CEDHCASELAW;DECISIONS;DECCOMMISSION;ENG21
CEDH · CASELAW;DECISIONS;DECCOMMISSION;ENG — 13 novembre 1987
- ECLI
- ECLI:CE:ECHR:1987:1113DEC001329387
- Date
- 13 novembre 1987
- Publication
- 13 novembre 1987
droits fondamentauxCEDH
Source : DILA / Judilibre · open data
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version préliminaireFaits
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Question juridique
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Solution
source officielleInadmissible
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.sDD6737AE { font-size:11pt } .s211D6B00 { margin-top:0pt; margin-bottom:0pt; line-height:normal; widows:0; orphans:0; font-size:8.5pt } .sBB9EE52A { font-family:Arial }                         AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF                         Application No. 13293/87                       by S. and N. M.                       against the Netherlands             The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in private on 13 November 1987, the following members being present:                 MM. C.A. NØRGAARD, President                   S. TRECHSEL                   G. SPERDUTI                   E. BUSUTTIL                   G. JÖRUNDSSON                   A.S. GÖZÜBÜYÜK                   A. WEITZEL                   J.-C. SOYER                   H.G. SCHERMERS                   H. DANELIUS                   G. BATLINER              Sir   Basil HALL              MM.   F. MARTINEZ                   C.L. ROZAKIS              Mrs.   J. LIDDY                Mr.   H.C. KRÜGER Secretary to the Commission           Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;           Having regard to the application introduced on 15 October 1987, together with a request to apply Rule 36 of the Commission's Rules of Procedure, on behalf of S. and N. M. by their grandparents against the Netherlands and registered on the same day under file N° 13293/87;           Having regard to the report provided for in Rule 40 of the Rules of Procedure of the Commission;           Having regard to the decision of the Commission on 16 October 1987 to invite the parties to submit further information on the application;           Having regard to the information submitted by the Government on 4 November 1987 and to the applicants' reply received on 12 November 1987;           Having regard to the decision of the President on 4 November 1987 not to apply Rule 36 of the Rules of Procedure;           Having deliberated;           Decides as follows:   THE FACTS           The facts of the case as submitted by the parties may be summarised as follows.           The applicants are Moroccan citizens, the first born in 1978 and the second in 1980.   They are at present living unlawfully in the Netherlands and represented in the proceedings before the Commission by Mr.   B.G. van Haren, a lawyer practising in Zeist.           The applicants first entered the Netherlands with their father in 1984.   When a residence permit was denied to the father, they were deported to Morocco on 28 March 1985.           The applicants' parents divorced on 25 January 1985.   The father, of whom the applicants allege that he is a psychopathic and cannot take care of his children, conferred the custody under Moroccan law to his mother on 30 August 1985.   The applicants' grandmother, who has a residence permit to live in the Netherlands, subsequently brought the applicants to the Netherlands on 12 December 1985.           On 16 December 1985, the applicants requested a residence permit which was refused on 12 September 1986.   The Deputy Minister of Justice (Staatssecretaris van Justitie) motivated her decision on the ground that the applicants' mother could take care of them in Morocco, and that the applicants never belonged to the family unit of their grandparents.   A request for review was rejected on 27 January 1987. An appeal to the Council of State (Raad van State), which does not have suspensive effect, is still pending.           The applicants then seized the President of the Regional Court (Arrondissementsrechtbank) of Utrecht in injunction proceedings (kort geding) to prevent their deportation pending the outcome of the procedure before the Council of State.   This request was rejected on 8 October 1987.    An appeal against this decision before the Court of Appeal (Gerechtshof) of Amsterdam is still pending.           The applicants are now in hiding.           Parties agree that the father's whereabouts are unknown, that he does not have a steady residence in Morocco and that he is not a legal resident in the Netherlands.     &_COMPLAINTS&S   1.       The applicants, invoking Article 3 of the Convention, fear that, in the case of deportation to Morocco, they will not receive an adequate treatment.   They submit that their mother does not want to take care of them and has abandoned them in order to remarry.   Their father has no known address and is very ill.   2.       The applicants fear that their deportation would put an end to their family relations with their grandparents.   They submit that they are integrated in the Netherlands where they go to school.   They allege a violation of Article 8 should their deportation take place.   PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION           The application was introduced and registered on 15 October 1987, together with a request for application of Rule 36 of the Commission's Rules of Procedure, in order to prevent the applicants' deportation to Morocco.           On 16 October 1987, after a preliminary examination of the admissibility of the application, the Commission decided to adjourn its decision on the Rule 36 request and instructed the Secretary to request the parties to submit further information in accordance with Rule 42 para. 2 (a) of its Rules of Procedure.           The information submitted by the Netherlands Government reached the Commission's Secretariat on 4 November 1987.           On the same day, the President of the Commission decided not to apply Rule 36 of the Rules of Procedure.           The applicants' reply to the information provided by the Government was received on 12 November 1987.     &_SUBMISSIONS OF THE PARTIES&S     A.       The Government             The Netherlands Government intend to deport the applicants to Morocco since their application for residence with their grandparents has been rejected in two instances and the President of the Regional Court of Utrecht decided that no suspensive effect should be given to the decision of the Deputy Minister of Justice to deport the children. The deportation will take place as soon as the two girls, who are in hiding, have been found and measures are taken that they will be taken care of as soon as they arrive in Morocco.           The mother of the children is willing to take care of the children.   