CEDH · CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;CHAMBER;ENG — 18 juillet 2023
- ECLI
- ECLI:CE:ECHR:2023:0718JUD004925522
- Date
- 18 juillet 2023
- Publication
- 18 juillet 2023
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Solution
source officielleViolation of Article 6 - Right to a fair trial (Article 6 - Enforcement proceedings;Article 6-1 - Access to court);Respondent State to take measures of a general character (Article 46-2 - General measures);Pecuniary and non-pecuniary damage - finding of violation sufficent (Article 41 - Non-pecuniary damage;Pecuniary damage;Just satisfaction)
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BELGIUM (Application no. 49255/22)   JUDGMENT Art 6 (civil) • Right to a court • National authorities’ refusal to enforce immediately enforceable decision requiring State to provide accommodation and material support to applicant for international protection • Art   6 applicable • Applicant accommodated only after interim measure indicated by Court • Difficult situation for respondent State in view of increase in number of applications for international protection and insufficient capacity to receive asylum-seekers • Operation of national court and of Court heavily overburdened on account of systemic failure of national authorities to enforce final judicial decisions concerning reception of asylum-seekers Art 46 • General measures • Respondent State required to address systemic problem affecting national authorities’ ability to comply with domestic law on asylum-seekers’ right to accommodation, including final court decisions ordering such compliance   STRASBOURG 18 July 2023 FINAL   18/10/2023   This judgment became final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 § 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision. In the case of Camara v. Belgium, The European Court of Human Rights (Second Section), sitting as a Chamber composed of:   Arnfinn Bårdsen , President ,   Jovan Ilievski,   Pauliine Koskelo,   Saadet Yüksel,   Lorraine Schembri Orland,   Frédéric Krenc,   Davor Derenčinović , judges , and Hasan Bakırcı, Section Registrar, Having regard to: the application (no.   49255/22) against the Kingdom of Belgium lodged with the Court under Article   34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a Guinean national, Mr   Abdoulaye Camara (“the applicant”), on 20   October 2022; the decision to give notice to the Belgian Government (“the Government”) of the complaints concerning Articles   3, 6 §   1, 8 and 13 and to declare inadmissible the remainder of the application; the observations submitted by the respondent Government and the observations in reply submitted by the applicant; the comments submitted by the French-speaking Bar Council of Brussels, who were granted leave to intervene by the President of the Section; Having deliberated in private on 20 June 2023, Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date: INTRODUCTION 1.     The case concerns an applicant for international protection who had no material support or accommodation at the relevant time. At his request, the Brussels French-Language Employment Tribunal   (hereinafter also referred to as “the Brussels Employment Tribunal” or “the Employment Tribunal”) ordered the Belgian State to grant him material support and provide him with accommodation in accordance with its legal obligations. The applicant complained that he had been forced to live in the street for several months in inhuman and degrading conditions that were inconsistent with Article   3 of the Convention. Relying on Article   6 §   1 of the Convention, he complained that the decision delivered by the Employment Tribunal had not been enforced. Under Article   8, read in conjunction with Article   13 of the Convention, he further complained that his right to respect for his private life had been infringed and that no effective remedy had been available to him in respect of that complaint. THE FACTS 2.     The applicant was born in 2001 and lives in Koekerlberg. He was represented by Mr   M. Lys, a lawyer practising in Saint-Gilles. 3.     The Government were represented by their Agent, Ms I.   Niedlispacher, of the Federal Justice Department.         international protection PROCEEDINGS 4.     The applicant arrived in Belgium on 12   July 2022. 5 .     On 15   July 2022 he went to the initial processing centre for applicants for international protection in Belgium (see paragraph   57 below), where he filed an application for international protection. He was issued with a certificate that indicated that he was to go to the Aliens Office on 2   September 2022 (see paragraph   25 below). 6 .     Following the interview with the Aliens Office, the applicant’s file was forwarded to the Office of the Commissioner General for Refugees and Stateless Persons (see paragraph   25 below), which interviewed him on 20   March 2023. 7.     The applicant is awaiting a decision concerning his application.       REception and related proceedings 8 .     On 15   July 2022, in connection with his asylum application, the applicant went to the Federal Agency for the Reception of Asylum-Seekers (“Fedasil”) with a view to obtaining a place in the reception network (see paragraph 29 below). He was informed that he could not be accommodated as the network had reached saturation point . 