(LUXEMBOURG) – Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic failed to fall in with an EU decision for a temporary mechanism to relocate their share of refugees from Greece and Italy, the EU’s top Court ruled on Thursday.
In its judgment, the Court upheld the actions for failure to fulfil obligations brought by the Commission against those three EU Member States seeking a declaration that, by failing to indicate at regular intervals, and at least every three months, an appropriate number of applicants for international protection who could be relocated swiftly to their respective territories and by consequently failing to implement their subsequent relocation obligations, those Member States had failed to fulfil their obligations under European Union law.
First, the Court concluded that there had been an infringement of an EU Council decision with a view to the relocation, on a mandatory basis, from Greece and Italy of 120,000 applicants for international protection to the other Member States of the European Union.
Secondly, the Court found that Poland and the Czech Republic had also failed to fulfil their obligations under an earlier decision that the Council had adopted with a view to the relocation, on a voluntary basis, from Greece and Italy of 40,000 applicants for international protection to the other Member States of the European Union.Hungary, for its part, was not bound by the relocation measures provided for under the latter decision.
In September 2015, having regard to the emergency situation linked to the arrival of third-country nationals in Greece and Italy, the Council adopted the above-mentioned decisions. While Poland had indicated that 100 persons could be swiftly relocated to its territory, it did not in fact relocate them and made no subsequent relocation commitment. Hungary, for its part, did not at any point indicate a number of persons who could be relocated to its territory. Lastly, in February and in May 2016, while the Czech Republic had indicated that 50 persons could be relocated to its territory, only twelve were in fact relocated from Greece, and the Czech Republic made no subsequent relocation commitment.
By the present judgment, the Court first of all rejected the argument raised by the three Member States concerned that the Commissions actions are inadmissible because, following the expiry of the period of application of the relocation decisions, on 17 and 26 September 2017respectively, it is no longer possible for them to remedy the infringements alleged. In this connection, the Court recalled that an action for infringement is admissible where the Commission restricts itself to seeking a declaration as to the existence of the infringement alleged inter alia in situations, such as those at issue in the present cases, in which the act of European Union law whose infringement is alleged definitively ceased to be applicable after the expiry date of the period set in the reasoned opinion, namely 23 August 2017.
Moreover, a declaration as to the failure to fulfil obligations is still of substantive interest, inter alia, as establishing the basis of a responsibility that a Member State can incur, as a result of its default, as regards other
Member States of the European Union or private parties.
As to the substance, Poland and Hungary maintained inter alia that they were entitled to disapply the relocation decisions by virtue of Article 72 TFEU, according to which the provisions of the FEU Treaty on the area of freedom, security and justice, which include in particular asylum policy, are not to affect the exercise of the responsibilities incumbent upon Member States with regard to the maintenance of law and order and the safeguarding of internal security. In that regard, the Court held that, inasmuch as Article 72 TFEU is a provision derogating from the general rules of European Union law, it must be interpreted strictly. Thus, that article does not confer on Member States the power to depart from the provisions of European Union law based on no
more than reliance on the interests linked to the maintenance of law and order and the safeguarding of internal security, but requires them to prove that it is necessary to have recourse to that derogation in order to exercise their responsibilities on those matters.
In that context, the Court observed that, under the relocation decisions, national security and public order were to be taken into consideration throughout the relocation procedure, until the actual transfer of the applicant for international protection. In that regard, the Court held that a wide discretion had to be accorded to the competent authorities of the Member States of relocation when they determine whether there are reasonable grounds for regarding a third-country national whose relocation is intended as a danger to their national security or public order. On that issue, the Court stated that the concept of danger to
national security or public order within the meaning of the relocation decisions, must be interpreted as covering both actual and potential threats to national security or public order. The Court nevertheless pointed out that, to rely on the above-mentioned grounds, those authorities had to rely, following a case-by-case investigation,
on consistent, objective and specific evidence that provides grounds for suspecting that the applicant in question represents an actual or potential danger. Consequently, it held that the arrangements provided by those provisions precluded, in the relocation procedure, a Member State from peremptorily invoking Article 72 TFEU for the sole purposes of general
prevention and without establishing any direct relationship with a particular case to justify suspending the implementation of or even ceasing to implement its obligations under the relocation decisions.
Ruling subsequently on the plea derived by the Czech Republic from the malfunctioning of the relocation mechanism at issue, the Court held that it was not permissible if the objective of solidarity inherent to the relocation decisions and the binding nature of those acts was not to be undermined, for a Member State to be able to rely on its unilateral assessment of the alleged lack of effectiveness, or even the purported malfunctioning, of the relocation mechanism established by those acts in order to avoid any obligation to relocate people incumbent upon it under those acts.
Lastly, drawing attention to the binding nature of the relocation decisions for the Czech Republic, as of their adoption and during their period of application, the Court stated that that Member State was required to comply with the relocation obligations imposed under those decisions irrespective of the provision of other types of aid to the Hellenic Republic and the Italian Republic.