Sunday, March 10, 2013

No way in, no way out? A study of living conditions of irregular migrants in Norway

http://www.udi.no/PageFiles/24116/20194%20Fafo%20report%20on%20irregular%20migrants%27%20living%20conditions%202011.pdf

excerpt from “No way in, no way out?” description of the Norwegian asylum procedure


The asylum application process: from asylum seeker to irregular migrant
“”The question is therefore whether migrants have access to information about rights and about possible outcomes to their application – also what a rejection could entail“”
“” .. Based on available information (e.g. Zhang 2008), most irregular migrants in Norway are rejected asylum seekers. Understanding the application process is therefore central in understanding how people become irregular migrants. In this section, we give a brief introduction to the way the asylum process is formally supposed to take place.

NEW ISSUES IN REFUGEE RESEARCH



Asylum, understood as ‘the protection that a state grants on its territory or in some other place
under the control of certain of its organs to a person who comes to seek it,’1
is a well-known

World Report 2013 - Ethiopia


The sudden death in August 2012 of Ethiopia's long-serving and powerful prime minister, Meles Zenawi, provoked uncertainty over the country's political transition, both domestically and among Ethiopia's international partners

Ethiopia: Future of last remaining human rights monitoring NGO in the balance


On February 3, 2012, the Cassation Bench of the Federal Supreme Court of Ethiopia will hear a petition by the Human Rights Council (HRCO), Ethiopia’s oldest human rights organization, to admit an appeal against the freezing of its bank accounts. Amnesty International, ARTICLE 19, CIVICUS,

Charges renewed against Ethiopian journalist Temesghen


Nairobi, February 8, 2013  The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the revival of criminal charges against Ethiopian journalist Temesghen Desalegn today in what appears to be a politicized court hearing designed to censor one of the few critical voices left in the country.
A court revived criminal charges against Temesghen Desalegn today. (CPJ)A court revived criminal charges against Temesghen Desalegn today. (CPJ)
A judge in the Federal High Court in the capital, Addis Ababa, revived three charges against Temesghen, former chief editor of the now-defunct Feteh, and one against the general manager of Mastewal Publishing, the publishing company that formerly printed Feteh, according to local journalists who attended the hearing. Temesghen faces charges of "outrages against the constitution," defaming the government, and false publication of articles, while the manager of Mastewal Publishing faces an unspecified charge for allowing the weekly to be published. Under Ethiopian law, a printing company is also held accountable for a press offense by a publication that it publishes.

Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights


“No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”

Rule 39, as an interim measure, has the power to require a State Party to refrain from removing an applicant to a country where he or she may be at real risk of a violation of his or her fundamental rights