Last Updated: Friday, 23 June 2017, 14:43 GMT

Judgement of the City Court in Prague, No. 7 A 7/2005 of 20 June 2005

Publisher Czech Republic: Prague City Court
Publication Date 20 June 2005
Citation / Document Symbol No. 7 A 7/2005
Cite as Judgement of the City Court in Prague, No. 7 A 7/2005 of 20 June 2005, No. 7 A 7/2005, Czech Republic: Prague City Court, 20 June 2005, available at: http://www.refworld.org/cases,CZE_PCC,4a782a582.html [accessed 25 June 2017]
Comments This unofficial summary translation has been made available by the Supreme Administrative Court, and is also available on the website of the Association of the Councils of State and the Supreme Administrative Jurisdictions of the European Union.
DisclaimerThis is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States.

The applicant, a Slovak national, brought action for annulment of the decision of the Ministerstvo vnitra (Ministry of the Interior of the Czech Republic).

The Ministerstvo vnitra rejected, without further examination, the asylum application, because the conditions set forth in Protocol No. 29 on asylum for nationals of Member States of the European Union ("Protocol") were not met.

The applicant argued that the examination of her application was formalistic and mechanical, and that her personal situation and the situation of her family have not been taken into consideration.

An additional claim made by the applicant was to transfer her asylum application for further proceedings to the Republic of Malta, because Malta has granted asylum to her daughter. She further argued that the decision of the Ministry cannot be reviewed, as the Protocol is inapplicable. Restriction of asylum for nationals of other member states became part of Czech asylum legislation (Zakon c. 326/1999 Sb., o azylu as amended by zakon c. 57/2005 Sb.) only after the examination of her application.

The applicant required in oral observations the interrogation of witnesses. She admitted her nationality of the member state of the European Union. Her case, however, shall be examined individually. Asylum granted to her Roma daughter by Malta, her Hungarian ethnicity and other circumstances shall be taken into consideration.

According to the court, the legal framework of the case is apparent, by virtue of the Treaty of Accession (ratified by the Czech Republic) and its Act Concerning the Conditions of Accession, the provisions of founding treaties are, as from the moment of the Accession, i.e. the 1st May 2004 - binding on new member states.

According to Article 10 of the Constitution of the Czech Republic, duly published international treaties to the ratification of which the Parliament has given its consent and by which the Czech Republic is bound, form part of the (Czech) legal order. If a treaty provides something other than that which a statute provides, the treaty shall prevail.

At the time of the contested decision, the Zakon o azylu did not contain any provision as to the applications for asylum of nationals of other member states.

According to the Protocol - forming integral part of the Treaty Establishing the European Community - applications for asylum of nationals of other member states can only be considered if conditions set out in the Protocol are met.

In the case of the applicant, however, these conditions were not met. The Czech Republic is not empowered to continue proceedings in the application. The Ministry has not erred in rejecting the application without further examination.

As an obiter dictum, the Court noticed that by virtue of Article 18 of the EC Treaty, the applicant enjoys the right of free movement within the territory of the Member States. According to the case law of the European Court of Justice, the provision is directly effective. Taking into account the right of the applicant to move freely within the European Union, the creation of a similar right by asylum is redundant.

Search Refworld