The European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting on 18 June 2013 as a Chamber composed of:
��������� Isabelle Berro-Lef�vre, President,
��������� Elisabeth Steiner,
��������� Guido Raimondi,
��������� Khanlar Hajiyev,
��������� Mirjana Lazarova Trajkovska,
��������� Julia Laffranque,
��������� Linos-Alexandre Sicilianos, judges,
and S�ren Nielsen, Section Registrar,
Having regard to the above application lodged on 26 August 2011,
Having regard to the interim measure indicated to the respondent Government under Rule 39 of the Rules of Court,
Having regard to the observations submitted by the Austrian Government, the comments submitted by the Italian Government, and the observations in reply submitted by the applicant,
Having deliberated, decides as follows:
THE FACTS
A. The circumstances of the case
1. The first set of asylum proceedings in Austria
2. The second set of asylum proceedings in Austria and application of Rule 39 of the Rules of Court
3. Medical information
B. Relevant European, Austrian and Italian law and practice
1. Council Regulation (EC) No 343/2003 (the Dublin Regulation)
2. Austrian Asylum Act
3. Asylum proceedings in Italy
�33. A person wishing to apply for asylum in Italy should do so with the border police or, if already in Italy, with the police (questura) immigration department. As soon as an asylum request has been filed, the petitioner is granted access to Italy as well as to the asylum procedure, and is authorised to remain in Italy pending the determination of the asylum request by the Territorial Commission for the Recognition of International Protection.
34. For petitioners who do not hold a valid entry visa, an identification procedure (fotosegnalamento) is carried out by the police - if need be - with the assistance of an interpreter. This procedure comprises the taking of passport photographs and fingerprints. The fingerprints are checked for matches in EURODAC and the domestic AFIS (Automated Fingerprint Identification System) database. At the end of this procedure, the petitioner is given a notice confirming the first registration (cedolino), on which future appointments are noted, in particular the appointment for the formal registration of the request.
35. The formal asylum request will be made in writing. On the basis of an interview held with the petitioner in a language which he or she understands, the police will fill out the �Standard form C/3 for the recognition of refugee status according to the Geneva Convention� (Modello C/3 per il riconoscimento dello status di rifugiato ai sensi della Convenzione di Ginevra), which contains questions on the petitioner�s personal data (name, surname, date of birth, citizenship, name and surname of parents/spouse/children and their whereabouts) as well as the details of the journey to Italy and reasons for fleeing the country of origin and for seeking asylum in Italy. The petitioner will be asked to provide a written paper, which will be appended to the form, containing his or her asylum account and written in his or her own language. The police will retain the original form and provide the petitioner with a stamped copy.
36. The petitioner will then be invited by a notification served in writing by the police for a hearing before the competent Territorial Commission for the Recognition of International Protection. During this hearing, the petitioner will be assisted by an interpreter.�
�At the arrival in the main airports, the applicant finds NGOs/associations which may help him/her to find an accommodation centre and provide him/her with further information on the asylum procedure. At the airport, the Border Police carry out the fotosegnalamento and verify the person�s identity in the EURODAC database. After having undertaken these procedures, the applicant will receive a letter (called �verbale di invito�) saying that s/he has to go to the Questura competent to continue the asylum procedure. The asylum seeker may be addressed to the office of the Questura where s/he was fingerprinted and photographed or to the office where s/he lodged the asylum application or where the documents related to his/her case are kept. The law does not foresee any support for reaching the competent Questura. In the practice the NGOs working at the border points can provide the train ticket for that destination on the basis of a specific agreement with the competent Prefecture. However, this support is not always guaranteed and often it happens that the NGO does not have information on the real arrival of the asylum seekers and on whether s/he has found an accommodation there.
Once the person is at the Questura, s/he may face different outcomes according to whether s/he did not apply or s/he did apply for asylum when s/he was in Italy previously.
If the person had never applied for international protection before, s/he is able to ask for protection now and is entitled to the same rights as the other asylum seekers. ...�
4. Reception conditions in Italy
�In Italy, foreign citizens, even those not complying with the provisions regulating their presence, are entitled to ordinary and/or urgent treatment through the National Health Service.
In the government centres for migrants the psychic/physical health of guests is recognized as an unalienable right of the individual, which is safeguarded by art. 32 of the Italian Constitution and it has always been put at the forefront when the regulatory and management system of the centres is being prepared.
