K. v. SWEDEN
Doc ref: 20470/92 • ECHR ID: 001-1375
Document date: September 10, 1992
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AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application No. 20470/92
by M.K.
against Sweden
The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in private on
10 September 1992, the following members being present:
MM. C.A. NØRGAARD, President
S. TRECHSEL
F. ERMACORA
E. BUSUTTIL
A.S. GÖZÜBÜYÜK
A. WEITZEL
J.-C. SOYER
H.G. SCHERMERS
H. DANELIUS
Sir Basil HALL
MM. F. MARTINEZ
Mrs. J. LIDDY
MM. L. LOUCAIDES
J.-C. GEUS
M.P. PELLONPÄÄ
B. MARXER
Mr. H.C. KRÜGER, Secretary to the Commission
Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;
Having regard to the application introduced on 28 May 1992 by
M.K. against Sweden and registered on 11 August 1992 under file No.
20470/92;
Having regard to the report provided for in Rule 47 of the Rules
of Procedure of the Commission;
Having deliberated;
Decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The applicant is a Russian citizen of Jewish origin born on
12 December 1959. She is presently staying at an unknown address in
Sweden.
The facts of the case, as submitted by the applicant, may be
summarised as follows.
The applicant left her home in Leningrad on 26 August 1989 for
a holiday trip to Sweden to which country she had been invited by her
cousin who has resided there for the last two years. She arrived in
Sweden on 27 August 1989 by boat from Helsinki on a tourist visa valid
for 69 days.
On 11 October 1989 she applied for asylum, refugee status, a
residence permit, travel documents, and an aliens passport. At the
ensuing police interrogation she stated, inter alia, the following. She
had never been engaged in any political activities. She was divorced
1 1/2 years ago and the father had received the custody of their child.
She did not want to go back to Russia as she had been harassed and
battered there by the economic police after she had publicly denounced
certain economic crimes which took place at her workplace. If she were
sent to Russia she would risk encountering serious problems upon her
return.
On 22 May 1990 she was heard again by the police. In addition to
the information already supplied, the applicant stated, inter alia, the
following. No member of her family had been convicted for political
crimes. An important reason for her wish to be allowed to stay in
Sweden was that this would enable her, through the Red Cross, to be
reunited with her child. When her cousin had visited Russia after the
applicant's arrival in Sweden she had been summoned by the KGB and
asked questions about the applicant and her whereabouts.
On 6 September 1990 the applicant's counsel submitted further
observations to the Government reiterating the substance of her earlier
submissions and adding, inter alia, the following details. One of the
main reasons why she had not received the custody of her child was that
she was seen as an unreliable person because she had a cousin who had
emigrated to Sweden. She was very close to this cousin as they had been
brought up together after the applicant's mother died when the
applicant was 12 years old. Her father was an alcoholic and died in
1978. Furthermore, the applicant's Jewish origin had caused her
problems at her workplace. After she had been beaten up by the economic
police she decided to use the visa she had received in May to visit her
cousin as a means of fleeing to Sweden. She left the country without
permission and without giving proper notice to her employer.
Her application for asylum was rejected by the National
Immigration Board (statens invandrarverk) on 2 April 1991 and the Board
decided that the applicant should be expelled (avvisad) from Sweden and
prohibited from returning to the country before 1 May 1993 without
special permission from the Board. In its decision the Board stated,
inter alia, the following:
"The Board has no reason to question the [applicant's]
submissions with regard to the harassment and battery she claims
to have suffered in her home country. What has been put forward
in support of her application for asylum can, however, not be
considered sufficient to make [the applicant] a refugee within
the meaning of Chapter 3, Section 2 of the Aliens Act
(utlänningslagen) or of the 1951 Geneva Convention relating
to the status of refugees. Neither are the circumstances
relied on such as are envisaged in Chapter 3, Section 1,
No. 3 of the Aliens Act [de facto refugee].
Her application for asylum must accordingly be rejected. No
other ground for granting a residence permit exists. [The
applicant] shall accordingly be expelled and the decision
be combined with a prohibition to re-enter the country.
In accordance with the above conclusion, the Board also
rejects her requests for refugee status, travel documents
and an aliens passport."
