A/HRC/38/41
expensive than forced removal, and do not require the approval of the country to which the
migrant is returned.17
30.
In general, the conditions under which migrants request assisted voluntary return do
not allow for the return to be qualified as voluntary, as they do not fulfil the requirements of
a fully informed decision, free of coercion and backed by the availability of sufficient valid
alternatives, such as temporary permits for work, study or humanitarian purposes, or
opportunities for permanent residence or citizenship. Some migrants request assisted
voluntary return out of despair, to avoid deportation, or because they are held in detention
— some indefinitely, because of slow and complicated family reunification and asylum
procedures, the risk of becoming destitute, poor reception conditions or withdrawal of
social support.18 The Special Rapporteur notes that States and other stakeholders who carry
out returns under an assisted voluntary return programme to States that are not safe and in
which migrants may face violations of their fundamental human rights may be in violation
of the principle of non-refoulement.
2.
Readmission agreements
31.
Since the 1990s, there has been a proliferation of readmission agreements between
destination countries and countries of origin and transit or readmission clauses in
cooperation arrangements. These agreements constitute a means to overcome the practical
and procedural obstacles to readmission that result when migrants are insufficiently
documented and requested States are uncooperative. 19 They specify the obligation of States
to readmit their own nationals, and often include conditions to readmit citizens of third
countries. They also include a list of means of evidence requiring a requested State to
recognize nationality, and an obligation to issue a travel document within a certain time
limit. 20 There are concerns, however, that readmission agreements include clauses that
facilitate the issuance of documents to returnees in exchange for incentives for third
countries, such as visa facilitation, trade facilities and development aid.21
32.
New informal deals or arrangements, also known as “flexible cooperative
frameworks”, have flourished in recent years as most third countries are reluctant to engage
in negotiations on readmission agreements owing to public hostility. Such arrangements
have been criticized for increasing the legal uncertainty with regard to the terms of the
accords, thereby impeding proper democratic accountability and judicial oversight, and
diluting responsibilities and procedural safeguards. 22
33.
The recourse to “safe third country” policies is another worrying trend. The aim of
these policies is to allow for the rejection of protection of asylum seekers who have
allegedly already found protection in a third country or who have travelled through a third
country where it would have been possible to seek protection while considered “safe”.23
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
8
many destination countries; for example, 83 per cent of cases of assisted voluntary return and
reintegration facilitated by IOM come from the European Economic Area. See IOM, Assisted
Voluntary Return and Reintegration: 2016 Key Highlights, Geneva, 2017.
Katie Kuschminder, “Taking Stock of Assisted Voluntary Return from Europe: Decision Making,
Reintegration and Sustainable Return – Time for a paradigm shift”. EUI Working Papers, European
University Institute, June 2017.
For instance, in the case of Australia, the option of remaining in Nauru or Papua New Guinea
indefinitely and under conditions that amount to inhumane or degrading treatment, or to resettle in
Cambodia through the assisted voluntary return scheme cannot be considered an option free of
coercion (see A/HRC/35/25/Add.3).
Nils Philip Coleman, European Readmission Policy: Third Country Interests and Refugee Rights,
Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy in Europe, vol. 16, 2008.
Ibid.
Caritas Europa, “Human rights and human dignity” (see footnote 4).
See Jean-Pierre Cassarino and Mariagiulia Giuffré, “Finding its Place in Africa: Why has the EU
opted for flexible arrangements on readmission?”, University of Nottingham, Human Rights Law
Centre, December 2017.
For instance, in the framework of the European Union-Turkey Statement, Greece may reject asylum
applications of persons who passed through Turkey as being inadmissible and shift the responsibility
of merit assessments to Turkey. See Maybritt Jill Alpes, Sevda Tunaboylu, Orcun Ulusoy and Saima