The Netherlands Government received information from a cousin of the mother, residing in the Netherlands, that the mother would very much like to have her children back.   Her family-in-law, in particular the grandparents, however, do everything, including the use of forged proof, to keep the girls with them in the Netherlands.           The Netherlands Government are quite sure that the mother can and will take care of her daughters.   Contacts between the Netherlands Embassy in Morocco and the mother have been established.   The former will be responsible for the children the moment they set foot on Moroccan soil, in order to hand them over to the custody of their mother.   B.       The applicants           The applicants contest the statements of the Government. They repeat that their mother is unwilling to take them into her new family and allege that she has only recently confirmed this by telephone to the family in the Netherlands.   The applicants submit letters from their school doctor who observes that they were neglected, uncared-for children with stunted growth when they arrived in the Netherlands and that, at this day, the grandparents are their 'psychological parents'.           The applicants deny that they will be supported by their mother.   As for the undertaking of the Netherlands Government, which does not specify any time-limit, the applicants maintain that it cannot give any guarantee beyond the moment that they are handed over to their mother, whilst the Moroccan Government have no public foster plan for neglected children.   THE LAW   1.       The Commission does not find it necessary to decide whether the applicants' grandparents are able to lodge an application under Article 25 (Art. 25) of the Convention on behalf of their grandchildren, as the application is in any case inadmissible for the following reasons.   2.       The applicants fear that they will not receive adequate care in Morocco given the fact that the mother repudiated them and that the father has no known address and is very ill.   They invoke Article 3 (Art. 3) of the Convention.           The Commission notes that the proceedings pending before the Council of State against the decision of the Deputy Minister and the proceedings before the Court of Appeal against the decision of the President of the Regional Court have no suspensive effect and that the applicants are susceptible to deportation as soon as they are found.   According to the Commission's constant case-law, remedies which do not suspend the execution of the decision to expel an applicant are not effective remedies within the meaning of Article 26 (Art. 26) of the Convention and need not be exhausted, where the allegation is that of a breach of Article 3 (Art. 3) of the Convention (No. 10760/84, Dec. 17.5.84, D.R. 38 p. 224).           The Commission refers to its case-law according to which the right of a person not to be expelled or extradited is not as such included among the rights and freedoms mentioned in the Convention but that a deportation could, in certain exceptional circumstances, raise an issue under Article 3 (Art. 3) where there is a serious reason to believe that the person concerned will be subjected to treatment prohibited by that provision in the receiving country (cf.   No. 8581/79, Dec. 6.3.80, D.R. 29 p. 48;   No. 10479/83, Kirkwood v. the United Kingdom, Dec. 12.3.84, D.R. 37 p. 158).           However, the Commission finds no indication that the applicants would be subjected to such a treatment by reason of the fact that, after an unfortunate divorce of their parents, they would now be in the custody of their mother and live in their country of origin where they have lived all but two years of their young lives instead of living with their grandparents.           It is true that the applicants allege that their mother repudiated them and is not willing to look after them.           The Government maintain that this allegation is false and only shows the willingness of the grandparents to keep the applicants with them against the wish of their daughter-in-law.           In any case, the applicants have failed to submit any evidence that could substantiate this claim.   The Commission does not consider that this uncorroborated declaration constitutes satisfactory prima facie evidence.           Moreover, the respondent Government have undertaken to take care of the applicants until they can be handed over to their mother.           The Commission concludes that an examination of the complaint, as it has been submitted, does not disclose any appearance of a violation of Article 3 (Art. 3) of the Convention.           This part of the application is accordingly manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention.   3.       The applicants also complain that a new deportation would disrupt their school and family life in the Netherlands.   They invoke Article 8 (Art. 8) of the Convention.           The Commission is not required to determine whether in this respect domestic remedies have been exhausted in accordance with Article 26 (Art. 26) of the Convention as it finds that this complaint is in any event inadmissible as being manifestly ill-founded, for the following reasons.           Firstly, the applicants entered the Netherlands secretly and never received a residence permit.   The Commission also notes that the repeated migration of the applicants to and from Morocco was the result of the family's own action, who brought the applicants illegally to the Netherlands, this being an act for which the Netherlands State cannot be held responsible (cf.   No. 9105/80, Dec. 6.7.81, not published).           Secondly the applicants, their parents being divorced, will be sent to their mother with whom they lived previously.   The Commission finds no indication that the Netherlands authorities acted inconsistently with the right to respect for family life guaranteed in Article 8 (Art. 8) of the Convention in giving precedence to the mother, being the person with the closest family tie.   As already observed above, there is no evidence before it that could substantiate the allegation that the applicants' mother is unwilling to take care of them.           It follows that this part of the application is manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention.           For these reasons, the Commission           DECLARES THE APPLICATION INADMISSIBLE.       Secretary to the Commission                President of the Commission                (H.C. KRÜGER)                                (C.A. NØRGAARD)          Citations
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Synthèse
- Juridiction
- CEDH
- Chambre
- CASELAW;DECISIONS;DECCOMMISSION;ENG
- Formation
- 21
- Date
- 13 novembre 1987
- Matière
- droits fondamentaux
Référence
ECLI:CE:ECHR:1987:1113DEC001329387
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