The implementation of the hotspots in Italy and Greece - A study

Authors Aspasia Papadopoulou, European Council on Refugees and Exiles
Description
The “hotspot approach” has been envisaged as a model of operational support by the EU agencies to Member States faced with disproportionate migratory pressure, with the aim to help them swiftly identify, register and fingerprint migrants, support the implementation of relocation and returns. One year since the first hotspots were set up, and half a year since the entry into force of the EU-Turkey Statement of March 2016, this study analyses the legal framework and practices developed in Italy and Greece, the role of the different actors involved and the challenges that have emerged. The key question throughout the study is whether and how implementation is in line with EU asylum law and legal standards and whether it ensures that the fundamental rights of the migrants and refugees are respected. The hotspots, as implemented today, are a pilot model of a more permanent registration and identification mechanism at the points of arrival that selects between those seeking asylum and those to be returned. Yet, the hotspots currently apply certain practices and standards that are either inadequate or contrary to the EU asylum and immigration acquis. As this is a hybrid EU-Member States tool, responsibility for human rights protection and safeguards relates to both levels. In terms of accessing the asylum procedure, the research shows that, while for some individuals this may have been the case, for many others it was not; many newly arrived migrants have been trapped in prolonged detention without access to asylum, have not received the right information in order to do so, or have been swiftly returned as a result of the hotspots approach. The hotspots have certainly not helped in relieving the pressure from Italy and Greece as was their stated objective: instead, they have led to an increase in the number of asylum applicants waiting in Italy and Greece, consolidating the challenges and shortcomings already inherent in the Dublin system. The hotspots approach has also led to more repressive measures, often disrespecting fundamental rights, which are applied by national authorities as a result of EU pressure to control the arrivals; yet despite EU pressure, it is the Member States that are held ultimately responsible for this implementation. The implementation of the EU-Turkey deal is a prime example of this EU pressure shifting responsibilities to the national level. The implementation of the hotspots approach should be understood in relation to the broader reform of the CEAS, and an overarching strategy to end irregular migration flows into the EU. The aim of the study is to contribute to current debates, by highlighting the challenges that emerge through the function of the hotspots at national level, the role of EU agencies and the level of EU responsibility in the absence of an EU mechanism for responsibility sharing. Ultimately, if the hotspots are to be consolidated as a permanent referral mechanism and the points of entry, a number of elements need to be in place to ensure that this is compatible with the EU acquis and legal standards.
Year 2016

Taxonomy Associations

Migration processes
Migration consequences (for migrants, sending and receiving countries)
Migration governance
Methods
Geographies
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