9.     The Government submitted that Fedasil delivered an information document to applicants upon registration which was drafted in several languages. This document, which the Government added to the case file, explained that the network had reached saturation point and that priority was being given to the most vulnerable groups. The applicant claimed that he had received no such a document. 10 .     The applicant’s representative sent a letter to Fedasil on 19   July 2022, stating as follows: “This refusal to accommodate my client despite the fact that his status as an applicant for international protection is undeniable and that Belgium never delivered an Annex   26 quater to him is completely unlawful and is in breach of the Reception Act of 12   January 2007 and of Belgium’s international undertakings. My client has no network to rely on in Belgium, such that he is currently reduced to living in the street. Needless to say, this situation is unbearable for him. As there is no doubt as to my client’s status as an applicant for international protection, kindly schedule a meeting as soon as possible in order to grant him access to the reception network – access to which he is entitled, in particular, under Article   3 of the [aforementioned] Act. Should you fail to reply to this email within 24 hours, I will have no choice but to lodge an ex parte application with the Brussels Employment Tribunal.” 11 .     The Government submitted that Fedasil had placed the applicant on a waiting list. In support of this submission, they provided an excerpt from a waiting list mentioning two unnamed Guinean nationals born in 2001 and the fact that an email had been sent on 19   July 2022. The applicant claimed that he had not been informed of his placement on a waiting list. 12 .     On 20   July 2022 the applicant applied ex parte to the President of the Brussels Employment Tribunal (see paragraphs 37-38 below) alleging the imminent risk of serious and irreparable harm to his human dignity on account of the fact that he was without accommodation and utterly destitute. He asked that Fedasil be ordered to fulfil its obligations pursuant to the Law of 12   January 2007 on the reception of asylum-seekers and other categories of foreign nationals (“the Reception Act”) (see paragraphs   27-31 below). 13 .     On 22   July 2022 the President of the Employment Tribunal ordered Fedasil to secure accommodation for the applicant in a reception centre, or even a hotel or any other appropriate establishment if there was no room available, and to provide him with material support as set out in the Reception Act, on pain of a fine of 1000   euros (EUR) for each night he was forced to spend outside the reception network or any other form of emergency accommodation. The operative part of the decision clarified that it was immediately enforceable and would remain so until the end of the asylum proceedings. Moreover, the decision was not conditional on the initiation of any proceedings on the merits . The decision also granted the applicant legal aid ( assistance judiciaire ) such that a bailiff was to provide his or her services free of charge with a view to its service and enforcement. 14.     Fedasil was notified of the decision by a bailiff on 29   July 2022. 15 .     Fedasil did not lodge a third-party appeal. The applicant and the Government agreed that under Belgian law (see paragraph   41 below) the decision had become final on 29   August 2022. 16 .     On 12   October 2022 the applicant’s representative had the decision served, with an order to comply with the writ of execution and a final notice to pay. 17 .     On 20   October 2022 the applicant applied to the Court for an interim measure under Rule   39 of its Rules of Court indicating to the Belgian Government to provide him urgently with accommodation and support to meet his basic needs, and thus that the decision delivered by the Employment Tribunal should be enforced. 18 .     On 31   October 2022 the Court granted the measure for the duration of the proceedings before it. 19 .     On 3   November 2022 Fedasil invited the applicant to go to the initial processing centre for applicants for international protection so that a place might be assigned to him. On 4 November 2022 the Evere Red Cross centre was designated as the applicant’s reception facility. He took up residence there that same day. He was subsequently transferred to the Koekelberg Samusocial Reception Centre, where he currently resides . 20 .     On 25   November 2022 the applicant sent the Court his application form in accordance with Rule   47 of its Rules of Court.     the applicant’s living conditions from 15   july 2022 to 4   november 2022 21 .     The applicant explained that, during the 112 days between the filing of his asylum application on 15   July 2022 and his being assigned a place in a reception centre on 4   November 2022, he had slept on a makeshift mattress provided by associations or on cardboard boxes after the mattress had disappeared from the spot where he had left it. He recounted having slept at the Nord and Midi railway stations, or in the vicinity when police had not allowed the homeless to remain in the station at night. He had also slept in parks the names of which he did not know. He explained that he had always tried to stay with a group to avoid being alone. While he slept, his bag had been stolen, which contained documents from Guinea that he had intended to use as part of his application for international protection . 