The applicant appealed to the Government. On 4 July 1991 her
counsel submitted, inter alia, the following additional information.
The applicant's cousin had become seriously mentally ill after her
fiancé had attempted to murder her in Russia. She received treatment
for her problems in Sweden. She had no close relative other than the
applicant and depended on the applicant's presence for her recovery.
The applicant expressed great fears as to the fate of her cousin if she
was not allowed to stay and help her. The applicant had no close
relative in Russia and feared very much what would happen to her if she
was sent back. She did not think that she would ever be allowed to
leave the country.
In the course of the autumn 1991 the applicant engaged in a
relationship with a Polish man who had been living in Sweden for 20
years with a permanent residence permit.
The Government rejected the appeal on 7 November 1991. It stated
in its decision that it shared the opinion expressed by the Board and
what had come to light in the proceedings before it could not lead to
any change in the decision appealed against.
However, when the applicant was informed of the decision on 8
November 1991, she was by mistake told that the Government had granted
her request, to be informed a few hours later that this information was
incorrect. The same evening she took an overdose of sleeping pills,
Rohypnol. Her boyfriend found her and took her to hospital where her
life was saved. She was sent to a closed psychiatric ward for
observation, but as she appeared capable of taking care of herself and
had abandoned her suicidal thoughts she was released on
10 November 1991.
A medical certificate dated 28 November 1991 and signed by Dr L.,
a physician and psychotherapist, stated that the applicant was
suffering from a reactive depression and was unable to control her
impulses. It concluded that, as she had recently required closed
psychiatric treatment following a suicide attempt, there was a risk of
suicide in case of new stress, for example in the event of execution
of the expulsion order.
On 4 December 1991 the applicant submitted a new request for
residence and work permits. She also asked for a stay in the execution
of the expulsion order. She maintained that there were strong
humanitarian grounds for granting her request. She invoked the medical
files established after her suicide attempt and the medical certificate
of 28 November 1991 and stated that she was still in a suicidal state
of mind. In addition, she invoked the fact that she had been living
together with her Polish boyfriend for four months and that she had
been staying in Sweden for 25 months.
By decision of 9 December 1991, the Board rejected all the
applicant's requests. The Board's decision stated summarily that the
humanitarian reasons invoked were not sufficiently strong for the
granting of a resident permit, nor were her connections with Sweden.
The Board's decision was not subject to any appeal.
On 8 January 1992 the applicant married her Polish boyfriend.
A new medical certificate issued by Dr. L. on 2 March 1992
described the applicant's mental situation as worse than that existing
at the time of the previous certificate. It concluded that further
stress in the form of execution of the expulsion decision could lead
to suicide.
On 4 March 1992 the applicant submitted to the Board a new
request for residence and work permits, for a cancellation of the
expulsion order and for a stay in the execution of this order. In this
request the applicant stated the following.
Everything she had submitted so far was true but still not her
complete story. In fact, in 1986 she had started to work for the KGB
to help them to get information from foreigners, in particular Asians,
by becoming the foreigners' friend and, if need be, by seducing them.
However, after some time she had become fed up with her work and the
strict scrutiny she was subjected to by the KGB. The KGB allowed her
to stop and found her another place of work - in fact the one where she
later encountered the serious problems she had already described to the
police. The organisation also offered to find her a suitable husband.
However, she had not been able to stand the situation and had contacted
her cousin in Sweden in order to have her help to obtain a visa to
Sweden. She had promised the KGB to stay in Sweden only for two months.
The KGB had allowed her to leave as they deemed that she had sufficient
ties with the Soviet Union through her son and her employment. She had
not dared to tell the Swedish authorities about her involvment with the
KGB for fear that they should distrust her and believe that she planned
to act for the KGB also in Sweden. She had reported to the consulate
of the Soviet Union upon her arrival in Sweden but had not had any
further contacts with the Soviet authorities. Since her arrival, she
had, however, received three convocations to interrogations in
Leningrad. The first arrived in January 1991 and the last, which was
annexed in original, stated that she was to be heard on 4 November
1991. She was absolutely sure that if she returned to Russia, she would
never be allowed to leave the country again. In addition, she did not
know what the KGB would do to her upon her return. She referred to
another woman who had worked in the same way as she had done but who
had fallen in love with a foreigner and who had planned to leave the
country with him. Shortly, before this woman was to leave the country
she was murdered, probably by the KGB.
