A/HRC/50/31
migrant arrivals to Europe.98 Frontex has reportedly facilitated these interceptions through
drone surveillance and secretive communication practices that prevent private and NGO
ships from accessing information regarding boats in distress and undermine their timely and
effective involvement in search and rescue.99 Cases of the Libyan Coast Guard threatening,
ill-treating and shooting live ammunition at boats in distress and their passengers have been
reported. In October 2021, the Independent Fact-Finding Mission on Libya mandated by the
Human Rights Council presented its report to the Council, noting that since the inception of
boat pullbacks in the Mediterranean, Libyan authorities had been involved in widespread and
systematic, reckless interceptions at sea and in abuses within migrant detention centres. The
Mission found that abuses against migrants were evidence of “a State policy encouraging the
deterrence of sea crossings, the extortion of migrants in detention, and subjection to violence
and discrimination”.100 It also found that there were “reasonable grounds to believe that acts
of murder, enslavement, torture, imprisonment, rape, persecution and other inhumane acts”
were being committed against migrants, which might amount to crimes against humanity.101
The Special Rapporteur reiterates that any agreement with Libyan authorities that involves
the take-back of migrants rescued or intercepted at sea should be revoked and European
States should provide adequate and efficient search and rescue services in line with
international human rights obligations and the laws of the sea.
54.
In August 2020, Italy entered into a political agreement with Tunisia to expedite the
readmission of Tunisian migrants, returning close to 4,000 people. 102 At the same time, tens
of thousands of migrants have been intercepted by the Tunisian Coast Guard. 103
55.
Spain continued to collectively expel migrants to Morocco based on a 1992 bilateral
readmission agreement and 2015 legislation enabling “border rejections” of foreign nationals
trying to enter Spain irregularly from Morocco. 104 Instances of large-scale collective
expulsions, sometimes accompanied by violence, were reported particularly from Ceuta,
between May and August 2021, involving thousands of migrants, including at least
45 unaccompanied migrant children.105 In February 2022, two courts in Ceuta ruled that the
returns of children were unlawful, as the authorities had failed to take any action to protect
the children’s best interests during the return procedures.106
56.
Swiss asylum legislation allows the State Secretariat for Migration to issue
inadmissibility decisions as a general practice for asylum applicants who can be transferred
to a safe third country on the basis of bilateral readmission agreements. 107 The Secretariat
revises the list of safe countries every two years; however, the list reportedly still includes
States to which the transfer of asylum applicants has been found to breach non-refoulement
obligations.108 The Special Rapporteur notes that the mere ratification of the 1951 Convention
or the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (European
Convention on Human Rights) does not provide sufficient evidence of adequate protection
from refoulement and other human rights violations in practice, the risks of which should be
assessed on an individual basis for each asylum seeker concerned. Transfers by Switzerland
have been variously found by the European Court of Human Rights and United Nations
human rights treaty bodies to be in breach of the country’s obligations.109
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
See submission by EuroMed Rights. See also A/HRC/47/30, para. 74.
See submission by Sea-Watch.
A/HRC/48/83, para. 60.
Ibid., para. 61.
See submission by EuroMed Rights.
Ibid. See also Mixed Migration Centre, “What’s new? Analysing the latest trends on the Central
Mediterranean mixed migration route to Italy”, 9 February 2022.
A/HRC/47/30, para. 71. See also submission by Live together – Cepaim foundation.
See submission No. 4 by Save the Children.
Ibid.
Asylum Act, art. 31a.
See submission by AsyLex.
See submissions by AsyLex and UNICEF.
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