22 .     The applicant submitted that he had had access to a shower on average once a week via the Hub Humanitaire (see paragraph   75 below). As to toilets, he said he had been able to use public toilets in the railway stations from time to time. He recounted that the security guards at the stations had often blocked access to them. 23 .     The applicant explained that he had been able to feed himself thanks to the actions of associations. His meals had most often been delivered by associations of the Hub Humanitaire   (see paragraphs 64-67 below). He stated that he had been able to receive a meal once a day, on average, but not every day. He recounted that some days the queue had been too long to obtain such meals and he had had to eat what he could find in dust bins. He submitted that he had always remained hungry. 24 .     The applicant claimed to have suffered from the rain and cold because the weather conditions in Brussels had deteriorated in October. That month had been very wet and the temperature had regularly dropped below 10 degrees at night. RELEVANT LEGAL FRAMEWORK AND PRACTICE         belgian law    Asylum procedure 25 .     The recognition of refugee status or of eligibility for subsidiary protection is governed by sections   48 et seq. of the Law of 15   December 1980 on the entry, residence, settlement and removal of aliens. The procedure is divided into two stages. Applications are filed with and registered by the Aliens Office. In practice, filing and registration are carried out in a place designated as an initial processing centre by the Secretary of State for Asylum and Migration (see paragraph 57 below). When the Aliens Office determines that Belgium is responsible for examining an application, it forwards that application to the Office of the Commissioner General for Refugees and Stateless Persons, which verifies its admissibility and merits, subject to subsequent review covering all aspects of the case by the Aliens Appeals Board.    Reception of applicants for international protection 26 .     Article   23, point   3, of the Belgian Constitution secures to everyone “the right to live his or her life in a manner compatible with human dignity”, which includes the right to decent accommodation. 27 .     The reception of applicants for international protection is governed by the Reception Act of 12 January 2007, which transposes Directive   2013/33/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26   June 2013 laying down standards for the reception of applicants for international protection.      Material support 28 .     Section   3 of the Reception Act provides that asylum-seekers have the right to be received in such a way as to be able to live their life in a manner compatible with human dignity. 29 .     Section   6 of the Reception Act places the burden for providing material support on Fedasil and its partners from the moment the application for international protection is filed. As a rule, such material support is due for the duration of the asylum procedure .    Fedasil 30 .     Fedasil is a public-interest agency that is financed almost exclusively by a federal grant and is placed under the responsibility of the Secretary of State for Asylum and Migration. 31 .     In accordance with the Reception Act (section   10), Fedasil is responsible for assigning a place in the reception network (“mandatory registration point”) to applicants for international protection. It designates the reception facility in which the applicant for international protection is to be accommodated (see sections   11(1) and 16 of the Reception Act).    Components of material support 32 .     Material support includes accommodation, meals, clothing, medical, social and psychological assistance and a daily allowance. It also includes access to legal aid, services such as interpreting and training, and a voluntary return programme (see section 2(6) of the Reception Act). 33 .     Applicants for international protection are authorised to engage in professional activities after a period of four months from the date on which they filed their application for international protection (see Article   18, point   3, of the Royal Decree   of 2   September 2018 implementing the Law of 9   May 2018 on the occupation of foreign nationals having a particular residence status).      Medical assistance 34 .     Irrespective of whether they live in a reception facility, applicants for international protection are eligible for medical assistance such that they may “live [their] life in a manner compatible with human dignity” (see sections   23-25 of the Reception Act).      Legal aid 35 .     Applicants for international protection are entitled to legal aid (see Articles   508-508/23 of the Judicial Code). Supplementary legal aid, including representation, is provided exclusively by lawyers.    