The applicant also invoked her marriage with her Polish boyfriend
and stated that she had had a very good influence on him: earlier he
had been in very bad company but, after meeting her, he had broken with
all his earlier friends. If she were expelled to Russia there would be
a great risk that they would never be able to reunite in Sweden.
Finally, she also invoked her mental condition as described by
Dr. L. in his certificate of 2 March 1992, and her plans to commit
suicide if expelled.
On 10 March 1992 the Board rejected the application. It stated
summarily that neither her work as "bait" for the KGB, nor her
marriage, nor her mental condition were circumstances of a character
as to warrant the granting of asylum or special reasons of a
humanitarian character warranting the granting of a residence permit.
The Board's decision was not subject to appeal.
On 24 March 1992 the applicant reiterated her request of
4 March 1992. She invoked the increased importance attached to
connections with Sweden in new regulations issued by the Government on
19 December 1991 and entered into force on 1 January 1992. According
to these regulations a residence permit could, unless there were
special reasons to the contrary, be granted an alien who had, by 1
January 1992, been in Sweden for at least 18 months after an
application for such a permit, but who had not, within that time, had
the application finally decided. The applicant pointed to the fact that
she had been in Sweden for almost 2 1/2 years and had applied for
asylum already on 11 November 1989, and to the strengthening of her
connections with the country which resulted from her marriage with her
Polish boyfriend. She also reiterated her fears of persecution in
Russia on account of her previous work for the KGB and her bad mental
state and the risk of sucidie.
By decision of 27 March 1992, the Board rejected the application.
The reasons for the Board's decision were stated as follows:
"[The applicant] mainly invokes the length of her stay in Sweden.
The Board starts by noting that there are no grounds for granting
asylum.
The Board also finds that [the applicant] has been in Sweden for
a long time. The length of the period an alien has stayed in
Sweden may, according to practice, be an essential element in
determining whether there are especially strong reasons of a
humanitarian character to grant a residence permit. However, the
mere fact that an alien may have been in Sweden for a long time
should not lead to a granting of his/her application for such a
permit; certain further circumstances have also to be present in
order for such special reasons to exist. Considering all the
elements of the case, the Board cannot find that sufficiently
strong reasons have been shown for changing the decision
challenged - which has gained legal force - and granting a
residence permit."
The Board's decision was not subject to any appeal.
On 2 April 1992 the applicant appealed to the Government for
"mercy" and for a stay in the execution of her expulsion. In her
application she reiterated in substance the arguments made in her
above-mentioned application of 24 March 1992. She also stated that she
would obtain a statement from the Swedish security police regarding the
risks faced by former KGB collaborators in Russia.
By decision of 29 April the Government refused to examine the
application.
On 13 May 1992 the security police sent a letter to the
applicant's lawyer informing the latter, inter alia, that they did not
know with any certainty what fate awaited a former KGB agent who was
returned to Russia after having fled abroad.
On 14 May 1992 the applicant requested the Board to order a stay
of execution of the expulsion decision, to annul this decision and to
grant her residence and work permits. She invoked all her earlier
submissions and emphasised the security police's statement that they
could not provide any information on what would happen to a former KGB
agent who was returned to Russia after having fled abroad. She
maintained that the insecurity as to her fate if returned to Russia was
so great that she should, having regard also to her connections with
Sweden, be allowed to stay in the country.
On 15 May 1992 the Board rejected the new application as it found
that it was in all important respects identical to her earlier
requests, even taking into account the information submitted by the
security police. The Board's decision was not subject to any appeal.
On 20 May 1992 the applicant requested the Government to
reconsider the case, reiterating her fears of reprisals upon her return
to Russia.
According to a medical certificate dated 6 August 1992 and signed
by Mr. P, a psychologist at the Southern Hospital in Stockholm
(Södersjukhuset), the applicant's husband suffers from serious
reactions of panic and anguish which, after he had suffered a heart
attack in 1986, have resulted in his admittance to the intensive care
unit of the heart department of the hospital. The certificate adds that
his mental condition is still very unstable and that the only points
of light in his condition are his contacts with his son and his new
wife.
