Aberkennungsbescheid eines Somaliers aufgehoben

Federal Administrative Court overturns a Somalian's withdrawal decision


Mr. A comes from Somalia and in April 2015 lodged an asylum application. Subsequently the Federal Asylum Court (FAC) in its decision from June 2017 granted Mr. A. subsidiary protection.

In the current proceedings in April 2018, Mr. A. submitted an application for the renewal of subsidiary protection. In its decision from November 2018, the Federal Asylum Office (FAO) officially withdrew his subsidiary protection and found his deportation to Somalia permissible. The FAO grounded its withdrawal of subsidiary protection on the no longer precarious food supply conditions in Somalia; he was healthy, fit to work, and also had family members in Somalia;  a return to Somalia was possible for Mr. A. 

Consequently in December 2018, he lodged an appeal to the FAC against the withdrawal of subsidiary protection on grounds that according to the FAO decision's country reports, there was still a high malnutrition rate and despite the no longer prevalent drought, the land needed a good rain season to ensurance stable supply of food. Moreover the security situation was still bad and wrongfully assessed by the authority. According to European High Court case law, the withdrawal of subsidiary protections required a substantial, non-temporary, change of the situation. This was not the case according to current reports, whereby the FAO unlawfully withdrew Mr. A.'s subsidiary protection. 

Thereupon the FAC, in its decision from July 2019, extended Mr. A.'s temporary residence permit for two more years. The court argued that the FAO did not substantiate its findings regarding the changed and sustainably improved supply situation. A comparison of the country reports from 2017 and 2018 did not reveal any fundamentally changed factors.  Country reports illustrated that the situation was still precarious.

Furthermore, the court found that, the FAO repeatedly pointed out, that Mr. A. was fit to work, whereby being able to secure his own livelihood in Somalia, which did not present an alteration of the the FAC's prerequisites for granting subsidiary protection in 2017. The ability to work was not called into question when the FAC made its decision. The FAO attempted to apply a legal interpretation that deviated from the FAC's decision from June 2017 concerning the granting of subsidiary protection. Therefore, the decision of the FAO was to be overturned.
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