Legal remedies in the event of reception disputes      Judicial Code 36.     Under Article   580,   point 8   (f), of the Judicial Code, challenges to the application of the Reception Act are heard by the employment tribunals. Under Article   628, point   14, of the Judicial Code, jurisdiction falls to the local tribunal for the socially insured person’s permanent residence or for the place where he or she was most recently living or, failing that, for the place of his or her most recent occupation in Belgium. 37 .     There are several ways to apply to the employment tribunal, in particular by way of an urgent application or, if absolutely necessary, by ex parte application (see Article   584, paragraph   3, of the Judicial Code), in which case the application is made directly to the president. 38 .     Ex parte proceedings are regulated by Articles   1025 et seq. of the Judicial Code. These are unilateral proceedings, with no respondent, in which the relevant court examines the merits of the application based solely on material provided by the claimant. 39 .     The president to whom an ex parte application has been made rules on an interim basis by delivering a reasoned decision. That decision is immediately enforceable, notwithstanding any appeal, and without payment of security, unless the judge decides otherwise. 40 .     The decision is served on the claimant by judicial recorded delivery within three days. 41 .     Any third party to which the decision is detrimental may challenge it by means of a third-party appeal. A third-party appeal is the remedy available to a third party by which to challenge – in adversarial proceedings – a measure granted ex parte and, where appropriate, to have the decision withdrawn. The third-party appeal must be lodged within a month from the notification of the decision to the third party by applying to the court which delivered it (see Article   1034 of the Judicial Code).      Case-law 42 .     In the context of the reception situation at issue in the present case (see paragraphs 50-83 below), the Association of French-speaking and German-speaking Bars and nine associations brought urgent proceedings against the Belgian State and Fedasil on 18   November 2021. In a decision delivered on 19   January 2022 the President of the Brussels French-Language Court of Frist Instance ordered Fedasil to grant any applicant for international protection material support unconditionally and immediately from the moment he or she filed an application. That decision was accompanied by a coercive fine of EUR   5,000   for every day that at least one person having filed his or her application was left without accommodation. In the face of that decision’s non-enforcement, the same claimants lodged a second urgent application on 9   February 2022 with a view to reinforcing the decision’s binding force. The fresh decision delivered on 25   March 2022 increased the fine to EUR   10,000 per day. 43 .     The Belgian State and Fedasil lodged an appeal against the two decisions. To justify the situation to the Brussels Court of Appeal they put forward the considerations listed in paragraph 49 below. In a judgment of 31   October 2022 the Court of Appeal, ruling in urgent proceedings, dismissed their appeal because of the obvious and wilful failure to enforce the decision of 19   January 2022. 44.     In the meantime, on 13   June 2022, the claimants had initiated a procedure for the attachment of Fedasil’s assets as a result of its failure to pay the coercive fines ordered in the decisions of 19   January and 25   March 2022. Fedasil had opposed that procedure. In a judgment of 30   January 2023 the judge dealing with the attachment of assets dismissed Fedasil’s opposition to the attachment measure. The judge upheld the amount sought in fines but ordered that the attachment of certain unseizable assets be lifted. 45.     Meanwhile, on 19   July 2022, since the decision of 19   January 2022 had been conditional on the initiation of proceedings on the merits within six months, those same claimants had brought substantive proceedings against the Belgian State and Fedasil in the Brussels Court of First Instance, requesting, in particular, that the defendants be ordered to implement the necessary structural measures.    Civil proceedings for damages 46 .     Article   1382 of the Civil Code provides that any act committed by a person that causes damage to another will render the person through whose fault the damage was caused liable to make reparation for it. It is possible to bring proceedings against the State for compensation on that ground. The State is subject to the ordinary rules on liability in tort. Such proceedings must be brought in the ordinary courts and are conducted in accordance with ordinary civil procedure. 47 .     