulnerable persons. The
common position merely substitutes the reference of "post-traumatic
disorders" with "serious mental disorders"; this change does not
restrict the scope of this provision. Reduction or withdrawal
of material reception conditions: Article 20, Recital 21 The common position is more
restrictive than the Commission proposal on this issue, in one aspect; in
particular, it re-introduces the ground included in the current Directive which
allows the reduction/withdrawal of support under all grounds envisaged in
Article 20 of the Directive when the asylum application was unjustifiably made too
late. However, the re-introduced
ground is also re-worded in order to be less ambitious than the one currently
in force. In particular, it only allows the reduction of support and not the
full withdrawal and it obliges Member States to first "establish"
that the delay was without "justifiable reasons". It also states that
in all cases, applicants must be ensured "dignified standards of
living". Finally, the common position retains the obligation to ensure
access to appeals against decision to withdraw/reduce support, accompanied by
access to request for free legal assistance, as set out in the Commission
proposal. Access to the labour
market- Article 15, Recital 19 The common position is more
restrictive than the Commission proposal concerning the maximum period of time
after which access to employment shall be granted [9 months instead of 6, as proposed
by the Commission, and only if a first instance decision is not issued within
that period]. It also re-introduces the possibility to apply the labour market
test, which was deleted by the Commission proposal. At the same time, it ensures
higher standards of protection than the current Directive which only allows
access after a period of 12 months. Moreover, the common position retains the
obligation included in the commission proposal for Member States to ensure that
while conditions on access to employment may be imposed, in practice they shall
not be so restrictive as to effectively prevent access to employment. Detention To be noted that, with the
exception of a few general principles, the Directive in force does not include
rules on detention. Therefore, the common position, which to a great extent
retains the Commission proposal's objectives, achieves a high added value
compared to current standards. a. Grounds for detention
- Article 8(3) The common position adds one
more ground for detention to the 4 proposed by the Commission. The additional
ground allows the detention of an asylum seeker if national authorities can substantiate,
on the basis of objective criteria, including that the person had the opportunity
to apply for asylum sooner but did not, that the intention was merely to
frustrate the return procedure. The common position retains the
list of grounds exhaustive. It also includes all the general safeguards introduced
in the Commission proposal [detention may only apply if proportional,
necessary, if alternatives considered etc.]. b. Guarantees for
detention – Article 9 The common position retains,
to a large extent, the guarantees proposed by the Commission, namely on access
to free legal assistance, information on grounds for detention and
possibilities to appeal. However, it does not foresee for an automatic judicial
review of the detention order if it is issued by the administrative authorities.
At the same time, in such cases, the common position obliges Member States to
at least inform the applicant in writing about his rights to lodge an appeal
against the detention order, and if such an appeal is lodged, to ensure that it
is processed speedily. c. Detention of persons
with special reception needs - Article 11 Article 11(1) of the
Commission amended proposal which prohibits Member States to detain vulnerable
persons unless it is established that their health, including their mental
health, and well-being, will not significantly deteriorate as a result of the
detention has been deleted in the common position. Instead, the common position
states that "the health, including mental health, of applicants in
detention who are vulnerable persons shall be of primary concern to national
authorities" and that Member States shall ensure regular monitoring
and adequate support taking into account their particular situation, including
their health. Article 11(1) needs to be seen
together with Article 22, which obliges Member States to assess without delay
the situation of all applicants arriving on the territory with a view to
identifying their special needs, including in terms of health and psychological
status. In this respect, Article 22 can also assist to ensure that the
objectives of Article 11(1) are met. Moreover, Article 11 no
longer refers to the obligation to ensure that detention is not applied unless
it is established that it is in line with the best interests of the child
principle. However, Article 23 of the Directive states that the best interests of
the child shall be a primary consideration for Member States when
implementing the provisions of the law concerning minors, as also stipulated in
the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. In this respect the Directive
retains the obligation to ensure that the principle of the best interests of
the child is respected in all cases including detention. Finally, the common position
deletes the reference to "particularly" from "particularly
exceptional". However, the principle of ensuring that detention of minors
is applied only exceptionally is retained in the text. d. Conditions for
detention - Article 10 The common position does not
retain the obligation to always ensure the separation of asylum applicants from
other third country nationals while in detention, as proposed by the
Commission, but only "as far as possible". However, it is ensured
that in such cases applicants are under a different regime from third country
nationals and can still benefit from the specific reception conditions set out
in the Directive. Moreover, the common
position allows Member States to exceptionally resort to prison accommodation
if they are "obliged to" since they "cannot" use special
detention facilities; the Commission proposal only allowed the use of prison
facilities when places in special facilities are exhausted. The common position
ensures however that in such cases, applicants shall be detained separately
from ordinary prisoners. The remaining guarantees
included by the Commission proposal are retained, namely ensuring access to
recreational activities, including in the open-air, communication and
visitation rights for UNHCR, NGOs, family members and legal advisers, and
access to information on the running of the detention facility. Appeals (free legal
assistance and representation) - Article 26 The common position reached
is more restrictive than the Commission proposal on two points. First it
includes a second ground for accessing free legal assistance informed from the
charter of Fundamental Rights, namely when "it is necessary to ensure
effective access to justice". Secondly, it introduces the "merit
test" (informed by case-law of the ECtHR) which allows judges to refuse access
to free legal assistance if they consider that the appeal will have no chance
of success. At the same time, the two
elements added are fully in line with developing case-law and existing
obligations of Member States concerning effective access to justice. In all
cases, the court will first need to assess the level of difficulty of the legal
procedures and the person's ability to follow them and the level of severity of
the sanctions involved with a view to deciding whether free legal assistance is
necessary. Although in the case of applicants it would be difficult to prove
that such assistance is not needed (unaware of the language, national legal
proceeding etc.), there could be cases where access to legal assistance may be
considered by the court to be disproportionate (i.e. minor reduction of pocket
money which does not affect his fundamental rights). 4. Conclusion The common position fully
satisfies the main objective of the Commission proposals. It brings added value
to the current standards of treatment and an increased level of harmonisation
on reception conditions for asylum seekers. It also introduces rules on
detention and access to free legal assistance, issues which the current asylum
instruments do not address. The substance of the
Council's position is, therefore broadly in line with the Commission's proposal
and can be supported.