A/75/183
40. In Europe, the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe has established
that children should, as a rule, not be detained, 34 and has acknowledged that the
Council of Europe “has a role to play in bringing to an end the immigration detention
of migrant children and in identifying alternatives to that practice ”. 35 In 2017, the
Council of Europe Action Plan on Protecting Refugee and Migrant Children in Europe
(2017–2019) was adopted. The Action Plan, inter alia, aimed at addr essing some of
the most persistent challenges with regard to the protection of migrant children,
including by promoting measures to prevent the detention of ch ildren in the context
of migration and supporting member States in providing appropriate receptio n,
protection and care to them. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
has also adopted a series of recommendations and resolutions consistently
emphasizing that children should never be detained for immigration -related purposes
and has encouraged member States to, inter alia, develop and implement
non-custodial, community-based alternative programmes for children and their
families. 36
Legislation and policies that restrict the use of immigration detention of
specific groups or categories of children
41. Some States have included in their national legislation a prohibition on
detaining children under a certain age or on the detention of specific individuals
regarded as particularly vulnerable, such as unaccompanied or separated children.
Some States allow, however, the detention of migrant families and older children who
do not fall within protected categories.
42. Several European countries only prohibit immigration detention for younger
children. For example, in Czechia, legislation provid es that unaccompanied children
under the age of 15 may not be detained. 37 Similarly, Poland only prohibits the
detention of unaccompanied child asylum seekers under the age of 15. 38 In
Switzerland, the Federal Act on Foreign Nationals and Integration forbids
immigration detention of children under the age of 15. 39 In Austria, the Aliens Police
Act provides that children under the age of 14 may not be h eld in detention pending
deportation. 40
43. Many other countries prohibit the detention of unaccompanied or se parated
children or children seeking international protection. Half of the member States of
the European Union do not allow unaccompanied children to be detained for asylum
or return purposes. 41 Czechia, Cyprus, Germany and the Netherlands do not detain
__________________
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
10/23
Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, “Guidelines on human rights protection in the
context of accelerated asylum procedures”, section XI, para. 2. Available at https://search.coe.int/
cm/Pages/result_details.aspx?ObjectId=09000016805b15d2.
Ibid., Reply to Parliamentary Assembly recommendation 2056 (2014) on the alternatives to
immigration detention of children, para. 2. Available at http://assembly.coe.int/nw/
xml/XRef/Xref-DocDetails-EN.asp?FileID=21296&lang=EN.
Parliamentary Assembly recommendation 1703 (2005), recommendation 1596 (2003),
recommendation 1985 (2011), resolution 1810 (2011), resolution 1707 (2010), resolution 2020
(2014), recommendation 2056 (2014), resolution 2136 (2016), resolution 2195 (2017), resolution
2295 (2019) and resolution 2324 (2020). Available at https://pace.coe.int/en/pages/official-documents.
Submission by the Public Defender of Rights of Czechia.
Poland, Law on Foreigners. Available at http://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/DocDetails.xsp?
id=WDU20130001650.
Switzerland, Federal Act on Foreign Nationals and Integration, art. 80, para. 4, and art. 80a,
para. 5; submissions by Switzerland and by Terre des Hommes Suisse.
Austria, Aliens Police Act, art. 76 (1); submission by the Permanent Mission of Austria to the
United Nations.
European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, European legal and policy framework on
immigration detention of children (Luxembourg, Publications Office of the European Union,
2017).
20-09734