The Government produced three decisions by the Liège Employment Tribunal (Namur Division) delivered on 30   March 2023 ordering Fedasil to assign a place in the reception network to applicants for international protection who had filed their applications between 9   November and 9   December 2022. These decisions had also granted the claimants’ request that Fedasil and the Belgian State be held jointly and severally liable under Article   1382 of the Civil Code to pay damages equal to the basic living allowance ( revenu d’intégration sociale ) at the individual rate for the period from the time of application for international protection until a place in the reception network had been assigned, and to pay EUR   2,500 as compensation for the non-pecuniary damage sustained, plus costs and expenses. In a fourth judgment of 30   March 2023, also submitted to the Court by the Government, the Liège Employment Tribunal had found that it had become pointless to order Fedasil to provide accommodation since the claimant had been accommodated in the meantime. That same judgment had required the Belgian State and Fedasil to pay damages. 48.     The Government produced the Belgian State’s appeal against one of these decisions. The State had called into question the jurisdiction ratione materiae of the employment tribunals to decide on damages and had submitted that the compensation claim was ill-founded in any event, since the Belgian State – which was dealing with a force majeure event –   had not committed an act of negligence. Moreover, the applicant had failed to demonstrate that he had sustained any damage that was causally connected to the alleged negligence. 49 .     In support of its submission, the Belgian State had adduced the following circumstances to explain the saturation of the reception network: (1) Greater migratory pressure (see paragraphs 51-55 below); (2) Extraordinary floods in the summer of 2021 having made 1,000 places in the reception network unusable; (3) Logistical issues affecting the opening of reception facilities and a shortage of specialised reception staff; (4) A lack of collaboration on the part of local authorities, who had taken measures to restrict the number of people who could be accommodated in the reception centres and to prevent the opening of new centres; (5) The length of asylum proceedings and, more specifically, the fact that the Office of the Commissioner General for Refugees and Stateless Persons had suspended the examination of asylum applications by Afghan nationals in 2021 (see paragraph 52 below).       BACKGROUND ON THE RECEPTION OF APPLICANTS FOR INTERNATIONAL PROTECTION IN BELGIUM 50 .     The background to the present case stretches back to September 2021, when Fedasil announced that the number of applications for international protection (see paragraphs 51-56 below) had exceeded the capacity of its network’s reception facilities (see paragraphs 58-60 below) and that the network had reached saturation point, with a 96   % occupancy rate.    The number of applications for international protection 51 .     According to official data from the Office of the Commissioner General for Refugees and Stateless Persons, between 2015 and 2022, the number of applications for international protection registered in Belgium every year, all applications combined, ranged anywhere from 44,760 in 2015, during the war in Syria, to 16,910 in 2020, during the pandemic. Over the previous ten years (2012-2022), the average number of applications for international protection registered in Belgium each year was 26,047. 52 .     There were 25,971 applications for international protection in 2021, 30% of which were made by Afghan nationals. In August 2021 the Office of the Commissioner General for Refugees and Stateless Persons suspended the processing of applications filed by these applicants until March 2022. The result of this suspension was to prolong the time needed to process the affected applicants’ eligibility for reception support. 53 .     In 2022 the number of applications for international protection registered in Belgium was 36,871, including 32,141 first-time applications. These figures – which were more than 18% lower than during the 2015 crisis – were up more than 42% on 2021. 54 .     An average of 3,073 applicants per month was recorded in 2022, compared to 2,164 in 2021. More than 4,000 applicants were registered in September and again in October 2022. That number had fallen back down to some 2,500 to 3,000 applicants by the start of 2023. 55 .     In 2022 the Office of the Commissioner General for Refugees and Stateless Persons took 20,514 asylum decisions , which represented an increase of 10.8% compared to 2021. On 31   December 2022 there was a backlog of 16,415 files for which the Commissioner General’s Office had yet to take a decision. In July/August 2022 the average time taken to examine an asylum application was one year. As a result of special measures taken to increase productivity, in particular recruitment measures, the number of decisions taken from September to December 2022 rose by 25%. 56 .     From 10   March 2022 to 31   December 2022 Belgium took in 65,000 Ukrainian nationals, including 762 who applied for international protection. Almost all of them were granted temporary protection as soon as they arrived in Belgium and were given temporary protection certificates which entitled them to residence and work permits, welfare assistance from the social welfare offices ( centres publics d’action sociale ) equal to the basic living allowance and health and disability insurance. Since these Ukrainian nationals were not applicants for international protection, they did not receive material support in the form of accommodation in the network managed at the federal level by Fedasil. They received support from the social welfare offices (welfare assistance) and the regional authorities (accommodation).    