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13/06/2024
The CJEU ruled on subsequent applications submitted by stateless persons of Palestinian origin registered with UNRWA and clarified that they should be granted refugee status if UNRWA’s protection or assistance has ceased.

ECLI
ECLI:EU:C:2024:494
Input Provided By
EUAA Information and Analysis Sector (IAS)
Other Source/Information
Type
Judgment
Original Documents
Relevant Legislative Provisions
Recast Qualification Directive (Directive 2011/95/EU on standards for the qualification of third-country nationals or stateless persons as BIP for a uniform status for refugees or for persons eligible for subsidiary protection)(recast QD)/or QD 2004/83/EC
Reference
European Union, Court of Justice of the European Union [CJEU], LN, SN v Zamestnik-predsedatel na Darzhavna agentsia za bezhantsite, C-563/22, ECLI:EU:C:2024:494, 13 June 2024. Link redirects to the English summary in the EUAA Case Law Database.
Permanent link to the case
https://caselaw.euaa.europa.eu/pages/viewcaselaw.aspx?CaseLawID=4325
Case history

The referral to the CJEU: Bulgaria, Administrative Court Sofia city [bg. Административен съд - София град]​], D.R.S. and D.I.S. v Chairman of the State Agency for Refugees, No. 6232, 9 August 2022. 

Other information
Abstract

According to the court press release


"UNRWA’s assistance or protection must, in particular be considered to have ceased vis-à-vis the applicant when that body finds itself unable, for whatever reason, to ensure dignified living conditions or minimum security conditions to any stateless person of Palestinian origin, staying in the sector of UNRWA’s area of operations, in which the applicant had his or her habitual residence.


In July 2018, a mother and her minor daughter, both stateless persons of Palestinian origin, left the city of Gaza and illegally entered Bulgaria after having transited through Egypt, Türkiye and Greece. Their first application for international protection before the Bulgarian authorities was definitively rejected on the ground that they had not demonstrated that they had left the Gaza Strip for fear they might be persecuted. They then submitted a second application (a so-called subsequent application) by asserting their registration with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). They claim refugee status following the de facto cessation of UNRWA’s protection in their respect. The subsequent application was also rejected on the ground that the interested parties had renounced UNRWA’s assistance by voluntarily leaving its area of operations.


The Bulgarian court hearing the action brought by the interested parties asks the Court of Justice to interpret the Procedures Directive as regards the extent of the examination of the merits of a subsequent application. Moreover, it asks the Court to interpret the Qualifications Directive. According to the latter, persons registered with UNRWA are, in principle, excluded from refugee status in the European Union. However, when UNRWA’s protection or assistance has ceased for any reason, those persons shall automatically be entitled to refugee status.


The Court is called upon to clarify at what point UNRWA’s assistance or protection must be regarded to have ceased. The Court responds, first of all, that the examination of the merits of a subsequent application must extend to all of the factual elements submitted. It must also take into account the facts which have already been assessed in the first application. Next, the Court observes that, if the Bulgarian court were to conclude that, having regard to the general conditions of life prevailing in the Gaza Strip at the time of its ruling, UNRWA’s protection or assistance in that sector of its area of operations must be considered as having ceased vis-à-vis the two applicants concerned, the latter should be automatically granted refugee status. However, that status must be refused to them if they fall within one of the other grounds for exclusion provided for by the Qualification Directive. UNRWA’s protection or assistance must, in particular be considered to have ceased in respect of the applicant when that body finds itself unable, for whatever reason, to ensure dignified living conditions or minimum security conditions to any stateless person of Palestinian origin, staying in the sector of UNRWA’s area of operations, in which the applicant had his or her habitual residence. The Court notes in this regard that both the living conditions in the Gaza Strip and UNRWA’s capacity to fulfil its mission have experienced an unprecedented deterioration due to the consequences of the events of 7 October 2023."


Country of Decision
European Union
Court Name
EU: Court of Justice of the European Union [CJEU]
Case Number
C-563/22
Date of Decision
13/06/2024
Country of Origin
Palestine State
Keywords
Article 1D Geneva Convention/UNRWA
Assessment of Application
Exclusion
Refugee Protection
Statelessness
Subsequent Application