More specifically, the medical assistance service provided for in the centres for migrants must grant guests the following:
a) Visit upon entry and medical first aid, carried out in a consulting room set up within the facility with medical staff and nurses, whose shifts must be based on the ratio guests/staff as indicated in the tables of the tender specifications;
b) When the need arises, possible transfer of guests to hospitals outside the centres, in compliance with art. 35 of Legislative Decree 286/98 as migrants hosted in CARA centres can benefit from the services of the National Health Service by showing their STP cards (Temporarily Present Alien), issued by the Local Health Service Unit, whereby they can enjoy treatment in the consulting room or in hospitals, when it is urgent or essential in case life is in peril;
c) Administering of medicines and medical devices necessary for first aid and for ordinary medical assistance, including for generic conditions of psychological type;
d) Recording of a personal medical file, a copy of which must be handed over to the guest. In this connection it is worth mentioning that doctors, when screening the guests upon entry must also evaluate their psychic-social situation as well as the presence of vulnerability factors (serious psychic-psychological conditions, including previous ones, victims of mistreatment/torture, substance addiction, etc.) in order to prescribe possible drug treatment or psychological counselling.
It is further specified that as provided for by the above mentioned art. 35 of Legislative Decree No. 286/98 (Consolidated Text on Immigration), foreign citizens who are on the national territory but do not comply with provisions regulating their presence are anyway entitled to treatment in public health care facilities either in consultation rooms and/or in hospital (both urgent and continuing treatment) because of illness or accident and they also benefit from the programmes of preventive medical treatment aimed at safeguarding individual and collective health.
Regardless of the possession of a residence permit, the Italian legislation provides for the social protection and medical assistance to expectant mothers and to mothers, the protection of the psychic-physical health of minors (as a result of the Convention on the Rights of the Child of 1989), interventions of prevention, diagnosis and treatment of infectious diseases and the decontamination of the related centres of infection.
Finally, when aliens not complying with provisions regulating their presence visit public medical facilities, they are not reported to the Police Authorities.
As far as social services are concerned, the principle enshrined in art. 24 of the 1951 Geneva Convention - according to which the status of a refugee is equal to that of a national - is embodied in the Italian legislation also as a consequence of art. 27 of the above mentioned Legislative Decree No. 251 of 19 November 2007, which lays down that individuals benefiting from refugee status and from subsidiary protection have the same status as Italian citizens and thus they have access to all services and benefits, including economic ones, covered by the social and medical assistance system.
Furthermore, the projects funded through resources of the ERF include measures to ease the access to social security, particularly on the part of vulnerable groups.�
�Within this broader category, another distinction is deemed necessary according to whether the returnee had already enjoyed the reception system while s/he was in Italy.
If returnees (international protection seekers, beneficiaries of international protection or of a permit of stay for humanitarian reasons) had not been placed in reception facilities while they were in Italy, they may still enter reception centres. Due to the lack of available places in reception structures and to the fragmentation of the reception system, the length of time necessary to find again availability in the centres is - in most of the cases - too long. Since, there is no general practice, it is not possible to make a quantification of the time necessary to access to an accommodation. However, in the last years, temporary reception systems have been established to house persons transferred to Italy on the basis of the Dublin II Regulation. However, it concerns a form of temporary reception that lasts until their juridical situation is defined or, in case they belong to vulnerable categories, an alternative facility is found.
Such temporary reception has been set up thanks to targeted projects funded by the European Fund for Refugees. For instance, in Rome, there are currently projects providing assistance to 200 persons - within this broader category 60 places are for vulnerable categories.
However, it happens that Dublin returnees are not accommodated and find alternative forms of accommodation such as self-organized settlements. ...�
COMPLAINTS
THE LAW
�No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.�
and
�Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.�
A. The parties� submissions
1. The Austrian Government
2. The Italian Government
3. The applicant
B. The Court�s assessment
1. General principles
2. Application of these principles to the present case
(a) Italy
(b) Austria
For these reasons, the Court by a majority
Declares the application inadmissible.
������� S�ren Nielsen���������������������������������������������������������� Isabelle
Berro-Lef�vre
����������� Registrar������������������������������������������������������������������������ President