The Fedasil reception network 57 .     The initial processing centre for applicants for international protection is located in Brussels and is managed directly by Fedasil. This is a single reception point where applications for international protection are registered by the Aliens Office. Under normal circumstances, once the application for international protection has been registered, the applicant meets with Fedasil, which assigns him or her a place in the reception network (see paragraph 31 above). 58 .     The reception network is made up of 97 collective facilities, 35 of which are managed by Fedasil, while the others are managed by partner organisations that receive special public subsidies (the Red Cross, Samusocial, Caritas International and private operators). 59 .     Fedasil and its partners could accommodate a total of 28,180 people on 1   January 2021; 29,446 on 1   January 2022; and 33,884 on 1   January 2023. From 31   August   2021 to 30   January 2023, 6,665 places were created. By the latter date , the reception network had grown to 34,199 places. 60 .     As at 31   January 2023 Fedasil had 2,729 staff members, which was double the staff it had had on 1   January 2019.    Fedasil’s placement policy 61 .     On 15   September 2021 Fedasil announced that its reception network had reached saturation point, with a 96% occupancy rate, and capped the number of people authorised to enter the initial processing centre. 62.     When registering their applications, applicants for international protection were given a document explaining that the network had reached saturation point and that priority was being given to the most vulnerable groups, namely unaccompanied minors, families and the sick. The Government added a copy of this document to the file. 63 .     From January 2022 Fedasil implemented a waiting list for unaccompanied men who were not deemed vulnerable. Initially, the first to be cleared from the list were applicants for international protection who could produce a decision delivered by the Employment Tribunal (see paragraph   80 below). By June 2022 Fedasil was reduced to accommodating only those applicants for international protection who had had Fedasil notified of the decision concerning them. From September 2022 Fedasil appeared to have further restricted its assignment of places by giving priority to applicants who had sought an interim measure from the Court (see paragraph   85 below). It can be inferred from the applicant’s observations that, from 31   October 2022, only those applicants in respect of whom an interim measure had been granted by the Court could be cleared from the waiting list. In their observations, the Government submitted that, in February 2023, there was a waiting time of at least three weeks between the indication of an interim measure by the Court and actually being assigned a place in the reception network.    Associative support schemes      The Hub Humanitaire 64 .     Since 2018 there has been a structure, the Hub Humanitaire, which has its premises in Brussels and is run by several associations that provide free basic services for the homeless, except accommodation for men. The consortium of associations includes Médecins du Monde, Médecins sans Frontières, the Belgian Red Cross, SOS Jeunes-Quartier Libre AMO and Plateforme Citoyenne BelRefugees. These associations handle operations on the Hub’s premises with their volunteer staff, to the extent of the means at their disposal. 65.     The management, operating and human-resources expenses (for sixty employees) of the Hub Humanitaire building are subsidised by the Brussels-Capital Region and the Brussels-Capital Common Community Commission. 66 .     The services provided at the Hub Humanitaire include free meal distribution, registration on the waiting list for men in urgent need of accommodation, medical consultations, distribution of free clothing and hygiene products and welfare and legal advice. 67 .     Once Fedasil was no longer able to cater for new arrivals, applicants for international protection increasingly came to rely on the Hub Humanitaire. In 2022, 66% of those who had recourse to the Hub Humanitaire reported that they were migrants. 68 .     The Hub Humanitaire found itself overwhelmed by the demand for support from applicants for international protection and, in September 2022, was forced to close down several days a week for want of means and staff.      Other support schemes 69 .     Samusocial provides emergency assistance for the homeless (accommodation, mobile support teams, medical care and psycho-social assistance). They are mainly financed by public funds. Like the Hub Humanitaire, Samusocial were relied on by applicants for international protection once Fedasil was no longer able to assume all of its reception responsibilities. 70 .     The Plateforme Citoyenne BelRefugees, which is subsidised by public funds and private donations, coordinates citizen-led initiatives to support applicants for international protection (reception, information, training and integration).     