COMPLAINTS
The applicant requests the Commission to help her to be allowed
to stay in Sweden. She does not invoke any provision of the Convention
but refers to her fears of reprisals if returned to Russia and her
family connections in Sweden.
THE LAW
The Commission recalls that no right to asylum or freedom from
expulsion are as such guaranteed by the Convention. The expulsion of
a person may nevertheless, in certain exceptional circumstances, raise
issues under the Convention, in particular under Article 3 (Art. 3)
where substantial grounds have been shown for believing that the person
concerned faces a real risk of being subjected to torture or to inhuman
or degrading treatment or punishment in the country to which he or she
is to be returned (see, inter alia, Eur. Court H.R. Vilvarajah and
Others judgment of 30 October 1991, Series A No. 215, p. 34, para. 103)
and under Article 8 (Art. 8) to the extent that the expulsion excludes
the person concerned from a country in which his or her close relatives
reside (see, inter alia, No. 12122/86, Dec. 16.10.86, D.R. 50 p. 268,
at p. 272).
As regards the questions raised under Article 3 (Art. 3) of the
Convention, the Commission observes that a mere possibility of ill-
treatment in the country to which the person concerned is to be sent
is not in itself sufficient to give rise to a breach of this provision
(see the above-mentioned Vilvarajah judgment, p. 37, para. 111). In the
light of this judgment and considering the circumstances of the present
case, the Commission does not find that the applicant has shown
substantial grounds for believing that she would be exposed to a
serious risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3
(Art. 3) if returned to Russia.
As regards questions raised under Article 8 (Art. 8) of the
Convention, the Commission notes that the applicant is being expelled
as she does not have a valid residence permit and has not been found
to fulfil the legal conditions for the granting of one or for the
granting of political asylum. The Commission also notes that the family
connections invoked by the applicant consist of her relations with her
cousin and her husband.
The Commission notes with regard to her family relations that
these are of a rather weak nature. Her cousin and herself are now grown
up persons and even if their family ties may have been very strong at
an earlier stage as a result of the circumstances obtaining after the
death of the applicant's mother, there is today a question of whether
these go beyond normal emotional ties (cf. No. 10375/83, Dec. 10.12.84,
D.R. 40 p. 196). The applicant established a relationship with her
husband only in the autumn of 1991 when she was already under the
expulsion order at issue. When she married him on 8 January 1992 she
was still under the expulsion order and her chances of being allowed
to stay in Sweden had not improved in the meantime. They have no
children.
The Commission has not found it necessary to determine whether
these relationships fall under the protection afforded by Article 8
(Art. 8) as a possible interference would in any case be justified
under the Article's second paragraph (cf. above-mentioned No. 12122/86,
D.R. 50 p. 272).
There is in the present case nothing to indicate that any
potential interference with the applicant's family life would not be
in accordance with the law within the meaning of the second paragraph
of Article 8 (Art. 8). When considering whether it was necessary in a
democratic society to decide to expel her and, subsequently, to refuse
to repeal this decision and to grant a residence permit, the Commission
must weigh the seriousness of the potential interference with the
applicant's family life against the considerations relating to the
proper enforcement of immigration controls. In this connection the
Commission recalls that the applicant is only prohibited from returning
to Sweden until 1 May 1993 and that she may, even before this date,
request a special permit to visit her husband and her cousin in Sweden.
In addition, the applicant has not provided any information to
the effect that it would be impossible for her to reunite with either
of them in Russia. The Commission would finally emphasize the close
connection between the policy of immigration control and important
considerations pertaining to public order. In the circumstances of the
present case the Commission accordingly finds that any potential
interference with the applicant's family life would be justified under
the second paragraph of Article 8 (Art. 8).
It follows that the application must be rejected as being
manifestly ill-founded, within the meaning of Article 27 para. 2
(Art. 27-2) of the Convention.
For these reasons, the Commission, by a majority,
DECLARES THE APPLICATION INADMISSIBLE.
Secretary to the Commission President of the Commission
(H.C. Krüger) (C.A. Nørgaard)
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