The Assembly considers that the EU–Turkey Agreement raises
several serious human rights issues relating to both its substance
and its implementation now and in the future, in particular the
following:
2.1 the Greek asylum
system lacks the capacity to ensure timely registration of asylum
applications, issuing of first instance decisions or determination
of appeals; the new Greek Law No. 4375/2016 may help to address
earlier shortcomings, but it will not ensure adequate capacity;
2.2 detention of asylum seekers in the “hotspots” on the Aegean
islands may be incompatible with the requirements of the European
Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5), due notably to procedural failures
undermining the legal grounds for detention and inadequate detention
conditions;
2.3 children and vulnerable persons are not systematically
referred from detention to appropriate alternative facilities;
2.4 returns of Syrian refugees to Turkey as a “first country
of asylum” may be contrary to European Union and/or international
law, as Turkey may not ensure protection that is “sufficient”, according
to the position of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR), and there have been reports of onward refoulement of Syrians;
2.5 returns of asylum seekers, whether Syrian or not, to Turkey
as a “safe third country” are contrary to European Union and/or
international law; as Turkey does not provide them with protection
in accordance with the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of
Refugees, non-Syrians do not have effective access to the asylum
procedure and there have been reports of onward refoulement of both Syrians and
non-Syrians;
2.6 remedies against decisions to return asylum seekers to
Turkey do not always have an automatic suspensive effect, as required
by the European Convention on Human Rights;
2.7 resettlement of Syrian refugees from Turkey is made conditional
on the number of returns to Turkey from Greece and will subsequently
depend on the Voluntary Humanitarian Readmission Scheme, which in
practice is likely to generate unacceptably low levels of resettlement;
2.8 there have been unreasonable delays in the European Union’s
disbursement of the financial assistance promised to Turkey to help
support Syrian refugees in the country, which should not depend on
developments in the Aegean Sea.