Living conditions in practice 71.     In reply to the Court’s question on this point when the case was communicated, the parties to the present case and the third-party intervener, the French-speaking Bar Council of Brussels, described the situation. In support of their accounts, they produced numerous newspaper articles published throughout 2022 that described the material living conditions of applicants for international protection lacking accommodation. That information was corroborated by the descriptions and evidence given by applicants, the respondent Government and associations on the ground in the context of requests for interim measures (see paragraphs   85-92 below).      Accommodation 72.     The vast majority of applicants for international protection to whom Fedasil refused material support, mainly unaccompanied men – but also unaccompanied minors and families as of October 2022 – were unable to find accommodation through the associative support schemes mentioned above (see paragraphs   64 and 69-70 above). They therefore unlawfully occupied public areas and set up makeshift encampments using tents, cardboard boxes and mattresses provided by citizens or associations, in particular in the parks along the Brussels canal and in the Midi and Nord railway stations. When the rain and the cold came in October, they also squatted in disused public buildings .      Food distribution 73.     Food distribution in Brussels is mainly managed by the Belgium Red Cross through the Hub Humanitaire (see paragraphs   64 and 66 above). Meals are brought directly by associations and citizen groups. One thousand meals were distributed per day from January to August 2022, and 1,300 from September to December. 74.     Drinking water fountains have been installed in various places in Brussels.      Sanitary facilities 75 .     One-euro shower tickets are available at the Hub Humanitaire (see paragraphs   64 and 66 above). This enabled 850 showers to be taken from July to September 2022, and 600 from September to November 2022 . 76.     The DoucheFLUX system is also in place, which provides the homeless with access to showers (20 shower-stalls open six days a week), washing machines, psycho-social activities, etc. 77 .     The Court has not been provided with specific information on the arrangements for access to toilets. Statements from applicants requesting interim measures and from the applicant in the present case only showed that they attempted, more or less successfully, to use public toilets in railway stations and that in certain places where makeshift encampments had formed public toilets or urinals were installed by associations.      Medical assistance 78 .     The most wide-spread health issue among applicants for international protection who lacked accommodation, in addition to diphtheria and tuberculosis, was a scabies epidemic that broke out as of the summer of 2022. 79 .     Thanks to the intervention, in particular, of Médecins sans frontières and Médecins du Monde, medical consultations were organised at the Hub Humanitaire (see paragraphs   64 and 66 above) in October 2022. Médecins sans frontières also opened a temporary medical service to ensure that the homeless received medical treatment . Since January 2023 that service has been funded by the public authorities.     Judgments of the employment tribunals 80.     In addition to the aforementioned collective proceedings (see paragraphs   42-43 above), thousands of unaccommodated applicants for international protection, like the applicant, applied ex parte to the President of the Brussels French-Language Employment Tribunal to have Fedasil ordered to fulfil its legal obligations to them (see paragraphs   37-41 above).   Over 90% of those applications were declared well-founded. 81.     By 1   March 2023 Fedasil had thus been ordered more than 7,000 times to secure accommodation for that many applicants for international protection. The decisions ordered Fedasil to accommodate the individuals concerned in a reception centre, or even a hotel or any other appropriate establishment if there was no room available, and to give them material support, on pain of a coercive fine for each night they were forced to spend outside the reception network or any other form of emergency accommodation. Fedasil had almost never challenged the orders delivered by the tribunal by way of a third-party appeal. To date, those fines have yet to be paid. 82 .     On 24   May 2022 the Brussels Employment Tribunal published a press release pointing out that, under normal circumstances, such cases were limited to a few dozen applications per year. 83.     On 27   October 2022 the urgent-applications division of the Brussels French-Language Employment Tribunal handed down five decisions against Fedasil. In a judgment of 28   March 2023 the Brussels Employment Appeal Tribunal upheld those decisions, holding, in particular: “1.     