EU court rules against
Hungary's detention of asylum seekers, including Christians
a police officer closes a gate at a migrant transit center at Hungary's border with Serbia (AFP) |
Hope is rising for an Iranian Christian father and his young
son held in detention on the Hungarian-Serbian border for 526 days, after the
European Union's top court ruled against Hungary's treatment of asylum seekers.
By Stefan J. Bos
The European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled Thursday that
Budapest was obliged to reconsider asylum applications. The court stressed that
Hungarian authorities circumvented EU law by holding migrants seeking refuge in
unlawful prison-like conditions, charges denied by the government.
Circumstances prevailing in the Röszke transit zone
"amount to a deprivation of liberty," explained the ECJ. "The
persons concerned cannot lawfully leave that zone of their own free will in any
direction whatsoever."
Christian refugees
The case was brought by a handful of migrants, including an
Afghan couple and an Iranian father and his son. The applicants included
Abouzar Soltani, an Iranian Christian, and his 11-year-old-son, Armin.
They had been living in blue containers since late 2018
after requesting asylum on political and religious grounds. Soltani
"thanked God" and his friends in Hungary for supporting him
throughout his ordeal. "I am very happy that God changed my mind and heart
during this time. For the past three years I have not been able to love Hungary
with all my heart because I was afraid for the law,” he said in a statement
obtained by Vatican News. “But for some time now, with all my heart, I consider
Hungary as my own country [because of] your love and efforts friends. There are
people outside this camp who are hopeful and waiting for me to be free.”
Hungary threatened to deport Soltani to Iran, though the
father could face the death penalty there for abandoning Islam and converting
to Christianity. Serbia refused to take them back, saying it does not share an
agreement with Hungary on the transfer of people who entered the EU country
illegally. That effectively left them in limbo.
Hungarian authorities declined to reconsider their
application, saying they "arrived from Serbia, a safe country." But
the court disagreed, siding with ECJ Advocate General Priit Pikamae. The
official argued last month that, due to Serbia's refusal to take them back,
Hungary should resume "the procedure to examine the substance of their initial
asylum request instead of returning them" to their country of origin.
New procedure
"Today's judgment ruled that asylum-seekers rejected on
this ground must be allowed to initiate a new procedure. Where the court's
ruling must be regarded as a new element," explained Márta Pardavi,
co-chair of the Hungarian Helsinki Committee. "This can finally put an end
to the unlawful practice of attempting to remove people stuck in the transit
zone to their country of origin without ever examining their asylum applications
on their merit."
Her advocacy group provided legal aid to Soltani and other
asylum seekers. She complained to Worthy News that Hungary's government claims
to aid persecuted Christians, but that this support stops at the border.
"Here, persecuted Christians are treated in the same inhumane way as other
asylum seekers." She cited "food deprivation" and reported
filthy conditions in the container camps as examples. "There has been also
horrible propaganda claiming that they brought the coronavirus with them. In
reality, so far, there were no infections among the roughly 300 asylum seekers
held in the two transit zones near the Hungarian-Serbian border."
Even before the ECJ ruling, the Hungarian government, led by
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, had come under European pressure over its
treatment of refugees such as Soltani. Asked about the case, Orbán told Vatican
News in January that his government would either grant Soltani and his son
asylum or bring them to safety elsewhere. "On that kind of case, as you
have mentioned and similar ones, we are very active," he said.
A Hungarian court was due to order the release of Soltani
and other asylum seekers from detention in the transit zone to a more open
reception center in Hungary. "The ECJ made a historic decision that could
set a precedent for other asylum seekers," explained Soltani's attorney
Barbara Pohárnok. But the government called the ruling
"disheartening".
Government response
The government told Vatican News: "Unfortunately, the
verdict – in accordance with intentions of Brussels made manifest until now –
want to force us not to defend Hungary's borders and make us allow migrants
in."
Prime Minister Orbán had built a border fence to prevent
asylum-seekers from entering through Serbia via the so-called Balkan route.
That happened after over 1 million refugees and migrants entered the EU in
2015, many of them fleeing war, persecution, and poverty in the Middle East,
Africa, and Asia.
The government's International Communications Office noted
to Worthy News that Europe's inner borders are currently closed "due to
the risk of contamination" with the coronavirus. Therefore, "it is
especially ill-boding" that the ECJ "believes that the effective
protection of external borders and the processing of asylum applications
outside of or at the latest at European borders is incompatible with European
Union law."
Europe, it stressed, "must be compelled to leave the
rules on external border protection either to the Member States or to set
stricter common EU standards."
Hungary's government added that it hopes that "the
European Union does not wish in the long run to jeopardize its own peaceful
social functioning and coexistence" by making external border protection
impossible. "This is the standpoint that Hungary will represent at every
European forum."
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