Fedasil never disputed the merits of the respondent’s claim under [the Reception Act]. It did not in any way challenge the urgent application to the President of the Employment Tribunal and did not appeal against the decision ordering it to provide the respondent with accommodation and support in accordance with that Act. Even in its statement of appeal, Fedasil continues to acknowledge the respondent’s entitlement to material support. Fedasil has nevertheless refrained from granting the respondent the accommodation and support that it does not dispute he is due, thereby forcing him to take legal action to have Fedasil ordered, on pain of a coercive fine, to grant them to him in fact. In so doing, Fedasil has forced the respondent to take legal action despite there being no serious or reasonable grounds to justify court proceedings, since the right claimed before the courts is not disputed. 2.     In accordance with the principles set forth above, it must now be ascertained whether Fedasil’s conduct was manifestly negligent. The conduct of an administrative authority that breaches a legal rule requiring it to act in a particular manner constitutes negligence, subject to grounds of justification. In the present case, Fedasil manifestly breached [the Reception Act], which requires it to act in a particular manner. Fedasil does not dispute this. Fedasil explains its conduct by referring to the impossibility of providing accommodation for all applicants for international protection as a result of the saturation of the reception network since January 2022. Fedasil alleges that this saturation is linked to the growing number of applications for international protection and to the length of asylum proceedings. It points to its own and to the Government’s efforts to resolve this situation. While claiming it is unable to discharge its statutory mandate, Fedasil has nevertheless failed to rely on force majeure or any other ground of justification. Fedasil’s unjustified breach of a legal rule requiring it to act in a particular manner constitutes negligence. For the purposes of applying Article   780 bis   of the Judicial Code, this act of negligence must be characterised as manifest abuse in that it vexatiously forced the respondent to make an urgent application to the President of the Employment Tribunal. 3.     The seriousness of such conduct on the part of Fedasil and the proportionality of the civil fine imposed must be assessed in the light of the circumstances of the case as a whole. Fedasil’s negligence is aggravated by its status as the public authority responsible for the reception of applicants for international protection, since it has failed to discharge the mandate for which it was created. To be sure, this is not an easy mandate and Fedasil is faced with certain problems, but these have nothing to do with force majeure or any other ground of justification. Accordingly, it is unacceptable that Fedasil, as a public authority, should fail to apply the law. The respondent’s particular vulnerability as an applicant for international protection in urgent need of the accommodation and support provided for by law to enable him to maintain his human dignity aggravates Fedasil’s negligence in forcing him to take legal action in the hope of securing effective respect for his fundamental rights. Lastly, the fact that the claim the respondent was forced to bring against Fedasil is one of thousands of similar claims (currently some 7,000 uncontested claims since January 2022) must be taken into consideration in assessing the disruption of the functioning of the public service provided by the justice system, a disruption which the legislative branch sought to punish by way of Article   780 bis   of the Judicial Code. This disruption has been substantial given the number of cases and the urgency with which they must be dealt, which is profoundly detrimental to the functioning of the Brussels French-Language Employment Tribunal and, ultimately, to all applicants thereto. The disruption is now spreading to the Brussels Employment Appeal Tribunal, with which a growing number of appeals are being lodged, as in the present case. 4.     Having regard to Fedasil’s manifest abuse of procedure in that it vexatiously forced the respondent to take legal action, and to the circumstances noted, it is with good reason and in a proportionate manner that the decision appealed against imposed on Fedasil a civil fine in the maximum amount, namely EUR   2,500. That sanction is upheld. ”     GRANTING OF INTERIM MEASURES BY THE COURT 84 .     On 31   October 2022, pursuant to Rule   39 §   1 of the Rules of Court, the Court decided for the first time to indicate to the Belgian State that an applicant for international protection – the applicant in the present case (see paragraph   18 above) – should be provided with accommodation and material support to meet his basic needs. 85 .     In the following period, and up to 30   May 2023, the Court granted interim measures to 1,710 applicants who had secured a final domestic decision from the Brussels Employment Tribunal, in each case for the duration of the proArticles de loi cités
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Synthèse
- Juridiction
- CEDH
- Chambre
- CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;CHAMBER;ENG
- Formation
- 5
- Dispositif
- Satisfaction
- Date
- 18 juillet 2023
- Matière
- droits fondamentaux
Référence
ECLI:CE:ECHR:2023:0718JUD004925522